How Can You Triple the Energy Stored in a Capacitor Circuit?

AI Thread Summary
To triple the energy stored in a capacitor circuit with a 250 pF capacitor, a second capacitor must be added in parallel. The energy equation shows that the total capacitance needs to be three times the initial capacitance. By setting up the equation (1/2)(C1 + C2)V^2 = 3(1/2)C1V^2, it can be determined that C2 must equal 500 pF. Therefore, adding a 500 pF capacitor in parallel with the original 250 pF capacitor achieves the desired energy storage.
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Homework Statement



A circuit contains a single 250 pF capacitor hooked across a battery. It is desired to store three times as much energy in a combination of two capacitors by adding a single capacitor to this one. How would you hook it up, and what would its value be?

Homework Equations



PE = (1/2) CV^2

The Attempt at a Solution



PE(final) = 3PE(initial)

so then:

(1/2)CV^2 = 3 * (1/2) CV^2

Not sure where to go from here? I would think that if it is three times as much energy, then it should be 3 times the capacitance 3C = 3 * 250 pF = 750 pF but this isn't correct
 
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sunflowerzz said:

Homework Statement



A circuit contains a single 250 pF capacitor hooked across a battery. It is desired to store three times as much energy in a combination of two capacitors by adding a single capacitor to this one. How would you hook it up, and what would its value be?

Homework Equations



PE = (1/2) CV^2

The Attempt at a Solution



PE(final) = 3PE(initial)

so then:

(1/2)CV^2 = 3 * (1/2) CV^2

Not sure where to go from here? I would think that if it is three times as much energy, then it should be 3 times the capacitance 3C = 3 * 250 pF = 750 pF but this isn't correct

I would call the initial capacitor C1, and the cap you add could be C2. That will make your equation make more sense.

And you have the right idea, but the question asks what size capacitor should you *add* to make the total energy storage 3x the initial storage on C1. How does that change your answer? :smile:
 
berkeman said:
I would call the initial capacitor C1, and the cap you add could be C2. That will make your equation make more sense.

And you have the right idea, but the question asks what size capacitor should you *add* to make the total energy storage 3x the initial storage on C1. How does that change your answer? :smile:

Ok so then it's:

(1/2)C2V^2 = 3 * (1/2)C1V^2

When you say "add", does this mean C2 will be in parallel with C1?

OOH...so if it's parallel, then It's C1 + C2 but is C1 = C2? If it is, then C = C1 + C2 = 250 + 250 = 500 pF

But how do you know that both capacitors are 250 pF?
 
sunflowerzz said:
Ok so then it's:

(1/2)C2V^2 = 3 * (1/2)C1V^2

When you say "add", does this mean C2 will be in parallel with C1?

OOH...so if it's parallel, then It's C1 + C2 but is C1 = C2? If it is, then C = C1 + C2 = 250 + 250 = 500 pF

But how do you know that both capacitors are 250 pF?

If you add C2 in parallel, what should you have written instead on the lefthand side (LHS) of your equation:

"(1/2)C2V^2 = 3 * (1/2)C1V^2"

Your LHS is incorrect as written.
 
berkeman said:
If you add C2 in parallel, what should you have written instead on the lefthand side (LHS) of your equation:

"(1/2)C2V^2 = 3 * (1/2)C1V^2"

Your LHS is incorrect as written.

Do you mean LHS for C2 = C1 + C2?
 
sunflowerzz said:
Do you mean LHS for C2 = C1 + C2?

Yes, the LHS should be the sum of C1+C2, not just C2. Your intuition has been correct all along. What value do you now get for C2?
 
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berkeman said:
Yes, the LHS should be the sum of C1+C2, not just C2. Your intuition has been correct all along. What value do you now get for C2?

Ok I got it:

(1/2)*(C1 + C2)*V^2 = 3 * (1/2)C1V^2

C1 + C2 = 3C1
C2 = 3C1 - C1 = 2C1 = 2 * 250 = 500 pF

Thanks! :)
 
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