The potential difference is the amount of work required to move a charge in an electric field. Inside a conductor, there is no electric field at steady state
The work done in a conductor is by virtue of collision of collisions in on the kernels rather than the charges working against a field...so its not necessary that work by a charge is only done in a field.
Anyway since we're considering superconductors, there will actually be no work done inside the conductor...so if we're connecting the inner side of the plates with superconductor, the the current will be infinite, so to put things in terms of real life cases, let's add a resistance...to this...so I'm asking what will be the energy dissipated through that resistance in an infinitely small time interval.
I'm not getting you...I decoded what you said as work cannot be done by a capacitor.
This is why I think so -
"We can compute stuff using Q = CV, which's a general relation for capacitors.
The Q here will be the net charge accumulated and V will be the potential difference across the plates of the parallel plate air capacitor; note that while using this formula, the arrangement is taken as an 'object' rather than a 2-plate arrangement that is there will be a difference between “the potential difference in each plate by virtue of the charge stored on each of them” and the V that we assume here (that just appears on the back side of the plate).
So...how do we know that there's so much charge on the plates?...how do we measure it and how do we get the 'real' potential “by virtue of the charge stored on each of them”?
There are 2 ways...the simple one is to separate the 2 plate, that way the charge will get exposed throughout the plate, and we'll be able to see its actual potential. On doing so, the V assumed will be different from the potential difference between the plates (that appears on dismantling the arrangement), why...cause on dismantling the plates the capacitance will decrease; remember that the capacitance (or charge per unit volts) of the arrangement and the 2 plates as separates entities are different, the dismantled situation having a lower capacitance...so on dismantling, though the capacitance will decrease, the charge wont...so what will happen?...the P.D will increase to as to store that specific amount of charge on both the plates (a property of their individual capacitance).
The other way is to do so is to connect the plates form the inside, since almost all of the charge has been accumulated on the inner side of the plates, the density will be high, and so will the potential (that's why a dielectric leaks). Connecting the plates from the outer side won't give you that much a potential difference, it will be equal to that of the voltage source.
It cannot be stated that this V computed from between the plates of the capacitor will be equal to the V assumed in Q = CV, that's cause the charge stored on the plate is extremely high and as said before, by virtue of that charge stored the P.D should also be extremely high; the only way the P.D can be reduced is when there'll be a charge difference on both the plates so as to make a lower P.D (equal to V)...but apparently the charge stored on each of the plates is equal and opposite...so this can't be said. Measuring this potential difference (between the 2 plates from the inside) will be like directly measuring the P.D between the 2 plates infinite distance apart (as done before), and that will definitely be higher than the predefined V.
Since the potential difference towards the inner side will be high, the capacitance of the arrangement will be low if that P.D is measured."