Stanley514 said:
Currently, they are trying to create high energy density capacitors for electric car such as Eestor.
Is it possible to make large unipolar capacitor which would discharge to the Earth?It could have ground of variable lenghth and be discharged through electric motor.Could you calculate how great energy density would it have if distance between capacitor (ground) and the Earth is 40 cm (15 inches)?Big distance between plates should meen big potential energy?What polarity such unipolar capacitor better to have taking in account that Earth have 200.000 V of negative potential?
That's a crazy sounding idea that actually makes some sense. Capacitance is inversely proportional to dielectric thickness, maximum voltage is proportional to dielectric thickness, and energy is proportional to capacitance and the square of voltage. Thus, energy storage capacity is proportional to the distance between the plates.
Air gap capacitors start off rather low, though. The dielectric constant will be far, far lower than it is for things like barium titanate, and there's limits to how highly charged you can make an object before it starts ionizing the air around it, so it would be a lot larger than a conventional supercapacitor, and dealing with the high voltage is certainly inconvenient. You would also need a good contact with the ground to discharge through, so the unipolar idea is useless for ground or air vehicles. Think bigger, and maybe it starts to work for some purposes.
A giant vacuum capacitor as a storage device is an interesting variation. There's still limits on how strongly charged you can make things before they start spraying electrons into the vacuum or tearing themselves apart, but no mass would be required for dielectrics, only for the plates. Perhaps on spacecraft , where vacuum and space are readily available, but mass is at a premium...a couple large aluminized balloons as the plates.
A vacuum capacitor formed from a 100 m sphere inside a 200 m sphere charged to 10 MV/m would have a total charge of 1 GV, and store
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?...m.*Meters.dflt--&a=UnitClash_*V.*Volts.dflt-- = 11 GJ (enough to supply 1 MW for about 16 minutes, or 350 W for a year), for what would be rather large, but could be rather little mass. You've got to deal with 1 GV to use it, though.