A charged capacitor is connected to another capacitor with identical capacitance. Where is energy stored at equilibrium?

1 Answer
Mar 4, 2018

Assuming that the charged capacitor having charge Q_iQi and capacitance CC is connected to an identical uncharged capacitor in parallel.

We know that in the initial condition

Q_i/C=V_iQiC=Vi ...........(1)
Where V_iVi is the initial voltage across the capacitor.

Also Energy stored on the capacitor

E_i=1/2Q_i^2/CEi=12Q2iC .........(2)

After the capacitors are connected, the charged capacitor acts a source of voltage and charges the other capacitor. In the equilibrium condition, due to the Law of Conservation of Charge half of the charge moves to other capacitor. From (2) we get energy stored on one capacitor as

E_f=1/2(Q_i/2)^2/C=1/8Q_i^2/CEf=12(Qi2)2C=18Q2iC

Similarly energy stored on the other capacitor is also same. Total energy stored on both capacitors

E_(f\ "total")=2(1/8Q_i^2/C)=1/4Q_i^2/C

The question is where has the remaining half of original energy gone.

And the answer is: this is expanded in charging the uncharged capacitor through RC time constant of the circuit. With the flow of charging current in the circuit, this half energy is lost as heat across the resistance R.