A common form is a parallel-plate
capacitor, which consists of two conductive plates insulated from each other, usually sandwiching a
dielectric material. In a parallel plate capacitor, capacitance is very nearly proportional to the surface area of the conductor plates and inversely proportional to the separation distance between the plates. If the charges on the plates are +q and -q, and V gives the
voltage between the plates, then the capacitance C is given by C = \frac{q}{V}, which gives the voltage/
current relationship i(t) = C \frac{dv(t)}{dt} + V\frac{dC}{dt}, where \frac{dv(t)}{dt} is the instantaneous rate of change of voltage, and \frac{dC}{dt} is the instantaneous rate of change of the capacitance. For most applications, the change in capacitance over time is negligible, so the formula reduces to: i(t) = C \frac{dv(t)}{dt}, The energy stored in a capacitor is found by
integrating the work W: W_\text{charging} = \frac{1}{2}CV^2.
Capacitance matrix The discussion above is limited to the case of two conducting plates, although of arbitrary size and shape. The definition C = Q/V does not apply when there are more than two charged plates, or when the net charge on the two plates is non-zero. To handle this case,
James Clerk Maxwell introduced his
coefficients of potential. If three (nearly ideal) conductors are given charges Q_1, Q_2, Q_3, then the voltage (actually potential) at conductor 1 is given by V_1 = P_{11}Q_1 + P_{12} Q_2 + P_{13}Q_3, and similarly for the other voltages.
Hermann von Helmholtz and
Sir William Thomson showed that the coefficients of potential are symmetric, so that P_{12} = P_{21}, etc. Thus the system can be described by a collection of coefficients known as the
elastance matrix, which is defined as: P_{ij} = \frac{\partial V_{i}}{\partial Q_{j}}. Similarly, the charge can be written in terms of voltages (actually potentials): Q_1 = C_{11}V_1 + C_{12} V_2 + C_{13}V_3, The collection of coefficients C_{ij} = \frac{\partial Q_{i}}{\partial V_{j}} is known as the
capacitance matrix,. In open systems which are not charge neutral, so that field lines can end at infinity (which is implicitly assumed to have 0 potential in the above equations), the capacitance and elastance matrices are inverses of each other: C^{-1} = P. In closed systems however the capacitance matrix is singular (it has a 0 eigenvalue due to charge neutrality), and so formally the elastance matrix as the inverse of the capacitance matrix is ill defined; it would require independently varying the charges. by solving for the total charge Q and using C_{m}=Q/(V_1 - V_2) . C_m = - C_{12} = \frac{1}{(P_{11} + P_{22})-(P_{12} + P_{21})}. Since no actual device holds perfectly equal and opposite charges on each of the two "plates", it is the mutual capacitance that is reported on capacitors. ==Capacitors==