This online calculator helps you find two things about a capacitor in one step. First, you enter the capacitance in μF, the voltage in V, and the resistance in kΩ. Then you click Calculate. You will see the stored energy using E = ½ C V² and the RC time constant using τ = R × C right away.
What This Tool Does
This online tool shows two things:
- Energy stored in a capacitor. It uses E = ½ C V².
- Time constant of an RC circuit. It uses τ = R × C.
Why Time Constant Matters
First, a capacitor charges or discharges through a resistor.
Then, its voltage moves slowly, not all at once.
Next, τ tells you how fast the voltage gets close to the final value.
After about 5 × τ, the voltage is over 99% of the final level.
How Energy Works
A capacitor holds energy in the space between its plates.
As you add charge, the voltage goes from 0 up to V. On average, it is V/2.
Since charge Q = C × V, you get E = ½ C V².
If you double V, energy goes up four times. If you double C, energy goes up two times.
Where You Use These Values
- For filters and smoothing power lines. A large C and the right R cut noise.
- For timers and delays. τ sets how long a pulse lasts.
- For energy pulses like camera flashes. They need a quick release of stored energy.
Note: These formulas assume perfect parts. Real parts have extra resistance and tolerance. This can change τ and E a little.
Quick Example
- Let C = 10 μF, V = 5 V, and R = 2 kΩ.
- Then
- E = ½ × 10×10⁻⁶ F × 5² = 0.000125 J
- τ = 2000 Ω × 10×10⁻⁶ F = 0.02 s
Check on a Scope
- First, watch the voltage rise on an oscilloscope.
- Then, note the time to reach 63% of V. It should match τ.
- After 5 × τ, the voltage should be almost equal to V.
FAQ
Microfarads and kilo-ohms simplify entry for common electronics values; the script auto-converts to SI.
For series capacitors, calculate equivalent C first; then apply the formulas below.
τ indicates how fast the voltage across the capacitor charges or discharges (63.2% after one τ).
Calculations assume ideal components; real tolerances may affect precise values.
Use in filter design, pulse timing, sensor circuits, and learning about RC behavior.


