Carmen M

asked on July 24, 2025

Electric potential and energy calculation

How to calculate electric potential and potential energy?

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Expert Answer

Answered on October 11, 2025 by EXPERT TUTOR

  • Koustubh B

    Dual MS in Physics & Astronomy | UT Dallas & IIST | US School Teacher | Several Years Experience (Several Years Online)

Dear Carmen M,

To calculate electric potential and potential energy, you use the charge, distance, and Coulomb’s constant. Electric potential V tells you the energy per unit charge at a point in space, while electric potential energy U is the actual stored energy of a charge configuration, according to expert tutors at My Physics Buddy.

Understanding Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy in AP Physics 2

These two quantities trip up almost every student the first time they encounter them, and I completely understand why — the names sound nearly identical. As someone with a dual MS in Physics and Astronomy who has taught AP Physics 2 for several years, I can tell you that the key is to lock in the distinction right from the start and never blur it again.

The Core Distinction: Potential vs. Potential Energy

Think of electric potential (V) like the height of a hill — it’s a property of the location itself, independent of whether anyone is standing there. Electric potential energy (U), on the other hand, is like the gravitational potential energy of a specific person standing on that hill — it depends on both the location and the object placed there.

  • Electric Potential (V) — energy per unit charge at a point, measured in Volts (V = J/C).
  • Electric Potential Energy (U) — the actual energy stored in a system of charges, measured in Joules (J).

Formula for Electric Potential Due to a Point Charge

The electric potential at a distance r from a single point charge Q is:

V = kQ / r

Where:
k = Coulomb’s constant = 8.99 × 109 N·m²/C²
Q = source charge in Coulombs (C)
r = distance from the charge in metres (m)
V = electric potential in Volts (V)

Notice that V is a scalar — it has no direction. This makes it far easier to work with than the electric field, which is a vector. When multiple charges are present, you simply add their individual potentials algebraically: Vtotal = V1 + V2 + V3 + …

Formula for Electric Potential Energy

Once you know the potential at a location, finding the potential energy of a charge q placed there is straightforward:

U = qV

Or directly for two point charges separated by distance r:

U = kQq / r

Where Q and q are the two interacting charges. A positive U means the configuration is repulsive (energy must be added to bring the charges together), and a negative U means it is attractive (energy is released as they come together).

Worked Example

Let’s say a charge Q = +3.0 μC sits fixed at the origin. You want to find:

  1. The electric potential at a point P located 0.30 m away.
  2. The electric potential energy if a second charge q = −2.0 μC is placed at P.

Step 1 — Convert units:
Q = 3.0 × 10−6 C, q = −2.0 × 10−6 C, r = 0.30 m

Step 2 — Calculate V at point P:
V = kQ / r = (8.99 × 109) × (3.0 × 10−6) / 0.30
V = (8.99 × 109 × 3.0 × 10−6) / 0.30
V = 26,970 / 0.30
V ≈ 9.0 × 104 V (or 90,000 V)

Step 3 — Calculate U:
U = qV = (−2.0 × 10−6) × (9.0 × 104)
U = −0.18 J

The negative sign tells you energy is released — the two charges attract each other, which makes physical sense since Q is positive and q is negative.

This concept is also fundamental in Electrostatics and appears in many related topics including capacitors and electric fields. For further reading on electric potential from a rigorous source, the PhET Charges and Fields simulation from the University of Colorado is an excellent interactive tool to visualize how potential changes around charges.

A useful relationship to also know is between electric potential and electric field: E = −ΔV / Δr. The electric field points from high potential to low potential — just like water flows downhill. This analogy is something I return to repeatedly in class because it immediately makes the field direction feel intuitive rather than arbitrary.

For a deeper dive into the mathematics behind these topics, OpenStax University Physics Volume 2 provides a thorough and freely accessible treatment of electric potential that aligns well with what you need for AP Physics 2.

Common Mistakes with Electric Potential and Potential Energy

Mistake: Treating electric potential V and electric potential energy U as the same quantity.
Fix: Always remember V = U/q. Potential is per unit charge; potential energy is the actual energy of a specific charge placed at that location. Always check whether the question asks for V (in volts) or U (in joules).

Mistake: Ignoring the sign of the charges when calculating U = kQq/r, and reporting energy as always positive.
Fix: Keep the full signs of both Q and q in your calculation. A negative result for U is physically meaningful — it means the charges are bound and the system is attractive.

Mistake: Trying to add electric potentials from multiple charges as vectors.
Fix: Electric potential is a scalar. Add the individual potentials from each charge as plain numbers (with signs), not as vectors. This is one of the biggest computational advantages of working with V instead of E.

Exam Relevance: Calculating electric potential and potential energy is directly tested in AP Physics 2, AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism, A/AS Level Physics (9702), and IB Physics HL. Expect both conceptual and calculation-based questions on these topics.

Pro Tip from Koustubh B: When dealing with multiple charges, always calculate V first at the point of interest by scalar addition — then multiply by q to get U. It saves significant time and avoids vector errors.

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