A capacitor (originally
known as a condenser) is a passive two-terminal electrical component used to
store energy electro
statically in an electric
field. The forms of practical capacitors vary widely, but all
contain at least two electrical conductors separated by a dielectric (insulator); for example, one common
construction consists of metal foils separated by a thin layer of insulating
film. Capacitors are widely used as parts of electrical circuits in many common
electrical devices.
When there is a potential difference across the
conductors, an electric field develops across the
dielectric, causing positive charge to collect on one plate and negative charge
on the other plate. Energy is stored in the electrostatic field. An ideal
capacitor is characterized by a single constant value, capacitance.
This is the ratio of the electric
charge on each conductor to the potential difference between
them. The SI unit
of capacitance is the farad, which is equal to one coulomb per volt.
The capacitance is
greatest when there is a narrow separation between large areas of conductor,
hence capacitor conductors are often called plates, referring to an
early means of construction. In practice, the dielectric between the plates
passes a small amount of leakage current and also has an
electric field strength limit, the breakdown
voltage. The conductors and leads introduce an undesired inductance and resistance.
Capacitors are widely
used in electronic circuits for blocking direct
current while allowingalternating current to pass. In analog filter networks,
they smooth the output of power
supplies. In resonant circuits they tune radios to
particular frequencies. In electric power transmission systems
they stabilize voltage and power flow.
HISTORY:
In October
1745, Ewald Georg von Kleist of Pomerania in
Germany found that charge could be stored by connecting a high-voltage electrostatic generator by a wire to
a volume of water in a hand-held glass jar. Von Kleist's hand and the
water acted as conductors, and the jar as a dielectric(although
details of the mechanism were incorrectly identified at the time). Von Kleist
found that touching the wire resulted in a powerful spark, much more painful
than that obtained from an electrostatic machine. The following year, the Dutch
physicist Pieter van Musschenbroek invented a
similar capacitor, which was named the Leyden jar,
after the University of Leiden where he worked. He
also was impressed by the power of the shock he received, writing, "I
would not take a second shock for the kingdom of France."
Daniel
Gralath was the first to combine several jars in parallel into
a "battery" to increase the charge storage capacity. Benjamin
Franklin investigated the Leyden jar and
came to the conclusion that the charge was stored on the glass, not in the
water as others had assumed. He also adopted the term "battery",
(denoting the increasing of power with a row of similar units as in a battery of
cannon), subsequently applied to clusters of electrochemical cells. Leyden
jars were later made by coating the inside and outside of jars with metal foil,
leaving a space at the mouth to prevent arcing between the foils.[citation needed] The
earliest unit of capacitance was the jar,
equivalent to about 1 nanofarad.
Leyden jars or more
powerful devices employing flat glass plates alternating with foil conductors
were used exclusively up until about 1900, when the invention of wireless (radio) created a demand
for standard capacitors, and the steady move to higher frequenciesrequired
capacitors with lower inductance. A more compact construction began to be used of a
flexible dielectric sheet such as oiled paper sandwiched between sheets of
metal foil, rolled or folded into a small package.
Early capacitors
were also known as condensers, a term that is still occasionally
used today. The term was first used for this purpose by Alessandro
Volta in 1782, with reference to the device's ability to store
a higher density of electric charge than a normal isolated conductor.
Theory
of operation
A capacitor consists
of two conductors separated by a
non-conductive region. The non-conductive region is called the dielectric.
In simpler terms, the dielectric is just an electrical insulator. Examples of
dielectric media are glass, air, paper, vacuum, and
even a semiconductordepletion
region chemically identical to the conductors. A capacitor is
assumed to be self-contained and isolated, with no net electric
charge and no influence from any external electric field. The
conductors thus hold equal and opposite charges on their facing
surfaces, and the dielectric develops an electric field. In SIunits, a capacitance of
one farad means
that onecoulomb of
charge on each conductor causes a voltage of one volt across the
device. An ideal capacitor is wholly characterized by a constant capacitance C,
defined as the ratio of charge ±Q on each conductor to the
voltage V between them:
Because the conductors
(or plates) are close together, the opposite charges on the conductors attract
one another due to their electric fields, allowing the capacitor to store more
charge for a given voltage than if the conductors were separated, giving the
capacitor a large capacitance.
Sometimes charge
build-up affects the capacitor mechanically, causing its capacitance to vary.
In this case, capacitance is defined in terms of incremental changes:
Hydraulic analogy
In the hydraulic
analogy, a capacitor is analogous to a rubber membrane sealed inside
a pipe. This animation illustrates a membrane being repeatedly stretched and
un-stretched by the flow of water, which is analogous to a capacitor being
repeatedly charged and discharged by the flow of charge.
In the hydraulic
analogy, charge carriers flowing through a wire are analogous to
water flowing through a pipe. A capacitor is like a rubber membrane sealed
inside a pipe. Water molecules cannot pass through the membrane, but some water
can move by stretching the membrane. The analogy clarifies a few aspects of
capacitors:
- The current alters the charge on a capacitor, just as the flow of water changes the position of the membrane. More specifically, the effect of an electric current is to increase the charge of one plate of the capacitor, and decrease the charge of the other plate by an equal amount. This is just like how, when water flow moves the rubber membrane, it increases the amount of water on one side of the membrane, and decreases the amount of water on the other side.
- The more a capacitor is charged, the larger its voltage drop; i.e., the more it "pushes back" against the charging current. This is analogous to the fact that the more a membrane is stretched, the more it pushes back on the water.
- Charge can flow "through" a capacitor even though no individual electron can get from one side to the other. This is analogous to the fact that water can flow through the pipe even though no water molecule can pass through the rubber membrane. Of course, the flow cannot continue the same direction forever; the capacitor will experience dielectric breakdown, and analogously the membrane will eventually break.
- The capacitance describes how much charge can be stored on one plate of a capacitor for a given "push" (voltage drop). A very stretchy, flexible membrane corresponds to a higher capacitance than a stiff membrane.
- A charged-up capacitor is storing potential energy, analogously to a stretched membrane.
Energy of electric field
Work must be done by an external influence
to "move" charge between the conductors in a capacitor. When the
external influence is removed, the charge separation persists in the electric
field and energy is stored to be released when the charge is allowed to return
to its equilibrium position. The work done in establishing the electric field,
and hence the amount of energy stored, is
Here Q is the charge
stored in the capacitor, V is the voltage across the capacitor, and C
is the capacitance.
In the case of a fluctuating
voltage V(t), the stored energy also fluctuates and hence power
must flow into or out of the capacitor. This power can be found by taking the time
derivative of the stored energy:
Current–voltage relation
The current I(t)
through any component in an electric circuit is defined as the rate of flow of a
charge Q(t) passing through it, but actual
charges—electrons—cannot pass through the dielectric layer of a capacitor.
Rather, an electron accumulates on the negative plate for each one that leaves
the positive plate, resulting in an electron depletion and consequent positive
charge on one electrode that is equal and opposite to the accumulated negative
charge on the other. Thus the charge on the electrodes is equal to the integral
of the current as well as proportional to the voltage, as discussed above. As
with any antiderivative, a constant of integration is added to
represent the initial voltage V(t0). This is the
integral form of the capacitor equation:
Taking the derivative of this
and multiplying by C yields the derivative form:
The dual of the capacitor is the inductor,
which stores energy in a magnetic field rather than an electric field.
Its current-voltage relation is obtained by exchanging current and voltage in
the capacitor equations and replacing C with the inductance L.
DC circuits
See also: RC circuit
A simple
resistor-capacitor circuit demonstrates charging of a capacitor.
A series circuit containing only
a resistor,
a capacitor, a switch and a constant DC source of voltage V0
is known as a charging circuit. If the capacitor is initially uncharged
while the switch is open, and the switch is closed at t0, it
follows from Kirchhoff's voltage law that
Taking the derivative and
multiplying by C, gives a first-order differential equation:
At t = 0, the voltage
across the capacitor is zero and the voltage across the resistor is V0.
The initial current is then I(0) =V0/R.
With this assumption, solving the differential equation yields
where τ0 = RC
is the time constant of the system. As the
capacitor reaches equilibrium with the source voltage, the voltages across the
resistor and the current through the entire circuit decay
exponentially. The case of discharging a charged capacitor
likewise demonstrates exponential decay, but with the initial capacitor voltage
replacing V0 and the final voltage being zero.
AC circuits
Impedance, the vector sum of reactance and resistance, describes the phase difference
and the ratio of amplitudes between sinusoidally varying voltage and
sinusoidally varying current at a given frequency. Fourier
analysis allows any signal to be constructed from a spectrum
of frequencies, whence the circuit's reaction to the various frequencies may be
found. The reactance and impedance of a capacitor are respectively
where j is the imaginary
unit and ω is the angular
frequency of the sinusoidal signal. The −j phase indicates
that the AC voltage V = ZI lags the AC current by 90°: the
positive current phase corresponds to increasing voltage as the capacitor
charges; zero current corresponds to instantaneous constant voltage, etc.
Impedance decreases with
increasing capacitance and increasing frequency. This implies that a
higher-frequency signal or a larger capacitor results in a lower voltage
amplitude per current amplitude—an AC "short circuit" or AC coupling.
Conversely, for very low frequencies, the reactance will be high, so that a
capacitor is nearly an open circuit in AC analysis—those frequencies have been
"filtered out".
Capacitors are different from
resistors and inductors in that the impedance is inversely proportional
to the defining characteristic; i.e., capacitance.
Laplace circuit analysis (s-domain)
When using the Laplace
transform in circuit analysis, the impedance of an ideal capacitor
with no initial charge is represented in the s domain by:
where
- C is the capacitance, and
- s is the complex frequency.
Parallel-plate model
Dielectric is
placed between two conducting plates, each of area A and with a
separation of d
The simplest capacitor consists
of two parallel conductive plates separated by a dielectric with permittivity
ε (such as air). The model may also be used to make qualitative predictions for
other device geometries. The plates are considered to extend uniformly over an
area A and a charge density ±ρ = ±Q/A exists on their
surface. Assuming that the width of the plates is much greater than their
separation d, the electric field near the centre of the device will be
uniform with the magnitude E = ρ/ε. The voltage is defined as the line integral
of the electric field between the plates
Solving this for C = Q/V
reveals that capacitance increases with area and decreases with separation
The capacitance is therefore
greatest in devices made from materials with a high permittivity, large plate
area, and small distance between plates.
A parallel plate capacitor can
only store a finite amount of energy before dielectric breakdown occurs. The
capacitor's dielectric material has a dielectric strength Ud which
sets the capacitor's breakdown voltage at V = Vbd
= Udd. The maximum energy that the capacitor can store
is therefore
We see that the maximum energy
is a function of dielectric volume, permittivity,
and dielectric strength per distance. So increasing
the plate area while decreasing the separation between the plates while
maintaining the same volume has no change on the amount of energy the capacitor
can store. Care must be taken when increasing the plate separation so that the
above assumption of the distance between plates being much smaller than the
area of the plates is still valid for these equations to be accurate. In
addition, these equations assume that the electric field is entirely
concentrated in the dielectric between the plates. In reality there are
fringing fields outside the dielectric, for example between the sides of the
capacitor plates, which will increase the effective capacitance of the
capacitor. This could be seen as a form of parasitic capacitance. For some simple
capacitor geometries this additional capacitance term can be calculated
analytically. It becomes negligibly small when the ratio of plate area to
separation is large.
Several
capacitors in parallel.
Networks
For capacitors
in parallel
Capacitors
in a parallel configuration each have the same applied voltage. Their
capacitances add up. Charge is apportioned among them by size. Using the
schematic diagram to visualize parallel plates, it is apparent that each
capacitor contributes to the total surface area.
For capacitors
in series
Several
capacitors in series.
Connected
in series, the schematic diagram reveals that the separation distance, not the
plate area, adds up. The capacitors each store instantaneous charge build-up
equal to that of every other capacitor in the series. The total voltage
difference from end to end is apportioned to each capacitor according to the
inverse of its capacitance. The entire series acts as a capacitor smaller
than any of its components.
Capacitors
are combined in series to achieve a higher working voltage, for example for
smoothing a high voltage power supply. The voltage ratings, which are based on
plate separation, add up, if capacitance and leakage currents for each
capacitor are identical. In such an application, on occasion series strings are
connected in parallel, forming a matrix. The goal is to maximize the energy
storage of the network without overloading any capacitor. For high-energy
storage with capacitors in series, some safety considerations must be applied
to ensure one capacitor failing and leaking current will not apply too much
voltage to the other series capacitors.
Voltage
distribution in parallel-to-series networks.
To
model the distribution of voltages from a single charged capacitor connected
in parallel to a chain of capacitors in series :
Note:
This is only correct if all capacitance values are equal.
The
power transferred in this arrangement is:
Series
connection is also sometimes used to adapt polarized electrolytic capacitors for bipolar AC
use. Two identical polarized electrolytic capacitors are connected back to back
to form a bipolar capacitor with half the nominal capacitance of either.
However, the anode film can only withstand a small reverse voltage. This
arrangement can lead to premature failure as the anode film is broken down
during the reverse-conduction phase and partially rebuilt during the forward
phase. A factory-made non-polarized electrolytic capacitor has both plates
anodized so that it can withstand rated voltage in both directions; such
capacitors also have about half the capacitance per unit volume of polarized
capacitors.
Non-ideal behavior
Capacitors deviate from the
ideal capacitor equation in a number of ways. Some of these, such as leakage
current and parasitic effects are linear, or can be assumed to be linear, and
can be dealt with by adding virtual components to the equivalent circuit of the capacitor. The usual
methods of network analysis can then
be applied. In other cases, such as with breakdown voltage, the effect is
non-linear and normal (i.e., linear) network analysis cannot be used, the
effect must be dealt with separately. There is yet another group, which may be
linear but invalidate the assumption in the analysis that capacitance is a
constant. Such an example is temperature dependence. Finally, combined
parasitic effects such as inherent inductance, resistance, or dielectric losses
can exhibit non-uniform behavior at variable frequencies of operation.
Breakdown voltage
Above a particular electric
field, known as the dielectric strength Eds, the dielectric
in a capacitor becomes conductive. The voltage at which this occurs is called
the breakdown voltage of the device, and is given by the product of the
dielectric strength and the separation between the conductors,
The maximum energy that can be
stored safely in a capacitor is limited by the breakdown voltage. Due to the
scaling of capacitance and breakdown voltage with dielectric thickness, all
capacitors made with a particular dielectric have approximately equal maximum energy
density, to the extent that the dielectric dominates their volume.
For air dielectric capacitors
the breakdown field strength is of the order 2 to 5 MV/m; for mica the breakdown is 100
to 300 MV/m, for oil 15 to 25 MV/m, and can be much less when other materials
are used for the dielectric. The dielectric is used in very thin layers and so
absolute breakdown voltage of capacitors is limited. Typical ratings for
capacitors used for general electronics applications range from a few volts
to 1 kV. As the voltage increases, the dielectric must be thicker, making
high-voltage capacitors larger per capacitance than those rated for lower
voltages. The breakdown voltage is critically affected by factors such as the
geometry of the capacitor conductive parts; sharp edges or points increase the
electric field strength at that point and can lead to a local breakdown. Once
this starts to happen, the breakdown quickly tracks through the dielectric
until it reaches the opposite plate, leaving carbon behind causing a short
circuit.
The usual breakdown route is
that the field strength becomes large enough to pull electrons in the dielectric
from their atoms thus causing conduction. Other scenarios are possible, such as
impurities in the dielectric, and, if the dielectric is of a crystalline
nature, imperfections in the crystal structure can result in an avalanche breakdown as seen in semi-conductor
devices. Breakdown voltage is also affected by pressure, humidity and
temperature.
Equivalent circuit
Two different
circuit models of a real capacitor
An ideal capacitor only stores
and releases electrical energy, without dissipating any. In reality, all
capacitors have imperfections within the capacitor's material that create
resistance. This is specified as the equivalent series resistance or ESR
of a component. This adds a real component to the impedance:
As frequency approaches
infinity, the capacitive impedance (or reactance) approaches zero and the ESR
becomes significant. As the reactance becomes negligible, power dissipation
approaches PRMS = VRMS² /RESR.
Similarly to ESR, the
capacitor's leads add equivalent series inductance or ESL
to the component. This is usually significant only at relatively high
frequencies. As inductive reactance is positive and increases with frequency,
above a certain frequency capacitance will be canceled by inductance.
High-frequency engineering involves accounting for the inductance of all
connections and components.
If the conductors are separated
by a material with a small conductivity rather than a perfect dielectric, then
a small leakage current flows directly between them. The capacitor therefore
has a finite parallel resistance, and slowly discharges over time (time may
vary greatly depending on the capacitor material and quality).
Q factor
The quality
factor (or Q) of a capacitor is the ratio of its reactance to
its resistance at a given frequency, and is a measure of its efficiency. The
higher the Q factor of the capacitor, the closer it approaches the behavior of
an ideal, lossless, capacitor.
The Q factor of a capacitor can
be found through the following formula:
Where:
- is frequency in radians per second,
- is the capacitance,
- is the capacitive reactance, and
- is the series resistance of the capacitor.
Ripple current
Ripple current is the AC
component of an applied source (often a switched-mode power supply) whose
frequency may be constant or varying. Ripple current causes heat to be
generated within the capacitor due to the dielectric losses caused by the
changing field strength together with the current flow across the slightly
resistive supply lines or the electrolyte in the capacitor. The equivalent
series resistance (ESR) is the amount of internal series resistance one would
add to a perfect capacitor to model this. Some types of capacitors, primarily tantalum
and aluminum
electrolytic capacitors, as well as some film
capacitors have a specified rating value for maximum ripple current.
- Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid manganese dioxide electrolyte are limited by ripple current and generally have the highest ESR ratings in the capacitor family. Exceeding their ripple limits can lead to shorts and burning parts.
- Aluminium electrolytic capacitors, the most common type of electrolytic, suffer a shortening of life expectancy at higher ripple currents. If ripple current exceeds the rated value of the capacitor, it tends to result in explosive failure.
- Ceramic capacitors generally have no ripple current limitation and have some of the lowest ESR ratings.
- Film capacitors have very low ESR ratings but exceeding rated ripple current may cause degradation failures.
Capacitance instability
The capacitance of certain
capacitors decreases as the component ages. In ceramic
capacitors, this is caused by degradation of the dielectric. The
type of dielectric, ambient operating and storage temperatures are the most
significant aging factors, while the operating voltage has a smaller effect.
The aging process may be reversed by heating the component above the Curie point.
Aging is fastest near the beginning of life of the component, and the device
stabilizes over time. Electrolytic capacitors age as the electrolyte evaporates. In contrast with
ceramic capacitors, this occurs towards the end of life of the component.
Temperature dependence of
capacitance is usually expressed in parts per million (ppm) per °C. It can
usually be taken as a broadly linear function but can be noticeably non-linear
at the temperature extremes. The temperature coefficient can be either positive
or negative, sometimes even amongst different samples of the same type. In
other words, the spread in the range of temperature coefficients can encompass
zero. See the data sheet in the leakage current section above for an example.
Capacitors, especially ceramic
capacitors, and older designs such as paper capacitors, can absorb sound waves
resulting in a microphonic effect. Vibration moves the plates,
causing the capacitance to vary, in turn inducing AC current. Some dielectrics
also generate piezoelectricity. The resulting interference is
especially problematic in audio applications, potentially causing feedback or
unintended recording. In the reverse microphonic effect, the varying electric
field between the capacitor plates exerts a physical force, moving them as a
speaker. This can generate audible sound, but drains energy and stresses the
dielectric and the electrolyte, if any.
Current and voltage reversal
Current reversal occurs when the
current changes direction. Voltage reversal is the change of polarity in a
circuit. Reversal is generally described as the percentage of the maximum rated
voltage that reverses polarity. In DC circuits, this will usually be less than
100% (often in the range of 0 to 90%), whereas AC circuits experience 100%
reversal.
In DC circuits and pulsed
circuits, current and voltage reversal are affected by the damping
of the system. Voltage reversal is encountered in RLC circuits
that are under-damped. The current and voltage reverse direction,
forming a harmonic oscillator between the inductance
and capacitance. The current and voltage will tend to oscillate and may reverse
direction several times, with each peak being lower than the previous, until
the system reaches an equilibrium. This is often referred to as ringing. In comparison, critically damped or over-damped systems usually do not experience a voltage
reversal. Reversal is also encountered in AC circuits, where the peak current
will be equal in each direction.
For maximum life, capacitors
usually need to be able to handle the maximum amount of reversal that a system
will experience. An AC circuit will experience 100% voltage reversal, while
under-damped DC circuits will experience less than 100%. Reversal creates
excess electric fields in the dielectric, causes excess heating of both the
dielectric and the conductors, and can dramatically shorten the life expectancy
of the capacitor. Reversal ratings will often affect the design considerations
for the capacitor, from the choice of dielectric materials and voltage ratings
to the types of internal connections used.
Dielectric absorption
Capacitors made with some types
of dielectric material show "dielectric absorption" or
"soakage". On discharging a capacitor and disconnecting it, after a
short time it may develop a voltage due to hysteresis in the dielectric. This
effect can be objectionable in applications such as precision sample and
hold circuits.
Leakage
Leakage is equivalent to a
resistor in parallel with the capacitor. Constant exposure to heat can cause
dielectric breakdown and excessive leakage, a problem often seen in older
vacuum tube circuits, particularly where oiled paper and foil capacitors were
used. In many vacuum tube circuits, interstage coupling capacitors are used to
conduct a varying signal from the plate of one tube to the grid circuit of the
next stage. A leaky capacitor can cause the grid circuit voltage to be raised from
its normal bias setting, causing excessive current or signal distortion in the
downstream tube. In power amplifiers this can cause the plates to glow red, or
current limiting resistors to overheat, even fail. Similar considerations apply
to component fabricated solid-state (transistor) amplifiers, but owing to lower
heat production and the use of modern polyester dielectric barriers this
once-common problem has become relatively rare.
Electrolytic failure from disuse
Electrolytic capacitors are conditioned
when manufactured by applying a voltage sufficient to initiate the proper
internal chemical state. This state is maintained by regular use of the
equipment. If a system using electrolytic capacitors is unused for a long
period of time it can lose its conditioning, and will generally fail with a
short circuit when next operated, permanently damaging the capacitor. To
prevent this in tube equipment, the voltage can be slowly brought up using a
variable transformer (variac) on the mains, over a twenty or thirty minute
interval. Transistor equipment is more problematic as such equipment may
be sensitive to low voltage ("brownout") conditions, with excessive
currents due to improper bias in some circuits.
Capacitor types
Practical capacitors are
available commercially in many different forms. The type of internal
dielectric, the structure of the plates and the device packaging all strongly
affect the characteristics of the capacitor, and its applications.
Values available range from very
low (picofarad range; while arbitrarily low values are in principle possible,
stray (parasitic) capacitance in any circuit is the limiting factor) to about
5 kF supercapacitors.
Above approximately 1 microfarad
electrolytic capacitors are usually used because of their small size and low
cost compared with other technologies, unless their relatively poor stability,
life and polarised nature make them unsuitable. Very high capacity
supercapacitors use a porous carbon-based electrode material.
Dielectric materials
Capacitor
materials. From left: multilayer ceramic, ceramic disc, multilayer polyester
film, tubular ceramic, polystyrene, metalized polyester film, aluminum
electrolytic. Major scale divisions are in centimetres.
Most types of capacitor include
a dielectric spacer, which increases their capacitance. These dielectrics are
most often insulators. However, low capacitance devices are available with a
vacuum between their plates, which allows extremely high voltage operation and
low losses. Variable capacitors with their plates open to
the atmosphere were commonly used in radio tuning circuits. Later designs use
polymer foil dielectric between the moving and stationary plates, with no
significant air space between them.
In order to maximise the charge
that a capacitor can hold, the dielectric material needs to have as high a permittivity
as possible, while also having as high a breakdown
voltage as possible.
Several solid dielectrics are
available, including paper,
plastic,
glass,
mica and ceramic
materials. Paper was used extensively in older devices and offers relatively
high voltage performance. However, it is susceptible to water absorption, and
has been largely replaced by plastic film
capacitors. Plastics offer better stability and aging performance,
which makes them useful in timer circuits, although they may be limited to low operating temperatures and frequencies.
Ceramic capacitors are generally small, cheap and useful for high frequency
applications, although their capacitance varies strongly with voltage and they
age poorly. They are broadly categorized as class 1 dielectrics, which have
predictable variation of capacitance with temperature or class 2 dielectrics, which can operate at
higher voltage. Glass and mica capacitors are extremely reliable, stable and
tolerant to high temperatures and voltages, but are too expensive for most
mainstream applications. Electrolytic capacitors and supercapacitors
are used to store small and larger amounts of energy, respectively, ceramic
capacitors are often used in resonators, and parasitic capacitance occurs in circuits
wherever the simple conductor-insulator-conductor structure is formed
unintentionally by the configuration of the circuit layout.
Electrolytic capacitors use an aluminum
or tantalum
plate with an oxide dielectric layer. The second electrode is a liquid electrolyte,
connected to the circuit by another foil plate. Electrolytic capacitors offer
very high capacitance but suffer from poor tolerances, high instability,
gradual loss of capacitance especially when subjected to heat, and high leakage
current. Poor quality capacitors may leak electrolyte,
which is harmful to printed circuit boards. The conductivity of the electrolyte
drops at low temperatures, which increases equivalent series resistance. While
widely used for power-supply conditioning, poor high-frequency characteristics
make them unsuitable for many applications. Electrolytic capacitors will
self-degrade if unused for a period (around a year), and when full power is
applied may short circuit, permanently damaging the capacitor and usually
blowing a fuse or causing failure of rectifier diodes (for instance, in older
equipment, arcing in rectifier tubes). They can be restored before use (and
damage) by gradually applying the operating voltage, often done on antique vacuum tube
equipment over a period of 30 minutes by using a variable transformer to supply
AC power. Unfortunately, the use of this technique may be less satisfactory for
some solid state equipment, which may be damaged by operation below its normal
power range, requiring that the power supply first be isolated from the
consuming circuits. Such remedies may not be applicable to modern
high-frequency power supplies as these produce full output voltage even with
reduced input.
Tantalum capacitors offer better
frequency and temperature characteristics than aluminum, but higher dielectric absorption and leakage.
Polymer
capacitors (OS-CON, OC-CON, KO, AO) use solid conductive polymer
(or polymerized organic semiconductor) as electrolyte and offer longer life and
lower ESR at higher cost than standard
electrolytic capacitors.
A Feedthrough
is a component that, while not serving as its main use, has capacitance and is
used to conduct signals through a circuit board.
Several other types of capacitor
are available for specialist applications. Supercapacitors
store large amounts of energy. Supercapacitors made from carbon aerogel,
carbon nanotubes, or highly porous electrode materials, offer extremely high
capacitance (up to 5 kF as of 2010) and can be used in some applications
instead of rechargeable batteries. Alternating current capacitors are specifically
designed to work on line (mains) voltage AC power circuits. They are commonly
used in electric motor circuits and are often designed
to handle large currents, so they tend to be physically large. They are usually
ruggedly packaged, often in metal cases that can be easily grounded/earthed.
They also are designed with direct
current breakdown voltages of at least five times the maximum AC
voltage.
Structure
Capacitor
packages: SMD ceramic at top left; SMD tantalum at
bottom left; through-hole tantalum at top right;
through-hole electrolytic at bottom right. Major scale divisions are cm.
The arrangement of plates and
dielectric has many variations depending on the desired ratings of the
capacitor. For small values of capacitance (microfarads and less), ceramic
disks use metallic coatings, with wire leads bonded to the coating. Larger
values can be made by multiple stacks of plates and disks. Larger value
capacitors usually use a metal foil or metal film layer deposited on the
surface of a dielectric film to make the plates, and a dielectric film of
impregnated paper or plastic – these are rolled
up to save space. To reduce the series resistance and inductance for long
plates, the plates and dielectric are staggered so that connection is made at
the common edge of the rolled-up plates, not at the ends of the foil or
metalized film strips that comprise the plates.
The assembly is encased to
prevent moisture entering the dielectric – early radio equipment used a
cardboard tube sealed with wax. Modern paper or film dielectric capacitors are
dipped in a hard thermoplastic. Large capacitors for high-voltage use may have
the roll form compressed to fit into a rectangular metal case, with bolted
terminals and bushings for connections. The dielectric in larger capacitors is
often impregnated with a liquid to improve its properties.
Several
axial-lead electrolytic capacitors
Capacitors may have their
connecting leads arranged in many configurations, for example axially or
radially. "Axial" means that the leads are on a common axis,
typically the axis of the capacitor's cylindrical body – the leads extend
from opposite ends. Radial leads might more accurately be referred to as tandem;
they are rarely actually aligned along radii of the body's circle, so the term
is inexact, although universal. The leads (until bent) are usually in planes
parallel to that of the flat body of the capacitor, and extend in the same
direction; they are often parallel as manufactured.
Small, cheap discoidal ceramic
capacitors have existed since the 1930s, and remain in widespread
use. Since the 1980s, surface mount packages for capacitors have been
widely used. These packages are extremely small and lack connecting leads,
allowing them to be soldered directly onto the surface of printed circuit boards. Surface mount
components avoid undesirable high-frequency effects due to the leads and
simplify automated assembly, although manual handling is made difficult due to
their small size.
Mechanically controlled variable
capacitors allow the plate spacing to be adjusted, for example by rotating or
sliding a set of movable plates into alignment with a set of stationary plates.
Low cost variable capacitors squeeze together alternating layers of aluminum
and plastic with a screw. Electrical control of capacitance
is achievable with varactors (or varicaps), which are reverse-biased
semiconductor diodes whose depletion region
width varies with applied voltage. They are used in phase-locked
loops, amongst other applications.
Capacitor markings
Most capacitors have numbers printed
on their bodies to indicate their electrical characteristics. Larger capacitors
like electrolytics usually display the actual capacitance together with the
unit (for example, 220 μF). Smaller capacitors like ceramics, however,
use a shorthand consisting of three numbers and a letter, where the numbers
show the capacitance in pF (calculated as XY × 10Z for the numbers XYZ) and
the letter indicates the tolerance (J, K or M for ±5%, ±10% and ±20%
respectively).
Additionally, the capacitor may
show its working voltage, temperature and other relevant characteristics.
Example
A capacitor with the text 473K
330V on its body has a capacitance of 47 × 103 pF =
47 nF (±10%) with a working voltage of 330 V. The working voltage of
a capacitor is the highest voltage that can be applied across it without undue
risk of breaking down the dielectric layer.
Applications
This mylar-film,
oil-filled capacitor has very low inductance and low resistance, to provide the
high-power (70 megawatt) and high speed (1.2 microsecond) discharge needed to
operate a dye laser.
Energy storage
A capacitor can store electric
energy when disconnected from its charging circuit, so it can be used like a
temporary battery, or like other types of rechargeable energy storage system.Capacitors
are commonly used in electronic devices to maintain power supply while
batteries are being changed. (This prevents loss of information in volatile
memory.)
Conventional capacitors provide
less than 360 joules
per kilogram of energy density, whereas a conventional alkaline
battery has a density of 590 kJ/kg.
In car audio
systems, large capacitors store energy for the amplifier
to use on demand. Also for a flash tube a capacitor is used to hold the high voltage.
Pulsed power and weapons
Groups of large, specially
constructed, low-inductance high-voltage capacitors (capacitor banks)
are used to supply huge pulses of current for many pulsed power
applications. These include electromagnetic forming, Marx
generators, pulsed lasers (especially TEA lasers),
pulse forming networks, radar, fusion
research, and particle accelerators.
Large capacitor banks
(reservoir) are used as energy sources for the exploding-bridgewire detonators
or slapper detonators in nuclear
weapons and other specialty weapons. Experimental work is under way
using banks of capacitors as power sources for electromagnetic
armour
and electromagnetic railguns and coilguns.
Power conditioning
A 10 millifarad
capacitor in an amplifier power supply
Reservoir capacitors are used in power
supplies where they smooth the output of a full or half wave rectifier.
They can also be used in charge pump circuits as the energy storage
element in the generation of higher voltages than the input voltage.
Capacitors are connected in
parallel with the power circuits of most electronic devices and larger systems
(such as factories) to shunt away and conceal current fluctuations from the
primary power source to provide a "clean" power supply for signal or
control circuits. Audio equipment, for example, uses several capacitors in this
way, to shunt away power line hum before it gets into the signal circuitry. The
capacitors act as a local reserve for the DC power source, and bypass AC
currents from the power supply. This is used in car audio applications, when a
stiffening capacitor compensates for the inductance and resistance of the leads
to the lead-acid car battery.
Power factor correction
A high-voltage
capacitor bank used for power factor correction on a power transmission system.
In electric power distribution,
capacitors are used for power factor correction. Such capacitors
often come as three capacitors connected as a three phase
load.
Usually, the values of these capacitors are given not in farads but rather as a
reactive
power in volt-amperes reactive (var). The purpose is to counteract
inductive loading from devices like electric
motors and transmission lines to make the load appear to
be mostly resistive. Individual motor or lamp loads may have capacitors for
power factor correction, or larger sets of capacitors (usually with automatic
switching devices) may be installed at a load center within a building or in a
large utility substation.
Suppression and coupling
Signal coupling
Main article: capacitive coupling
Polyester film
capacitors are frequently used as coupling capacitors.
Because capacitors pass AC but
block DC signals (when charged up to the applied dc
voltage), they are often used to separate the AC and DC components of a signal.
This method is known as AC coupling or "capacitive coupling".
Here, a large value of capacitance, whose value need not be accurately
controlled, but whose reactance is small at the signal
frequency, is employed.
Decoupling
A decoupling capacitor is a capacitor used
to protect one part of a circuit from the effect of another, for instance to
suppress noise or transients. Noise caused by other circuit elements is shunted
through the capacitor, reducing the effect they have on the rest of the
circuit. It is most commonly used between the power supply and ground. An
alternative name is bypass capacitor as it is used to bypass the power
supply or other high impedance component of a circuit.
Noise filters and snubbers
When an inductive circuit is
opened, the current through the inductance collapses quickly, creating a large
voltage across the open circuit of the switch or relay. If the inductance is
large enough, the energy will generate a spark, causing the contact points to
oxidize, deteriorate, or sometimes weld together, or destroying a solid-state switch.
A snubber
capacitor across the newly opened circuit creates a path for this impulse to
bypass the contact points, thereby preserving their life; these were commonly
found in contact breaker ignition
systems, for instance. Similarly, in smaller scale circuits, the
spark may not be enough to damage the switch but will still radiate undesirable radio frequency interference (RFI), which
a filter capacitor absorbs. Snubber capacitors
are usually employed with a low-value resistor in series, to dissipate energy
and minimize RFI. Such resistor-capacitor combinations are available in a
single package.
Capacitors are also used in
parallel to interrupt units of a high-voltage circuit
breaker in order to equally distribute the voltage between these
units. In this case they are called grading capacitors.
In schematic diagrams, a
capacitor used primarily for DC charge storage is often drawn vertically in
circuit diagrams with the lower, more negative, plate drawn as an arc. The
straight plate indicates the positive terminal of the device, if it is
polarized (see electrolytic capacitor).
Motor starters
In single phase squirrel cage motors, the primary winding
within the motor housing is not capable of starting a rotational motion on the
rotor, but is capable of sustaining one. To start the motor, a secondary
"start" winding has a series non-polarized starting capacitor to introduce a lead in
the sinusoidal current. When the secondary (start) winding is placed at an
angle with respect to the primary (run) winding, a rotating electric field is
created. The force of the rotational field is not constant, but is sufficient
to start the rotor spinning. When the rotor comes close to operating speed, a
centrifugal switch (or current-sensitive relay in series with the main winding)
disconnects the capacitor. The start capacitor is typically mounted to the side
of the motor housing. These are called capacitor-start motors, that have
relatively high starting torque. Typically they can have up-to four times as
much starting torque than a split-phase motor and are used on applications such
as compressors, pressure washers and any small device requiring high starting
torques.
Capacitor-run induction motors
have a permanently connected phase-shifting capacitor in series with a second
winding. The motor is much like a two-phase induction motor.
Motor-starting capacitors are
typically non-polarized electrolytic types, while running capacitors are
conventional paper or plastic film dielectric types.
Signal processing
The energy stored in a capacitor
can be used to represent information, either in binary form, as in DRAMs, or in analogue
form, as in analog sampled filters and CCDs. Capacitors can be used in analog
circuits as components of integrators or more complex filters and in
negative feedback loop stabilization. Signal
processing circuits also use capacitors to integrate
a current signal.
Tuned circuits
Capacitors and inductors are
applied together in tuned circuits to select information in
particular frequency bands. For example, radio
receivers rely on variable capacitors to tune the station frequency.
Speakers use passive analog crossovers,
and analog equalizers use capacitors to select different audio bands.
The resonant frequency f of a tuned circuit
is a function of the inductance (L) and capacitance (C) in
series, and is given by:
where L is in henries
and C is in farads.
Sensing
Main
article: capacitive sensing
Main
article: Capacitive displacement sensor
Most capacitors are designed to
maintain a fixed physical structure. However, various factors can change the
structure of the capacitor, and the resulting change in capacitance can be used
to sense
those factors.
Changing the dielectric:
The
effects of varying the characteristics of the dielectric can be used for
sensing purposes. Capacitors with an exposed and porous dielectric can be used
to measure humidity in air. Capacitors are used to accurately measure the fuel
level in airplanes;
as the fuel covers more of a pair of plates, the circuit capacitance increases.
Changing the distance between
the plates:
Capacitors
with a flexible plate can be used to measure strain or pressure. Industrial
pressure transmitters used for process
control use pressure-sensing diaphragms, which form a capacitor
plate of an oscillator circuit. Capacitors are used as the sensor in condenser microphones, where one plate is
moved by air pressure, relative to the fixed position of the other plate. Some accelerometers
use MEMS
capacitors etched on a chip to measure the magnitude and direction of the
acceleration vector. They are used to detect changes in acceleration, in tilt
sensors, or to detect free fall, as sensors triggering airbag
deployment, and in many other applications. Some fingerprint sensors use capacitors.
Additionally, a user can adjust the pitch of a theremin
musical instrument by moving his hand since this changes the effective
capacitance between the user's hand and the antenna.
Changing the effective area of
the plates:
Capacitive
touch
switches are now used on many consumer electronic products.
Hazards and safety
Capacitors may retain a charge
long after power is removed from a circuit; this charge can cause dangerous or
even potentially fatal shocks or damage connected equipment. For
example, even a seemingly innocuous device such as a disposable camera flash
unit powered by a 1.5 volt AA battery contains a capacitor which may be
charged to over 300 volts. This is easily capable of delivering a shock.
Service procedures for electronic devices usually include instructions to
discharge large or high-voltage capacitors, for instance using a Brinkley
stick. Capacitors may also have built-in discharge resistors to
dissipate stored energy to a safe level within a few seconds after power is
removed. High-voltage capacitors are stored with the terminals shorted,
as protection from potentially dangerous voltages due to dielectric absorption.
Some old, large oil-filled paper
or plastic film capacitors contain polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). It is
known that waste PCBs can leak into groundwater
under landfills.
Capacitors containing PCB were labelled as containing "Askarel" and
several other trade names. PCB-filled paper capacitors are found in very old
(pre-1975) fluorescent lamp ballasts, and other
applications.
Capacitors may catastrophically fail when subjected to
voltages or currents beyond their rating, or as they reach their normal end of
life. Dielectric or metal interconnection failures may create arcing that
vaporizes the dielectric fluid, resulting in case bulging, rupture, or even an explosion.
Capacitors used in RF or sustained high-current applications can
overheat, especially in the center of the capacitor rolls. Capacitors used
within high-energy capacitor banks can violently explode when a short in one
capacitor causes sudden dumping of energy stored in the rest of the bank into
the failing unit. High voltage vacuum capacitors can generate soft X-rays even
during normal operation. Proper containment, fusing, and preventive maintenance
can help to minimize these hazards.
High-voltage capacitors can
benefit from a pre-charge to limit in-rush currents at power-up of high
voltage direct current (HVDC) circuits. This will extend the life of the
component and may mitigate high-voltage hazards.
Swollen caps of
electrolytic capacitors – special design of semi-cut caps prevents capacitors
from bursting
This
high-energy capacitor from a defibrillator
can deliver over 500 joules of energy. A resistor is connected between the
terminals for safety, to allow the stored energy to be released.