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{{short description|Passive two-terminal electronic component that stores electrical energy in an electric field}}
]
{{About|the electronic component|the physical phenomenon|Capacitance|an overview of types|Capacitor types}}
{{Redirect|Capacitive|the term used when referring to touchscreens|Capacitive sensing}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2022|cs1-dates=y}}
{{Infobox electronic component
| name = Capacitor
| image = Capacitors (7189597135).jpg
| type = ]
| working_principle = ]
| invented = {{ubl
| ]
| ]
}}
| symbol = ]
| invention_Year = 1745
| terminal_number = 2
}}


In ], a '''capacitor''' is a device that stores ] by accumulating ]s on two closely spaced surfaces that are insulated from each other. The capacitor was originally known as the '''condenser''',<ref name="duff">{{cite book
A '''capacitor''' (occasionally referred to using the older term '''condenser''') is a device that stores ] in the ] created between a pair of conductors on which equal but opposite electric charges have been placed. Capacitors have thin conducting plates (usually made of metal), separated by a layer of dielectric, then stacked or rolled to form a compact device.
|author-last=Duff
|author-first=Wilmer
|title=A Text-Book of Physics
|date=1916
|orig-date=1908
|publisher=P. Blakiston's Son & Co.
|location=Philadelphia
|page=361
|edition=4th |url=https://archive.org/stream/atextbookphysic00carmgoog#page/n378/mode/2up |access-date=1 December 2016
}}</ref> a term still encountered in a few compound names, such as the '']''. It is a ] ] with two ].


The utility of a capacitor depends on its ]. While some capacitance exists between any two electrical conductors in proximity in a ], a capacitor is a component designed specifically to add capacitance to some part of the circuit.
== Physics of the capacitor ==
=== Overview ===


The physical form and construction of practical capacitors vary widely and many ] are in common use. Most capacitors contain at least two ]s, often in the form of metallic plates or surfaces separated by a ] medium. A conductor may be a foil, thin film, ] bead of metal, or an ]. The nonconducting dielectric acts to increase the capacitor's charge capacity. Materials commonly used as dielectrics include ], ], ], ], ], air, and ]. When an ] difference (a ]) is applied across the terminals of a capacitor, for example when a capacitor is connected across a battery, an ] develops across the dielectric, causing a net positive ] to collect on one plate and net negative charge to collect on the other plate. No current actually flows through a ]. However, there is a flow of charge through the source circuit. If the condition is maintained sufficiently long, the current through the source circuit ceases. If a time-varying voltage is applied across the leads of the capacitor, the source experiences an ongoing current due to the charging and discharging cycles of the capacitor.
'''Ben Fong is an moron.'''


Capacitors are widely used as parts of ]s in many common electrical devices. Unlike a ], an ideal capacitor does not dissipate energy, although real-life capacitors do dissipate a small amount (see ]).
Typical designs consist of two ]s or plates, each of which stores an opposite charge. These two plates are conductive and are separated by an ] or ''].'' The charge is stored at the surface of the plates, at the boundary with the dielectric. Because each plate stores an equal but opposite charge, the ''total'' charge in the device is always zero.


The earliest forms of capacitors were created in the 1740s, when European experimenters discovered that electric charge could be stored in water-filled glass jars that came to be known as ]s. Today, capacitors are widely used in ]s for blocking ] while allowing ] to pass. In ] networks, they smooth the output of ]. In ] they tune ]s to particular ]. In ] systems, they stabilize voltage and power flow.<ref>{{cite book |title=Electrical and Electronic Principles and Technology |author-last=Bird |author-first=John |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=A1tAHm_5sl0C}} |date=2010 |publisher=Routledge |pages=63–76 |isbn=978-0-08089056-2 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref> The property of energy storage in capacitors was exploited as dynamic memory in early digital computers,<ref name="floyd">{{cite book |author-last=Floyd |author-first=Thomas |title=Electronic Devices |date=2005 |orig-date=1984 |publisher=] |location=Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, USA |isbn=0-13-127827-4 |page=10 |edition=7th}}</ref> and still is in modern ].
] is created in the region between the plates that is proportional to the amount of accumulated charge. This electric field creates a potential difference ''V'' = ''E&middot;d'' across the plates of this simple parallel-plate capacitor.]]
]


=== Capacitance === ==History==
{{See also|Leyden jar}}
Natural capacitors have existed since prehistoric times. The most common example of natural capacitance are the static charges accumulated between clouds in the sky and the surface of the Earth, where the air between them serves as the dielectric. This results in bolts of ] when the breakdown voltage of the air is exceeded.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/electromag/java/lightning/index.html#:~:text=An+Example+Of+A+Natural,ionizing+radiation,+and+each+other.|title=Molecular Expressions: Electricity and Magnetism - Interactive Java Tutorials: Lightning: A Natural Capacitor|website=micro.magnet.fsu.edu}}</ref>


]s in ], ], the ]]]
The capacitor's ] (''C'') is a measure of the amount of ] (''Q'') stored on each plate for a given ] or ''voltage'' (''V'') which appears between the plates:
In October 1745, ] of ], Germany, found that ] could be stored by connecting a high-voltage ] by a wire to a volume of water in a hand-held glass jar.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/sci/history/AHistoryofScienceVolumeII/chap49.html |title=A History of Science Volume II, Part VI: The Leyden Jar Discovered |author-last=Williams |author-first=Henry Smith |access-date=2013-03-17 |archive-date=2007-10-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071024034729/http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/sci/history/AHistoryofScienceVolumeII/chap49.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Von Kleist's hand and the water acted as conductors and the jar as a ] (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 ] invented a similar capacitor, which was named the ], after the ] where he worked.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Story of Electrical and Magnetic Measurements: From 500 BC to the 1940s |author-last=Keithley |author-first=Joseph F. |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=uwgNAtqSHuQC|page=23}} |date=1999 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |page=23 |isbn=978-0780311930 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref> 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."<ref>{{cite book |title=Electricity in Every-day Life |author-last=Houston |author-first=Edwin J. |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=ko9BAAAAIAAJ|page=71}} |date=1905 |publisher=P. F. Collier & Son |page=71 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref>
:<math>C = \frac{Q}{V}</math>


] was the first to combine several jars in parallel to increase the charge storage capacity.<ref name="Benjamin1895">{{cite book |author-last=Benjamin |author-first=Park |title=A History of Electricity: (The Intellectual Rise in Electricity) from Antiquity to the Days of Benjamin Franklin |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hkMPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA523 |date=1895 |publisher=] |pages=522–524}}</ref> ] investigated the ] 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",<ref>{{cite book |title=Benjamin Franklin: An American Life |author-last=Isaacson |author-first=Walter |author-link=Walter Isaacson |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=oIW915dDMBwC|page=135}}|date=2003 |publisher=Simon and Schuster |page=136 |isbn=978-0-74326084-8 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Experiments & Observations on Electricity: Letter IV to Peter Collinson |url=http://www.chemteam.info/Chem-History/Franklin-1749/Franklin-1749-all.pdf |date=1749-04-29 |author-first=Benjamin |author-last=Franklin |page=28 |access-date=2009-08-09}}</ref> (denoting the increase of power with a row of similar units as in a ]), subsequently applied to ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Franklin and Electrostatics&nbsp;– Ben Franklin as my Lab Partner |url=http://www.compadre.org/Repository/document/ServeFile.cfm?ID=3430&DocID=2402&DocFID=3925&Attachment=1 |author-last=Morse |author-first=Robert A. |page=23 |date=September 2004 |format=PDF |work=Wright Center for Science Education |publisher=Tufts University |quote=After Volta's discovery of the electrochemical cell in 1800, the term was then applied to a group of electrochemical cells |access-date=2009-08-10}}</ref> In 1747, Leyden jars were made by coating the inside and outside of jars with metal foil, leaving a space at the mouth to prevent arcing between the foils.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wolf|first1=A|last2=McKie|first2=D.|title=A history of science, technology and philosophy in the 18th century|date=1962|publisher=George Allen & Unwin|location=London|page=224|edition=2nd|url=https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.460063/2015.460063.A-History#page/n261/mode/2up}}</ref> The earliest unit of capacitance was the ], equivalent to about 1.11 ].<ref>{{cite web |title=eFunda: Glossary: Units: Electric Capacitance: Jar |url=http://www.efunda.com/glossary/units/units--electric_capacitance--jar.cfm |publisher=eFunda |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref>
In ] units, a capacitor has a capacitance of one ] when one ] of charge causes a potential difference of one ] across the plates. Since the farad is a very large unit, values of capacitors are usually expressed in microfarads (&micro;F), nanofarads (nF) or picofarads (pF).


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 ] (]) created a demand for standard capacitors, and the steady move to higher ] required capacitors with lower ]. More compact construction methods began to be used, such as a flexible dielectric sheet (like oiled paper) sandwiched between sheets of metal foil, rolled or folded into a small package.
The '''capacitance''' is proportional to the surface area of the conducting plate and inversely proportional to the distance between the plates. It is also proportional to the ] of the ] (that is, non-]) substance that separates the plates.


{{anchor|Condenser}}
=== Energy ===


] for Dubilier condensers, for use in wireless receiving sets|upright=1.5]]
As electric charge accumulates on the plates of a capacitor, a voltage develops across the capacitor due to the electric field of the accumulated charge. Ever increasing work must be done against this ever increasing electric field as more charge accumulates. The ] (measured in ]s, in ]) stored in a capacitor is equal to the amount of work required to establish the voltage across the capacitor, and therefore the electric field. The energy stored is given by:


Early capacitors were known as ''condensers'', a term that is still occasionally used today, particularly in high power applications, such as automotive systems. The term ''condensatore'' was used by ] in 1780 to refer to a device, similar to his ], he developed to measure electricity, and translated in 1782 as ''condenser'',<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pancaldi |first1=G. |title=Volta: Science and culture in the Age of Enlightenment |date=2003 |publisher=Princeton University Press |location=Princeton |isbn=0691096856 |pages=112–126}}</ref> where the name referred to the device's ability to store a higher density of electric charge than was possible with an isolated conductor.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=Sketch of Alessandro Volta |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=eCADAAAAMBAJ|page=117}} |journal=The Popular Science Monthly |publisher=Bonnier Corporation |location=New York |pages=118–119 |issn=0161-7370 |date=May 1892}}</ref><ref name="duff"/> The term became deprecated because of the ambiguous meaning of ], with ''capacitor'' becoming the recommended term in the UK from 1926,<ref>British Engineering Standards Association, ''British Standard Glossary of Terms in Electrical Engineering'', C. Lockwood & Son, 1926</ref> while the change occurred considerably later in the United States.
:<math> E_\mathrm{stored} = {1 \over 2} C V^2 </math>


Since the beginning of the study of ], non-conductive materials like ], ], ] and ] have been used as ]. Decades later, these materials were also well-suited for use as the dielectric for the first capacitors.
where V is the voltage across the capacitor.
Paper capacitors, made by sandwiching a strip of impregnated paper between strips of metal and rolling the result into a cylinder, were commonly used in the late 19th century; their manufacture started in 1876,<ref name="Boggs">{{cite journal |author-last2=Jow |author-first2=T. Richard |author-last3=Boggs |author-first3=Steven |date=January 2010 |title=Historical Introduction to Capacitor Technology |journal=IEEE Electrical Insulation Magazine |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=20–25 |doi=10.1109/mei.2010.5383924 |author-first1=Janet |author-last1=Ho |s2cid=23077215 |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1232215}}</ref> and they were used from the early 20th century as ]s in ].


Porcelain was used in the first ]s. In the early years of ]'s wireless transmitting apparatus, porcelain capacitors were used for high voltage and high frequency application in the ]s. On the receiver side, smaller ] were used for ]. Mica capacitors were invented in 1909 by William Dubilier. Prior to World War II, mica was the most common dielectric for capacitors in the United States.<ref name="Boggs"/>
=== In electric circuits ===


Charles Pollak (born ]), the inventor of the first ]s, found out that the oxide layer on an aluminum anode remained stable in a neutral or alkaline ], even when the power was switched off. In 1896 he was granted U.S. Patent No. 672,913 for an "Electric liquid capacitor with aluminum electrodes". Solid electrolyte ]s were invented by ] in the early 1950s as a miniaturized and more reliable low-voltage support capacitor to complement their newly invented ].
For an ideal capacitor, the capacitor ] is proportional to the time rate of change of the ] across the capacitor where the constant of proportionality is the ], C:


With the development of plastic materials by organic chemists during the ], the capacitor industry began to replace paper with thinner polymer films. One very early development in ]s was described in British Patent 587,953 in 1944.<ref name="Boggs"/>
:<math>i(t) = C \frac{dv(t)}{dt}</math>


Electric double-layer capacitors (now ]s) were invented in 1957 when H. Becker developed a "Low voltage electrolytic capacitor with porous carbon electrodes".<ref name="Boggs"/><ref>{{cite patent |country=US |number=2800616 |title=Low voltage electrolytic capacitor |gdate=1957-07-23 |invent1=Becker, H. I.}}</ref><ref>A brief history of supercapacitors AUTUMN 2007 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140106032318/http://www.cantecsystems.com/ccrdocs/brief-history-of-supercapacitors.pdf |date=2014-01-06}}</ref> He believed that the energy was stored as a charge in the carbon pores used in his capacitor as in the pores of the etched foils of electrolytic capacitors. Because the double layer mechanism was not known by him at the time, he wrote in the patent: "It is not known exactly what is taking place in the component if it is used for energy storage, but it leads to an extremely high capacity."
The ] in the ] can be written as


The MOS capacitor was later widely adopted as a storage capacitor in ]s, and as the basic building block of the ] (CCD) in ] technology.<ref>{{cite book |author-last1=Sze |author-first1=Simon Min |author-link1=Simon Sze |author-last2=Lee |author-first2=Ming-Kwei |chapter=MOS Capacitor and MOSFET |title=Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology |date=May 2012 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-47053794-7 |url=https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/semiconductor-devices-physics/9780470537947/13_chap05.html |access-date=2019-10-06}}</ref> In 1966, Dr. ] invented modern DRAM architecture, combining a single MOS transistor per capacitor.<ref name="ibm100">{{cite web |date=9 August 2017 |title=DRAM |url=https://www.ibm.com/ibm/history/ibm100/us/en/icons/dram/ |access-date=20 September 2019 |website=IBM100 |publisher=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author-last=Sze |author-first=Simon M. |author-link=Simon Sze |url=http://www.fulviofrisone.com/attachments/article/453/Semiconductor.Devices_Physics.Technology_Sze.2ndEd_Wiley_2002.pdf |title=Semiconductor Devices: Physics and Technology |date=2002 |publisher=] |isbn=0-471-33372-7 |edition=2nd |page=214 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230123184804/http://www.fulviofrisone.com/attachments/article/453/Semiconductor.Devices_Physics.Technology_Sze.2ndEd_Wiley_2002.pdf |archive-date=January 23, 2023}}</ref>
:<math>Z = \frac{1}{j \omega C} = - j X_C </math>.


==Theory of operation==
This shows that a capacitor has a high impedance to low-frequency signals (when &omega; is small) and a low impedance to high-frequency signals (when &omega; is large). This frequency-selective behaviour accounts for most uses of the capacitor (see ], below).
{{Main|Capacitance}}


===Overview===
Applying the ], the impedance becomes:
]
]
A capacitor consists of two ] separated by a non-conductive region.{{sfn|Ulaby|1999|p=168}} The non-conductive region can either be a ] or an electrical insulator material known as a ]. Examples of dielectric media are glass, air, paper, plastic, ceramic, and even a ] ] chemically identical to the conductors. From ] a charge on one conductor will exert a force on the ]s within the other conductor, attracting opposite polarity charge and repelling like polarity charges, thus an opposite polarity charge will be induced on the surface of the other conductor. The conductors thus hold equal and opposite charges on their facing surfaces,{{sfn|Ulaby|1999|p=157}} and the dielectric develops an electric field.


An ideal capacitor is characterized by a constant ] ''C'', in ]s in the ] system of units, defined as the ratio of the positive or negative charge ''Q'' on each conductor to the voltage ''V'' between them:{{sfn|Ulaby|1999|p=168}}
:<math>Z=\frac{1}{sC}</math>
<math display="block">C= \frac{Q}{V}</math>
A capacitance of one ] (F) means that one ] of charge on each conductor causes a voltage of one ] across the device.{{sfn|Ulaby|1999|p=69}} 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 when the conductors are separated, yielding a larger capacitance.


In practical devices, charge build-up sometimes affects the capacitor mechanically, causing its capacitance to vary. In this case, capacitance is defined in terms of incremental changes:
== Capacitor networks ==
<math display="block">C= \frac{\mathrm{d}Q}{\mathrm{d}V}</math>


===Hydraulic analogy===
Capacitors in a ] configuration each have the same potential difference (voltage). To find their total equivalent capacitance (''C<sub>eq</sub>''):
], a capacitor is analogous to an elastic diaphragm within a pipe. This animation shows a diaphragm being stretched and un-stretched, which is analogous to a capacitor being charged and discharged.]]
In the ], voltage is analogous to water pressure and electrical current through a wire is analogous to water flow through a pipe. A capacitor is like an elastic diaphragm within the pipe. Although water cannot pass through the diaphragm, it moves as the diaphragm stretches or un-stretches.
* Capacitance is analogous to diaphragm ]. In the same way that the ratio of charge differential to voltage would be greater for a larger capacitance value (<math>C=Q / V </math>), the ratio of water displacement to pressure would be greater for a diaphragm that flexes more readily.
* In an AC circuit, a capacitor behaves like a diaphragm in a pipe, allowing the charge to move on both sides of the dielectric while no electrons actually pass through. For DC circuits, a capacitor is analogous to a ], storing the energy until pressure is released. Similarly, they can be used to smooth the flow of electricity in ] DC circuits in the same way an accumulator damps surges from a hydraulic pump.
* Charged capacitors and stretched diaphragms both store ]. The more a capacitor is charged, the higher the voltage across the plates (<math>V = Q / C </math>). Likewise, the greater the displaced water volume, the greater the elastic potential energy.
* Electrical current affects the charge differential across a capacitor just as the flow of water affects the volume differential across a diaphragm.
* Just as capacitors experience ] when subjected to high voltages, diaphragms burst under extreme pressures.
* Just as capacitors block DC while passing AC, diaphragms displace no water unless there is a change in pressure.


=== Circuit equivalence at short-time limit and long-time limit ===
:]
In a circuit, a capacitor can behave differently at different time instants. However, it is usually easy to think about the short-time limit and long-time limit:
* In the long-time limit, after the charging/discharging current has saturated the capacitor, no current would come into (or get out of) either side of the capacitor; Therefore, the long-time equivalence of capacitor is an open circuit.
* In the short-time limit, if the capacitor starts with a certain voltage V, since the voltage drop on the capacitor is known at this instant, we can replace it with an ideal voltage source of voltage V. Specifically, if V=0 (capacitor is uncharged), the short-time equivalence of a capacitor is a short circuit.


===Parallel-plate capacitor===
:<math> C_{eq} = C_1 + C_2 + \cdots + C_n \,</math>
]
]
The simplest model of a capacitor consists of two thin parallel conductive plates each with an area of <math>A</math> separated by a uniform gap of thickness <math>d</math> filled with a dielectric of ] <math>\varepsilon</math>. It is assumed the gap <math>d</math> is much smaller than the dimensions of the plates. This model applies well to many practical capacitors which are constructed of metal sheets separated by a thin layer of insulating dielectric, since manufacturers try to keep the dielectric very uniform in thickness to avoid thin spots which can cause failure of the capacitor.


Since the separation between the plates is uniform over the plate area, the electric field between the plates <math>E</math> is constant, and directed perpendicularly to the plate surface, except for an area near the edges of the plates where the field decreases because the electric field lines "bulge" out of the sides of the capacitor. This "fringing field" area is approximately the same width as the plate separation, <math>d</math>, and assuming <math>d</math> is small compared to the plate dimensions, it is small enough to be ignored. Therefore, if a charge of <math>+Q</math> is placed on one plate and <math>-Q</math> on the other plate (the situation for unevenly charged plates is discussed below), the charge on each plate will be spread evenly in a ] layer of constant ] <math>\sigma = \pm Q/A</math> coulombs per square meter, on the inside surface of each plate. From ] the magnitude of the electric field between the plates is <math>E = \sigma / \varepsilon</math>. The voltage(difference) <math>V</math> between the plates is defined as the ] of the electric field over a line (in the z-direction) from one plate to another
The current through capacitors in ] stays the same, but the voltage across each capacitor can be different. The sum of the potential differences (voltage) is equal to the total voltage. To find their total capacitance:
<math display="block">V= \int_0^d E(z)\,\mathrm{d}z = Ed = \frac{\sigma}{\varepsilon}d = \frac{Qd}{\varepsilon A}</math>
The capacitance is defined as <math>C = Q/V</math>. Substituting <math>V</math> above into this equation
{{Equation box 1 |indent =: |cellpadding = 5 |border = 1 |border colour = black |background colour = transparent
|equation = <math>C = \frac{\varepsilon A}{d}</math>
}}
Therefore, in a capacitor the highest capacitance is achieved with a high ] dielectric material, large plate area, and small separation between the plates.


Since the area <math>A</math> of the plates increases with the square of the linear dimensions and the separation <math>d</math> increases linearly, the capacitance scales with the linear dimension of a capacitor (<math>C \varpropto L</math>), or as the cube root of the volume.
:]


A parallel plate capacitor can only store a finite amount of energy before ] occurs. The capacitor's dielectric material has a ] ''U''<sub>d</sub> which sets the ] at {{math|1=''V'' = ''V''<sub>bd</sub> = ''U''<sub>d</sub>''d''}}. The maximum energy that the capacitor can store is therefore
:<math> \frac{1}{C_{eq}} = \frac{1}{C_1} + \frac{1}{C_2} + \cdots + \frac{1}{C_n}</math>
<math display="block">E = \frac{1}{2} CV^2 = \frac{1}{2} \frac{\varepsilon A}{d} \left(U_d d\right)^2 = \frac{1}{2} \varepsilon A d U_d^2</math>


The maximum energy is a function of dielectric volume, ], and ]. Changing the plate area and the separation between the plates while maintaining the same volume causes no change of the maximum amount of energy that the capacitor can store, so long as the distance between plates remains much smaller than both the length and width of the plates. 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 increase the effective capacitance of the capacitor. This is sometimes called ]. For some simple capacitor geometries this additional capacitance term can be calculated analytically.<ref name="Pillai1970">{{Cite journal |author-last=Pillai |author-first=K. P. P. |title=Fringing field of finite parallel-plate capacitors |doi=10.1049/piee.1970.0232 |journal=Proceedings of the Institution of Electrical Engineers |volume=117 |issue=6 |pages=1201–1204 |date=1970}}</ref> It becomes negligibly small when the ratios of plate width to separation and length to separation are large.
One possible reason to connect capacitors in series is to increase the overall voltage rating. In practice, a very large resistor might be connected across each capacitor to divide the total voltage appropriately for the individual ratings.


For unevenly charged plates:
== Capacitor/inductor duality ==
* If one plate is charged with <math>Q_1</math> while the other is charged with <math>Q_2</math>, and if both plates are separated from other materials in the environment, then the inner surface of the first plate will have <math display="inline">\frac{Q_1 - Q_2}{2}</math>, and the inner surface of the second plated will have <math display="inline">-\frac{Q_1 - Q_2}{2}</math> charge.{{citation needed|date=January 2020}} Therefore, the voltage <math>V</math> between the plates is <math display="inline">V = \frac{Q_1 - Q_2}{2C}</math>. Note that the outer surface of both plates will have <math display="inline">\frac{Q_1 + Q_2}{2}</math>, but those charges do not affect the voltage between the plates.
* If one plate is charged with <math>Q_1</math> while the other is charged with <math>Q_2</math>, and if the second plate is connected to ground, then the inner surface of the first plate will have <math>Q_1</math>, and the inner surface of the second plated will have <math>-Q_1</math>. Therefore, the voltage <math>V</math> between the plates is <math display="inline">V = \frac {Q_1} C</math>. Note that the outer surface of both plates will have zero charge.


===Interleaved capacitor===
In mathematical terms, the ideal capacitor can be considered as an inverse of the ideal ], because the voltage-current equations of the two devices can be transformed into one another by exchanging the voltage and current terms.
]
For <math>n</math> number of plates in a capacitor, the total capacitance would be
<math display="block">C = \varepsilon_o\frac{A}{d} (n-1)</math>
where <math>C = \varepsilon_o A / d</math> is the capacitance for a single plate and <math>n</math> is the number of interleaved plates.


As shown to the figure on the right, the interleaved plates can be seen as parallel plates connected to each other. Every pair of adjacent plates acts as a separate capacitor; the number of pairs is always one less than the number of plates, hence the <math>(n-1)</math> multiplier.
Just as two or more inductors can be magnetically coupled to make a ], two or more charged conductors can be electrostatically coupled to make a capacitor. The ''mutual capacitance'' of two conductors is defined as the current that flows in one when the voltage across the other changes by unit voltage in unit time.


===Energy stored in a capacitor===
To increase the charge and voltage on a capacitor, ] must be done by an external power source to move charge from the negative to the positive plate against the opposing force of the electric field.<ref name="Purcell">{{cite book |author-last=Purcell |author-first=Edward |title=Electricity and Magnetism, 2nd Ed. |publisher=] |date=2011 |pages=110–111 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z3bkNh6h4WEC&pg=PA110 |isbn=978-1-13950355-6}}</ref><ref name="Serway">{{cite book |author-last1=Serway |author-first1=Raymond A. |author-last2=Vuille |author-first2=Chris |title=College Physics, 10th Ed. |publisher=Cengage Learning |date=2014 |pages=582 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xETAAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA582 |isbn=978-1-30514282-4}}</ref> If the voltage on the capacitor is <math>V</math>, the work <math>dW</math> required to move a small increment of charge <math>dq</math> from the negative to the positive plate is <math>dW = Vdq</math>. The energy is stored in the increased electric field between the plates. The total energy <math>W</math> stored in a capacitor (expressed in ]s) is equal to the total work done in establishing the electric field from an uncharged state.<ref name="Hammond2013">{{cite book |author-last=Hammond |author-first=P. |title=Electromagnetism for Engineers: An Introductory Course |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=-8QgBQAAQBAJ |page=44}} |date=2013 |publisher=Elsevier Science |isbn=978-1-48314978-3 |pages=44–45}}</ref><ref name="Serway"/><ref name="Purcell"/>
<math display="block">W = \int_0^Q V(q) \, \mathrm{d}q = \int_0^Q \frac{q}{C} \, \mathrm{d}q = \frac{1}{2} \frac{Q^2}{C} = \frac{1}{2} VQ = \frac{1}{2} C V^2</math>
where <math>Q</math> is the charge stored in the capacitor, <math>V</math> is the voltage across the capacitor, and <math>C</math> is the capacitance. This potential energy will remain in the capacitor until the charge is removed. If charge is allowed to move back from the positive to the negative plate, for example by connecting a circuit with resistance between the plates, the charge moving under the influence of the electric field will do work on the external circuit.


If the gap between the capacitor plates <math>d</math> is constant, as in the parallel plate model above, the electric field between the plates will be uniform (neglecting fringing fields) and will have a constant value <math>E = V/d</math>. In this case the stored energy can be calculated from the electric field strength
<math display="block">W = \frac{1}{2}CV^2 = \frac{1}{2}\frac{\varepsilon A}{d}\left(Ed\right)^2 = \frac{1}{2} \varepsilon AdE^2 = \frac{1}{2} \varepsilon E^2 (\text{volume of electric field})</math>
The last formula above is equal to the energy density per unit volume in the electric field multiplied by the volume of field between the plates, confirming that the energy in the capacitor is stored in its electric field.


===Current–voltage relation===
== Practical capacitors ==
]
=== Common types of fixed capacitor ===
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. Actual charges&nbsp;– electrons&nbsp;– cannot pass through the dielectric of an ''ideal'' capacitor.{{NoteTag|Most real capacitors may have a small dielectric leakage current that passes through the resistive dielectric layer in between the plates.}} Rather, one 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 ] of the current as well as proportional to the voltage, as discussed above. As with any ], a ] is added to represent the initial voltage ''V''(''t''<sub>0</sub>). This is the integral form of the capacitor equation:{{sfn|Dorf|Svoboda|2001|p=263}}
<math display="block">V(t) = \frac{Q(t)}{C} = V(t_0) + \frac{1}{C}\int_{t_0}^t I(\tau) \, \mathrm{d}\tau</math>


Taking the derivative of this and multiplying by ''C'' yields the derivative form:{{sfn|Dorf|Svoboda|2001|p=260}}
Many types of Discrete capacitors are available commercially, with capacitances ranging from the picofarad range to more than a Farad, and voltage ratings up to kilovolts. In general, the higher the capacitance and voltage rating, the larger the physical size of the capacitor and the higher the cost. ]s for discrete capacitors are usually specified such as 5 or 10%, or broader ranges for some types. Adjustable versions have stability issues. Another figure of merit for analog components is stability with respect to time and temperature, or ''drift''.
<math display="block">I(t) = \frac{\mathrm{d}Q(t)}{\mathrm{d}t} = C\frac{\mathrm{d}V(t)}{\mathrm{d}t}</math>
for {{mvar|C}} independent of time, voltage and electric charge.
Capacitors are often classified according to the material used as the dielectric with the dielectrics divided into two broad categories: bulk insulators and metal-oxide films (so-called ''electrolytic capacitors'').


The ] of the capacitor is the ], which stores energy in a ] rather than an electric field. Its current-voltage relation is obtained by exchanging current and voltage in the capacitor equations and replacing {{mvar|C}} with the inductance&nbsp;{{mvar|L}}.
==== Capacitors using bulk insulators ====


===DC circuits===
*'''Air-gap''': An air-gap capacitor is highly resistant to breakdown from arcing, because any air that becomes ionized is soon replaced by fresh air . Large-valued tunable capacitors can be made this way. Good for resonating HF antennas.
{{See also|RC circuit}}
*'''Ceramic''': The main differences between ceramic dielectric types are the temperature coefficient of capacitance, and the dielectric loss. C0G and NP0 (negative-positive-zero, i.e. &plusmn;0) dielectrics have the lowest losses, and are used in filters, as timing elements, and for balancing ]s. Ceramic capacitors tend to have low inductance because of their small size. NP0 refers to the shape of the capacitor's temperature coefficient graph (how much the capacitance changes with temperature). NP0 means that the graph is flat and the device is not affected by temperature changes.
]
**''']''' or ''']''' - Typically 4.7 pF to 0.047 &micro;F, 5%. High tolerance and temperature performance. Larger and more expensive.
A series circuit containing only a ], a capacitor, a switch and a constant DC source of voltage {{math|''V''<sub>0</sub>}} is known as a ''charging circuit''.<ref name="ChargingCircuit">{{cite web |title=Capacitor charging and discharging |url=http://www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_6/chpt_3/17.html |work=All About Circuits |access-date=2009-02-19}}</ref> If the capacitor is initially uncharged while the switch is open, and the switch is closed at {{math|1=''t'' = 0}}, it follows from ] that
**''']''' - Typical 3300 pF to 0.33 &micro;F, 10%. Good for non-critical coupling, timing applications. Subject to ].
<math display="block">V_0 = v_\text{resistor}(t) + v_\text{capacitor}(t) = i(t) R + \frac{1}{C} \int_{t_0}^t i(\tau) \, \mathrm{d}\tau</math>
**''']''' - Typical 0.01 &micro;F to 2.2 &micro;F, 20%. Good for bypass, coupling applications. Low price and small size. Subject to ].
**'''Ceramic chip''': 1% accurate, values up to about 1 &mu;F, typically made from ] (PZT) ] ceramic
*'''Glass''' - used to form extremely stable, reliable capacitors.
*'''Paper''' - common in antique radio equipment, paper dielectric and aluminum foil layers rolled into a cylinder and sealed with wax. Low values up to a few &mu;F, working voltage up to several hundred volts, oil-impregnated bathtub types to 5,000 V used for motor starting and high-voltage power supplies.
*''']''', ]: (from about 1 nF to 1 &mu;F) signal capacitors, integrators.
*''']''': (usually in the picofarad range) stable signal capacitors.
*''']''': low-loss, high voltage, resistant to breakdown, signal capacitors.
*''']''' or ] &trade;: higher performing and more expensive than other plastic dielectrics.
*]ed ''']''': These are fast and stable for HF and low VHF RF circuits, but expensive.


Taking the derivative and multiplying by ''C'', gives a ]:
*''']''': Finally, metal conductive areas in different layers of a multi-layer printed circuit board can act as a highly stable capacitor. It is common industry practice to fill unused areas of one PCB layer with the ground conductor and another layer with the power conductor, forming a large distributed capacitor between the layers, or to make power traces broader than signal traces.
<math display="block">RC \frac{\mathrm{d}i(t)}{\mathrm{d}t} + i(t) = 0</math>


At {{math|1=''t'' = 0}}, the voltage across the capacitor is zero and the voltage across the resistor is ''V''<sub>0</sub>. The initial current is then {{math|1=''I''(0) = ''V''<sub>0</sub>/''R''}}. With this assumption, solving the differential equation yields
====Electrolytic capacitors====
<math display="block">\begin{align}
I(t) &= \frac{V_0}{R} e^{-t / \tau_0} \\
V(t) &= V_0 \left( 1 - e^{-t / \tau_0}\right) \\
Q(t) &= C V_0 \left( 1 - e^{-t / \tau_0}\right)
\end{align}</math>
where {{math|1=''τ''<sub>0</sub> = ''RC''}} is the '']'' of the system. As the capacitor reaches equilibrium with the source voltage, the voltages across the resistor and the current through the entire circuit ]. In the case of a ''discharging'' capacitor, the capacitor's initial voltage ({{math|''V''<sub>Ci</sub>}}) replaces {{math|''V''<sub>0</sub>}}. The equations become
<math display="block">\begin{align}
I(t) &= \frac{V_{Ci}}{R} e^{-t / \tau_0} \\
V(t) &= V_{Ci} \, e^{-t / \tau_0} \\
Q(t) &= C \, V_{Ci} \, e^{-t / \tau_0}
\end{align}</math>


===AC circuits===
''main article: ]''
{{See also|reactance (electronics)|electrical impedance#Deriving the device-specific impedances}}
<!-- should I move all but a brief summary to that article ? --] 22:46, 1 Jun 2005 (UTC) -->
], the vector sum of ] and ], describes the phase difference and the ratio of amplitudes between sinusoidally varying voltage and sinusoidally varying current at a given frequency. ] allows any signal to be constructed from a ] of frequencies, whence the circuit's reaction to the various frequencies may be found. The reactance and impedance of a capacitor are respectively
<math display="block">\begin{align}
X &= -\frac{1}{\omega C} = -\frac{1}{2\pi f C} \\
Z &= \frac{1}{j\omega C} = -\frac{j}{\omega C} = -\frac{j}{2\pi f C}
\end{align}</math>
where {{math|''j''}} is the ] and {{mvar|ω}} is the ] of the sinusoidal signal. The {{math|−''j''}} phase indicates that the AC voltage {{math|1=''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.<ref> PLoS one 2017</ref> This implies that a higher-frequency signal or a larger capacitor results in a lower voltage amplitude per current amplitude&nbsp;– an AC "short circuit" or ]. Conversely, for very low frequencies, the reactance is high, so that a capacitor is nearly an open circuit in AC analysis&nbsp;– those frequencies have been "filtered out".
Unlike capacitors that use a bulk dielectric made from an intrinsically insulating material, the dielectric in electrolytic capacitors depends on the formation and maintenance of a microscopic metal oxide layer. Compared to bulk dielectric capacitors, this very thin dielectric allows for much more capacitance in the same unit volume, but maintaining the integrity of the dielectric usually requires the steady application of the correct polarity of ] else the oxide layer will break down and be ruptured, causing the capacitor to fail. In addition, electrolytic capacitors generally use an internal wet chemistry and they will eventually fail as the water within the capacitor evaporates.


Capacitors are different from resistors and inductors in that the impedance is ''inversely'' proportional to the defining characteristic; i.e., ].
Electrolytic capacitance values are not as tightly-specified as with bulk dielectric capacitors. Especially with aluminum electrolytics, it is quite common to see an electrolytic capacitor specified as having a "guaranteed minimum value" and no upper bound on its value. For most purposes (such as power supply filtering and signal coupling), this type of specification is acceptable.


A capacitor connected to an alternating voltage source has a displacement current to flowing through it. In the case that the voltage source is ''V''<sub>0</sub>cos(ωt), the displacement current can be expressed as:
As with bulk dielectric capacitors, electrolytic capacitors come in several varieties:
<math display="block"> I = C \frac{\text{d}V}{\text{d}t} = -\omega {C}{V_0}\sin(\omega t)</math>


At {{math|1=sin(''ωt'') = −1}}, the capacitor has a maximum (or peak) current whereby {{math|1=''I''<sub>0</sub> = ''ωCV''<sub>0</sub>}}. The ratio of peak voltage to peak current is due to ] (denoted X<sub>C</sub>).
*'''Aluminum ]''': compact but lossy, these are available in the range of <1 &mu;F to 1,000,000 &mu;F with working voltages up to several hundred volts dc. The dielectric is a thin layer of aluminum oxide. They contain corrosive liquid and can burst if the device is connected backwards. Over a long time the liquid can dry out, causing the capacitor to fail. Bipolar electrolytics contain two capacitors connected in series opposition and are used for coupling AC signals.
<math display="block"> X_C = \frac{V_0}{I_0} = \frac{V_0}{\omega C V_0} = \frac{1}{\omega C} </math>


X<sub>C</sub> approaches zero as {{mvar|ω}} approaches infinity. If X<sub>C</sub> approaches 0, the capacitor resembles a short wire that strongly passes current at high frequencies. X<sub>C</sub> approaches infinity as ω approaches zero. If X<sub>C</sub> approaches infinity, the capacitor resembles an open circuit that poorly passes low frequencies.
*''']''': compact, low-voltage devices up to about 100 &mu;F, these have a lower energy density and are more accurate than aluminum electrolytics. Compared to aluminum electrolytics, tantalum capacitors have very stable capacitance and little DC leakage, and very low impedance at low frequencies. However, unlike aluminum electrolytics, they are intolerant of voltage spikes and are destroyed (often exploding violently) if connected backwards or exposed to spikes above their voltage rating. Tantalum capacitors are also polarized because of their dissimilar electrodes. The cathode electrode is formed of sintered tantalum grains, with the dielectric electrochemically formed as a thin layer of oxide. The thin layer of oxide gives this type a very high capacitance per unit volume. The anode electrode is formed of a chemically deposited semi-conductive layer of ] dioxide, which is then connected to an external wire lead. A development of this type replaces the manganese dioxide with a conductive plastic ] (]) that eliminates a self-ignition failure mode of capacitor failure. One vendor's web site refers to the advantage of this new design as "suppression of combustion" .
*'''Supercapacitor''' or ] capacitor: extreme high capacitance values up to ten farads but low voltage. They are based on the huge surface area of pucks of ] immersed in electrolyte, with the voltage of each puck being kept below 1 volt. Current is carried through the non-metallic but conductive granular carbon.


The current of the capacitor may be expressed in the form of cosines to better compare with the voltage of the source:
*'''Ultracapacitor''' or ] capacitor. Huge values, up to thousands of farads. Similar to supercapacitors, but using carbon aerogel to attain immense electrode surface area.
<math display="block"> I = - I_0 \sin({\omega t}) = I_0 \cos({\omega t} + {90^\circ})</math>


In this situation, the current is out of ] with the voltage by +π/2 radians or +90 degrees, i.e. the current leads the voltage by 90°.
===Variable capacitors===
]
There are two distinct types of ''variable capacitors'', whose capacitance may be intentionally and repeatedly changed over the life of the device:


===Laplace circuit analysis (s-domain)===
*Those that use a mechanical construction to change the distance between the plates, or the amount of plate surface area which overlaps. These devices are called ]s or simply "variable capacitors", and are used in telecommunication equipment for tuning and frequency control. Small variable capacitors which are mounted directly to PCBs (for instance, to precisely set a resonant frequency at the factory and then never be adjusted again) are called trimmer capacitors.
When using the ] in circuit analysis, the impedance of an ideal capacitor with no initial charge is represented in the {{mvar|s}} domain by:
*Those that use the fact that the thickness of the depletion layer of a diode varies with the DC voltage across the diode. These diodes are called ]s, varactors or varicaps. Any diode exhibits this effect, but devices specifically sold as varactors have a large junction area and a doping profile specifically designed to maximize capacitance.
<math display="block">Z(s) = \frac{1}{sC}</math>
where
* {{mvar|C}} is the capacitance, and
* {{mvar|s}} is the complex frequency.


===Circuit analysis===
Variable capacitance is sometimes used to convert physical phenomena into electrical signals.
{{See also|Series and parallel circuits}}
*In a capacitor ] (commonly known as a condenser microphone), the diaphragm acts as one plate of a capacitor, and vibrations produce changes in the distance between the diaphragm and a fixed plate, changing the voltage maintained across the capacitor plates.
{{multiple image
* In process industry instruments,some types of pressure transmitter use a capacitor element to measure pressure and convert to an electrical signal.
| direction = vertical
* Some forms of tank level gauge detect the change in capacitance between two electrodes which are immersed in a varying depth of liquid.
| width = 200
* A ] may be equipped with a ] which sets off the explosive charge when a tuned circuit's frequency changes because of an approaching target.
| image1 = capacitors in parallel.svg
* Variable capacitance can be used to detect objects , or as the operating principle of a keyboard.
| caption1 = Several capacitors in parallel
| image2 = Kondensator C1 plus C2.svg
| caption2 = The parallel connection of two capacitors
}}


;Cpacitors in parallel
=== Electric Double Layer Capacitors (EDLCs) ===
: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. <math display="block">C_\mathrm{eq} = \sum_{i=1}^n C_i = C_1 + C_2 + \cdots + C_n</math> {{Clear}}
These devices, often called '''supercapacitors''' or '''ultracapacitors''' for short, are capacitors that use a molecule-thin layer of electrolyte, rather than a manufactured sheet of material, as the dielectric. As the energy stored is inversely proportional to the thickness of the dielectric, these capacitors have an extremely high energy density. The electrodes are made of activated ], which has a high surface area per unit volume, further increasing the capacitor's energy density. Individual EDLCs have capacitances of hundreds or even thousands of farads. For example, the Korean company NessCap offers units up to 5000 farads ( 5 kF) at 2.7 V, useful for electric vehicles and solar energy applications.
{{multiple image
| direction = vertical
| width = 200
| image1 = capacitors in series.svg
| caption1 = Several capacitors in series
| image2 = Kondensator C1 C2 Reihe.svg
| caption2 = The serial connection of two capacitors
}}
;For 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. <math display="block">C_\mathrm{eq} = \left(\sum_{i=1}^n\frac{1}{C_i}\right)^{-1} = \left({1\over C_1} + {1\over C_2} + {1\over C_3} + \dots + {1\over C_n}\right)^{-1}</math>
: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 does not apply too much voltage to the other series capacitors.
:Series connection is also sometimes used to adapt polarized ]s for bipolar AC use. {{clear}}
;Voltage distribution in parallel-to-series networks.
:To model the distribution of voltages from a single charged capacitor <math> \left( A \right)</math> connected in parallel to a chain of capacitors in series <math> \left( B_\text{n} \right) </math>: <math display="block">\begin{align}
\text{(volts)} A_\mathrm{eq} &= A\left(1 - \frac{1}{n + 1}\right) \\
\text{(volts)} B_\text{1..n} &= \frac{A}{n} \left(1 - \frac{1}{n + 1}\right) \\
A - B &= 0
\end{align}</math>
:'''Note:''' This is only correct if all capacitance values are equal.
:The power transferred in this arrangement is: <math display="block">P = \frac{1}{R} \cdot \frac{1}{n + 1} A_\text{volts} \left( A_\text{farads} + B_\text{farads} \right)</math>


==Non-ideal behavior==
EDLCs can be used as replacements for ] in applications where a high discharge current is required. They can also be recharged hundreds of thousands of times, unlike conventional batteries which last for only a few hundred or thousand recharge cycles. But capacitor voltage drops faster than battery voltage during discharge so a DC-to-DC inverter may be used to maintain voltage and to make more of the energy stored in the capacitor usable. ] is testing ]es employing supercapacitors.
{{anchor|Non-ideal behavior}}
<!-- NB. Section header used in various redirects to this page -->
In practice, capacitors deviate from the ideal capacitor equation in several aspects. Some of these, such as leakage current and parasitic effects are linear, or can be analyzed as nearly linear, and can be accounted for by adding virtual components to form ]. The usual methods of ] can then be applied.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313799141|title=Universality of the emergent scaling in finite random binary percolation networks}}</ref> In other cases, such as with breakdown voltage, the effect is non-linear and ordinary (normal, e.g., linear) network analysis cannot be used, the effect must be considered separately. Yet another group of artifacts may exist, including temperature dependence, that may be linear but invalidates the assumption in the analysis that capacitance is a constant. Finally, combined parasitic effects such as inherent inductance, resistance, or dielectric losses can exhibit non-uniform behavior at varying frequencies of operation.


==={{anchor|sparking}}Breakdown voltage===
===Less-conventional capacitors===
{{Main|Breakdown voltage}}
Other circuit elements or devices exhibit capacitive impedance. These include:
Above a particular electric field strength, known as the dielectric strength ''E<sub>ds</sub>'', 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,{{sfn|Ulaby|1999|p=170}}
*'''stubs''': In RF circuits, a length of ] less than a quarter-wave, that is open at the far end, or a length equal to a quarter-wave which is shorted, has the electrical properties of a capacitor. Transmission line ]s could also be used to tune a resistive load into looking like a capacitor, if the value of the ] was distinct from the characteristic ] to the T-line. Video typically uses a 75-ohm T-line, RF 50, UHF pairs (ladder line) are typically 300 ohms.
<math display="block">V_{\text{bd}}= E_{\text{ds}} d</math>
*'''electrically short antennas''': Dipole and monopole ]s, as well as other types, can be made 'electrically short', which means that they are shorter than one quarter of the ] of the radio signal. This makes them look capacitive to their driving amplifiers. A small, tunable ] ] can be added to ] the antenna to the amplifier. Nulling out the ] also has the effect of greatly increasing the effective size of the antenna.
*''']s''': Electro-luminescent displays, used in computers before the availability of ]s, are made from photo-emissive capacitors with a visible phosphor-based dielectric. When stimulated with ca. 100 V AC they glow. When left floating afterward they gradually diminish in brightness. If shunted with a resistor after being stimulated, they stop glowing immediately. They come in ]-like colors, and lately they take the form of long filaments containing a center conductor and a transparent conductive coating.
*'''human body''': The human body can be modeled as a capacitor of about 10 pF in parallel with a 1 M&Omega; resistor for the purposes of ESD (]) studies.
*'''] crystals''': Capacitors with a piezoelectric crystal as the dielectric can induce movements in the crystal or sense external strains on it. Devices based on this principle are called ''capacitive transducers''. Applications of capacitive transducers include ] ] pickups, ] ]s, and microscope stage positioners. Generally they operate across short distances, but can generate high pressure with good linearity.
*'''parasitics''': These are generally unwanted. The nature of the ] makes space itself capacitive and inductive by nature. Processing for faster ]s generally involves reducing stored charge at the electrodes, to reduce parasitic capacitance. RF ]s are designed to have low capacitance.
*''']''': if empty space lacks ]s (an electron cloud or mobile ions), it will serve as an excellent ] which lacks ] absorption or dielectric losses. Vacuum capacitors are typically used in high voltage, high power applications. Since a vacuum lacks a breakdown voltage, the typical failure mode is either an ] developing in the supporting enclosure, or a "]" breaking out when the ] of the metal electrode surfaces is exceeded.


The maximum energy that can be stored safely in a capacitor is limited by the breakdown voltage. Exceeding this voltage can result in a short circuit between the plates, which can often cause permanent damage to the dielectric, plates, or both. Due to the scaling of capacitance and breakdown voltage with dielectric thickness, all capacitors made with a particular dielectric have approximately equal maximum ], to the extent that the dielectric dominates their volume.<ref>{{cite book |title=Introduction to High Power Pulse Technology |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=spZ_H4nwIN0C |page=47}} |author-last1=Pai |author-first1=S. T. |author-first2=Qi |author-last2=Zhang |publisher=World Scientific |date=1995 |series=Advanced Series in Electrical and Computer Engineering |volume=10 |isbn=978-9810217143 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref>
== Applications ==
{{float_begin|side=right}}
|- align = "center"
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| Capacitor
| Polarized<br/> Capacitor
| Variable<br/> Capacitor
{{float_end|caption=Capacitor symbols}}


For air dielectric capacitors the breakdown field strength is of the order 2–5&nbsp;MV/m (or kV/mm); for ] the breakdown is 100–300&nbsp;MV/m; for oil, 15–25&nbsp;MV/m; it can be much less when other materials are used for the dielectric.<ref>{{cite book |title=Wiley Survey of Instrumentation and Measurement |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=Wr6l42rEizUC|page=397}} |author-last=Dyer |author-first=Stephen A. |date=2004 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-47122165-4 |page=397 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref> The dielectric is used in very thin layers and so absolute breakdown voltage of capacitors is limited. Typical ratings for capacitors used for general ] applications range from a few volts to 1&nbsp;kV. As the voltage increases, the dielectric must be thicker, making high-voltage capacitors larger per capacitance than those rated for lower voltages.
A capacitor can store electric energy when disconnected from its charging circuit, so it can be used like a fast ].


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 and causing a short (or relatively low resistance) circuit. The results can be explosive, as the short in the capacitor draws current from the surrounding circuitry and dissipates the energy.<ref>{{cite book |title=Practical Electronics for Inventors |edition=2nd |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=C9pL3iL6eSMC |page=100}} |author-last=Scherz |author-first=Paul |date=2006 |publisher=] |page=100 |isbn=978-0-07177644-8 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref> However, in capacitors with particular dielectrics<ref>{{cite journal |author-last1=Inuishi |author-first1=Y. |author-last2=Powers |author-first2=D. A. |title=Electric breakdown and conduction through Mylar films |journal=Journal of Applied Physics |date=1957 |volume=28 |issue=9 |pages=1017–1022 |bibcode=1957JAP....28.1017I |doi=10.1063/1.1722899}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author-last1=Reed |author-first1=C. W. |author-last2=Cichanowski |author-first2=S. W. |title=The fundamentals of aging in HV polymer-film capacitors |journal=] |volume=1 |issue=5 |date=1994 |pages=904–922 |doi=10.1109/94.326658}}</ref> and thin metal electrodes, shorts are not formed after breakdown. It happens because a metal melts or evaporates in a breakdown vicinity, isolating it from the rest of the capacitor.<ref>{{cite journal |author-last1=Klein |author-first1=N. |author-last2=Gafni |author-first2=H. |title=The maximum dielectric strength of thin silicon oxide films |journal=IEEE Transactions on Electron Devices |date=1966 |volume=13 |issue=2 |pages=281–289 |bibcode=1966ITED...13..281K |doi=10.1109/T-ED.1966.15681}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author-last=Belkin |author-first=A. |display-authors=et al |title=Recovery of alumina nanocapacitors after high voltage breakdown |journal=Scientific Reports |date=2017 |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=932 |doi=10.1038/s41598-017-01007-9 |pmid=28428625 |pmc=5430567 |bibcode=2017NatSR...7..932B}}</ref>
In AC or signal circuits a capacitor induces a phase difference of 90 degrees, current leading voltage.


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 ] as seen in semi-conductor devices. Breakdown voltage is also affected by pressure, humidity and temperature.<ref>{{cite book |title=Electrical Circuit Theory and Technology |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=Q9zpWdgQeM4C|page=501}} |author-last=Bird |author-first=John |date=2007 |publisher=Routledge |page=501 |isbn=978-0-75068139-1 |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref>
The energy stored in a capacitor can be used to represent ], either in binary form, as in ]s, or in analogue form, as in switched-capacitor circuits and bucket-brigade delay lines.


===Equivalent circuit===
Capacitors are commonly used in ] where they smooth the output of a full or half wave ].
[[File:Real capacitor model adding inductance and series and parallel resistance.svg|thumb|upright=1.2|Real capacitor model that adds an inductance and resistance in series and a conductance in parallel to its capacitance. Its total impedance is: <math>\begin{align}
Z_\Sigma &{=} Z_\text{ESL} + R_\text{lead} + (Z_\text{C} \parallel G_\text{dielectric}) \\
&{=} j\omega \cdot \text{ESL} + R_\text{lead} + \frac{1}{j\omega \cdot C + G_\text{dielectric}}.
\end{align}</math>]]
An ideal capacitor only stores and releases electrical energy, without dissipation. In practice, capacitors have imperfections within the capacitor's materials that result in the following parasitic components:<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bisquert |first1=J. |last2=Garcia-Belmonte |first2=G. |last3=Fabregat-Santiago |first3=F. |date=2000 |title=The role of instrumentation in the process of modeling real capacitors |url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/883355 |journal=IEEE Transactions on Education |volume=43 |issue=4 |pages=439–442 |doi=10.1109/13.883355 |bibcode=2000ITEdu..43..439F |issn=1557-9638}}</ref>


* <math>\text{ESL}</math>, the ''],'' due to the leads. This is usually significant only at relatively high frequencies.
Capacitors can be used in ]s as components of integrators. Signal processing circuits also use capacitors to ] a current signal.
* Two resistances that add a ] component to the total impedance, which wastes power:
** <math>R_\text{lead}</math>, a small series resistance in the ]. Becomes more relevant as frequency increases.
** <math>G_\text{dielectric}</math>, a small ] (or reciprocally, a large resistance) in parallel with the capacitance, to account for imperfect dielectric material. This causes a small leakage current across the dielectric (see {{Slink|2=Leakage|nopage=y}}){{sfn|Ulaby|1999|p=169}} that slowly discharges the capacitor over time. This conductance dominates the total resistance at very low frequencies. Its value varies greatly depending on the capacitor material and quality.{{Citation needed|date=September 2023|reason=Probably should find citation giving numbers for different types of capacitors.}}


==== Simplified RLC series model ====
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.
] capacitor model. Its total equivalent impedance is: <math>
j\omega \cdot \text{ESL} + \text{ESR} - \frac{j}{\omega \cdot C}.
</math>]]
] of voltages in an RLC circuit. Frequency is relative to the natural frequency ''ω''<sub>0</sub>. (Its ] ''ζ'' and ''ω''<sub>0</sub> would depend on the particular capacitor.) Lower frequencies are more capacitive. Around ''ω''<sub>0</sub>, the total impedance and voltage drop is primarily resistive. Higher frequencies are more inductive.]]
As frequency increases, the capacitive impedance (a negative reactance) reduces, so the dielectric's conductance becomes less important and the series components become more significant. Thus, a simplified ] model valid for a large frequency range simply treats the capacitor as being in series with an equivalent series inductance <math>\text{ESL}</math> and a frequency-dependent '']'' <math>\text{ESR}</math>, which varies little with frequency. Unlike the previous model, this model is not valid at ] and very low frequencies where <math>G_\text{dielectric}</math> is relevant.


Inductive reactance increases with frequency. Because its sign is positive, it counteracts the capacitance.
Capacitors and ]s are applied together in ] 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.


At the RLC circuit's ] <math>\omega_0 {=} \tfrac{1}{\sqrt{\text{ESL} \cdot \text{C}}}</math>, the inductance perfectly cancels the capacitance, so total reactance is zero. Since the total impedance at <math>\omega_0</math> is just the real-value of <math>\text{ESR}</math>, ] dissipation reaches its maximum of {{Sfrac|V{{sub|RMS}}{{sup|2}}|ESR}}, where V{{sub|RMS}} is the ] across the capacitor.
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 ]). Non-polarized electrolytic capacitors used for signal filtering are typically drawn with two curved plates. Other non-polarized capacitors are drawn with two straight plates.


At even higher frequencies, the inductive impedance dominates, so the capacitor undesirably behaves instead like an inductor. High-frequency engineering involves accounting for the inductance of all connections and components.
Because capacitors pass AC but block DC ]s, they are often used to separate the AC and DC components of a signal. This method is known as ''AC coupling''. (Sometimes ]s are used for the same effect.) Here, a large value of capacitance, whose value need not be accurately controlled, but whose ] is small at the signal frequency, is employed. Capacitors for this purpose designed to be fitted through a metal panel are called feed-through capacitors, and have a slightly different schematic symbol.


===== Q factor =====
Capacitors with an exposed and porous dielectric can be used to measure humidity in air. Capacitors with a flexible plate can be used to measure strain or pressure.
{{See also|Dielectric loss#Discrete circuit perspective}}
For a simplified model of a capacitor as an ideal capacitor in series with an ] <math>\text{ESR}</math>, the capacitor's ] (or ''Q'') is the ratio of the magnitude of its ] <math>X_C</math> to its resistance at a given ] <math>\omega</math>:


<math display="block">Q(\omega) = \frac{|X_{C}(\omega)|}{\text{ESR}}=\frac{1}{\omega C \cdot \text{ESR}} \, .</math>
Capacitors are also used in ] correction. Such capacitors often come as three capacitors connected as a ] ]. Usually, the values of these capacitors are given not in farads but rather as a ] in volt-amperes reactive (var). The purpose is to match the inductive loading of machinery which contains motors, to return the load to a purely resistive state.


The Q factor is a measure of its efficiency: the higher the Q factor of the capacitor, the closer it approaches the behavior of an ideal capacitor. ] is its reciprocal.
An obscure but illustrative military application of the capacitor is in an ] weapon. A ] is used for the dielectric. The capacitor is charged up and the explosive is detonated. The capacitance becomes smaller, but the charge on the plates stays the same. This creates a high-energy electromagnetic shock wave capable of destroying unprotected electronics for miles around. These devices were first employed by the US in the ].


===Ripple current===
==History==
] current is the AC component of an applied source (often a ]) 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 ]s, primarily ] and ] ]s, as well as some ]s have a specified rating value for maximum ripple current.
We know from reports of the lost writings of ] (around ]) that the ] knew how to generate sparks by rubbing balls of ] on spindles. This is the ], the mechanical separation of charge in a dielectric.
* 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.
* Aluminum 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.
* ]s generally have no ripple current limitation{{Citation needed|date=October 2020|reason=everything has a current limitation, even if it is not specified.}} and have some of the lowest ESR ratings.
* ]s have very low ESR ratings but exceeding rated ripple current may cause degradation failures.


===Capacitance instability===
The ancient experimenters, however, did not know that the charge density could be dramatically increased by sandwiching the insulator between two metal plates. This was the basis of the capacitor. ] of ] invented the first recorded capacitor in October ]. It was a glass jar coated inside and out with metal. The inner coating was connected to a rod that passed through the lid and ended in a metal ball.
The capacitance of certain capacitors decreases as the component ages. In ]s, 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 usually has a smaller effect, i.e., usual capacitor design is to minimize voltage coefficient. The aging process may be reversed by heating the component above the ]. Aging is fastest near the beginning of life of the component, and the device stabilizes over time.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.johansondielectrics.com/technical-notes/general/ceramic-capacitor-aging-made-simple.html |title=Ceramic Capacitor Aging Made Simple |publisher=Johanson Dielectrics |date=2012-05-21 |access-date=2013-03-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121226160520/http://www.johansondielectrics.com/technical-notes/general/ceramic-capacitor-aging-made-simple.html |archive-date=2012-12-26 |url-status=dead}}</ref> Electrolytic capacitors age as the ]. 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 may be positive or negative, depending mostly on the dielectric material. Some, designated C0G/NP0, but called '''NPO''', have a somewhat negative coefficient at one temperature, positive at another, and zero in between. Such components may be specified for temperature-critical circuits.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/technical-articles/x7r-x5r-c0g...-a-concise-guide-to-ceramic-capacitor-types/ |title=Concise Guide to Capacitor Types |publisher=EETech Media LLC |access-date=7 September 2023}}</ref>
Before Kleist's discovery became widely known, a capacitor essentially the same as his was invented independently in January ] by the Dutch physicist ] of the University of ] and was named by ] as the ].


Capacitors, especially ceramic capacitors, and older designs such as paper capacitors, can absorb sound waves resulting in a ] effect. Vibration moves the plates, causing the capacitance to vary, in turn inducing AC current. Some dielectrics also generate ]. 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.
] investigated the Leyden jar, and proved that the charge was stored on the glass, not in the water as others had assumed.


===Current and voltage reversal===
Early capacitors were also known as ''condensers'', a term that is still occasionally used today. It was coined by ] in ] (derived from the Italian ''condensatore''), with reference to the device's ability to store a higher density of electric charge than a normal isolated conductor. Most non-English languages still use a word derived from "condensatore", like the French ''condensateur'' or the German ''kondensator''.
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 is usually 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 ] of the system. Voltage reversal is encountered in ] that are ]. The current and voltage reverse direction, forming a ] between the ] and capacitance. The current and voltage tends 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 ]. In comparison, ] or ] systems usually do not experience a voltage reversal. Reversal is also encountered in AC circuits, where the peak current is equal in each direction.
===Displacement current===


For maximum life, capacitors usually need to be able to handle the maximum amount of reversal that a system may experience. An AC circuit experiences 100% voltage reversal, while underdamped DC circuits 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 often affect the design considerations for the capacitor, from the choice of dielectric materials and voltage ratings to the types of internal connections used.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ga.com/websites/ga/images/products/ep/tech-bulletins/voltage-reversal.pdf |title=The Effect of Reversal on Capacitor Life |publisher=Sorrento Electronics |work=Engineering Bulletin 96-004 |date=November 2003 |access-date=2013-03-17 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714134127/http://www.ga.com/websites/ga/images/products/ep/tech-bulletins/voltage-reversal.pdf |archive-date=2014-07-14}}</ref>
The physicist ] invented the concept of ], d'''D'''/dt, to make ] consistent with conservation of charge in cases where charge is accumulating, for example in a capacitor. He interpreted this as a real motion of charges, even in vacuum, where he supposed that it corresponded to motion of ] charges in the ]. Although this interpretation has been abandoned, Maxwell's correction to Ampere's law remains valid (a changing electric field produces a magnetic field).


===Dielectric absorption===
The displacement current must be included, for example, to apply ] to the interior of a capacitor (e.g. to only one of the plates).
Capacitors made with any type of dielectric material show some level of "]" 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 is objectionable in applications such as precision ] circuits or timing circuits. The level of absorption depends on many factors, from design considerations to charging time, since the absorption is a time-dependent process. However, the primary factor is the type of dielectric material. Capacitors such as tantalum electrolytic or ] film exhibit relatively high absorption, while ] or ] allow very small levels of absorption.<ref name="Kaiser2012">{{cite book |author-last=Kaiser |author-first=Cletus J. |title=The Capacitor Handbook |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=FOatBAAAQBAJ}} |date=2012-12-06 |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |isbn=978-9-40118090-0}}</ref> In some capacitors where dangerous voltages and energies exist, such as in ]s, ]s, ]s and ]s, the dielectric absorption can recharge the capacitor to hazardous voltages after it has been shorted or discharged. Any capacitor containing over 10 joules of energy is generally considered hazardous, while 50 joules or higher is potentially lethal. A capacitor may regain anywhere from 0.01 to 20% of its original charge over a period of several minutes, allowing a seemingly safe capacitor to become surprisingly dangerous.<ref>''Electronics''. McGraw-Hill 1960 p. 90</ref><ref>. donklipstein.com. 2006-05-29</ref><ref name="Prutchi2012">{{cite book |author-last=Prutchi |author-first=David |title=Exploring Quantum Physics through Hands-on Projects |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=LLxsnx74KEYC |page=10}} |page=10 |date=2012 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-11817070-0}}</ref><ref name="DixitYadav2010">{{cite book |author-last1=Dixit |author-first1=J. B. |author-last2=Yadav |author-first2=Amit |title=Electrical Power Quality |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=lxLWYe5sGMsC |page=63}} |date=2010 |page=63 |publisher=Laxmi Publications, Ltd. |isbn=978-9-38038674-4}}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite book |author=Winburn |title=Practical Laser Safety, Second Edition |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=xx1I5eQybE8C |page=189}} |date=1989 |page=189 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-82478240-5}}</ref>


===Leakage===
== Properties of capacitors ==
No material is a perfect insulator, thus all dielectrics allow some small level of current to leak through, which can be measured with a ].<ref>''Robinson's Manual of Radio Telegraphy and Telephony by S.S. Robinson -- US Naval Institute 1924 Pg. 170</ref> Leakage is equivalent to a resistor in parallel with the capacitor. Constant exposure to factors such as heat, mechanical stress, or humidity can cause the dielectric to deteriorate resulting in 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===
Important properties of capacitors, apart from the capacitance, are the maximum working voltage (potential, measured in volts) and the amount of energy lost in the dielectric. For high-power or high-speed capacitors, the maximum ripple current and ] (ESR) are further considerations. A typical ESR for most capacitors is between 0.0001 and 0.01 ohm, low values being preferred for high-current, or long term integration applications.
]s 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 ]. Sometimes they fail with a short circuit when next operated.


===Lifespan===
Since capacitors have such low ESRs, they have the capacity to deliver huge currents into short circuits, which can be dangerous. For safety purposes, all large capacitors should be discharged before handling. For board-level capacitors, this is done by placing a high-power 1 to 10 ohm resistor across the terminals.
All capacitors have varying lifespans, depending upon their construction, operational conditions, and environmental conditions. Solid-state ceramic capacitors generally have very long lives under normal use, which has little dependency on factors such as vibration or ambient temperature, but factors like humidity, mechanical stress, and ] play a primary role in their failure. Failure modes may differ. Some capacitors may experience a gradual loss of capacitance, increased leakage or an increase in ] (ESR), while others may fail suddenly or even ]. For example, metal-film capacitors are more prone to damage from stress and humidity, but will self-heal when a breakdown in the dielectric occurs. The formation of a ] at the point of failure prevents arcing by vaporizing the metallic film in that spot, neutralizing any short circuit with minimal loss in capacitance. When enough pinholes accumulate in the film, a total failure occurs in a metal-film capacitor, generally happening suddenly without warning.


Electrolytic capacitors generally have the shortest lifespans. Electrolytic capacitors are affected very little by vibration or humidity, but factors such as ambient and operational temperatures play a large role in their failure, which gradually occur as an increase in ESR (up to 300%) and as much as a 20% decrease in capacitance. The capacitors contain electrolytes which will eventually diffuse through the seals and evaporate. An increase in temperature also increases internal pressure, and increases the reaction rate of the chemicals. Thus, the life of an electrolytic capacitor is generally defined by a modification of the ], which is used to determine chemical-reaction rates:
When rehabilitating old (especially audio) equipment, it is a good idea to replace all of the electrolyte-based caps out of hand. After long storage electrolytic capacitors may deteriorate; when first powering up equipment with old electrolytics, it may be useful to apply low voltage at first to allow the capacitors to reform before applying full voltage.
<math display="block"> L = B e^{\frac{e_A}{k T_o}}</math>


Manufacturers often use this equation to supply an expected lifespan, in hours, for electrolytic capacitors when used at their designed operating temperature, which is affected by both ambient temperature, ESR, and ripple current. However, these ideal conditions may not exist in every use. The rule of thumb for predicting lifespan under different conditions of use is determined by:
ESL (]) is also important for signal capacitors. For any real-world capacitor, there is a frequency above DC at which it ceases to behave as a pure capacitance. This is called the (first) resonant frequency. This is also critically important with local supply decoupling for high-speed logic circuits. This capacitor supplies transient current to the chip. Without decouplers, the IC demands current faster than the connection to the power supply can supply it, as parts of the circuit rapidly switch on and off. Large capacitors tend to have much higher ESL than small ones. As a result, instrumentation electronics will frequently use multiple bypass capacitors -- a small, 0.1uF for high frequencies, a large electrolytic for low frequencies, and occasionally, an intermediate.
<math display="block"> L_a = L_0 2^{\frac{T_0 - T_a}{10}}</math>


This says that the capacitor's life decreases by half for every 10 degrees Celsius that the temperature is increased,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy19osti/71386.pdf |title=A Review of Degradation Behavior and Modeling of Capacitors |author-last1=Gupta |author-first1=Anunay |author-first2=Om Prakash |author-last2=Yadav |author-first3=Douglas |author-last3=DeVoto |author-first4=Joshua |author-last4=Major |publisher=National Renewable Energy Laboratory |date=October 2018 |access-date=2021-07-23 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200605220416/https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy19osti/71386.pdf |archive-date=2020-06-05}}</ref> where:
In the construction of long-time-constant integrators, it is important that the capacitor does not retain a residual charge when shorted. This phenomenon is called ''dielectric absorption'' or ''soakage'', and it creates a memory effect in the capacitor. This is a non-linear phenomenon, and is also important when building very low distortion filters.


* <math>L_0</math> is the rated life under rated conditions, e.g. 2000 hours
Capacitors may also change capacitance with applied voltage. This is another major source of non-linearity when building low distortion filters. In the case of some types of audio equipment, capacitor non-linearity in the signal path is the dominant source of distortion.
* <math>T_0</math> is the rated max/min operational temperature
* <math>T_a</math> is the average operational temperature
* <math>L_a</math> is the expected lifespan under given conditions


==Capacitor types==
Capacitors will also have leakage --- some level of parasitic resistance across the terminals. This fundamentally limits how long capacitors can store charge. Historically, this was a major source of problems in some types of applications (long RC timers, sample-and-holds, etc.). Most of these applications have since moved to digital.
{{Main|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&nbsp;kF ].
Other major non-idealities include temperature coefficient (change in capacitance with temperature).


Above approximately 1 microfarad electrolytic capacitors are usually used because of their small size and low cost compared with other types, unless their relatively poor stability, life and polarised nature make them unsuitable. Very high capacity supercapacitors use a porous carbon-based electrode material.
Capacitors can also be fabricated in ] ] devices using metal lines and insulators on a substrate. Such capacitors are used to store analogue signals in switched-capacitor ]s, and to store digital data in dynamic random-access memory (]). Unlike discrete capacitors, however, in most fabrication processes, tolerances much lower than 15-20% are not possible.


===Dielectric materials===
==Capacitor hazards==
]
Capacitors may retain a charge long after power is removed from a circuit; this charge can cause shocks (up to and including ]) or damage to connected equipment. Take care to ensure that any large or high-voltage capacitor is properly discharged before servicing the containing equipment.


Most capacitors have a dielectric spacer, which increases their capacitance compared to air or a vacuum. In order to maximise the charge that a capacitor can hold, the dielectric material needs to have as high a ] as possible, while also having as high a ] as possible. The dielectric also needs to have as low a loss with frequency as possible.
Dispose of large oil-filled old capacitors properly; some contain ]s (PCBs). The reason many older large capacitors and transformers were oil-filled is that the normal usage of these devices can generate a great deal of ]. Oil is an inexpensive heat-dissipating substance that is resistant to boiling within these components' heat range. However, if overheated, the oil can ignite. PCBs were an inexpensive additive that dramatically reduced the oil's ignitability. It was later discovered that waste PCBs can leak into ] under ]s. If consumed by drinking contaminated water, PCBs are ]ic, even in very tiny amounts. If the capacitor is physically large it is more likely to be dangerous and may require precautions in addition to those described above. Of course, new electrical components are no longer produced with PCBs.


However, low value capacitors are available with a high vacuum between their plates to allow extremely high voltage operation and low losses. ]s 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 the plates.
==See also==
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<div style="float: left;">]</div>
<div style="margin-left: 60px;">] has more about this subject:
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*]
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*]
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*] (thought by some to be a capacitor)


Several solid dielectrics are available, including ], ], ], ] and ].<ref name="Boggs"/>
==External links==


Paper was used extensively in older capacitors and offers relatively high voltage performance. However, paper absorbs moisture, and has been largely replaced by plastic ]s.
*

*
Most of the plastic films now used offer better stability and ageing performance than such older dielectrics such as oiled paper, which makes them useful in timer circuits, although they may be limited to relatively low ]s and frequencies, because of the limitations of the plastic film being used. Large plastic film capacitors are used extensively in suppression circuits, motor start circuits, and ] circuits.
*

*
Ceramic capacitors are generally small, cheap and useful for high frequency applications, although their capacitance varies strongly with voltage and temperature and they age poorly. They can also suffer from the piezoelectric effect. Ceramic capacitors are broadly categorized as ], which have predictable variation of capacitance with temperature or ], which can operate at higher voltage. Modern multilayer ceramics are usually quite small, but some types have inherently wide value tolerances, microphonic issues, and are usually physically brittle.
*

*
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 ]s are used to store small and larger amounts of energy, respectively, ceramic capacitors are often used in ], and ] occurs in circuits wherever the simple conductor-insulator-conductor structure is formed unintentionally by the configuration of the circuit layout.

]
]

]s use an ] or ] plate with an oxide dielectric layer. The second electrode is a liquid ], 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. ] 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 suffer from self-degradation 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 example, in older equipment, this may cause arcing in rectifier tubes. They can be restored before use by gradually applying the operating voltage, often performed on antique ] equipment over a period of thirty minutes by using a variable transformer to supply AC power. 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.{{citation needed|reason=how-to|date=November 2016}}

Tantalum capacitors offer better frequency and temperature characteristics than aluminum, but higher ] and leakage.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.analog.com/library/analogDialogue/Anniversary/21.html |title=Ask The Applications Engineer – 21 |author-last=Guinta |author-first=Steve |publisher=Analog Devices |access-date=2013-03-17}}</ref>

]s (OS-CON, OC-CON, KO, AO) use solid conductive polymer (or polymerized organic semiconductor) as electrolyte and offer longer life and lower ] at higher cost than standard electrolytic capacitors.

A ] is a component that, while not serving as its main use, has capacitance and is used to conduct signals through a conductive sheet.

Several other types of capacitor are available for specialist applications. ]s store large amounts of energy. Supercapacitors made from carbon ], carbon nanotubes, or highly porous electrode materials, offer extremely high capacitance (up to 5&nbsp;kF {{As of|2010|lc=on}}) and can be used in some applications instead of ]. ] capacitors are specifically designed to work on line (mains) voltage AC power circuits. They are commonly used in ] 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 ] breakdown voltages of at least five times the maximum AC voltage.

===Voltage-dependent capacitors===
The dielectric constant for a number of very useful dielectrics changes as a function of the applied electrical field, for example ] materials, so the capacitance for these devices is more complex. For example, in charging such a capacitor the differential increase in voltage with charge is governed by:
<math display="block"> dQ = C(V) \, dV</math>
where the voltage dependence of capacitance, {{math|''C''(''V'')}}, suggests that the capacitance is a function of the electric field strength, which in a large area parallel plate device is given by {{math|1=''<big>ε</big>'' = ''V''/''d''}}. This field polarizes the dielectric, which polarization, in the case of a ferroelectric, is a nonlinear ''S''-shaped function of the electric field, which, in the case of a large area parallel plate device, translates into a capacitance that is a nonlinear function of the voltage.<ref name="Araujo">{{Cite book |at=Figure 2, p. 504 |title=Science and Technology of Integrated Ferroelectrics: Selected Papers from Eleven Years of the Proceedings of the International Symposium on Integrated Ferroelectrics |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=QMlOkeJ4qN4C |page=504}} |isbn=90-5699-704-1 |editor-first1=Carlos Paz |editor-last1=de Araujo |editor-first2=Ramamoorthy |editor-last2=Ramesh |editor-first3=George W. |editor-last3=Taylor |publisher=] |date=2001}}</ref><ref name="Musikant">{{Cite book |title=What Every Engineer Should Know about Ceramics |author-first=Solomon |author-last=Musikant |isbn=0-8247-8498-7 |date=1991 |publisher=] |at=Figure 3.9, p. 43 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=Jc8xRdgdH38C |page=44}}}}</ref>

Corresponding to the voltage-dependent capacitance, to charge the capacitor to voltage {{mvar|V}} an integral relation is found:
<math display="block"> Q = \int_0^V C(V) \, dV </math>
which agrees with {{math|1=''Q'' = ''CV''}} only when {{mvar|C}} does not depend on voltage {{mvar|V}}.

By the same token, the energy stored in the capacitor now is given by
<math display="block">dW = Q \, dV =\left dV \, . </math>

Integrating:
<math display="block">W = \int_0^V dV \int_0^V dV' \, C(V') = \int_0^V dV' \int_{V'}^V dV \, C(V') = \int_0^V dV' \left(V-V'\right) C(V') \, , </math>
where interchange of the ] is used.

The nonlinear capacitance of a microscope probe scanned along a ferroelectric surface is used to study the domain structure of ferroelectric materials.<ref name="Cho">{{Cite book |title=Scanning Nonlinear Dielectric Microscope |author=Yasuo Cho |edition=in ''Polar Oxides''; ], U. Böttger & S. Tiedke, editors |isbn=3-527-40532-1 |publisher=Wiley-VCH |date=2005 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=wQ09DhMBJroC |page=304}} |page=Chapter 16 |no-pp=true}}</ref>

Another example of voltage dependent capacitance occurs in ] such as semiconductor ]s, where the voltage dependence stems not from a change in dielectric constant but in a voltage dependence of the spacing between the charges on the two sides of the capacitor.{{sfn|Sze|Ng|2006|p=217}} This effect is intentionally exploited in diode-like devices known as ]s.

===Frequency-dependent capacitors===
If a capacitor is driven with a time-varying voltage that changes rapidly enough, at some frequency the polarization of the dielectric cannot follow the voltage. As an example of the origin of this mechanism, the internal microscopic dipoles contributing to the dielectric constant cannot move instantly, and so as frequency of an applied alternating voltage increases, the dipole response is limited and the dielectric constant diminishes. A changing dielectric constant with frequency is referred to as ], and is governed by ] processes, such as ]. Under transient conditions, the displacement field can be expressed as (see ]):
<math display="block">\boldsymbol{D(t)}=\varepsilon_0\int_{-\infty}^t \varepsilon_r (t-t') \boldsymbol E (t')\, dt' , </math>

indicating the lag in response by the time dependence of {{math|''ε<sub>r</sub>''}}, calculated in principle from an underlying microscopic analysis, for example, of the dipole behavior in the dielectric. See, for example, ].<ref name="Giuliani">{{Cite book |title=Quantum Theory of the Electron Liquid |author-first1=Gabriele |author-last1=Giuliani |author-first2=Giovanni |author-last2=Vignale |page=111 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=kFkIKRfgUpsC |page=538}} |isbn=0-521-82112-6 |publisher=] |date=2005}}</ref><ref name="Rammer">{{Cite book |title=Quantum Field Theory of Non-equilibrium States |author-first=Jørgen |author-last=Rammer |page=158 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=A7TbrAm5Wq0C |page=6}} |isbn=978-0-52187499-1 |publisher=] |date=2007}}</ref> The integral extends over the entire past history up to the present time. A ] in time then results in:
<math display="block">\boldsymbol D(\omega) = \varepsilon_0 \varepsilon_r(\omega) \boldsymbol E (\omega)\, , </math>

where ''ε''<sub>r</sub>(''ω'') is now a ], with an imaginary part related to absorption of energy from the field by the medium. See ]. The capacitance, being proportional to the dielectric constant, also exhibits this frequency behavior. Fourier transforming Gauss's law with this form for displacement field:

<math display="block">\begin{align}
I(\omega) &= j\omega Q(\omega) = j\omega \oint_{\Sigma} \boldsymbol D (\boldsymbol r , \omega)\cdot d \boldsymbol{\Sigma} \\
&=\left V(\omega) = \frac {V(\omega)}{Z(\omega)} \, ,
\end{align}</math>
where {{math|''j''}} is the ], {{math|''V''(''ω'')}} is the voltage component at angular frequency {{mvar|ω}}, {{math|''G''(''ω'')}} is the ''real'' part of the current, called the ''conductance'', and {{math|''C''(''ω'')}} determines the ''imaginary'' part of the current and is the ''capacitance''. {{math|''Z''(''ω'')}} is the complex impedance.

When a parallel-plate capacitor is filled with a dielectric, the measurement of dielectric properties of the medium is based upon the relation:
<math display="block"> \varepsilon_r(\omega) = \varepsilon '_r(\omega) - j \varepsilon ''_r(\omega) = \frac{1}{j\omega Z(\omega) C_0} = \frac{C_{\text{cmplx}}(\omega)}{C_0} \, , </math>
where a single ''prime'' denotes the real part and a double ''prime'' the imaginary part, {{math|''Z''(''ω'')}} is the complex impedance with the dielectric present, {{math|''C''<sub>cmplx</sub>(''ω'')}} is the so-called ''complex'' capacitance with the dielectric present, and {{math|''C''<sub>0</sub>}} is the capacitance without the dielectric.<ref name="Handbook">{{Cite book |title=Springer Handbook of Materials Measurement Methods |author-first1=Horst |author-last1=Czichos |author-first2=Tetsuya |author-last2=Saito |author-first3=Leslie |author-last3=Smith |page=475 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=8lANaR-Pqi4C |page=1}} |publisher=Springer |isbn=3-540-20785-6 |date=2006}}</ref><ref name="Coffey">{{Cite book |title=Fractals, diffusion and relaxation in disordered complex systems. Part A |author-first1=William |author-last1=Coffey |author-first2=Yu. P. |author-last2=Kalmykov |publisher=Wiley |date=2006 |isbn=0-470-04607-4 |page=17 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=mgtQslaXBc4C |page=18}}}}</ref> (Measurement "without the dielectric" in principle means measurement in ], an unattainable goal inasmuch as even the ] is predicted to exhibit nonideal behavior, such as ]. For practical purposes, when measurement errors are taken into account, often a measurement in terrestrial vacuum, or simply a calculation of ''C''<sub>0</sub>, is sufficiently accurate.<ref>{{cite book |title=2005 IEEE Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference (IMTC): Ottawa, Ontario Canada, 16–19 May 2005 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=85I5nQAACAAJ |page=1350}} |date=2005 |pages=1350–1353 |publisher=IEEE |isbn=978-0-78038879-6 |doi=10.1109/IMTC.2005.1604368 |s2cid=37739028}}</ref>)

Using this measurement method, the dielectric constant may exhibit a ] at certain frequencies corresponding to characteristic response frequencies (excitation energies) of contributors to the dielectric constant. These resonances are the basis for a number of experimental techniques for detecting defects. The ''conductance method'' measures absorption as a function of frequency.{{sfn|Schroder|2006|p=347}} Alternatively, the time response of the capacitance can be used directly, as in '']''.{{sfn|Schroder|2006|p=305}}

Another example of frequency dependent capacitance occurs with ], where the slow generation of minority carriers means that at high frequencies the capacitance measures only the majority carrier response, while at low frequencies both types of carrier respond.{{sfn|Sze|Ng|2006|p=217}}<ref name="Kasap">{{Cite book |title=Springer Handbook of Electronic and Photonic Materials |author-first1=Safa O. |author-last1=Kasap |author-first2=Peter |author-last2=Capper |date=2006 |publisher=Springer |page=Figure 20.22, p. 425 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=rVVW22pnzhoC |page=425}} |no-pp=true}}</ref>

At optical frequencies, in semiconductors the dielectric constant exhibits structure related to the band structure of the solid. Sophisticated modulation spectroscopy measurement methods based upon modulating the crystal structure by pressure or by other stresses and observing the related changes in absorption or reflection of light have advanced our knowledge of these materials.<ref name="Cardona">{{Cite book |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=W9pdJZoAeyEC |page=244}} |title=Fundamentals of Semiconductors |author1=PY Yu |author-first2=Manuel |author-last2=Cardona |isbn=3-540-25470-6 |date=2001 |edition=3rd |publisher=Springer |at=§6.6 "Modulation Spectroscopy"}}</ref>

===Styles===
] ceramic at top left; SMD tantalum electrolytic at bottom left; ] ceramic at top right; through-hole aluminium electrolytic at bottom right. Major scale divisions are cm.]]

The arrangement of plates and dielectric has many variations in different styles 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 ] or plastic{{spaced ndash}}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{{spaced ndash}}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.

]s]]
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{{spaced ndash}}the leads extend from opposite ends. Radial leads are rarely aligned along radii of the body's circle, so the term is conventional. 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 ]s have existed from the 1930s onward, and remain in widespread use. After the 1980s, ] 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 ]. 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 ]. Electrical control of capacitance is achievable with ]s (or varicaps), which are ] ]s whose depletion region width varies with applied voltage. They are used in ], amongst other applications.

==Capacitor markings==
===Marking codes for larger parts===
Most capacitors have designations printed on their bodies to indicate their electrical characteristics. Larger capacitors, such as electrolytic types usually display the capacitance as value with explicit unit, for example, ''220 μF''.

For typographical reasons, some manufacturers print ''MF'' on capacitors to indicate microfarads (μF).<ref name="KaplanWhite2003">{{cite book |title=Hands-On Electronics: A Practical Introduction to Analog and Digital Circuits |author-last1=Kaplan |author-first1=Daniel M. |author-last2=White |author-first2=Christopher G. |date=2003 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-52189351-0 |page=19 |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=kNbGGpuJyjMC |page=19}}}}</ref>

===Three-/four-character marking code for small capacitors===
Smaller capacitors, such as ceramic types, often use a shorthand-notation consisting of three digits and an optional letter, where the digits (''XYZ'') denote the capacitance in ] (pF), calculated as ''XY''&nbsp;× 10<sup>''Z''</sup>, and the letter indicating the tolerance. Common tolerances are ±5%, ±10%, and ±20%, denotes as J, K, and M, respectively.

A capacitor may also be labeled with its working voltage, temperature, and other relevant characteristics.

Example:
A capacitor labeled or designated as ''473K 330V'' has a capacitance of {{val|47|e=3|u=pF}} = 47&nbsp;nF (±10%) with a maximum working voltage of 330&nbsp;V. The working voltage of a capacitor is nominally the highest voltage that may be applied across it without undue risk of breaking down the dielectric layer.

==={{anchor|2-char-capacitor-marking-code}}Two-character marking code for small capacitors===
For capacitances following the ], ], ] or ] of preferred values, the former ANSI/EIA-198-D:1991, ANSI/EIA-198-1-E:1998 and ANSI/EIA-198-1-F:2002 as well as the amendment IEC&nbsp;60062:2016/AMD1:2019 to ] define a ''special two-character marking code for capacitors'' for very small parts which leave no room to print the above-mentioned three-/four-character code onto them. The code consists of an uppercase letter denoting the two significant digits of the value followed by a digit indicating the multiplier. The EIA standard also defines a number of lowercase letters to specify a number of values not found in E24.<ref name="SIST-EN60062-A1_2019">{{cite book |title=SLOVENSKI STANDARD SIST EN 60062:2016/A1:2019 |chapter=Annex B: Special two-character code system for capacitors |date=2019-12-01 |type=preview |pages=3–4 |url=https://cdn.standards.iteh.ai/samples/67713/7c42aed17a454cdaaff49b69445f0ee8/SIST-EN-60062-2016-A1-2019.pdf |access-date=2022-06-17 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220617174351/https://cdn.standards.iteh.ai/samples/67713/7c42aed17a454cdaaff49b69445f0ee8/SIST-EN-60062-2016-A1-2019.pdf |archive-date=2022-06-17}}</ref>

{| class="wikitable" style="float:left; margin-right:2em;"
!Code
!Series
!colspan="10"|Digit
|-
!Letter<ref group="nb" name="NB_AmbiguousLetters"/>
!E24
!9
!0
!1
!2
!3
!4
!5
!6
!7
!8
|-
!A
!1.0
|0.10&nbsp;pF||1.0&nbsp;pF||10&nbsp;pF||100&nbsp;pF||1.0&nbsp;nF||10&nbsp;nF||100&nbsp;nF||1.0&nbsp;μF||10&nbsp;μF||100&nbsp;μF
|-
!B
!1.1
|0.11&nbsp;pF||1.1&nbsp;pF||11&nbsp;pF||110&nbsp;pF||1.1&nbsp;nF||11&nbsp;nF||110&nbsp;nF||1.1&nbsp;μF||11&nbsp;μF||110&nbsp;μF
|-
!C
!1.2
|0.12&nbsp;pF||1.2&nbsp;pF||12&nbsp;pF||120&nbsp;pF||1.2&nbsp;nF||12&nbsp;nF||120&nbsp;nF||1.2&nbsp;μF||12&nbsp;μF||120&nbsp;μF
|-
!D
!1.3
|0.13&nbsp;pF||1.3&nbsp;pF||13&nbsp;pF||130&nbsp;pF||1.3&nbsp;nF||13&nbsp;nF||130&nbsp;nF||1.3&nbsp;μF||13&nbsp;μF||130&nbsp;μF
|-
!E
!1.5
|0.15&nbsp;pF||1.5&nbsp;pF||15&nbsp;pF||150&nbsp;pF||1.5&nbsp;nF||15&nbsp;nF||150&nbsp;nF||1.5&nbsp;μF||15&nbsp;μF||150&nbsp;μF
|-
!F
!1.6
|0.16&nbsp;pF||1.6&nbsp;pF||16&nbsp;pF||160&nbsp;pF||1.6&nbsp;nF||16&nbsp;nF||160&nbsp;nF||1.6&nbsp;μF||16&nbsp;μF||160&nbsp;μF
|-
!G
!1.8
|0.18&nbsp;pF||1.8&nbsp;pF||18&nbsp;pF||180&nbsp;pF||1.8&nbsp;nF||18&nbsp;nF||180&nbsp;nF||1.8&nbsp;μF||18&nbsp;μF||180&nbsp;μF
|-
!H
!2.0
|0.20&nbsp;pF||2.0&nbsp;pF||20&nbsp;pF||200&nbsp;pF||2.0&nbsp;nF||20&nbsp;nF||200&nbsp;nF||2.0&nbsp;μF||20&nbsp;μF||200&nbsp;μF
|-
!J
!2.2
|0.22&nbsp;pF||2.2&nbsp;pF||22&nbsp;pF||220&nbsp;pF||2.2&nbsp;nF||22&nbsp;nF||220&nbsp;nF||2.2&nbsp;μF||22&nbsp;μF||220&nbsp;μF
|-
!K
!2.4
|0.24&nbsp;pF||2.4&nbsp;pF||24&nbsp;pF||240&nbsp;pF||2.4&nbsp;nF||24&nbsp;nF||240&nbsp;nF||2.4&nbsp;μF||24&nbsp;μF||240&nbsp;μF
|-
!L
!2.7
|0.27&nbsp;pF||2.7&nbsp;pF||27&nbsp;pF||270&nbsp;pF||2.7&nbsp;nF||27&nbsp;nF||270&nbsp;nF||2.7&nbsp;μF||27&nbsp;μF||270&nbsp;μF
|-
!M
!3.0
|0.30&nbsp;pF||3.0&nbsp;pF||30&nbsp;pF||300&nbsp;pF||3.0&nbsp;nF||30&nbsp;nF||300&nbsp;nF||3.0&nbsp;μF||30&nbsp;μF||300&nbsp;μF
|-
!N
!3.3
|0.33&nbsp;pF||3.3&nbsp;pF||33&nbsp;pF||330&nbsp;pF||3.3&nbsp;nF||33&nbsp;nF||330&nbsp;nF||3.3&nbsp;μF||33&nbsp;μF||330&nbsp;μF
|-
!P
!3.6
|0.36&nbsp;pF||3.6&nbsp;pF||36&nbsp;pF||360&nbsp;pF||3.6&nbsp;nF||36&nbsp;nF||360&nbsp;nF||3.6&nbsp;μF||36&nbsp;μF||360&nbsp;μF
|-
!Q
!3.9
|0.39&nbsp;pF||3.9&nbsp;pF||39&nbsp;pF||390&nbsp;pF||3.9&nbsp;nF||39&nbsp;nF||390&nbsp;nF||3.9&nbsp;μF||39&nbsp;μF||390&nbsp;μF
|-
!R
!4.3
|0.43&nbsp;pF||4.3&nbsp;pF||43&nbsp;pF||430&nbsp;pF||4.3&nbsp;nF||43&nbsp;nF||430&nbsp;nF||4.3&nbsp;μF||43&nbsp;μF||430&nbsp;μF
|-
!S
!4.7
|0.47&nbsp;pF||4.7&nbsp;pF||47&nbsp;pF||470&nbsp;pF||4.7&nbsp;nF||47&nbsp;nF||470&nbsp;nF||4.7&nbsp;μF||47&nbsp;μF||470&nbsp;μF
|-
!T
!5.1
|0.51&nbsp;pF||5.1&nbsp;pF||51&nbsp;pF||510&nbsp;pF||5.1&nbsp;nF||51&nbsp;nF||510&nbsp;nF||5.1&nbsp;μF||51&nbsp;μF||510&nbsp;μF
|-
!U
!5.6
|0.56&nbsp;pF||5.6&nbsp;pF||56&nbsp;pF||560&nbsp;pF||5.6&nbsp;nF||56&nbsp;nF||560&nbsp;nF||5.6&nbsp;μF||56&nbsp;μF||560&nbsp;μF
|-
!V
!6.2
|0.62&nbsp;pF||6.2&nbsp;pF||62&nbsp;pF||620&nbsp;pF||6.2&nbsp;nF||62&nbsp;nF||620&nbsp;nF||6.2&nbsp;μF||62&nbsp;μF||620&nbsp;μF
|-
!W
!6.8
|0.68&nbsp;pF||6.8&nbsp;pF||68&nbsp;pF||680&nbsp;pF||6.8&nbsp;nF||68&nbsp;nF||680&nbsp;nF||6.8&nbsp;μF||68&nbsp;μF||680&nbsp;μF
|-
!X
!7.5
|0.75&nbsp;pF||7.5&nbsp;pF||75&nbsp;pF||750&nbsp;pF||7.5&nbsp;nF||75&nbsp;nF||750&nbsp;nF||7.5&nbsp;μF||75&nbsp;μF||750&nbsp;μF
|-
!Y
!8.2
|0.82&nbsp;pF||8.2&nbsp;pF||82&nbsp;pF||820&nbsp;pF||8.2&nbsp;nF||82&nbsp;nF||820&nbsp;nF||8.2&nbsp;μF||82&nbsp;μF||820&nbsp;μF
|-
!Z
!9.1
|0.91&nbsp;pF||9.1&nbsp;pF||91&nbsp;pF||910&nbsp;pF||9.1&nbsp;nF||91&nbsp;nF||910&nbsp;nF||9.1&nbsp;μF||91&nbsp;μF||910&nbsp;μF
|}
{| class="wikitable" style="float:left; margin-right:2em;"
!Code
!Series
!colspan="10"|Digit
|-
!Letter
!EIA
!9
!0
!1
!2
!3
!4
!5
!6
!7
!8
|-
!a
!2.5
|0.25&nbsp;pF||2.5&nbsp;pF||25&nbsp;pF||250&nbsp;pF||2.5&nbsp;nF||25&nbsp;nF||250&nbsp;nF||2.5&nbsp;μF||25&nbsp;μF||250&nbsp;μF
|-
!b?<ref name="Zabkar_2011">{{cite web |title=EIA-198-D capacitance codes |author-first=Franc |author-last=Zabkar |date=2011-09-15 |url=https://www.electronicspoint.com/forums/threads/eia-198-d-capacitance-codes.238921/ |access-date=2022-06-18 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220617225054/https://www.electronicspoint.com/forums/threads/eia-198-d-capacitance-codes.238921/ |archive-date=2022-06-17}}</ref>
!3.0?<ref name="Zabkar_2011"/>
|0.30&nbsp;pF||3.0&nbsp;pF||30&nbsp;pF||300&nbsp;pF||3.0&nbsp;nF||30&nbsp;nF||300&nbsp;nF||3.0&nbsp;μF||30&nbsp;μF||300&nbsp;μF
|-
!b?<ref name="SIST-EN60062-A1_2019"/>/c?<ref name="Zabkar_2011"/>
!3.5
|0.35&nbsp;pF||3.5&nbsp;pF||35&nbsp;pF||350&nbsp;pF||3.5&nbsp;nF||35&nbsp;nF||350&nbsp;nF||3.5&nbsp;μF||35&nbsp;μF||350&nbsp;μF
|-
!d
!4.0
|0.40&nbsp;pF||4.0&nbsp;pF||40&nbsp;pF||400&nbsp;pF||4.0&nbsp;nF||40&nbsp;nF||400&nbsp;nF||4.0&nbsp;μF||40&nbsp;μF||400&nbsp;μF
|-
!e
!4.5
|0.45&nbsp;pF||4.5&nbsp;pF||45&nbsp;pF||450&nbsp;pF||4.5&nbsp;nF||45&nbsp;nF||450&nbsp;nF||4.5&nbsp;μF||45&nbsp;μF||450&nbsp;μF
|-
!f
!5.0
|0.50&nbsp;pF||5.0&nbsp;pF||50&nbsp;pF||500&nbsp;pF||5.0&nbsp;nF||50&nbsp;nF||500&nbsp;nF||5.0&nbsp;μF||50&nbsp;μF||500&nbsp;μF
|-
!m
!6.0
|0.60&nbsp;pF||6.0&nbsp;pF||60&nbsp;pF||600&nbsp;pF||6.0&nbsp;nF||60&nbsp;nF||600&nbsp;nF||6.0&nbsp;μF||60&nbsp;μF||600&nbsp;μF
|-
!n
!7.0
|0.70&nbsp;pF||7.0&nbsp;pF||70&nbsp;pF||700&nbsp;pF||7.0&nbsp;nF||70&nbsp;nF||700&nbsp;nF||7.0&nbsp;μF||70&nbsp;μF||700&nbsp;μF
|-
!t
!8.0
|0.80&nbsp;pF||8.0&nbsp;pF||80&nbsp;pF||800&nbsp;pF||8.0&nbsp;nF||80&nbsp;nF||800&nbsp;nF||8.0&nbsp;μF||80&nbsp;μF||800&nbsp;μF
|-
!g
!9.0
|0.90&nbsp;pF||9.0&nbsp;pF||90&nbsp;pF||900&nbsp;pF||9.0&nbsp;nF||90&nbsp;nF||900&nbsp;nF||9.0&nbsp;μF||90&nbsp;μF||900&nbsp;μF
|}
{{clear}}

===RKM code===
The ] following ] and ] is a notation to state a capacitor's value in a circuit diagram. It avoids using a ] and replaces the decimal separator with the SI prefix symbol for the particular value (and the letter {{mono|F}} for weight 1). The code is also used for part markings. Example: {{mono|4n7}} for 4.7&nbsp;nF or {{mono|2F2}} for 2.2&nbsp;F.

===Historical===
{{See also|Farad#Informal and deprecated terminology}}
In texts prior to the 1960s and on some capacitor packages until more recently,<ref name="Boggs"/> obsolete capacitance units were utilized in electronic books,<ref name="FoE-1965">{{Cite web |url=http://archive.org/details/FundamentalsOfElectronics93400A1b |title=Fundamentals of Electronics, Volume 1b: Basic Electricity, Alternating Current, NAVPERS 93400A-1b |date=1965-04-12 |via=Internet Archive}}</ref> magazines, and electronics catalogs.<ref>{{cite web |title=1930 Catalog – Capacitors (Condensers) |url=http://www.alliedcatalogs.com/html/catalogs_additional/1930/hr139.html |website=] |page=139 |access-date=2017-07-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170711160331/http://www.alliedcatalogs.com/html/catalogs_additional/1930/hr139.html |archive-date=2017-07-11}}</ref> The old units "mfd" and "mf" meant ''microfarad'' (μF); and the old units "mmfd", "mmf", "uuf", "μμf", "pfd" meant ''picofarad'' (pF); but they are rarely used any more.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.justradios.com/MFMMFD.html |title=Capacitor MF - MMFD Conversion Chart |website=www.justradios.com}}</ref> Also, "Micromicrofarad" or "micro-microfarad" are obsolete units that are found in some older texts that is equivalent to ''picofarad'' (pF).<ref name="FoE-1965"/>

Summary of obsolete capacitance units: (upper/lower case variations are not shown)
* μF (microfarad) = mf, mfd
* pF (picofarad) = mmf, mmfd, pfd, μμF

==Applications==
{{Main|Applications of capacitors}}
]. The mylar-film capacitor has very low inductance and low resistance, producing a 3.5 microsecond pulse with 24 million watts of power, to operate a ].]]

===Energy storage===
A capacitor can store electric energy when disconnected from its charging circuit, so it can be used like a temporary ], or like other types of ].<ref>{{cite book |author-last=Miller |author-first=Charles |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=RSsJAAAAQBAJ |page=445}} |title= Illustrated Guide to the National Electrical Code |page=445 |publisher=Cengage Learning |date=2011}}</ref> Capacitors are commonly used in electronic devices to maintain power supply while batteries are being changed. (This prevents loss of information in volatile memory.)

A capacitor can facilitate conversion of kinetic energy of charged particles into electric energy and store it.<ref>{{cite journal |author-last1=Shinn |author-first1=Eric |display-authors=et al |title=Nuclear energy conversion with stacks of graphene nanocapacitors |journal=Complexity |volume=18 |issue=3 |pages=24–27 |date=2012 |doi=10.1002/cplx.21427 |bibcode=2013Cmplx..18c..24S}}</ref>

There are tradeoffs between capacitors and batteries as storage devices. Without external resistors or inductors, capacitors can generally release their stored energy in a very short time compared to batteries. Conversely, batteries can hold a far greater charge per their size. Conventional capacitors provide less than 360 ]s per kilogram of ], whereas a conventional ] has a density of 590 kJ/kg. There is
an intermediate solution: ]s, which can accept and deliver charge much faster than batteries, and tolerate many more charge and discharge cycles than rechargeable batteries. They are, however, 10 times larger than conventional batteries for a given charge. On the other hand, it has been shown that the amount of charge stored in the dielectric
layer of the thin film capacitor can be equal to, or can even exceed, the amount of charge stored on its plates.<ref>{{cite journal |author-last1=Bezryadin |author-first1=A. |author-last2=Belkin |author-first2=A. |display-authors=et al |title=Large energy storage efficiency of the dielectric layer of graphene nanocapacitors |journal=Nanotechnology |date=2017 |volume=28 |issue=49 |pages=495401 |doi=10.1088/1361-6528/aa935c |pmid=29027908 |bibcode=2017Nanot..28W5401B |arxiv=2011.11867 |s2cid=44693636}}</ref>

In ] systems, large capacitors store energy for the ] to use on demand. Also, for a ], a capacitor is used to hold the ].

===Digital memory===
In the 1930s, ] applied the principle of energy storage in capacitors to construct dynamic digital memories for the first binary computers that used electron tubes for logic.<ref name="Floyd2017">{{cite book |author-last=Floyd |author-first=Thomas L. |title=Electronic Devices |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=vg41vgAACAAJ |page=10}} |date=2017 |publisher=Pearson |isbn=978-0-13441444-7 |page=10}}</ref>

===Pulsed power and weapons===
] is used in many applications to increase the power intensity (watts) of a volume of energy (joules) by releasing that volume within a very short time. Pulses in the nanosecond range and powers in the gigawatts are achievable. Short pulses often require specially constructed, low-inductance, high-voltage capacitors that are often used in large groups (''capacitor banks'') to supply huge pulses of current for many pulsed power applications. These include ], ]s, pulsed ]s (especially ]s), ]s, ], ] research, and ]s.<ref>''Pulsed Power'' by Gennady A. Mesyats -- Springer 2005 Page 1--5</ref>

Large capacitor banks (reservoir) are used as energy sources for the ]s or ]s in ]s and other specialty weapons. Experimental work is under way using banks of capacitors as power sources for ] and electromagnetic ]s and ]s.

===Power conditioning===
] capacitor in an amplifier power supply]]

]s are used in ] where they smooth the output of a full or half wave ]. They can also be used in ] 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 ] 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 ] ].

====Power-factor correction====
] on a power transmission system]]
In electric power distribution, capacitors are used for ]. Such capacitors often come as three capacitors connected as a ] ]. Usually, the values of these capacitors are not given in farads but rather as a ] in volt-amperes reactive (var). The purpose is to counteract inductive loading from devices like ] and ]s 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 ].

===Suppression and coupling===

====Signal coupling====
{{Main|capacitive coupling}}
]s are frequently used as coupling capacitors.]]
Because capacitors pass AC but block DC ] (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 ] is small at the signal frequency, is employed.

====Decoupling====
{{Main|decoupling capacitor}}
A ] 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 '']'' as it is used to bypass the power supply or other high impedance component of a circuit.

Decoupling capacitors need not always be discrete components. Capacitors used in these applications may be built into a ], between the various layers. These are often referred to as embedded capacitors.<ref>{{cite journal |author-last1=Alam |author-first1=Mohammed |author-first2=Michael H. |author-last2=Azarian |author-first3=Michael |author-last3=Osterman |author-first4=Michael |author-last4=Pecht |title=Effectiveness of embedded capacitors in reducing the number of surface mount capacitors for decoupling applications |journal=Circuit World |date=2010 |volume=36 |issue=1 |page=22 |doi=10.1108/03056121011015068}}</ref> The layers in the board contributing to the capacitive properties also function as power and ground planes, and have a dielectric in between them, enabling them to operate as a parallel plate capacitor.

====High-pass and low-pass filters====
{{Further|High-pass filter|Low-pass filter}}

====Noise suppression, spikes, and snubbers====
{{Further|High-pass filter|Low-pass filter}}
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 may generate a spark, causing the contact points to oxidize, deteriorate, or sometimes weld together, or destroying a solid-state switch. A ] 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 ] ]s, for instance. Similarly, in smaller scale circuits, the spark may not be enough to damage the switch but may still ] undesirable ] (RFI), which a ] 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 with interrupting units of a high-voltage ] to equally distribute the voltage between these units. These 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 ]).

===Motor starters===
{{Main|Motor capacitor}}
In single phase ] 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 '']'' 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 as 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 ], either in binary form, as in ]s, or in analogue form, as in ]s and ]. Capacitors can be used in ]s as components of integrators or more complex filters and in ] loop stabilization. Signal processing circuits also use capacitors to ] a current signal.

====Tuned circuits====
Capacitors and inductors are applied together in ] to select information in particular frequency bands. For example, ]s rely on variable capacitors to tune the station frequency. Speakers use passive analog ], and analog equalizers use capacitors to select different audio bands.

The ] ''f'' of a tuned circuit is a function of the inductance (''L'') and capacitance (''C'') in series, and is given by:
<math display="block">f = \frac{1}{2 \pi \sqrt{LC}}</math>
where {{mvar|L}} is in ] and {{mvar|C}} is in farads.

===Sensing===
{{main|capacitive sensing|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 ] 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 ]s; as the fuel covers more of a pair of plates, the circuit capacitance increases. Squeezing the dielectric can change a capacitor at a few tens of bar pressure sufficiently that it can be used as a pressure sensor.<ref>Downie, Neil A and Mathilde Pradier, 'Method and apparatus for monitoring fluid pressure", US Patent 7526961 (2009)</ref> A selected, but otherwise standard, polymer dielectric capacitor, when immersed in a compatible gas or liquid, can work usefully as a very low cost pressure sensor up to many hundreds of bar.
;Changing the distance between the plates:
:Capacitors with a flexible plate can be used to measure strain or pressure. Industrial pressure transmitters used for ] use pressure-sensing diaphragms, which form a capacitor plate of an oscillator circuit. Capacitors are used as the ] in ]s, where one plate is moved by air pressure, relative to the fixed position of the other plate. Some ]s use ] 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 ] deployment, and in many other applications. Some ] use capacitors. Additionally, a user can adjust the pitch of a ] musical instrument by moving their hand since this changes the effective capacitance between the user's hand and the antenna.
;Changing the effective area of the plates:
:Capacitive ]es are now{{when|date=May 2018}} used on many consumer electronic products.

===Oscillators===
{{Further|Hartley oscillator}}
]
A capacitor can possess spring-like qualities in an oscillator circuit. In the image example, a capacitor acts to influence the biasing voltage at the npn transistor's base. The resistance values of the voltage-divider resistors and the capacitance value of the capacitor together control the oscillatory frequency.

=== Producing light ===
{{main | light emitting capacitor }}
A light-emitting capacitor is made from a dielectric that uses ] to produce light. If one of the conductive plates is made with a transparent material, the light is visible. Light-emitting capacitors are used in the construction of electroluminescent panels, for applications such as backlighting for laptop computers. In this case, the entire panel is a capacitor used for the purpose of generating light.

==Hazards and safety==
The hazards posed by a capacitor are usually determined, foremost, by the amount of energy stored, which is the cause of things like electrical burns or heart ]. Factors such as voltage and chassis material are of secondary consideration, which are more related to how easily a shock can be initiated rather than how much damage can occur.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Under certain conditions, including conductivity of the surfaces, preexisting medical conditions, the humidity of the air, or the pathways it takes through the body (i.e.: shocks that travel across the core of the body and, especially, the heart are more dangerous than those limited to the extremities), shocks as low as one joule have been reported to cause death, although in most instances they may not even leave a burn. Shocks over ten joules will generally damage skin, and are usually considered hazardous. Any capacitor that can store 50 joules or more should be considered potentially lethal.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://donklipstein.com/xesafe.html|title=Some Xenon Strobe and Flash Safety Hints|website=donklipstein.com}}</ref><ref name="ReferenceA"/>

Capacitors may retain a charge long after power is removed from a circuit; this charge can cause dangerous or even potentially fatal ] or damage connected equipment. For example, even a seemingly innocuous device such as the ] of a ], has a ] which may contain over 15 joules of energy and 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 ]. Larger capacitors, such as those used in ]s, ] units and medical ]s 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 ], as protection from potentially dangerous voltages due to ] or from transient voltages the capacitor may pick up from static charges or passing weather events.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

Some old, large oil-filled paper or plastic film capacitors contain ] (PCBs). It is known that waste PCBs can leak into ] under ]s. Capacitors containing PCBs were labelled as containing "Askarel" and several other trade names. PCB-filled paper capacitors are found in very old (pre-1975) ] ballasts, and other applications.

Capacitors may ] when subjected to voltages or currents beyond their rating, or in case of polarized capacitors, applied in a reverse polarity. Failures may create arcing that heats and vaporizes the dielectric fluid, causing a build up of pressurized gas that may result in swelling, rupture, or an explosion. Larger capacitors may have vents or
similar mechanism to allow the release of such pressures in the event of failure. Capacitors used in ] 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 may benefit from a ] to limit in-rush currents at power-up of high voltage direct current (HVDC) circuits. This extends the life of the component and may mitigate high-voltage hazards.

<gallery mode="packed">
File:Defekte Kondensatoren.jpg|Swollen electrolytic capacitors. The vent on the tops allows the release of pressurized gas build-up in the event of failure, preventing it from exploding.
File:High-energy capacitor from a defibrillator 42 MFD @ 5000 VDC.jpg|This high-energy capacitor from a ] has a resistor connected between the terminals for safety, to dissipate stored energy.
File:Exploded Electrolytic Capacitor.jpg|An exploded electrolytic capacitor, showing fragments of paper and metallic foil
</gallery>

==See also==
{{Portal|Electronics}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]

==Notes==
{{NoteFoot}}{{Reflist|group="nb"|refs=
<ref group="nb" name="NB_AmbiguousLetters">In order to reduce the risk for read errors, the letters <code>I</code> and <code>O</code> are not used as their glyphs look similar to other letters and digits.</ref>
}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}


===Bibliography===
* Glenn Zorpette "Super Charged: A Tiny South Korean Company is Out to Make Capacitors Powerful enough to Propel the Next Generation of Hybrid-Electric Cars", "IEEE Spectrum", January, 2005 Vol 42, No. 1, North American Edition.
* {{cite book |title=Introduction to Electric Circuits |url={{google books|plainurl=y|id=l-weAQAAIAAJ}} |author-last1=Dorf |author-first1=Richard C. |author-last2=Svoboda |author-first2=James A. |edition=5th |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |location=New York |date=2001 |isbn=978-0-47138689-6}}
* "The ARRL Handbook for Radio Amateurs, 68th ed", The Amateur Radio Relay League, Newington CT USA, 1991
* "Basic Circuit Theory with Digital Computations", Lawrence P. Huelsman, Prentice-Hall, 1972
* Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society LXXII, Appendix 8, 1782 (Volta coins the word ''condenser'') * Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society LXXII, Appendix 8, 1782 (Volta coins the word ''condenser'')
* {{cite book |title=Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=a_C8QgAACAAJ}} |author-last=Ulaby |author-first=Fawwaz Tayssir |publisher=] |date=1999 |edition=2nd |location=Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, USA |isbn=978-0-13011554-6}}
* (von Kleist and Musschenbroek)
* {{Cite book |title=Semiconductor Material and Device Characterization |author-first=Dieter K. |author-last=Schroder |page=270 ''ff'' |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=OX2cHKJWCKgC |page=305}} |edition=3rd |publisher=Wiley |date=2006 |isbn=978-0-47173906-7}}
*
* {{Cite book |title=Physics of Semiconductor Devices |author-first1=Simon M. |author-last1=Sze |author-first2=Kwok K. |author-last2=Ng |isbn=978-0-47006830-4 |publisher=Wiley |date=2006 |edition=3rd |url={{google books |plainurl=y |id=o4unkmHBHb8C}}}}

==Further reading==
* ''Tantalum and Niobium-Based Capacitors – Science, Technology, and Applications''; 1st Ed; Yuri&nbsp;Freeman; Springer; 120 pages; 2018; {{ISBN|978-3-31967869-6}}.
* ''Capacitors''; 1st Ed; R. P. Deshpande; McGraw-Hill; 342 pages; 2014; {{ISBN|978-0-07184856-5}}.
* ''The Capacitor Handbook''; 1st Ed; Cletus Kaiser; Van Nostrand Reinhold; 124 pages; 1993; {{ISBN|978-9-40118092-4}}.
* ''Understanding Capacitors and their Uses''; 1st Ed; William Mullin; Sams Publishing; 96 pages; 1964. <small></small>
* ''Fixed and Variable Capacitors''; 1st Ed; G. W. A. Dummer and Harold Nordenberg; Maple Press; 288 pages; 1960. <small></small>
* ''The Electrolytic Capacitor''; 1st Ed; Alexander Georgiev; Murray Hill Books; 191 pages; 1945. <small></small>

==External links==
{{Commons category multi|Capacitors|Capacitors (SMD)}}
{{Wikibooks
|1=Electronics
|2=Capacitors
|3=Capacitors
}}
{{Wiktionary}}
* – SparkMuseum
* – Howstuffworks
*


{{Electronic component}}
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{{Digital electronics}}
{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 02:49, 14 December 2024

Passive two-terminal electronic component that stores electrical energy in an electric field This article is about the electronic component. For the physical phenomenon, see Capacitance. For an overview of types, see Capacitor types. "Capacitive" redirects here. For the term used when referring to touchscreens, see Capacitive sensing.

Capacitor
TypePassive
Working principle‍Capacitance
Inventor
Invention year1745; 280 years ago (1745)
Number of terminals2
Electronic symbol

In electrical engineering, a capacitor is a device that stores electrical energy by accumulating electric charges on two closely spaced surfaces that are insulated from each other. The capacitor was originally known as the condenser, a term still encountered in a few compound names, such as the condenser microphone. It is a passive electronic component with two terminals.

The utility of a capacitor depends on its capacitance. While some capacitance exists between any two electrical conductors in proximity in a circuit, a capacitor is a component designed specifically to add capacitance to some part of the circuit.

The physical form and construction of practical capacitors vary widely and many types of capacitor are in common use. Most capacitors contain at least two electrical conductors, often in the form of metallic plates or surfaces separated by a dielectric medium. A conductor may be a foil, thin film, sintered bead of metal, or an electrolyte. The nonconducting dielectric acts to increase the capacitor's charge capacity. Materials commonly used as dielectrics include glass, ceramic, plastic film, paper, mica, air, and oxide layers. When an electric potential difference (a voltage) is applied across the terminals of a capacitor, for example when a capacitor is connected across a battery, an electric field develops across the dielectric, causing a net positive charge to collect on one plate and net negative charge to collect on the other plate. No current actually flows through a perfect dielectric. However, there is a flow of charge through the source circuit. If the condition is maintained sufficiently long, the current through the source circuit ceases. If a time-varying voltage is applied across the leads of the capacitor, the source experiences an ongoing current due to the charging and discharging cycles of the capacitor.

Capacitors are widely used as parts of electrical circuits in many common electrical devices. Unlike a resistor, an ideal capacitor does not dissipate energy, although real-life capacitors do dissipate a small amount (see Non-ideal behavior).

The earliest forms of capacitors were created in the 1740s, when European experimenters discovered that electric charge could be stored in water-filled glass jars that came to be known as Leyden jars. Today, capacitors are widely used in electronic circuits for blocking direct current while allowing alternating 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. The property of energy storage in capacitors was exploited as dynamic memory in early digital computers, and still is in modern DRAM.

History

See also: Leyden jar

Natural capacitors have existed since prehistoric times. The most common example of natural capacitance are the static charges accumulated between clouds in the sky and the surface of the Earth, where the air between them serves as the dielectric. This results in bolts of lightning when the breakdown voltage of the air is exceeded.

Battery of four Leyden jars in Museum Boerhaave, Leiden, the Netherlands

In October 1745, Ewald Georg von Kleist of Pomerania, 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 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 increase of power with a row of similar units as in a battery of cannon), subsequently applied to clusters of electrochemical cells. In 1747, Leyden jars were made by coating the inside and outside of jars with metal foil, leaving a space at the mouth to prevent arcing between the foils. The earliest unit of capacitance was the jar, equivalent to about 1.11 nanofarads.

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 frequencies required capacitors with lower inductance. More compact construction methods began to be used, such as a flexible dielectric sheet (like oiled paper) sandwiched between sheets of metal foil, rolled or folded into a small package.

Advert from the 28 December 1923 edition of The Radio Times for Dubilier condensers, for use in wireless receiving sets

Early capacitors were known as condensers, a term that is still occasionally used today, particularly in high power applications, such as automotive systems. The term condensatore was used by Alessandro Volta in 1780 to refer to a device, similar to his electrophorus, he developed to measure electricity, and translated in 1782 as condenser, where the name referred to the device's ability to store a higher density of electric charge than was possible with an isolated conductor. The term became deprecated because of the ambiguous meaning of steam condenser, with capacitor becoming the recommended term in the UK from 1926, while the change occurred considerably later in the United States.

Since the beginning of the study of electricity, non-conductive materials like glass, porcelain, paper and mica have been used as insulators. Decades later, these materials were also well-suited for use as the dielectric for the first capacitors. Paper capacitors, made by sandwiching a strip of impregnated paper between strips of metal and rolling the result into a cylinder, were commonly used in the late 19th century; their manufacture started in 1876, and they were used from the early 20th century as decoupling capacitors in telephony.

Porcelain was used in the first ceramic capacitors. In the early years of Marconi's wireless transmitting apparatus, porcelain capacitors were used for high voltage and high frequency application in the transmitters. On the receiver side, smaller mica capacitors were used for resonant circuits. Mica capacitors were invented in 1909 by William Dubilier. Prior to World War II, mica was the most common dielectric for capacitors in the United States.

Charles Pollak (born Karol Pollak), the inventor of the first electrolytic capacitors, found out that the oxide layer on an aluminum anode remained stable in a neutral or alkaline electrolyte, even when the power was switched off. In 1896 he was granted U.S. Patent No. 672,913 for an "Electric liquid capacitor with aluminum electrodes". Solid electrolyte tantalum capacitors were invented by Bell Laboratories in the early 1950s as a miniaturized and more reliable low-voltage support capacitor to complement their newly invented transistor.

With the development of plastic materials by organic chemists during the Second World War, the capacitor industry began to replace paper with thinner polymer films. One very early development in film capacitors was described in British Patent 587,953 in 1944.

Electric double-layer capacitors (now supercapacitors) were invented in 1957 when H. Becker developed a "Low voltage electrolytic capacitor with porous carbon electrodes". He believed that the energy was stored as a charge in the carbon pores used in his capacitor as in the pores of the etched foils of electrolytic capacitors. Because the double layer mechanism was not known by him at the time, he wrote in the patent: "It is not known exactly what is taking place in the component if it is used for energy storage, but it leads to an extremely high capacity."

The MOS capacitor was later widely adopted as a storage capacitor in memory chips, and as the basic building block of the charge-coupled device (CCD) in image sensor technology. In 1966, Dr. Robert Dennard invented modern DRAM architecture, combining a single MOS transistor per capacitor.

Theory of operation

Main article: Capacitance

Overview

Charge separation in a parallel-plate capacitor causes an internal electric field. A dielectric (orange) reduces the field and increases the capacitance.
A simple demonstration capacitor made of two parallel metal plates, using an air gap as the dielectric

A capacitor consists of two conductors separated by a non-conductive region. The non-conductive region can either be a vacuum or an electrical insulator material known as a dielectric. Examples of dielectric media are glass, air, paper, plastic, ceramic, and even a semiconductor depletion region chemically identical to the conductors. From Coulomb's law a charge on one conductor will exert a force on the charge carriers within the other conductor, attracting opposite polarity charge and repelling like polarity charges, thus an opposite polarity charge will be induced on the surface of the other conductor. The conductors thus hold equal and opposite charges on their facing surfaces, and the dielectric develops an electric field.

An ideal capacitor is characterized by a constant capacitance C, in farads in the SI system of units, defined as the ratio of the positive or negative charge Q on each conductor to the voltage V between them: C = Q V {\displaystyle C={\frac {Q}{V}}} A capacitance of one farad (F) means that one coulomb of charge on each conductor causes a voltage of one volt across the device. 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 when the conductors are separated, yielding a larger capacitance.

In practical devices, charge build-up sometimes affects the capacitor mechanically, causing its capacitance to vary. In this case, capacitance is defined in terms of incremental changes: C = d Q d V {\displaystyle C={\frac {\mathrm {d} Q}{\mathrm {d} V}}}

Hydraulic analogy

In the hydraulic analogy, a capacitor is analogous to an elastic diaphragm within a pipe. This animation shows a diaphragm being stretched and un-stretched, which is analogous to a capacitor being charged and discharged.

In the hydraulic analogy, voltage is analogous to water pressure and electrical current through a wire is analogous to water flow through a pipe. A capacitor is like an elastic diaphragm within the pipe. Although water cannot pass through the diaphragm, it moves as the diaphragm stretches or un-stretches.

  • Capacitance is analogous to diaphragm elasticity. In the same way that the ratio of charge differential to voltage would be greater for a larger capacitance value ( C = Q / V {\displaystyle C=Q/V} ), the ratio of water displacement to pressure would be greater for a diaphragm that flexes more readily.
  • In an AC circuit, a capacitor behaves like a diaphragm in a pipe, allowing the charge to move on both sides of the dielectric while no electrons actually pass through. For DC circuits, a capacitor is analogous to a hydraulic accumulator, storing the energy until pressure is released. Similarly, they can be used to smooth the flow of electricity in rectified DC circuits in the same way an accumulator damps surges from a hydraulic pump.
  • Charged capacitors and stretched diaphragms both store potential energy. The more a capacitor is charged, the higher the voltage across the plates ( V = Q / C {\displaystyle V=Q/C} ). Likewise, the greater the displaced water volume, the greater the elastic potential energy.
  • Electrical current affects the charge differential across a capacitor just as the flow of water affects the volume differential across a diaphragm.
  • Just as capacitors experience dielectric breakdown when subjected to high voltages, diaphragms burst under extreme pressures.
  • Just as capacitors block DC while passing AC, diaphragms displace no water unless there is a change in pressure.

Circuit equivalence at short-time limit and long-time limit

In a circuit, a capacitor can behave differently at different time instants. However, it is usually easy to think about the short-time limit and long-time limit:

  • In the long-time limit, after the charging/discharging current has saturated the capacitor, no current would come into (or get out of) either side of the capacitor; Therefore, the long-time equivalence of capacitor is an open circuit.
  • In the short-time limit, if the capacitor starts with a certain voltage V, since the voltage drop on the capacitor is known at this instant, we can replace it with an ideal voltage source of voltage V. Specifically, if V=0 (capacitor is uncharged), the short-time equivalence of a capacitor is a short circuit.

Parallel-plate capacitor

Parallel plate capacitor model consists of two conducting plates, each of area A, separated by a gap of thickness d containing a dielectric.
A surface-mount capacitor. The plates, not visible, are layered horizontally between ceramic dielectric layers, and connect alternately to either end-cap, which are visible.

The simplest model of a capacitor consists of two thin parallel conductive plates each with an area of A {\displaystyle A} separated by a uniform gap of thickness d {\displaystyle d} filled with a dielectric of permittivity ε {\displaystyle \varepsilon } . It is assumed the gap d {\displaystyle d} is much smaller than the dimensions of the plates. This model applies well to many practical capacitors which are constructed of metal sheets separated by a thin layer of insulating dielectric, since manufacturers try to keep the dielectric very uniform in thickness to avoid thin spots which can cause failure of the capacitor.

Since the separation between the plates is uniform over the plate area, the electric field between the plates E {\displaystyle E} is constant, and directed perpendicularly to the plate surface, except for an area near the edges of the plates where the field decreases because the electric field lines "bulge" out of the sides of the capacitor. This "fringing field" area is approximately the same width as the plate separation, d {\displaystyle d} , and assuming d {\displaystyle d} is small compared to the plate dimensions, it is small enough to be ignored. Therefore, if a charge of + Q {\displaystyle +Q} is placed on one plate and Q {\displaystyle -Q} on the other plate (the situation for unevenly charged plates is discussed below), the charge on each plate will be spread evenly in a surface charge layer of constant charge density σ = ± Q / A {\displaystyle \sigma =\pm Q/A} coulombs per square meter, on the inside surface of each plate. From Gauss's law the magnitude of the electric field between the plates is E = σ / ε {\displaystyle E=\sigma /\varepsilon } . The voltage(difference) V {\displaystyle V} between the plates is defined as the line integral of the electric field over a line (in the z-direction) from one plate to another V = 0 d E ( z ) d z = E d = σ ε d = Q d ε A {\displaystyle V=\int _{0}^{d}E(z)\,\mathrm {d} z=Ed={\frac {\sigma }{\varepsilon }}d={\frac {Qd}{\varepsilon A}}} The capacitance is defined as C = Q / V {\displaystyle C=Q/V} . Substituting V {\displaystyle V} above into this equation

C = ε A d {\displaystyle C={\frac {\varepsilon A}{d}}}

Therefore, in a capacitor the highest capacitance is achieved with a high permittivity dielectric material, large plate area, and small separation between the plates.

Since the area A {\displaystyle A} of the plates increases with the square of the linear dimensions and the separation d {\displaystyle d} increases linearly, the capacitance scales with the linear dimension of a capacitor ( C L {\displaystyle C\varpropto L} ), or as the cube root of the volume.

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 E = 1 2 C V 2 = 1 2 ε A d ( U d d ) 2 = 1 2 ε A d U d 2 {\displaystyle E={\frac {1}{2}}CV^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}{\frac {\varepsilon A}{d}}\left(U_{d}d\right)^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}\varepsilon AdU_{d}^{2}}

The maximum energy is a function of dielectric volume, permittivity, and dielectric strength. Changing the plate area and the separation between the plates while maintaining the same volume causes no change of the maximum amount of energy that the capacitor can store, so long as the distance between plates remains much smaller than both the length and width of the plates. 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 increase the effective capacitance of the capacitor. This is sometimes called parasitic capacitance. For some simple capacitor geometries this additional capacitance term can be calculated analytically. It becomes negligibly small when the ratios of plate width to separation and length to separation are large.

For unevenly charged plates:

  • If one plate is charged with Q 1 {\displaystyle Q_{1}} while the other is charged with Q 2 {\displaystyle Q_{2}} , and if both plates are separated from other materials in the environment, then the inner surface of the first plate will have Q 1 Q 2 2 {\textstyle {\frac {Q_{1}-Q_{2}}{2}}} , and the inner surface of the second plated will have Q 1 Q 2 2 {\textstyle -{\frac {Q_{1}-Q_{2}}{2}}} charge. Therefore, the voltage V {\displaystyle V} between the plates is V = Q 1 Q 2 2 C {\textstyle V={\frac {Q_{1}-Q_{2}}{2C}}} . Note that the outer surface of both plates will have Q 1 + Q 2 2 {\textstyle {\frac {Q_{1}+Q_{2}}{2}}} , but those charges do not affect the voltage between the plates.
  • If one plate is charged with Q 1 {\displaystyle Q_{1}} while the other is charged with Q 2 {\displaystyle Q_{2}} , and if the second plate is connected to ground, then the inner surface of the first plate will have Q 1 {\displaystyle Q_{1}} , and the inner surface of the second plated will have Q 1 {\displaystyle -Q_{1}} . Therefore, the voltage V {\displaystyle V} between the plates is V = Q 1 C {\textstyle V={\frac {Q_{1}}{C}}} . Note that the outer surface of both plates will have zero charge.

Interleaved capacitor

The interleaved capacitor can be seen as a combination of several parallel connected capacitors.

For n {\displaystyle n} number of plates in a capacitor, the total capacitance would be C = ε o A d ( n 1 ) {\displaystyle C=\varepsilon _{o}{\frac {A}{d}}(n-1)} where C = ε o A / d {\displaystyle C=\varepsilon _{o}A/d} is the capacitance for a single plate and n {\displaystyle n} is the number of interleaved plates.

As shown to the figure on the right, the interleaved plates can be seen as parallel plates connected to each other. Every pair of adjacent plates acts as a separate capacitor; the number of pairs is always one less than the number of plates, hence the ( n 1 ) {\displaystyle (n-1)} multiplier.

Energy stored in a capacitor

To increase the charge and voltage on a capacitor, work must be done by an external power source to move charge from the negative to the positive plate against the opposing force of the electric field. If the voltage on the capacitor is V {\displaystyle V} , the work d W {\displaystyle dW} required to move a small increment of charge d q {\displaystyle dq} from the negative to the positive plate is d W = V d q {\displaystyle dW=Vdq} . The energy is stored in the increased electric field between the plates. The total energy W {\displaystyle W} stored in a capacitor (expressed in joules) is equal to the total work done in establishing the electric field from an uncharged state. W = 0 Q V ( q ) d q = 0 Q q C d q = 1 2 Q 2 C = 1 2 V Q = 1 2 C V 2 {\displaystyle W=\int _{0}^{Q}V(q)\,\mathrm {d} q=\int _{0}^{Q}{\frac {q}{C}}\,\mathrm {d} q={\frac {1}{2}}{\frac {Q^{2}}{C}}={\frac {1}{2}}VQ={\frac {1}{2}}CV^{2}} where Q {\displaystyle Q} is the charge stored in the capacitor, V {\displaystyle V} is the voltage across the capacitor, and C {\displaystyle C} is the capacitance. This potential energy will remain in the capacitor until the charge is removed. If charge is allowed to move back from the positive to the negative plate, for example by connecting a circuit with resistance between the plates, the charge moving under the influence of the electric field will do work on the external circuit.

If the gap between the capacitor plates d {\displaystyle d} is constant, as in the parallel plate model above, the electric field between the plates will be uniform (neglecting fringing fields) and will have a constant value E = V / d {\displaystyle E=V/d} . In this case the stored energy can be calculated from the electric field strength W = 1 2 C V 2 = 1 2 ε A d ( E d ) 2 = 1 2 ε A d E 2 = 1 2 ε E 2 ( volume of electric field ) {\displaystyle W={\frac {1}{2}}CV^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}{\frac {\varepsilon A}{d}}\left(Ed\right)^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}\varepsilon AdE^{2}={\frac {1}{2}}\varepsilon E^{2}({\text{volume of electric field}})} The last formula above is equal to the energy density per unit volume in the electric field multiplied by the volume of field between the plates, confirming that the energy in the capacitor is stored in its electric field.

Current–voltage relation

Schematic showing polarity of voltage and direction of current for this 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. Actual charges – electrons – cannot pass through the dielectric of an ideal capacitor. Rather, one 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: V ( t ) = Q ( t ) C = V ( t 0 ) + 1 C t 0 t I ( τ ) d τ {\displaystyle V(t)={\frac {Q(t)}{C}}=V(t_{0})+{\frac {1}{C}}\int _{t_{0}}^{t}I(\tau )\,\mathrm {d} \tau }

Taking the derivative of this and multiplying by C yields the derivative form: I ( t ) = d Q ( t ) d t = C d V ( t ) d t {\displaystyle I(t)={\frac {\mathrm {d} Q(t)}{\mathrm {d} t}}=C{\frac {\mathrm {d} V(t)}{\mathrm {d} t}}} for C independent of time, voltage and electric charge.

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 t = 0, it follows from Kirchhoff's voltage law that V 0 = v resistor ( t ) + v capacitor ( t ) = i ( t ) R + 1 C t 0 t i ( τ ) d τ {\displaystyle V_{0}=v_{\text{resistor}}(t)+v_{\text{capacitor}}(t)=i(t)R+{\frac {1}{C}}\int _{t_{0}}^{t}i(\tau )\,\mathrm {d} \tau }

Taking the derivative and multiplying by C, gives a first-order differential equation: R C d i ( t ) d t + i ( t ) = 0 {\displaystyle RC{\frac {\mathrm {d} i(t)}{\mathrm {d} t}}+i(t)=0}

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 I ( t ) = V 0 R e t / τ 0 V ( t ) = V 0 ( 1 e t / τ 0 ) Q ( t ) = C V 0 ( 1 e t / τ 0 ) {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}I(t)&={\frac {V_{0}}{R}}e^{-t/\tau _{0}}\\V(t)&=V_{0}\left(1-e^{-t/\tau _{0}}\right)\\Q(t)&=CV_{0}\left(1-e^{-t/\tau _{0}}\right)\end{aligned}}} 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. In the case of a discharging capacitor, the capacitor's initial voltage (VCi) replaces V0. The equations become I ( t ) = V C i R e t / τ 0 V ( t ) = V C i e t / τ 0 Q ( t ) = C V C i e t / τ 0 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}I(t)&={\frac {V_{Ci}}{R}}e^{-t/\tau _{0}}\\V(t)&=V_{Ci}\,e^{-t/\tau _{0}}\\Q(t)&=C\,V_{Ci}\,e^{-t/\tau _{0}}\end{aligned}}}

AC circuits

See also: reactance (electronics) and electrical impedance § Deriving the device-specific impedances

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 X = 1 ω C = 1 2 π f C Z = 1 j ω C = j ω C = j 2 π f C {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}X&=-{\frac {1}{\omega C}}=-{\frac {1}{2\pi fC}}\\Z&={\frac {1}{j\omega C}}=-{\frac {j}{\omega C}}=-{\frac {j}{2\pi fC}}\end{aligned}}} 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 is 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.

A capacitor connected to an alternating voltage source has a displacement current to flowing through it. In the case that the voltage source is V0cos(ωt), the displacement current can be expressed as: I = C d V d t = ω C V 0 sin ( ω t ) {\displaystyle I=C{\frac {{\text{d}}V}{{\text{d}}t}}=-\omega {C}{V_{0}}\sin(\omega t)}

At sin(ωt) = −1, the capacitor has a maximum (or peak) current whereby I0 = ωCV0. The ratio of peak voltage to peak current is due to capacitive reactance (denoted XC). X C = V 0 I 0 = V 0 ω C V 0 = 1 ω C {\displaystyle X_{C}={\frac {V_{0}}{I_{0}}}={\frac {V_{0}}{\omega CV_{0}}}={\frac {1}{\omega C}}}

XC approaches zero as ω approaches infinity. If XC approaches 0, the capacitor resembles a short wire that strongly passes current at high frequencies. XC approaches infinity as ω approaches zero. If XC approaches infinity, the capacitor resembles an open circuit that poorly passes low frequencies.

The current of the capacitor may be expressed in the form of cosines to better compare with the voltage of the source: I = I 0 sin ( ω t ) = I 0 cos ( ω t + 90 ) {\displaystyle I=-I_{0}\sin({\omega t})=I_{0}\cos({\omega t}+{90^{\circ }})}

In this situation, the current is out of phase with the voltage by +π/2 radians or +90 degrees, i.e. the current leads the voltage by 90°.

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: Z ( s ) = 1 s C {\displaystyle Z(s)={\frac {1}{sC}}} where

  • C is the capacitance, and
  • s is the complex frequency.

Circuit analysis

See also: Series and parallel circuits Several capacitors in parallelThe parallel connection of two capacitors
Cpacitors 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. C e q = i = 1 n C i = C 1 + C 2 + + C n {\displaystyle C_{\mathrm {eq} }=\sum _{i=1}^{n}C_{i}=C_{1}+C_{2}+\cdots +C_{n}}
Several capacitors in seriesThe serial connection of two capacitors
For 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. C e q = ( i = 1 n 1 C i ) 1 = ( 1 C 1 + 1 C 2 + 1 C 3 + + 1 C n ) 1 {\displaystyle C_{\mathrm {eq} }=\left(\sum _{i=1}^{n}{\frac {1}{C_{i}}}\right)^{-1}=\left({1 \over C_{1}}+{1 \over C_{2}}+{1 \over C_{3}}+\dots +{1 \over C_{n}}\right)^{-1}}
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 does not apply too much voltage to the other series capacitors.
Series connection is also sometimes used to adapt polarized electrolytic capacitors for bipolar AC use.
Voltage distribution in parallel-to-series networks.
To model the distribution of voltages from a single charged capacitor ( A ) {\displaystyle \left(A\right)} connected in parallel to a chain of capacitors in series ( B n ) {\displaystyle \left(B_{\text{n}}\right)} : (volts) A e q = A ( 1 1 n + 1 ) (volts) B 1..n = A n ( 1 1 n + 1 ) A B = 0 {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}{\text{(volts)}}A_{\mathrm {eq} }&=A\left(1-{\frac {1}{n+1}}\right)\\{\text{(volts)}}B_{\text{1..n}}&={\frac {A}{n}}\left(1-{\frac {1}{n+1}}\right)\\A-B&=0\end{aligned}}}
Note: This is only correct if all capacitance values are equal.
The power transferred in this arrangement is: P = 1 R 1 n + 1 A volts ( A farads + B farads ) {\displaystyle P={\frac {1}{R}}\cdot {\frac {1}{n+1}}A_{\text{volts}}\left(A_{\text{farads}}+B_{\text{farads}}\right)}

Non-ideal behavior

In practice, capacitors deviate from the ideal capacitor equation in several aspects. Some of these, such as leakage current and parasitic effects are linear, or can be analyzed as nearly linear, and can be accounted for by adding virtual components to form an equivalent circuit. The usual methods of network analysis can then be applied. In other cases, such as with breakdown voltage, the effect is non-linear and ordinary (normal, e.g., linear) network analysis cannot be used, the effect must be considered separately. Yet another group of artifacts may exist, including temperature dependence, that may be linear but invalidates the assumption in the analysis that capacitance is a constant. Finally, combined parasitic effects such as inherent inductance, resistance, or dielectric losses can exhibit non-uniform behavior at varying frequencies of operation.

Breakdown voltage

Main article: Breakdown voltage

Above a particular electric field strength, 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, V bd = E ds d {\displaystyle V_{\text{bd}}=E_{\text{ds}}d}

The maximum energy that can be stored safely in a capacitor is limited by the breakdown voltage. Exceeding this voltage can result in a short circuit between the plates, which can often cause permanent damage to the dielectric, plates, or both. 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 2–5 MV/m (or kV/mm); for mica the breakdown is 100–300 MV/m; for oil, 15–25 MV/m; it 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 and causing a short (or relatively low resistance) circuit. The results can be explosive, as the short in the capacitor draws current from the surrounding circuitry and dissipates the energy. However, in capacitors with particular dielectrics and thin metal electrodes, shorts are not formed after breakdown. It happens because a metal melts or evaporates in a breakdown vicinity, isolating it from the rest of the capacitor.

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

Real capacitor model that adds an inductance and resistance in series and a conductance in parallel to its capacitance. Its total impedance is: Z Σ = Z ESL + R lead + ( Z C G dielectric ) = j ω ESL + R lead + 1 j ω C + G dielectric . {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}Z_{\Sigma }&{=}Z_{\text{ESL}}+R_{\text{lead}}+(Z_{\text{C}}\parallel G_{\text{dielectric}})\\&{=}j\omega \cdot {\text{ESL}}+R_{\text{lead}}+{\frac {1}{j\omega \cdot C+G_{\text{dielectric}}}}.\end{aligned}}}

An ideal capacitor only stores and releases electrical energy, without dissipation. In practice, capacitors have imperfections within the capacitor's materials that result in the following parasitic components:

  • ESL {\displaystyle {\text{ESL}}} , the equivalent series inductance, due to the leads. This is usually significant only at relatively high frequencies.
  • Two resistances that add a real-valued component to the total impedance, which wastes power:
    • R lead {\displaystyle R_{\text{lead}}} , a small series resistance in the leads. Becomes more relevant as frequency increases.
    • G dielectric {\displaystyle G_{\text{dielectric}}} , a small conductance (or reciprocally, a large resistance) in parallel with the capacitance, to account for imperfect dielectric material. This causes a small leakage current across the dielectric (see § Leakage) that slowly discharges the capacitor over time. This conductance dominates the total resistance at very low frequencies. Its value varies greatly depending on the capacitor material and quality.

Simplified RLC series model

Simplified RLC series capacitor model. Its total equivalent impedance is: j ω ESL + ESR j ω C . {\displaystyle j\omega \cdot {\text{ESL}}+{\text{ESR}}-{\frac {j}{\omega \cdot C}}.}
Bode magnitude plot of voltages in an RLC circuit. Frequency is relative to the natural frequency ω0. (Its damping ratio ζ and ω0 would depend on the particular capacitor.) Lower frequencies are more capacitive. Around ω0, the total impedance and voltage drop is primarily resistive. Higher frequencies are more inductive.

As frequency increases, the capacitive impedance (a negative reactance) reduces, so the dielectric's conductance becomes less important and the series components become more significant. Thus, a simplified RLC series model valid for a large frequency range simply treats the capacitor as being in series with an equivalent series inductance ESL {\displaystyle {\text{ESL}}} and a frequency-dependent equivalent series resistance ESR {\displaystyle {\text{ESR}}} , which varies little with frequency. Unlike the previous model, this model is not valid at DC and very low frequencies where G dielectric {\displaystyle G_{\text{dielectric}}} is relevant.

Inductive reactance increases with frequency. Because its sign is positive, it counteracts the capacitance.

At the RLC circuit's natural frequency ω 0 = 1 ESL C {\displaystyle \omega _{0}{=}{\tfrac {1}{\sqrt {{\text{ESL}}\cdot {\text{C}}}}}} , the inductance perfectly cancels the capacitance, so total reactance is zero. Since the total impedance at ω 0 {\displaystyle \omega _{0}} is just the real-value of ESR {\displaystyle {\text{ESR}}} , average power dissipation reaches its maximum of ⁠VRMS/ESR⁠, where VRMS is the root mean square (RMS) voltage across the capacitor.

At even higher frequencies, the inductive impedance dominates, so the capacitor undesirably behaves instead like an inductor. High-frequency engineering involves accounting for the inductance of all connections and components.

Q factor
See also: Dielectric loss § Discrete circuit perspective

For a simplified model of a capacitor as an ideal capacitor in series with an equivalent series resistance ESR {\displaystyle {\text{ESR}}} , the capacitor's quality factor (or Q) is the ratio of the magnitude of its capacitive reactance X C {\displaystyle X_{C}} to its resistance at a given frequency ω {\displaystyle \omega } :

Q ( ω ) = | X C ( ω ) | ESR = 1 ω C ESR . {\displaystyle Q(\omega )={\frac {|X_{C}(\omega )|}{\text{ESR}}}={\frac {1}{\omega C\cdot {\text{ESR}}}}\,.}

The Q factor is a measure of its efficiency: the higher the Q factor of the capacitor, the closer it approaches the behavior of an ideal capacitor. Dissipation factor is its reciprocal.

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.
  • Aluminum 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 usually has a smaller effect, i.e., usual capacitor design is to minimize voltage coefficient. 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 may be positive or negative, depending mostly on the dielectric material. Some, designated C0G/NP0, but called NPO, have a somewhat negative coefficient at one temperature, positive at another, and zero in between. Such components may be specified for temperature-critical circuits.

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 is usually 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 underdamped. The current and voltage reverse direction, forming a harmonic oscillator between the inductance and capacitance. The current and voltage tends 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 overdamped systems usually do not experience a voltage reversal. Reversal is also encountered in AC circuits, where the peak current is equal in each direction.

For maximum life, capacitors usually need to be able to handle the maximum amount of reversal that a system may experience. An AC circuit experiences 100% voltage reversal, while underdamped DC circuits 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 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 any type of dielectric material show some level of "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 is objectionable in applications such as precision sample and hold circuits or timing circuits. The level of absorption depends on many factors, from design considerations to charging time, since the absorption is a time-dependent process. However, the primary factor is the type of dielectric material. Capacitors such as tantalum electrolytic or polysulfone film exhibit relatively high absorption, while polystyrene or Teflon allow very small levels of absorption. In some capacitors where dangerous voltages and energies exist, such as in flashtubes, television sets, microwave ovens and defibrillators, the dielectric absorption can recharge the capacitor to hazardous voltages after it has been shorted or discharged. Any capacitor containing over 10 joules of energy is generally considered hazardous, while 50 joules or higher is potentially lethal. A capacitor may regain anywhere from 0.01 to 20% of its original charge over a period of several minutes, allowing a seemingly safe capacitor to become surprisingly dangerous.

Leakage

No material is a perfect insulator, thus all dielectrics allow some small level of current to leak through, which can be measured with a megohmmeter. Leakage is equivalent to a resistor in parallel with the capacitor. Constant exposure to factors such as heat, mechanical stress, or humidity can cause the dielectric to deteriorate resulting in 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

Aluminum 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. Sometimes they fail with a short circuit when next operated.

Lifespan

All capacitors have varying lifespans, depending upon their construction, operational conditions, and environmental conditions. Solid-state ceramic capacitors generally have very long lives under normal use, which has little dependency on factors such as vibration or ambient temperature, but factors like humidity, mechanical stress, and fatigue play a primary role in their failure. Failure modes may differ. Some capacitors may experience a gradual loss of capacitance, increased leakage or an increase in equivalent series resistance (ESR), while others may fail suddenly or even catastrophically. For example, metal-film capacitors are more prone to damage from stress and humidity, but will self-heal when a breakdown in the dielectric occurs. The formation of a glow discharge at the point of failure prevents arcing by vaporizing the metallic film in that spot, neutralizing any short circuit with minimal loss in capacitance. When enough pinholes accumulate in the film, a total failure occurs in a metal-film capacitor, generally happening suddenly without warning.

Electrolytic capacitors generally have the shortest lifespans. Electrolytic capacitors are affected very little by vibration or humidity, but factors such as ambient and operational temperatures play a large role in their failure, which gradually occur as an increase in ESR (up to 300%) and as much as a 20% decrease in capacitance. The capacitors contain electrolytes which will eventually diffuse through the seals and evaporate. An increase in temperature also increases internal pressure, and increases the reaction rate of the chemicals. Thus, the life of an electrolytic capacitor is generally defined by a modification of the Arrhenius equation, which is used to determine chemical-reaction rates: L = B e e A k T o {\displaystyle L=Be^{\frac {e_{A}}{kT_{o}}}}

Manufacturers often use this equation to supply an expected lifespan, in hours, for electrolytic capacitors when used at their designed operating temperature, which is affected by both ambient temperature, ESR, and ripple current. However, these ideal conditions may not exist in every use. The rule of thumb for predicting lifespan under different conditions of use is determined by: L a = L 0 2 T 0 T a 10 {\displaystyle L_{a}=L_{0}2^{\frac {T_{0}-T_{a}}{10}}}

This says that the capacitor's life decreases by half for every 10 degrees Celsius that the temperature is increased, where:

  • L 0 {\displaystyle L_{0}} is the rated life under rated conditions, e.g. 2000 hours
  • T 0 {\displaystyle T_{0}} is the rated max/min operational temperature
  • T a {\displaystyle T_{a}} is the average operational temperature
  • L a {\displaystyle L_{a}} is the expected lifespan under given conditions

Capacitor types

Main article: 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 types, 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

An assortment of capacitor types. From left: multilayer ceramic, ceramic disc, multilayer polyester film, tubular ceramic, polystyrene, metalized polyester film, aluminum electrolytic. Major scale divisions are in centimetres.

Most capacitors have a dielectric spacer, which increases their capacitance compared to air or a vacuum. 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. The dielectric also needs to have as low a loss with frequency as possible.

However, low value capacitors are available with a high vacuum between their plates to allow 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 the plates.

Several solid dielectrics are available, including paper, plastic, glass, mica and ceramic.

Paper was used extensively in older capacitors and offers relatively high voltage performance. However, paper absorbs moisture, and has been largely replaced by plastic film capacitors.

Most of the plastic films now used offer better stability and ageing performance than such older dielectrics such as oiled paper, which makes them useful in timer circuits, although they may be limited to relatively low operating temperatures and frequencies, because of the limitations of the plastic film being used. Large plastic film capacitors are used extensively in suppression circuits, motor start circuits, and power-factor correction circuits.

Ceramic capacitors are generally small, cheap and useful for high frequency applications, although their capacitance varies strongly with voltage and temperature and they age poorly. They can also suffer from the piezoelectric effect. Ceramic capacitors 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. Modern multilayer ceramics are usually quite small, but some types have inherently wide value tolerances, microphonic issues, and are usually physically brittle.

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.

Three aluminum electrolytic capacitors of varying capacity
3D model of a capacitor

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 suffer from self-degradation 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 example, in older equipment, this may cause arcing in rectifier tubes. They can be restored before use by gradually applying the operating voltage, often performed on antique vacuum tube equipment over a period of thirty minutes by using a variable transformer to supply AC power. 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 capacitor is a component that, while not serving as its main use, has capacitance and is used to conduct signals through a conductive sheet.

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.

Voltage-dependent capacitors

The dielectric constant for a number of very useful dielectrics changes as a function of the applied electrical field, for example ferroelectric materials, so the capacitance for these devices is more complex. For example, in charging such a capacitor the differential increase in voltage with charge is governed by: d Q = C ( V ) d V {\displaystyle dQ=C(V)\,dV} where the voltage dependence of capacitance, C(V), suggests that the capacitance is a function of the electric field strength, which in a large area parallel plate device is given by ε = V/d. This field polarizes the dielectric, which polarization, in the case of a ferroelectric, is a nonlinear S-shaped function of the electric field, which, in the case of a large area parallel plate device, translates into a capacitance that is a nonlinear function of the voltage.

Corresponding to the voltage-dependent capacitance, to charge the capacitor to voltage V an integral relation is found: Q = 0 V C ( V ) d V {\displaystyle Q=\int _{0}^{V}C(V)\,dV} which agrees with Q = CV only when C does not depend on voltage V.

By the same token, the energy stored in the capacitor now is given by d W = Q d V = [ 0 V d V C ( V ) ] d V . {\displaystyle dW=Q\,dV=\leftdV\,.}

Integrating: W = 0 V d V 0 V d V C ( V ) = 0 V d V V V d V C ( V ) = 0 V d V ( V V ) C ( V ) , {\displaystyle W=\int _{0}^{V}dV\int _{0}^{V}dV'\,C(V')=\int _{0}^{V}dV'\int _{V'}^{V}dV\,C(V')=\int _{0}^{V}dV'\left(V-V'\right)C(V')\,,} where interchange of the order of integration is used.

The nonlinear capacitance of a microscope probe scanned along a ferroelectric surface is used to study the domain structure of ferroelectric materials.

Another example of voltage dependent capacitance occurs in semiconductor devices such as semiconductor diodes, where the voltage dependence stems not from a change in dielectric constant but in a voltage dependence of the spacing between the charges on the two sides of the capacitor. This effect is intentionally exploited in diode-like devices known as varicaps.

Frequency-dependent capacitors

If a capacitor is driven with a time-varying voltage that changes rapidly enough, at some frequency the polarization of the dielectric cannot follow the voltage. As an example of the origin of this mechanism, the internal microscopic dipoles contributing to the dielectric constant cannot move instantly, and so as frequency of an applied alternating voltage increases, the dipole response is limited and the dielectric constant diminishes. A changing dielectric constant with frequency is referred to as dielectric dispersion, and is governed by dielectric relaxation processes, such as Debye relaxation. Under transient conditions, the displacement field can be expressed as (see electric susceptibility): D ( t ) = ε 0 t ε r ( t t ) E ( t ) d t , {\displaystyle {\boldsymbol {D(t)}}=\varepsilon _{0}\int _{-\infty }^{t}\varepsilon _{r}(t-t'){\boldsymbol {E}}(t')\,dt',}

indicating the lag in response by the time dependence of εr, calculated in principle from an underlying microscopic analysis, for example, of the dipole behavior in the dielectric. See, for example, linear response function. The integral extends over the entire past history up to the present time. A Fourier transform in time then results in: D ( ω ) = ε 0 ε r ( ω ) E ( ω ) , {\displaystyle {\boldsymbol {D}}(\omega )=\varepsilon _{0}\varepsilon _{r}(\omega ){\boldsymbol {E}}(\omega )\,,}

where εr(ω) is now a complex function, with an imaginary part related to absorption of energy from the field by the medium. See permittivity. The capacitance, being proportional to the dielectric constant, also exhibits this frequency behavior. Fourier transforming Gauss's law with this form for displacement field:

I ( ω ) = j ω Q ( ω ) = j ω Σ D ( r , ω ) d Σ = [ G ( ω ) + j ω C ( ω ) ] V ( ω ) = V ( ω ) Z ( ω ) , {\displaystyle {\begin{aligned}I(\omega )&=j\omega Q(\omega )=j\omega \oint _{\Sigma }{\boldsymbol {D}}({\boldsymbol {r}},\omega )\cdot d{\boldsymbol {\Sigma }}\\&=\leftV(\omega )={\frac {V(\omega )}{Z(\omega )}}\,,\end{aligned}}} where j is the imaginary unit, V(ω) is the voltage component at angular frequency ω, G(ω) is the real part of the current, called the conductance, and C(ω) determines the imaginary part of the current and is the capacitance. Z(ω) is the complex impedance.

When a parallel-plate capacitor is filled with a dielectric, the measurement of dielectric properties of the medium is based upon the relation: ε r ( ω ) = ε r ( ω ) j ε r ( ω ) = 1 j ω Z ( ω ) C 0 = C cmplx ( ω ) C 0 , {\displaystyle \varepsilon _{r}(\omega )=\varepsilon '_{r}(\omega )-j\varepsilon ''_{r}(\omega )={\frac {1}{j\omega Z(\omega )C_{0}}}={\frac {C_{\text{cmplx}}(\omega )}{C_{0}}}\,,} where a single prime denotes the real part and a double prime the imaginary part, Z(ω) is the complex impedance with the dielectric present, Ccmplx(ω) is the so-called complex capacitance with the dielectric present, and C0 is the capacitance without the dielectric. (Measurement "without the dielectric" in principle means measurement in free space, an unattainable goal inasmuch as even the quantum vacuum is predicted to exhibit nonideal behavior, such as dichroism. For practical purposes, when measurement errors are taken into account, often a measurement in terrestrial vacuum, or simply a calculation of C0, is sufficiently accurate.)

Using this measurement method, the dielectric constant may exhibit a resonance at certain frequencies corresponding to characteristic response frequencies (excitation energies) of contributors to the dielectric constant. These resonances are the basis for a number of experimental techniques for detecting defects. The conductance method measures absorption as a function of frequency. Alternatively, the time response of the capacitance can be used directly, as in deep-level transient spectroscopy.

Another example of frequency dependent capacitance occurs with MOS capacitors, where the slow generation of minority carriers means that at high frequencies the capacitance measures only the majority carrier response, while at low frequencies both types of carrier respond.

At optical frequencies, in semiconductors the dielectric constant exhibits structure related to the band structure of the solid. Sophisticated modulation spectroscopy measurement methods based upon modulating the crystal structure by pressure or by other stresses and observing the related changes in absorption or reflection of light have advanced our knowledge of these materials.

Styles

Capacitor packages: SMD ceramic at top left; SMD tantalum electrolytic at bottom left; through-hole ceramic at top right; through-hole aluminium electrolytic at bottom right. Major scale divisions are cm.

The arrangement of plates and dielectric has many variations in different styles 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 are rarely aligned along radii of the body's circle, so the term is conventional. 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 from the 1930s onward, and remain in widespread use. After 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

Marking codes for larger parts

Most capacitors have designations printed on their bodies to indicate their electrical characteristics. Larger capacitors, such as electrolytic types usually display the capacitance as value with explicit unit, for example, 220 μF.

For typographical reasons, some manufacturers print MF on capacitors to indicate microfarads (μF).

Three-/four-character marking code for small capacitors

Smaller capacitors, such as ceramic types, often use a shorthand-notation consisting of three digits and an optional letter, where the digits (XYZ) denote the capacitance in picofarad (pF), calculated as XY × 10, and the letter indicating the tolerance. Common tolerances are ±5%, ±10%, and ±20%, denotes as J, K, and M, respectively.

A capacitor may also be labeled with its working voltage, temperature, and other relevant characteristics.

Example: A capacitor labeled or designated as 473K 330V has a capacitance of 47×10 pF = 47 nF (±10%) with a maximum working voltage of 330 V. The working voltage of a capacitor is nominally the highest voltage that may be applied across it without undue risk of breaking down the dielectric layer.

Two-character marking code for small capacitors

For capacitances following the E3, E6, E12 or E24 series of preferred values, the former ANSI/EIA-198-D:1991, ANSI/EIA-198-1-E:1998 and ANSI/EIA-198-1-F:2002 as well as the amendment IEC 60062:2016/AMD1:2019 to IEC 60062 define a special two-character marking code for capacitors for very small parts which leave no room to print the above-mentioned three-/four-character code onto them. The code consists of an uppercase letter denoting the two significant digits of the value followed by a digit indicating the multiplier. The EIA standard also defines a number of lowercase letters to specify a number of values not found in E24.

Code Series Digit
Letter E24 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
A 1.0 0.10 pF 1.0 pF 10 pF 100 pF 1.0 nF 10 nF 100 nF 1.0 μF 10 μF 100 μF
B 1.1 0.11 pF 1.1 pF 11 pF 110 pF 1.1 nF 11 nF 110 nF 1.1 μF 11 μF 110 μF
C 1.2 0.12 pF 1.2 pF 12 pF 120 pF 1.2 nF 12 nF 120 nF 1.2 μF 12 μF 120 μF
D 1.3 0.13 pF 1.3 pF 13 pF 130 pF 1.3 nF 13 nF 130 nF 1.3 μF 13 μF 130 μF
E 1.5 0.15 pF 1.5 pF 15 pF 150 pF 1.5 nF 15 nF 150 nF 1.5 μF 15 μF 150 μF
F 1.6 0.16 pF 1.6 pF 16 pF 160 pF 1.6 nF 16 nF 160 nF 1.6 μF 16 μF 160 μF
G 1.8 0.18 pF 1.8 pF 18 pF 180 pF 1.8 nF 18 nF 180 nF 1.8 μF 18 μF 180 μF
H 2.0 0.20 pF 2.0 pF 20 pF 200 pF 2.0 nF 20 nF 200 nF 2.0 μF 20 μF 200 μF
J 2.2 0.22 pF 2.2 pF 22 pF 220 pF 2.2 nF 22 nF 220 nF 2.2 μF 22 μF 220 μF
K 2.4 0.24 pF 2.4 pF 24 pF 240 pF 2.4 nF 24 nF 240 nF 2.4 μF 24 μF 240 μF
L 2.7 0.27 pF 2.7 pF 27 pF 270 pF 2.7 nF 27 nF 270 nF 2.7 μF 27 μF 270 μF
M 3.0 0.30 pF 3.0 pF 30 pF 300 pF 3.0 nF 30 nF 300 nF 3.0 μF 30 μF 300 μF
N 3.3 0.33 pF 3.3 pF 33 pF 330 pF 3.3 nF 33 nF 330 nF 3.3 μF 33 μF 330 μF
P 3.6 0.36 pF 3.6 pF 36 pF 360 pF 3.6 nF 36 nF 360 nF 3.6 μF 36 μF 360 μF
Q 3.9 0.39 pF 3.9 pF 39 pF 390 pF 3.9 nF 39 nF 390 nF 3.9 μF 39 μF 390 μF
R 4.3 0.43 pF 4.3 pF 43 pF 430 pF 4.3 nF 43 nF 430 nF 4.3 μF 43 μF 430 μF
S 4.7 0.47 pF 4.7 pF 47 pF 470 pF 4.7 nF 47 nF 470 nF 4.7 μF 47 μF 470 μF
T 5.1 0.51 pF 5.1 pF 51 pF 510 pF 5.1 nF 51 nF 510 nF 5.1 μF 51 μF 510 μF
U 5.6 0.56 pF 5.6 pF 56 pF 560 pF 5.6 nF 56 nF 560 nF 5.6 μF 56 μF 560 μF
V 6.2 0.62 pF 6.2 pF 62 pF 620 pF 6.2 nF 62 nF 620 nF 6.2 μF 62 μF 620 μF
W 6.8 0.68 pF 6.8 pF 68 pF 680 pF 6.8 nF 68 nF 680 nF 6.8 μF 68 μF 680 μF
X 7.5 0.75 pF 7.5 pF 75 pF 750 pF 7.5 nF 75 nF 750 nF 7.5 μF 75 μF 750 μF
Y 8.2 0.82 pF 8.2 pF 82 pF 820 pF 8.2 nF 82 nF 820 nF 8.2 μF 82 μF 820 μF
Z 9.1 0.91 pF 9.1 pF 91 pF 910 pF 9.1 nF 91 nF 910 nF 9.1 μF 91 μF 910 μF
Code Series Digit
Letter EIA 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
a 2.5 0.25 pF 2.5 pF 25 pF 250 pF 2.5 nF 25 nF 250 nF 2.5 μF 25 μF 250 μF
b? 3.0? 0.30 pF 3.0 pF 30 pF 300 pF 3.0 nF 30 nF 300 nF 3.0 μF 30 μF 300 μF
b?/c? 3.5 0.35 pF 3.5 pF 35 pF 350 pF 3.5 nF 35 nF 350 nF 3.5 μF 35 μF 350 μF
d 4.0 0.40 pF 4.0 pF 40 pF 400 pF 4.0 nF 40 nF 400 nF 4.0 μF 40 μF 400 μF
e 4.5 0.45 pF 4.5 pF 45 pF 450 pF 4.5 nF 45 nF 450 nF 4.5 μF 45 μF 450 μF
f 5.0 0.50 pF 5.0 pF 50 pF 500 pF 5.0 nF 50 nF 500 nF 5.0 μF 50 μF 500 μF
m 6.0 0.60 pF 6.0 pF 60 pF 600 pF 6.0 nF 60 nF 600 nF 6.0 μF 60 μF 600 μF
n 7.0 0.70 pF 7.0 pF 70 pF 700 pF 7.0 nF 70 nF 700 nF 7.0 μF 70 μF 700 μF
t 8.0 0.80 pF 8.0 pF 80 pF 800 pF 8.0 nF 80 nF 800 nF 8.0 μF 80 μF 800 μF
g 9.0 0.90 pF 9.0 pF 90 pF 900 pF 9.0 nF 90 nF 900 nF 9.0 μF 90 μF 900 μF

RKM code

The RKM code following IEC 60062 and BS 1852 is a notation to state a capacitor's value in a circuit diagram. It avoids using a decimal separator and replaces the decimal separator with the SI prefix symbol for the particular value (and the letter F for weight 1). The code is also used for part markings. Example: 4n7 for 4.7 nF or 2F2 for 2.2 F.

Historical

See also: Farad § Informal and deprecated terminology

In texts prior to the 1960s and on some capacitor packages until more recently, obsolete capacitance units were utilized in electronic books, magazines, and electronics catalogs. The old units "mfd" and "mf" meant microfarad (μF); and the old units "mmfd", "mmf", "uuf", "μμf", "pfd" meant picofarad (pF); but they are rarely used any more. Also, "Micromicrofarad" or "micro-microfarad" are obsolete units that are found in some older texts that is equivalent to picofarad (pF).

Summary of obsolete capacitance units: (upper/lower case variations are not shown)

  • μF (microfarad) = mf, mfd
  • pF (picofarad) = mmf, mmfd, pfd, μμF

Applications

Main article: Applications of capacitors
A capacitor discharging its stored energy through a flashtube. The mylar-film capacitor has very low inductance and low resistance, producing a 3.5 microsecond pulse with 24 million watts of power, 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.)

A capacitor can facilitate conversion of kinetic energy of charged particles into electric energy and store it.

There are tradeoffs between capacitors and batteries as storage devices. Without external resistors or inductors, capacitors can generally release their stored energy in a very short time compared to batteries. Conversely, batteries can hold a far greater charge per their size. Conventional capacitors provide less than 360 joules per kilogram of specific energy, whereas a conventional alkaline battery has a density of 590 kJ/kg. There is an intermediate solution: supercapacitors, which can accept and deliver charge much faster than batteries, and tolerate many more charge and discharge cycles than rechargeable batteries. They are, however, 10 times larger than conventional batteries for a given charge. On the other hand, it has been shown that the amount of charge stored in the dielectric layer of the thin film capacitor can be equal to, or can even exceed, the amount of charge stored on its plates.

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.

Digital memory

In the 1930s, John Atanasoff applied the principle of energy storage in capacitors to construct dynamic digital memories for the first binary computers that used electron tubes for logic.

Pulsed power and weapons

Pulsed power is used in many applications to increase the power intensity (watts) of a volume of energy (joules) by releasing that volume within a very short time. Pulses in the nanosecond range and powers in the gigawatts are achievable. Short pulses often require specially constructed, low-inductance, high-voltage capacitors that are often used in large groups (capacitor banks) 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 10,000 microfarad 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 not given 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

Main article: decoupling capacitor

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.

Decoupling capacitors need not always be discrete components. Capacitors used in these applications may be built into a printed circuit board, between the various layers. These are often referred to as embedded capacitors. The layers in the board contributing to the capacitive properties also function as power and ground planes, and have a dielectric in between them, enabling them to operate as a parallel plate capacitor.

High-pass and low-pass filters

Further information: High-pass filter and Low-pass filter

Noise suppression, spikes, and snubbers

Further information: High-pass filter and Low-pass filter

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 may 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 may 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 with interrupting units of a high-voltage circuit breaker to equally distribute the voltage between these units. These 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

Main article: Motor capacitor

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 as 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: f = 1 2 π L C {\displaystyle f={\frac {1}{2\pi {\sqrt {LC}}}}} where L is in henries and C is in farads.

Sensing

Main articles: capacitive sensing and 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. Squeezing the dielectric can change a capacitor at a few tens of bar pressure sufficiently that it can be used as a pressure sensor. A selected, but otherwise standard, polymer dielectric capacitor, when immersed in a compatible gas or liquid, can work usefully as a very low cost pressure sensor up to many hundreds of bar.
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 their 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.

Oscillators

Further information: Hartley oscillator
Example of a simple oscillator incorporating a capacitor

A capacitor can possess spring-like qualities in an oscillator circuit. In the image example, a capacitor acts to influence the biasing voltage at the npn transistor's base. The resistance values of the voltage-divider resistors and the capacitance value of the capacitor together control the oscillatory frequency.

Producing light

Main article: light emitting capacitor

A light-emitting capacitor is made from a dielectric that uses phosphorescence to produce light. If one of the conductive plates is made with a transparent material, the light is visible. Light-emitting capacitors are used in the construction of electroluminescent panels, for applications such as backlighting for laptop computers. In this case, the entire panel is a capacitor used for the purpose of generating light.

Hazards and safety

The hazards posed by a capacitor are usually determined, foremost, by the amount of energy stored, which is the cause of things like electrical burns or heart fibrillation. Factors such as voltage and chassis material are of secondary consideration, which are more related to how easily a shock can be initiated rather than how much damage can occur. Under certain conditions, including conductivity of the surfaces, preexisting medical conditions, the humidity of the air, or the pathways it takes through the body (i.e.: shocks that travel across the core of the body and, especially, the heart are more dangerous than those limited to the extremities), shocks as low as one joule have been reported to cause death, although in most instances they may not even leave a burn. Shocks over ten joules will generally damage skin, and are usually considered hazardous. Any capacitor that can store 50 joules or more should be considered potentially lethal.

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 the flash of a disposable camera, has a photoflash capacitor which may contain over 15 joules of energy and 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. Larger capacitors, such as those used in microwave ovens, HVAC units and medical defibrillators 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 or from transient voltages the capacitor may pick up from static charges or passing weather events.

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 PCBs 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 in case of polarized capacitors, applied in a reverse polarity. Failures may create arcing that heats and vaporizes the dielectric fluid, causing a build up of pressurized gas that may result in swelling, rupture, or an explosion. Larger capacitors may have vents or similar mechanism to allow the release of such pressures in the event of failure. 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 may benefit from a pre-charge to limit in-rush currents at power-up of high voltage direct current (HVDC) circuits. This extends the life of the component and may mitigate high-voltage hazards.

  • Swollen electrolytic capacitors. The vent on the tops allows the release of pressurized gas build-up in the event of failure, preventing it from exploding. Swollen electrolytic capacitors. The vent on the tops allows the release of pressurized gas build-up in the event of failure, preventing it from exploding.
  • This high-energy capacitor from a defibrillator has a resistor connected between the terminals for safety, to dissipate stored energy. This high-energy capacitor from a defibrillator has a resistor connected between the terminals for safety, to dissipate stored energy.
  • An exploded electrolytic capacitor, showing fragments of paper and metallic foil An exploded electrolytic capacitor, showing fragments of paper and metallic foil

See also

Notes

  1. Most real capacitors may have a small dielectric leakage current that passes through the resistive dielectric layer in between the plates.
  1. In order to reduce the risk for read errors, the letters I and O are not used as their glyphs look similar to other letters and digits.

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Bibliography

Further reading

  • Tantalum and Niobium-Based Capacitors – Science, Technology, and Applications; 1st Ed; Yuri Freeman; Springer; 120 pages; 2018; ISBN 978-3-31967869-6.
  • Capacitors; 1st Ed; R. P. Deshpande; McGraw-Hill; 342 pages; 2014; ISBN 978-0-07184856-5.
  • The Capacitor Handbook; 1st Ed; Cletus Kaiser; Van Nostrand Reinhold; 124 pages; 1993; ISBN 978-9-40118092-4.
  • Understanding Capacitors and their Uses; 1st Ed; William Mullin; Sams Publishing; 96 pages; 1964. (archive)
  • Fixed and Variable Capacitors; 1st Ed; G. W. A. Dummer and Harold Nordenberg; Maple Press; 288 pages; 1960. (archive)
  • The Electrolytic Capacitor; 1st Ed; Alexander Georgiev; Murray Hill Books; 191 pages; 1945. (archive)

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