Passive Electronic Components - Capacitors. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Passive Electronic Components - Capacitors.

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The attached narrated power point presentation attempts to explain the different types of capacitors used in electronic circuits. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Passive Electronic Components - Capacitors.


1
Passive ComponentsCapacitors
  • CEC

2
Contents
  • Introduction.
  • Capacitor Classifications.
  • Fixed Capacitors.
  • Variable Capacitors.
  • Capacitor Coding.
  • Super Capacitors.
  • Applications.

3
Capacitors
  • Passive electronic component.
  • Capacitance expressed in Farads.
  • Metal plates separated by dielectric.
  • Impedance has reactive components.
  • Frequency dependent reactance.
  • Can store and release energy.
  • Blocks dc and passes ac.
  • Opposes change in voltage.
  • With or without polarity.

4
Breakdown Voltage
  • Voltage above which the dielectric will breakdown
    and start conducting.
  • Depends on the type of the capacitor.

5
Capacitor Types

Capacitors

Fixed Capacitors
Variable Capacitors
Gang Condensor
Ceramic Disc
Trimmer
Electrolytic
Padder
Ceramic Tubular
Tantalum
Paper
Mica
Polyester
6
Capacitor Symbols

7
Electrolytic Capacitors
  • Polarised, has positive and negative electrodes.
  • Aluminium foil electrodes with aluminium oxide
    film covering on one side.
  • Oxide as dielectric, aluminium plates as
    electrodes.
  • Oxide in contact with paper saturated with an
    electrolyte.
  • Electrolyte as the second plate.

8
Electrolytic Capacitors
  • Layer of aluminium without oxide for electrical
    contacts.
  • 1µF to a few thousand µF, 1V to 500 V.
  • Size depends on voltage rating.
  • As filters in power supplies, coupling capacitors.

9
Electrolytic Capacitors

10
Tantalum Capacitors
  • Electrolytic, tantalum electrodes.
  • Polarised.
  • Superior to electrolytic capacitors in
    temperature and frequency characteristics.
  • Expensive.
  • Stable capacitance values.
  • Used in analog signal systems.

11
Tantalum Capacitors

12
Mica Capacitors
  • Mica as dielectric, flat strips of metal foil
    separated by mica.
  • Metal plates connected to two electrodes.
  • Relative costly.
  • 5 to 10,000 pf, up to 500 V, no polarity.
  • Excellent frequency characteristics.
  • Used in resonance circuits and high frequency
    filters.
  • Good insulation, in high voltage circuits.

13
Mica Capacitors

14
Ceramic Capacitors
  • Titanium and barium as dielectric.
  • Ceramic disc with silver or copper plating on
    opposite faces.
  • Leads attached to the plates.
  • In high frequency applications.
  • In both ac and dc circuits.
  • As byepass capacitors.
  • 3 pF to 2 µF, no polarity.

15
Ceramic Capacitors

Disc
Tubular
16
Paper Capacitors
  • Two metal foils separated by strips of paper.
  • Paper impregnated with wax, plastic or oil
    (dielectric).
  • 0.0005 µF to several µF.
  • No polarity.
  • 100 Volts to several thousand Volts.
  • More bulky.

17
Paper Capacitors

18
Variable Capacitors
  • Capacitors for coarse and fine adjustments.
  • Used for frequency adjustments.
  • In radio tuners, tuning to a radio station.

19
Gang Capacitors
  • Group of capacitors ganged together.
  • Air Gang and PVC Gang.
  • Rotor-Stator type variable capacitor with two
    sets of metal plates.
  • Fixed plates connected together to form stator.
  • Movable plates connected together on a rotating
    shaft.
  • In radio receivers to tune to stations.

20
Gang Capacitors

PVC Gang
Air Gang
21
Trimmers
  • Mica or Ceramic as dielectric.
  • Capacitance varied by turning adjustment screw.
  • Normally initial setting undisturbed.
  • Low values of the order of pF.
  • Use when frequent adjustment is not required.
  • Use in TV, broadcast receivers.

22
Trimmers

Trimmers
23
Padders
  • Higher capacitance values.
  • Two concentrically mounted tiny aluminium cups.
  • Air as dielectric.
  • Gap between two caps varied by turning a screw,
    capacitance varies.
  • 5 pF to 600 pF.

24
Padders

25
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26
Super Capacitors
  • High capacitance values.
  • Uses electrostatic double-layer capacitance and
    electrochemical pseudocapacitance.
  • 10 to 100 times more energy per unit volume than
    electrolytic capacitors.
  • Bridges the gap between electrolytic capacitors
    and rechargeable batteries.
  • Used in applications requiring many rapid
    charge/discharge cycles.

27
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28
Super Capacitors

29
Indicating Capacitance Values
  • Alphanumeric and colour coding schemes.
  • Value written in coded form on small capacitors.
  • Similar to resistor colour coding scheme.
  • Five colour bands - value (first two bands),
    multiplier (third band) and tolerance (fourth
    band).
  • Fifth band indicates voltage rating.

30
Alphanumeric Coding
Code 0.1 10 104 10k
Value 0.1µF 10 pF 10 x 104 pF (0.1 µF) 10 kpF (0.01 µF)
Code 10n 1M 2M2 4k7
Value 10 nF 1 µF 2.2 µF 4.7 kpF (0.0047 µF)
31
Alphanumeric Coding
  • If the number written is greater than 1, value in
    pF, else in µF.
  • For 3 digits, 3rd digit indicates multiplier.
  • If letter k follows digits, value in kpF.
  • If n or M, value in nF or µF.
  • k or M follow a 3 digit number implies 10
    and 20 tolerance.
  • If n, M or k between numbers, put decimal
    point in place, value in nF, µF or kpF
    respectively.

32
Alphanumeric Coding

33
Capacitor Colour Coding
34

5 band system
35
Capacitor Colour Coding

36
Capacitor Colour Coding

Identify the above capacitors
37
Capacitor Applications
  • As timing elements in oscillator circuits.
  • Coupling - to block dc and pass ac signals.
  • Byepass to byepass high frequencies.
  • Surge suppression.
  • In filter circuits.
  • In clampers and voltage multipliers.
  • In differentiating and integrating circuits.

38
Thank You
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