What are capacitors?

Posted by Rohan on Tuesday, July 01, 2014 with No comments
DC current does not flow through a capacitor, but voltage can accumulate very quickly inside it, and remains after the power supply is disconnected. Figures below may help to give you an idea of what happens inside a capacitor when it is fully charged.






In most modern electrolytic capacitors, the plates have been reduced to two strips of very thin, flexible, metallic film, often wrapped around each other, separated by an equally thin insulator. Disc ceramic capacitors typically consist of just a single disc of nonconductive material with metal painted on both sides and leads soldered on. The two most common varieties of capacitors are ceramic (capable of storing a relatively small charge) and electrolytic (which can be much larger). Ceramics are often disc-shaped and yellow in color; electrolytics are often shaped like miniature tin cans and may be just about any color.

Ceramic capacitors have no polarity, meaning that you can apply negative volt- age to either side of them. Electrolytics do have polarity, and won’t work unless you connect them the right way around. The schematic symbol for a capacitor has two significant variants: with two straight lines (symbolizing the plates inside a capacitor), or with one straight line and one curved line, as shown in below.


 When you see a curved line, that side of the capacitor should be more negative than the other. The schemat- ic symbol may also include a + sign. Unfortunately, some people don’t bother to draw a curved plate on a polarized capacitor, yet others draw a curved plate even on a nonpolarized capacitor.

Categories: