Why do we use polarized capacitors? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InAre tantalum capacitors safe for use in new designs?Why does the LM1117 data sheet specifically specify tantalum capacitors?Amplifier capacitorsWhy do some capacitors leak and other capacitors hardly leak at all?What are these electrolytic capacitors?Why are capacitors with large values are manufactured polarized?Is it safe to use series polarized capacitors to form non-polarized capacitors to be used for higher rated voltage?Unpolarized Capacitors in place of Polarized onesWhy is this power cable sometimes polarized and sometimes not?Can I use polarized capacitors in a location where they shouldn't be polarized?Non-Polarized Electrolytic Capacitor Replacement

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Why do we use polarized capacitors?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are InAre tantalum capacitors safe for use in new designs?Why does the LM1117 data sheet specifically specify tantalum capacitors?Amplifier capacitorsWhy do some capacitors leak and other capacitors hardly leak at all?What are these electrolytic capacitors?Why are capacitors with large values are manufactured polarized?Is it safe to use series polarized capacitors to form non-polarized capacitors to be used for higher rated voltage?Unpolarized Capacitors in place of Polarized onesWhy is this power cable sometimes polarized and sometimes not?Can I use polarized capacitors in a location where they shouldn't be polarized?Non-Polarized Electrolytic Capacitor Replacement



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21












$begingroup$


I want to know if the polarized capacitor has some advantage that they are used in some circuits?



For example, in a schematic of the BISS001 PIR controller IC, in some places, a polarized capacitor is used and in some places a non-polarized capacitor one.



Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?



Reference Docs:



  1. BISS001 datasheet

  2. HC-SR501 PIR MOTION DETECTOR datasheet


  3. Grove - PIR Motion Sensor or EasyEDA link


What I've understand from your answers is why the electrolytic capacitors are used, and why these are polarized.



But the designers of this circuit could have used a non-polarized capacitor or even polarized tantalum capacitors. Is it true? As the (Grove - PIR Motion Sensor) module uses polarized tantalum capacitors.



I want to know if the polarized capacitors are being used for circuit protection or is there any other reason (regardless of the type of capacitor.)



Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in these circuits?










share|improve this question









New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$







  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It's not because we want them polarized, but them being polarized is a consequence of how they'r emade.
    $endgroup$
    – Hearth
    Apr 7 at 21:48






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Compare the prices of electrolytic caps with ceramic (or film) caps in the range of 10uF ~22uF (after taking bias voltage derating into consideration) and you will have one of the reasons.
    $endgroup$
    – Wesley Lee
    Apr 7 at 21:54










  • $begingroup$
    The very thin oxide layers, providing insulation for a certain polarity, provides a very compact energy storage module. Just view those useful electrolytic capacitors as early versions of self-assembled-nano-tech; the manufacturing process creates the very thin oxide layer: the oxide is GROWN or FORMED.
    $endgroup$
    – analogsystemsrf
    Apr 7 at 22:01






  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in this circuits? -- no, there is no problem. But you may find it hard to find non-polarized capacitors of the same specification. Non-polarized capacitors are usually in the nF range and are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less). If you want anything in the uF or mF and/or rated at tens of volts you will have to make do with polarized capacitors
    $endgroup$
    – slebetman
    Apr 8 at 5:22







  • 4




    $begingroup$
    @slebetman "Non-polarized capacitors are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less)" - the reality is actually opposite of what you say.
    $endgroup$
    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Apr 8 at 8:03

















21












$begingroup$


I want to know if the polarized capacitor has some advantage that they are used in some circuits?



For example, in a schematic of the BISS001 PIR controller IC, in some places, a polarized capacitor is used and in some places a non-polarized capacitor one.



Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?



Reference Docs:



  1. BISS001 datasheet

  2. HC-SR501 PIR MOTION DETECTOR datasheet


  3. Grove - PIR Motion Sensor or EasyEDA link


What I've understand from your answers is why the electrolytic capacitors are used, and why these are polarized.



But the designers of this circuit could have used a non-polarized capacitor or even polarized tantalum capacitors. Is it true? As the (Grove - PIR Motion Sensor) module uses polarized tantalum capacitors.



I want to know if the polarized capacitors are being used for circuit protection or is there any other reason (regardless of the type of capacitor.)



Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in these circuits?










share|improve this question









New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$







  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It's not because we want them polarized, but them being polarized is a consequence of how they'r emade.
    $endgroup$
    – Hearth
    Apr 7 at 21:48






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Compare the prices of electrolytic caps with ceramic (or film) caps in the range of 10uF ~22uF (after taking bias voltage derating into consideration) and you will have one of the reasons.
    $endgroup$
    – Wesley Lee
    Apr 7 at 21:54










  • $begingroup$
    The very thin oxide layers, providing insulation for a certain polarity, provides a very compact energy storage module. Just view those useful electrolytic capacitors as early versions of self-assembled-nano-tech; the manufacturing process creates the very thin oxide layer: the oxide is GROWN or FORMED.
    $endgroup$
    – analogsystemsrf
    Apr 7 at 22:01






  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in this circuits? -- no, there is no problem. But you may find it hard to find non-polarized capacitors of the same specification. Non-polarized capacitors are usually in the nF range and are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less). If you want anything in the uF or mF and/or rated at tens of volts you will have to make do with polarized capacitors
    $endgroup$
    – slebetman
    Apr 8 at 5:22







  • 4




    $begingroup$
    @slebetman "Non-polarized capacitors are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less)" - the reality is actually opposite of what you say.
    $endgroup$
    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Apr 8 at 8:03













21












21








21


2



$begingroup$


I want to know if the polarized capacitor has some advantage that they are used in some circuits?



For example, in a schematic of the BISS001 PIR controller IC, in some places, a polarized capacitor is used and in some places a non-polarized capacitor one.



Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?



Reference Docs:



  1. BISS001 datasheet

  2. HC-SR501 PIR MOTION DETECTOR datasheet


  3. Grove - PIR Motion Sensor or EasyEDA link


What I've understand from your answers is why the electrolytic capacitors are used, and why these are polarized.



But the designers of this circuit could have used a non-polarized capacitor or even polarized tantalum capacitors. Is it true? As the (Grove - PIR Motion Sensor) module uses polarized tantalum capacitors.



I want to know if the polarized capacitors are being used for circuit protection or is there any other reason (regardless of the type of capacitor.)



Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in these circuits?










share|improve this question









New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




I want to know if the polarized capacitor has some advantage that they are used in some circuits?



For example, in a schematic of the BISS001 PIR controller IC, in some places, a polarized capacitor is used and in some places a non-polarized capacitor one.



Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?



Reference Docs:



  1. BISS001 datasheet

  2. HC-SR501 PIR MOTION DETECTOR datasheet


  3. Grove - PIR Motion Sensor or EasyEDA link


What I've understand from your answers is why the electrolytic capacitors are used, and why these are polarized.



But the designers of this circuit could have used a non-polarized capacitor or even polarized tantalum capacitors. Is it true? As the (Grove - PIR Motion Sensor) module uses polarized tantalum capacitors.



I want to know if the polarized capacitors are being used for circuit protection or is there any other reason (regardless of the type of capacitor.)



Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in these circuits?







capacitor circuit-design polarity






share|improve this question









New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 8 at 18:55









JakeGould

1155




1155






New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Apr 7 at 21:36









hamid mousavihamid mousavi

11116




11116




New contributor




hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






hamid mousavi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It's not because we want them polarized, but them being polarized is a consequence of how they'r emade.
    $endgroup$
    – Hearth
    Apr 7 at 21:48






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Compare the prices of electrolytic caps with ceramic (or film) caps in the range of 10uF ~22uF (after taking bias voltage derating into consideration) and you will have one of the reasons.
    $endgroup$
    – Wesley Lee
    Apr 7 at 21:54










  • $begingroup$
    The very thin oxide layers, providing insulation for a certain polarity, provides a very compact energy storage module. Just view those useful electrolytic capacitors as early versions of self-assembled-nano-tech; the manufacturing process creates the very thin oxide layer: the oxide is GROWN or FORMED.
    $endgroup$
    – analogsystemsrf
    Apr 7 at 22:01






  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in this circuits? -- no, there is no problem. But you may find it hard to find non-polarized capacitors of the same specification. Non-polarized capacitors are usually in the nF range and are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less). If you want anything in the uF or mF and/or rated at tens of volts you will have to make do with polarized capacitors
    $endgroup$
    – slebetman
    Apr 8 at 5:22







  • 4




    $begingroup$
    @slebetman "Non-polarized capacitors are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less)" - the reality is actually opposite of what you say.
    $endgroup$
    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Apr 8 at 8:03












  • 17




    $begingroup$
    It's not because we want them polarized, but them being polarized is a consequence of how they'r emade.
    $endgroup$
    – Hearth
    Apr 7 at 21:48






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    Compare the prices of electrolytic caps with ceramic (or film) caps in the range of 10uF ~22uF (after taking bias voltage derating into consideration) and you will have one of the reasons.
    $endgroup$
    – Wesley Lee
    Apr 7 at 21:54










  • $begingroup$
    The very thin oxide layers, providing insulation for a certain polarity, provides a very compact energy storage module. Just view those useful electrolytic capacitors as early versions of self-assembled-nano-tech; the manufacturing process creates the very thin oxide layer: the oxide is GROWN or FORMED.
    $endgroup$
    – analogsystemsrf
    Apr 7 at 22:01






  • 4




    $begingroup$
    Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in this circuits? -- no, there is no problem. But you may find it hard to find non-polarized capacitors of the same specification. Non-polarized capacitors are usually in the nF range and are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less). If you want anything in the uF or mF and/or rated at tens of volts you will have to make do with polarized capacitors
    $endgroup$
    – slebetman
    Apr 8 at 5:22







  • 4




    $begingroup$
    @slebetman "Non-polarized capacitors are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less)" - the reality is actually opposite of what you say.
    $endgroup$
    – Dmitry Grigoryev
    Apr 8 at 8:03







17




17




$begingroup$
It's not because we want them polarized, but them being polarized is a consequence of how they'r emade.
$endgroup$
– Hearth
Apr 7 at 21:48




$begingroup$
It's not because we want them polarized, but them being polarized is a consequence of how they'r emade.
$endgroup$
– Hearth
Apr 7 at 21:48




2




2




$begingroup$
Compare the prices of electrolytic caps with ceramic (or film) caps in the range of 10uF ~22uF (after taking bias voltage derating into consideration) and you will have one of the reasons.
$endgroup$
– Wesley Lee
Apr 7 at 21:54




$begingroup$
Compare the prices of electrolytic caps with ceramic (or film) caps in the range of 10uF ~22uF (after taking bias voltage derating into consideration) and you will have one of the reasons.
$endgroup$
– Wesley Lee
Apr 7 at 21:54












$begingroup$
The very thin oxide layers, providing insulation for a certain polarity, provides a very compact energy storage module. Just view those useful electrolytic capacitors as early versions of self-assembled-nano-tech; the manufacturing process creates the very thin oxide layer: the oxide is GROWN or FORMED.
$endgroup$
– analogsystemsrf
Apr 7 at 22:01




$begingroup$
The very thin oxide layers, providing insulation for a certain polarity, provides a very compact energy storage module. Just view those useful electrolytic capacitors as early versions of self-assembled-nano-tech; the manufacturing process creates the very thin oxide layer: the oxide is GROWN or FORMED.
$endgroup$
– analogsystemsrf
Apr 7 at 22:01




4




4




$begingroup$
Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in this circuits? -- no, there is no problem. But you may find it hard to find non-polarized capacitors of the same specification. Non-polarized capacitors are usually in the nF range and are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less). If you want anything in the uF or mF and/or rated at tens of volts you will have to make do with polarized capacitors
$endgroup$
– slebetman
Apr 8 at 5:22





$begingroup$
Is there a problem if these capacitors are replaced with non-polarized capacitors in this circuits? -- no, there is no problem. But you may find it hard to find non-polarized capacitors of the same specification. Non-polarized capacitors are usually in the nF range and are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less). If you want anything in the uF or mF and/or rated at tens of volts you will have to make do with polarized capacitors
$endgroup$
– slebetman
Apr 8 at 5:22





4




4




$begingroup$
@slebetman "Non-polarized capacitors are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less)" - the reality is actually opposite of what you say.
$endgroup$
– Dmitry Grigoryev
Apr 8 at 8:03




$begingroup$
@slebetman "Non-polarized capacitors are usually rated for low voltage use (5V or less)" - the reality is actually opposite of what you say.
$endgroup$
– Dmitry Grigoryev
Apr 8 at 8:03










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















17












$begingroup$


Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?




Electrically speaking, non-polarized capacitor is always better than a polarized one. Yes, you can always replace with a non-polarized capacitor with exactly same rating.



But there is an assumption hidden here:
Provided you can find one that's physically small enough to fit on your board and cheap enough to fit in your budget. And the fact that you can't is the only reason we use polarized caps.



I assume that, if we ever learn to make non-polarized caps that are as cheap and dense (capacity-per-volume) as electrolytic ones, the polarized capacitors will vanish.



Side note - voltage and capacitance are not the only electrical parameters of a capacitor. They would suffice for an ideal capacitor, but real world brings other, ugly metrics. Like ESR, capacity coefficient with temperature or voltage, frequency response, etc. Circuits designed around quirks of particular tech can fail if the substitute differs there. Even being too good can cause trouble, eg. high-ESR caps naturally keep peak current in check so substituting with a theoretically superior low-ESR part can cause the whole thing to blow up. Adding ESR is trivial - but that's no longer a drop-in replacement, but rather a circuit redesign. So we don't replace electrolytics with something else not because polarization is important, it's just a nuisance. We keep them because of many other parameters, less obvious than C, V and polarization.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
    $endgroup$
    – nshct
    Apr 8 at 21:22










  • $begingroup$
    @nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
    $endgroup$
    – Agent_L
    Apr 8 at 21:25











  • $begingroup$
    Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday


















36












$begingroup$

The physical size of a capacitor is a function of the thickness of the dielectric (among other things).



Early on, it was discovered that the oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) made good dielectrics, and could be made very thin through a chemical process — orders of magnitude thinner than other dielectrics such as waxed/oiled paper and plastic film. Therefore, the electrolytic capacitor was invented to provide high capacitance in a reasonable volume.



Unfortunately, the chemical process requires that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity, so these capacitors are "polarized". Reversing the polarity degrades and eventually destroys the oxide layer. It's something we just have to live with in order to take advantage of this technology.




The ability to produce high-value capacitors in nonpolarized technologies such as multilayer ceramic means that it is now possible to use them where only a polarized capacitor would have been previously available. There is generally no problem with making this substitution, although you may need to consider some of the quirks of the technology you're switching to.



For example, some high-K (high dielectric constant) ceramics exhibit significant capacitance changes with voltage. This might be acceptable in a coupling or bypass application, but completely unacceptable in a filter design.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
    $endgroup$
    – Peter Smith
    Apr 8 at 9:03










  • $begingroup$
    Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
    $endgroup$
    – uhoh
    Apr 8 at 10:28



















7












$begingroup$

Since you mention protection I'll add that polarized caps should not be used for reverse polarity protection. They will react on a reverse voltage very slowly (seconds or minutes), while typical sensitive components which are worth protecting will be dead within milliseconds. And once a polarized cap starts to absorb the reverse voltage, it may vent, explode or catch fire which (apart from the obvious problem with smoke and fire) can make it non-conductive again, exposing your circuit to the reverse voltage once more.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Good point here.
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday











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3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









17












$begingroup$


Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?




Electrically speaking, non-polarized capacitor is always better than a polarized one. Yes, you can always replace with a non-polarized capacitor with exactly same rating.



But there is an assumption hidden here:
Provided you can find one that's physically small enough to fit on your board and cheap enough to fit in your budget. And the fact that you can't is the only reason we use polarized caps.



I assume that, if we ever learn to make non-polarized caps that are as cheap and dense (capacity-per-volume) as electrolytic ones, the polarized capacitors will vanish.



Side note - voltage and capacitance are not the only electrical parameters of a capacitor. They would suffice for an ideal capacitor, but real world brings other, ugly metrics. Like ESR, capacity coefficient with temperature or voltage, frequency response, etc. Circuits designed around quirks of particular tech can fail if the substitute differs there. Even being too good can cause trouble, eg. high-ESR caps naturally keep peak current in check so substituting with a theoretically superior low-ESR part can cause the whole thing to blow up. Adding ESR is trivial - but that's no longer a drop-in replacement, but rather a circuit redesign. So we don't replace electrolytics with something else not because polarization is important, it's just a nuisance. We keep them because of many other parameters, less obvious than C, V and polarization.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
    $endgroup$
    – nshct
    Apr 8 at 21:22










  • $begingroup$
    @nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
    $endgroup$
    – Agent_L
    Apr 8 at 21:25











  • $begingroup$
    Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday















17












$begingroup$


Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?




Electrically speaking, non-polarized capacitor is always better than a polarized one. Yes, you can always replace with a non-polarized capacitor with exactly same rating.



But there is an assumption hidden here:
Provided you can find one that's physically small enough to fit on your board and cheap enough to fit in your budget. And the fact that you can't is the only reason we use polarized caps.



I assume that, if we ever learn to make non-polarized caps that are as cheap and dense (capacity-per-volume) as electrolytic ones, the polarized capacitors will vanish.



Side note - voltage and capacitance are not the only electrical parameters of a capacitor. They would suffice for an ideal capacitor, but real world brings other, ugly metrics. Like ESR, capacity coefficient with temperature or voltage, frequency response, etc. Circuits designed around quirks of particular tech can fail if the substitute differs there. Even being too good can cause trouble, eg. high-ESR caps naturally keep peak current in check so substituting with a theoretically superior low-ESR part can cause the whole thing to blow up. Adding ESR is trivial - but that's no longer a drop-in replacement, but rather a circuit redesign. So we don't replace electrolytics with something else not because polarization is important, it's just a nuisance. We keep them because of many other parameters, less obvious than C, V and polarization.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 2




    $begingroup$
    One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
    $endgroup$
    – nshct
    Apr 8 at 21:22










  • $begingroup$
    @nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
    $endgroup$
    – Agent_L
    Apr 8 at 21:25











  • $begingroup$
    Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday













17












17








17





$begingroup$


Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?




Electrically speaking, non-polarized capacitor is always better than a polarized one. Yes, you can always replace with a non-polarized capacitor with exactly same rating.



But there is an assumption hidden here:
Provided you can find one that's physically small enough to fit on your board and cheap enough to fit in your budget. And the fact that you can't is the only reason we use polarized caps.



I assume that, if we ever learn to make non-polarized caps that are as cheap and dense (capacity-per-volume) as electrolytic ones, the polarized capacitors will vanish.



Side note - voltage and capacitance are not the only electrical parameters of a capacitor. They would suffice for an ideal capacitor, but real world brings other, ugly metrics. Like ESR, capacity coefficient with temperature or voltage, frequency response, etc. Circuits designed around quirks of particular tech can fail if the substitute differs there. Even being too good can cause trouble, eg. high-ESR caps naturally keep peak current in check so substituting with a theoretically superior low-ESR part can cause the whole thing to blow up. Adding ESR is trivial - but that's no longer a drop-in replacement, but rather a circuit redesign. So we don't replace electrolytics with something else not because polarization is important, it's just a nuisance. We keep them because of many other parameters, less obvious than C, V and polarization.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$




Can I use a non-polarized capacitor with the same voltage and capacitance instead of these polarizing capacitors?




Electrically speaking, non-polarized capacitor is always better than a polarized one. Yes, you can always replace with a non-polarized capacitor with exactly same rating.



But there is an assumption hidden here:
Provided you can find one that's physically small enough to fit on your board and cheap enough to fit in your budget. And the fact that you can't is the only reason we use polarized caps.



I assume that, if we ever learn to make non-polarized caps that are as cheap and dense (capacity-per-volume) as electrolytic ones, the polarized capacitors will vanish.



Side note - voltage and capacitance are not the only electrical parameters of a capacitor. They would suffice for an ideal capacitor, but real world brings other, ugly metrics. Like ESR, capacity coefficient with temperature or voltage, frequency response, etc. Circuits designed around quirks of particular tech can fail if the substitute differs there. Even being too good can cause trouble, eg. high-ESR caps naturally keep peak current in check so substituting with a theoretically superior low-ESR part can cause the whole thing to blow up. Adding ESR is trivial - but that's no longer a drop-in replacement, but rather a circuit redesign. So we don't replace electrolytics with something else not because polarization is important, it's just a nuisance. We keep them because of many other parameters, less obvious than C, V and polarization.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 2 days ago









Ismael Miguel

17319




17319










answered Apr 8 at 9:13









Agent_LAgent_L

1,085611




1,085611







  • 2




    $begingroup$
    One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
    $endgroup$
    – nshct
    Apr 8 at 21:22










  • $begingroup$
    @nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
    $endgroup$
    – Agent_L
    Apr 8 at 21:25











  • $begingroup$
    Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday












  • 2




    $begingroup$
    One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
    $endgroup$
    – nshct
    Apr 8 at 21:22










  • $begingroup$
    @nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
    $endgroup$
    – Agent_L
    Apr 8 at 21:25











  • $begingroup$
    Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday







2




2




$begingroup$
One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
$endgroup$
– nshct
Apr 8 at 21:22




$begingroup$
One thing that should also be noted is that in applications where the frequency response of the capacitor is important, you can't just replace one type with another, since they work well at different frequency ranges. Examples are e.g. noise filters.
$endgroup$
– nshct
Apr 8 at 21:22












$begingroup$
@nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
$endgroup$
– Agent_L
Apr 8 at 21:25





$begingroup$
@nshct that's what I've meant by "other, ugly metrics" : ) Edited
$endgroup$
– Agent_L
Apr 8 at 21:25













$begingroup$
Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
$endgroup$
– Overmind
yesterday




$begingroup$
Suggestion: add to your answer a link about ESR : avnet.com/wps/portal/abacus/resources/engineers-insight/article/…
$endgroup$
– Overmind
yesterday













36












$begingroup$

The physical size of a capacitor is a function of the thickness of the dielectric (among other things).



Early on, it was discovered that the oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) made good dielectrics, and could be made very thin through a chemical process — orders of magnitude thinner than other dielectrics such as waxed/oiled paper and plastic film. Therefore, the electrolytic capacitor was invented to provide high capacitance in a reasonable volume.



Unfortunately, the chemical process requires that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity, so these capacitors are "polarized". Reversing the polarity degrades and eventually destroys the oxide layer. It's something we just have to live with in order to take advantage of this technology.




The ability to produce high-value capacitors in nonpolarized technologies such as multilayer ceramic means that it is now possible to use them where only a polarized capacitor would have been previously available. There is generally no problem with making this substitution, although you may need to consider some of the quirks of the technology you're switching to.



For example, some high-K (high dielectric constant) ceramics exhibit significant capacitance changes with voltage. This might be acceptable in a coupling or bypass application, but completely unacceptable in a filter design.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
    $endgroup$
    – Peter Smith
    Apr 8 at 9:03










  • $begingroup$
    Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
    $endgroup$
    – uhoh
    Apr 8 at 10:28
















36












$begingroup$

The physical size of a capacitor is a function of the thickness of the dielectric (among other things).



Early on, it was discovered that the oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) made good dielectrics, and could be made very thin through a chemical process — orders of magnitude thinner than other dielectrics such as waxed/oiled paper and plastic film. Therefore, the electrolytic capacitor was invented to provide high capacitance in a reasonable volume.



Unfortunately, the chemical process requires that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity, so these capacitors are "polarized". Reversing the polarity degrades and eventually destroys the oxide layer. It's something we just have to live with in order to take advantage of this technology.




The ability to produce high-value capacitors in nonpolarized technologies such as multilayer ceramic means that it is now possible to use them where only a polarized capacitor would have been previously available. There is generally no problem with making this substitution, although you may need to consider some of the quirks of the technology you're switching to.



For example, some high-K (high dielectric constant) ceramics exhibit significant capacitance changes with voltage. This might be acceptable in a coupling or bypass application, but completely unacceptable in a filter design.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$








  • 1




    $begingroup$
    There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
    $endgroup$
    – Peter Smith
    Apr 8 at 9:03










  • $begingroup$
    Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
    $endgroup$
    – uhoh
    Apr 8 at 10:28














36












36








36





$begingroup$

The physical size of a capacitor is a function of the thickness of the dielectric (among other things).



Early on, it was discovered that the oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) made good dielectrics, and could be made very thin through a chemical process — orders of magnitude thinner than other dielectrics such as waxed/oiled paper and plastic film. Therefore, the electrolytic capacitor was invented to provide high capacitance in a reasonable volume.



Unfortunately, the chemical process requires that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity, so these capacitors are "polarized". Reversing the polarity degrades and eventually destroys the oxide layer. It's something we just have to live with in order to take advantage of this technology.




The ability to produce high-value capacitors in nonpolarized technologies such as multilayer ceramic means that it is now possible to use them where only a polarized capacitor would have been previously available. There is generally no problem with making this substitution, although you may need to consider some of the quirks of the technology you're switching to.



For example, some high-K (high dielectric constant) ceramics exhibit significant capacitance changes with voltage. This might be acceptable in a coupling or bypass application, but completely unacceptable in a filter design.






share|improve this answer











$endgroup$



The physical size of a capacitor is a function of the thickness of the dielectric (among other things).



Early on, it was discovered that the oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) made good dielectrics, and could be made very thin through a chemical process — orders of magnitude thinner than other dielectrics such as waxed/oiled paper and plastic film. Therefore, the electrolytic capacitor was invented to provide high capacitance in a reasonable volume.



Unfortunately, the chemical process requires that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity, so these capacitors are "polarized". Reversing the polarity degrades and eventually destroys the oxide layer. It's something we just have to live with in order to take advantage of this technology.




The ability to produce high-value capacitors in nonpolarized technologies such as multilayer ceramic means that it is now possible to use them where only a polarized capacitor would have been previously available. There is generally no problem with making this substitution, although you may need to consider some of the quirks of the technology you're switching to.



For example, some high-K (high dielectric constant) ceramics exhibit significant capacitance changes with voltage. This might be acceptable in a coupling or bypass application, but completely unacceptable in a filter design.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Apr 8 at 0:02

























answered Apr 7 at 22:01









Dave TweedDave Tweed

124k10153268




124k10153268







  • 1




    $begingroup$
    There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
    $endgroup$
    – Peter Smith
    Apr 8 at 9:03










  • $begingroup$
    Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
    $endgroup$
    – uhoh
    Apr 8 at 10:28













  • 1




    $begingroup$
    There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
    $endgroup$
    – Peter Smith
    Apr 8 at 9:03










  • $begingroup$
    Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
    $endgroup$
    – uhoh
    Apr 8 at 10:28








1




1




$begingroup$
There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
$endgroup$
– Peter Smith
Apr 8 at 9:03




$begingroup$
There is a specific use case where replacing tantalum devices with MLCC parts can have unfortunate effects: at the output of some (older) LDO regulators which require a certain minimum output ESR. It can be done, but some care is necessary.
$endgroup$
– Peter Smith
Apr 8 at 9:03












$begingroup$
Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
$endgroup$
– uhoh
Apr 8 at 10:28





$begingroup$
Very nice answer! I'm trying to figure out if asking "Why does the chemical process used to make capacitor dielectrics from oxides of certain metals (aluminum and tantalum in particular) require that the voltage across the capacitor must have only a single polarity?" but I'm not confident it will be on topic. Is there any chance you could add a hint here?
$endgroup$
– uhoh
Apr 8 at 10:28












7












$begingroup$

Since you mention protection I'll add that polarized caps should not be used for reverse polarity protection. They will react on a reverse voltage very slowly (seconds or minutes), while typical sensitive components which are worth protecting will be dead within milliseconds. And once a polarized cap starts to absorb the reverse voltage, it may vent, explode or catch fire which (apart from the obvious problem with smoke and fire) can make it non-conductive again, exposing your circuit to the reverse voltage once more.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Good point here.
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday















7












$begingroup$

Since you mention protection I'll add that polarized caps should not be used for reverse polarity protection. They will react on a reverse voltage very slowly (seconds or minutes), while typical sensitive components which are worth protecting will be dead within milliseconds. And once a polarized cap starts to absorb the reverse voltage, it may vent, explode or catch fire which (apart from the obvious problem with smoke and fire) can make it non-conductive again, exposing your circuit to the reverse voltage once more.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Good point here.
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday













7












7








7





$begingroup$

Since you mention protection I'll add that polarized caps should not be used for reverse polarity protection. They will react on a reverse voltage very slowly (seconds or minutes), while typical sensitive components which are worth protecting will be dead within milliseconds. And once a polarized cap starts to absorb the reverse voltage, it may vent, explode or catch fire which (apart from the obvious problem with smoke and fire) can make it non-conductive again, exposing your circuit to the reverse voltage once more.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



Since you mention protection I'll add that polarized caps should not be used for reverse polarity protection. They will react on a reverse voltage very slowly (seconds or minutes), while typical sensitive components which are worth protecting will be dead within milliseconds. And once a polarized cap starts to absorb the reverse voltage, it may vent, explode or catch fire which (apart from the obvious problem with smoke and fire) can make it non-conductive again, exposing your circuit to the reverse voltage once more.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 8 at 8:09









Dmitry GrigoryevDmitry Grigoryev

18.5k22778




18.5k22778











  • $begingroup$
    Good point here.
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday
















  • $begingroup$
    Good point here.
    $endgroup$
    – Overmind
    yesterday















$begingroup$
Good point here.
$endgroup$
– Overmind
yesterday




$begingroup$
Good point here.
$endgroup$
– Overmind
yesterday










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대한민국 목차 국명 지리 역사 정치 국방 경제 사회 문화 국제 순위 관련 항목 각주 외부 링크 둘러보기 메뉴북위 37° 34′ 08″ 동경 126° 58′ 36″ / 북위 37.568889° 동경 126.976667°  / 37.568889; 126.976667ehThe Korean Repository문단을 편집문단을 편집추가해Clarkson PLC 사Report for Selected Countries and Subjects-Korea“Human Development Index and its components: P.198”“http://www.law.go.kr/%EB%B2%95%EB%A0%B9/%EB%8C%80%ED%95%9C%EB%AF%BC%EA%B5%AD%EA%B5%AD%EA%B8%B0%EB%B2%95”"한국은 국제법상 한반도 유일 합법정부 아니다" - 오마이뉴스 모바일Report for Selected Countries and Subjects: South Korea격동의 역사와 함께한 조선일보 90년 : 조선일보 인수해 혁신시킨 신석우, 임시정부 때는 '대한민국' 국호(國號) 정해《우리가 몰랐던 우리 역사: 나라 이름의 비밀을 찾아가는 역사 여행》“남북 공식호칭 ‘남한’‘북한’으로 쓴다”“Corea 대 Korea, 누가 이긴 거야?”국내기후자료 - 한국[김대중 前 대통령 서거] 과감한 구조개혁 'DJ노믹스'로 최단기간 환란극복 :: 네이버 뉴스“이라크 "韓-쿠르드 유전개발 MOU 승인 안해"(종합)”“해외 우리국민 추방사례 43%가 일본”차기전차 K2'흑표'의 세계 최고 전력 분석, 쿠키뉴스 엄기영, 2007-03-02두산인프라, 헬기잡는 장갑차 'K21'...내년부터 공급, 고뉴스 이대준, 2008-10-30과거 내용 찾기mk 뉴스 - 구매력 기준으로 보면 한국 1인당 소득 3만弗과거 내용 찾기"The N-11: More Than an Acronym"Archived조선일보 최우석, 2008-11-01Global 500 2008: Countries - South Korea“몇년째 '시한폭탄'... 가계부채, 올해는 터질까”가구당 부채 5000만원 처음 넘어서“‘빚’으로 내몰리는 사회.. 위기의 가계대출”“[경제365] 공공부문 부채 급증…800조 육박”“"소득 양극화 다소 완화...불평등은 여전"”“공정사회·공생발전 한참 멀었네”iSuppli,08年2QのDRAMシェア・ランキングを発表(08/8/11)South Korea dominates shipbuilding industry | Stock Market News & Stocks to Watch from StraightStocks한국 자동차 생산, 3년 연속 세계 5위자동차수출 '현대-삼성 웃고 기아-대우-쌍용은 울고' 과거 내용 찾기동반성장위 창립 1주년 맞아Archived"중기적합 3개업종 합의 무시한 채 선정"李대통령, 사업 무분별 확장 소상공인 생계 위협 질타삼성-LG, 서민업종인 빵·분식사업 잇따라 철수상생은 뒷전…SSM ‘몸집 불리기’ 혈안Archived“경부고속도에 '아시안하이웨이' 표지판”'철의 실크로드' 앞서 '말(言)의 실크로드'부터, 프레시안 정창현, 2008-10-01“'서울 지하철은 안전한가?'”“서울시 “올해 안에 모든 지하철역 스크린도어 설치””“부산지하철 1,2호선 승강장 안전펜스 설치 완료”“전교조, 정부 노조 통계서 처음 빠져”“[Weekly BIZ] 도요타 '제로 이사회'가 리콜 사태 불러들였다”“S Korea slams high tuition costs”““정치가 여론 양극화 부채질… 합리주의 절실””“〈"`촛불집회'는 민주주의의 질적 변화 상징"〉”““촛불집회가 민주주의 왜곡 초래””“국민 65%, "한국 노사관계 대립적"”“한국 국가경쟁력 27위‥노사관계 '꼴찌'”“제대로 형성되지 않은 대한민국 이념지형”“[신년기획-갈등의 시대] 갈등지수 OECD 4위…사회적 손실 GDP 27% 무려 300조”“2012 총선-대선의 키워드는 '국민과 소통'”“한국 삶의 질 27위, 2000년과 2008년 연속 하위권 머물러”“[해피 코리아] 행복점수 68점…해외 평가선 '낙제점'”“한국 어린이·청소년 행복지수 3년 연속 OECD ‘꼴찌’”“한국 이혼율 OECD중 8위”“[통계청] 한국 이혼율 OECD 4위”“오피니언 [이렇게 생각한다] `부부의 날` 에 돌아본 이혼율 1위 한국”“Suicide Rates by Country, Global Health Observatory Data Repository.”“1. 또 다른 차별”“오피니언 [편집자에게] '왕따'와 '패거리 정치' 심리는 닮은꼴”“[미래한국리포트] 무한경쟁에 빠진 대한민국”“대학생 98% "외모가 경쟁력이라는 말 동의"”“특급호텔 웨딩·200만원대 유모차… "남보다 더…" 호화病, 고질병 됐다”“[스트레스 공화국] ① 경쟁사회, 스트레스 쌓인다”““매일 30여명 자살 한국, 의사보다 무속인에…””“"자살 부르는 '우울증', 환자 중 85% 치료 안 받아"”“정신병원을 가다”“대한민국도 ‘묻지마 범죄’,안전지대 아니다”“유엔 "학생 '성적 지향'에 따른 차별 금지하라"”“유엔아동권리위원회 보고서 및 번역본 원문”“고졸 성공스토리 담은 '제빵왕 김탁구' 드라마 나온다”“‘빛 좋은 개살구’ 고졸 취업…실습 대신 착취”원본 문서“정신건강, 사회적 편견부터 고쳐드립니다”‘소통’과 ‘행복’에 목 마른 사회가 잠들어 있던 ‘심리학’ 깨웠다“[포토] 사유리-곽금주 교수의 유쾌한 심리상담”“"올해 한국인 평균 영화관람횟수 세계 1위"(종합)”“[게임연중기획] 게임은 문화다-여가활동 1순위 게임”“영화속 ‘영어 지상주의’ …“왠지 씁쓸한데””“2월 `신문 부수 인증기관` 지정..방송법 후속작업”“무료신문 성장동력 ‘차별성’과 ‘갈등해소’”대한민국 국회 법률지식정보시스템"Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project: South Korea"“amp;vwcd=MT_ZTITLE&path=인구·가구%20>%20인구총조사%20>%20인구부문%20>%20 총조사인구(2005)%20>%20전수부문&oper_YN=Y&item=&keyword=종교별%20인구& amp;lang_mode=kor&list_id= 2005년 통계청 인구 총조사”원본 문서“한국인이 좋아하는 취미와 운동 (2004-2009)”“한국인이 좋아하는 취미와 운동 (2004-2014)”Archived“한국, `부분적 언론자유국' 강등〈프리덤하우스〉”“국경없는기자회 "한국, 인터넷감시 대상국"”“한국, 조선산업 1위 유지(S. Korea Stays Top Shipbuilding Nation) RZD-Partner Portal”원본 문서“한국, 4년 만에 ‘선박건조 1위’”“옛 마산시,인터넷속도 세계 1위”“"한국 초고속 인터넷망 세계1위"”“인터넷·휴대폰 요금, 외국보다 훨씬 비싸”“한국 관세행정 6년 연속 세계 '1위'”“한국 교통사고 사망자 수 OECD 회원국 중 2위”“결핵 후진국' 한국, 환자가 급증한 이유는”“수술은 신중해야… 자칫하면 생명 위협”대한민국분류대한민국의 지도대한민국 정부대표 다국어포털대한민국 전자정부대한민국 국회한국방송공사about korea and information korea브리태니커 백과사전(한국편)론리플래닛의 정보(한국편)CIA의 세계 정보(한국편)마리암 부디아 (Mariam Budia),『한국: 하늘이 내린 한 폭의 그림』, 서울: 트랜스라틴 19호 (2012년 3월)대한민국ehehehehehehehehehehehehehehWorldCat132441370n791268020000 0001 2308 81034078029-6026373548cb11863345f(데이터)00573706ge128495