Seeking low chemical reaction caps

Hi,

As you may know, Electrolytic caps can generate a few hundred microvolts DC. I read that this voltage is due to slow chemical reactions. What capacitors (over 4uF) generate the least DC voltage?

I appreciate it, Paul L.

Reply to
Paul
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What's the app. ?

D from BC

Reply to
D from BC

D from BC schrieb:

Try polymer caps, like OS-CON. I never measured it, but their electrolyt is solid!

- Henry

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www.ehydra.dyndns.info
Reply to
Henry Kiefer

It's for a circuit that measures DC microvolts. Ceramics are better than electrolytics, but in terms of microvolt levels they react to the slightest vibration or an appreciable temperature change. What about Poly films? They have self healing properties, so are there chemical reactions occurring in Polys that may generate microvolts? As already stated, electrolytics are out of the question.

Does anyone have any capacitor recommendations?

Reply to
Paul

Thanks. The local store has some 4.7uF Mylars. I'd like to order some from digikey, but there are so many types of polys and the datasheets provide no hint of the caps chemical reaction factor -->

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B32022
B32023
B32024
B32026
B32231
B32232
B32559
B32613
B32671
B32672
B32911
B32912
B32913
B32914
BF
BQ
CB
CombiSuppressor
E
ECH-U(B)
ECH-U(X)
ECHAX
ECHS
ECP-U(A)
ECQ-E(B)
ECQ-E(C)
ECQ-E(F)
ECQ-E(H)
ECQ-P(U)
ECQ-P(Z)
ECW-F(B)
ECW-F(L)
ECW-H(L)
ECW-H(V)
ECW-U(B)
ECW-U(C)
ECW-U(V16)
ECW-U(X)
ECW-UC(V17)
FB
FFV
M
MKP
MKP 416-420
MKP X1
MKP X2
MKT
MMKP 383
P
PETP
PPS
UNL
V
X-Y
366
460
462
464
940C
Reply to
Paul

It's news to me about free electrolytics having a battery characteristic.

Perhaps focus on the nature of the dielectrics. You can start with vacuum sealed capacitors and then work your way up in size until the capacitor is as big as the rest of the components.

A vacuum is an inert dielectric but not the best permittivity especially compared to tantulum.

How is the capacitor being used? As a filter?

Read up on:

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D from BC

Reply to
D from BC

oopps... correction: 'work your way down in size'

D from BC

Reply to
D from BC

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    Boris Mohar
Reply to
Boris Mohar

"electrolyte oils"?

John

Reply to
John Larkin

Aha, for once I can contribute something useful.

Boris' link is essentially correct. It is dielectric relaxation. I first came across this effect with "supercaps". I was attempting to figure how long my battery would power a micropower circuit, but the circuit's micro used current in pulses, so it wasn't easy to measure. I figured I could tell the energy required by hooking up a 5 volt, 1 farad supercapacitor to the circuit running voltage, then seeing how long it took to discharge by say 1 volt while the circuit ran. [See note 1.]

I found that if I charged the supercap to 5V, then short circuited it for say 30 seconds, its terminals would gradually spring apart to say

1V.

After a literature trawl I discovered that some dielectrics store energy for a long time - I think of it as them being twisted like an LCD molecule and only gradually returning to their rest position. After discharging them the dielectric continues to unsqueeze and charge is induced back into the capacitor plates. Which is why certain types of capacitor are recommended for sample-and-hold circuits. Supercaps are particularly bad for this because of their enormous internal resistance, up to 200 ohms, so they have a long RC time constant. However I found you CAN discharge them if you short them for long enough.

The tants which John Larkin checked, unused for years, may be showing a residual charge from all that time ago. I'm not saying you CAN'T get a battery effect, especially with a leaky cap, but I would think if you did, the capacitors would have corroded to a blob after 6 years. Fresh capacitors in a reel may have a residual charge from when they were made and tested.

- - -

Note 1: the practicalities of this technique for measuring average current drain

Of course it's not that simple. First, you need to determine what the capacitance of the beast really is, at the voltage you're going to use, as supercaps are not precision devices. Once you've figured that out:

Since Q = It = CV, then the average current of the circuit is CV/t where V is the voltage drop in time t

Next real-world issue is, you actually want a voltage drop nearer 0.1V because the circuit current drain is going to vary considerably between a supply of 3.5V and 2.5V.

Then you need to charge the cap up on its own and leave it, say 10 minutes to find out what its self discharge is from the voltage drop(about 1uA as I recall)

Then you need to check the 100 - 200 ohm internal impedance of the supercap is not going to affect your circuit current drain, voltage supply etc

Around this point you realise that the DVM monitoring the supercap has a noticeable draining effect on the experiment and is best used intermittently rather than as a constant load 8)

Apart from that, it's pretty straightforward.

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Nemo
Reply to
Nemo

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