In a way, a capacitor is a little like a battery. Although they work
in completely different ways, capacitors and batteries both store electrical energy. If you have read How Batteries Work, then you know that a battery has two terminals. Inside the battery, chemical reactions produce electrons
on one terminal and absorb electrons on the other terminal. A capacitor
is much simpler than a battery, as it can't produce new electrons -- it
only stores them.
 Flash capacitor from a point-and-shoot camera
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In this article, we'll learn exactly what a capacitor is, what it does and how it's used in electronics. We'll also look at the history of the capacitor and how several people helped shape its progress.
Inside the capacitor, the terminals connect to two metal plates separated by a non-conducting substance, or dielectric. You can easily make a capacitor from two pieces of aluminum foil and a piece of paper. It won't be a particularly good capacitor in terms of its storage capacity, but it will work.
In
theory, the dielectric can be any non-conductive substance. However,
for practical applications, specific materials are used that best suit
the capacitor's function. Mica, ceramic, cellulose, porcelain, Mylar, Teflon and even air
are some of the non-conductive materials used. The dielectric dictates
what kind of capacitor it is and for what it is best suited. Depending
on the size and type of dielectric, some capacitors are better for high
frequency uses, while some are better for high voltage applications.
Capacitors can be manufactured to serve any purpose, from the smallest
plastic capacitor in your calculator, to an ultra capacitor that can
power a commuter bus. NASA
uses glass capacitors to help wake up the space shuttle's circuitry and
help deploy space probes. Here are some of the various types of
capacitors and how they are used.
- Air - Often used in radio tuning circuits
- Mylar - Most commonly used for timer circuits like clocks, alarms and counters
- Glass - Good for high voltage applications
- Ceramic - Used for high frequency purposes like antennas, X-ray and MRI machines
- Super capacitor - Powers electric and hybrid cars
In the next section, we'll take a closer look at exactly how capacitors work.
Capacitor Circuit
In an electronic circuit, a capacitor is shown like this:
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When you
connect a capacitor to a battery, here's what happens:
- The plate on the capacitor that attaches to the negative terminal of the battery accepts electrons that the battery is producing.
- The plate on the capacitor that attaches to the positive terminal of the battery loses electrons to the battery.
Once it's charged, the capacitor has the same voltage
as the battery (1.5 volts on the battery means 1.5 volts on the
capacitor). For a small capacitor, the capacity is small. But large
capacitors can hold quite a bit of charge. You can find capacitors as
big as soda cans that hold enough charge to light a flashlight bulb for a minute or more.
Even nature shows the capacitor at work in the form of lightning. One plate is the cloud, the other plate is the ground and the lightning is the charge releasing between these two "plates." Obviously, in a capacitor that large, you can hold a huge amount of charge!
Let's say you hook up a capacitor like this:
Here you have a battery, a
light bulb
and a capacitor. If the capacitor is pretty big, what you will notice
is that, when you connect the battery, the light bulb will light up as
current flows from the
battery
to the capacitor to charge it up. The bulb will get progressively
dimmer and finally go out once the capacitor reaches its capacity. If
you then remove the battery and replace it with a wire, current will
flow from one plate of the capacitor to the other. The bulb will light
initially and then dim as the capacitor discharges, until it is
completely out.
Like a Water Tower
One way to visualize the action of a capacitor is to imagine it as a water tower
hooked to a pipe. A water tower "stores" water pressure -- when the
water system pumps produce more water than a town needs, the excess is
stored in the water tower. Then, at times of high demand, the excess
water flows out of the tower to keep the pressure up. A capacitor
stores electrons in the same way and can then release them later. |
In the next section, we'll learn more about capacitance and take a detailed look at the different ways that capacitors are used.
Farad
A capacitor's storage potential, or capacitance, is measured in units called farads.
A 1-farad capacitor can store one coulomb (coo-lomb) of charge at 1
volt. A coulomb is 6.25e18 (6.25 * 10^18, or 6.25 billion billion) electrons. One amp
represents a rate of electron flow of 1 coulomb of electrons per
second, so a 1-farad capacitor can hold 1 amp-second of electrons at 1
volt.
A 1-farad capacitor would typically be pretty big. It
might be as big as a can of tuna or a 1-liter soda bottle, depending on
the voltage it can handle. For this reason, capacitors are typically
measured in microfarads (millionths of a farad).
To get some perspective on how big a farad is, think about this:
- A standard alkaline AA battery holds about 2.8 amp-hours.
- That
means that a AA battery can produce 2.8 amps for an hour at 1.5 volts
(about 4.2 watt-hours -- a AA battery can light a 4-watt bulb for a
little more than an hour).
- Let's call it 1 volt to make
the math easier. To store one AA battery's energy in a capacitor, you
would need 3,600 * 2.8 = 10,080 farads to hold it, because an amp-hour
is 3,600 amp-seconds.
If it takes something the
size of a can of tuna to hold a farad, then 10,080 farads is going to
take up a LOT more space than a single AA battery! Obviously, it's
impractical to use capacitors to store any significant amount of power
unless you do it at a high voltage.
Applications
The
difference between a capacitor and a battery is that a capacitor can
dump its entire charge in a tiny fraction of a second, where a battery
would take minutes to completely discharge. That's why the electronic
flash on a camera
uses a capacitor -- the battery charges up the flash's capacitor over
several seconds, and then the capacitor dumps the full charge into the
flash tube almost instantly. This can make a large, charged capacitor
extremely dangerous -- flash units and TVs
have warnings about opening them up for this reason. They contain big
capacitors that can, potentially, kill you with the charge they contain.
Capacitors are used in several different ways in electronic circuits:
- Sometimes, capacitors are used to store charge for high-speed use. That's what a flash does. Big lasers use this technique as well to get very bright, instantaneous flashes.
- Capacitors
can also eliminate ripples. If a line carrying DC voltage has ripples
or spikes in it, a big capacitor can even out the voltage by absorbing
the peaks and filling in the valleys.
- A capacitor can
block DC voltage. If you hook a small capacitor to a battery, then no
current will flow between the poles of the battery once the capacitor
charges. However, any alternating current (AC) signal flows through a
capacitor unimpeded. That's because the capacitor will charge and
discharge as the alternating current fluctuates, making it appear that
the alternating current is flowing.
 © Photographer: Newstocker | Agency: Dreamstime.com A family of capacitors |
In
the next section, we'll look at the history of the capacitor and how
some of the most brilliant minds contributed to its progress.
Capacitive Touch Screens
One of the more futuristic applications of capacitors is the capacitive touch screen.
These are glass screens that have a very thin, transparent metallic
coating. A built-in electrode pattern charges the screen so when
touched, a current is drawn to the finger and creates a voltage drop.
This exact location of the voltage drop is picked up by a controller
and transmitted to a computer. These touch screens are commonly found in interactive building directories and more recently in Apple's iPhone.
History of the Capacitor
The
invention of the capacitor varies somewhat depending on who you ask.
There are records that indicate a German scientist named Ewald Georg
von Kleist invented the capacitor in November 1745. Several months
later Pieter van Musschenbroek, a Dutch professor at the University of
Leyden came up with a very similar device in the form of the Leyden jar,
which is typically credited as the first capacitor. Since Kleist didn't
have detailed records and notes, nor the notoriety of his Dutch
counterpart, he's often overlooked as a contributor to the capacitor's
evolution. However, over the years, both have been given equal credit
as it was established that their research was independent of each other
and merely a scientific coincidence [source: Williams].
The
Leyden jar was a very simple device. It consisted of a glass jar, half
filled with water and lined inside and out with metal foil. The glass
acted as the dielectric, although it was thought for a time that water
was the key ingredient. There was usually a metal wire or chain driven
through a cork in the top of the jar. The chain was then hooked to something that would deliver a charge, most likely a hand-cranked static generator.
Once delivered, the jar would hold two equal but opposite charges in
equilibrium until they were connected with a wire, producing a slight
spark or shock [source: Williams].
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Benjamin
Franklin worked with the Leyden jar in his experiments with electricity
and soon found that a flat piece of glass worked as well as the jar
model, prompting him to develop the flat capacitor,
or Franklin square. Years later, English chemist Michael Faraday would
pioneer the first practical applications for the capacitor in trying to
store unused electrons from his experiments. This led to the first usable capacitor, made from large oil
barrels. Faraday's progress with capacitors is what eventually enabled
us to deliver electric power over great distances. As a result of
Faraday's achievements in the field of electricity, the unit of
measurement for capacitors, or capacitance, became known as the farad [source: Ramasamy].