backjourne
Electrical
- Apr 1, 2008
- 3
Hello All,
I have a brief question regarding polar electrolytic capacitors in AC applications. My understanding is that the use of polar electrolytic capacitors is acceptable in AC circuits if two are placed in series but with opposite orientations. What is the effective capacitance of this arrangement?
My understanding is that these capacitors will conduct if a voltage >2V is imposed in the reverse polarity. Because of this, I think the effective capacitance is equal to that of a single capacitor (i.e., it’s not halved) while the ESR is doubled. I can’t measure this with my RCL meter because it does not have a great enough output voltage.
Thanks for any help.
I have a brief question regarding polar electrolytic capacitors in AC applications. My understanding is that the use of polar electrolytic capacitors is acceptable in AC circuits if two are placed in series but with opposite orientations. What is the effective capacitance of this arrangement?
My understanding is that these capacitors will conduct if a voltage >2V is imposed in the reverse polarity. Because of this, I think the effective capacitance is equal to that of a single capacitor (i.e., it’s not halved) while the ESR is doubled. I can’t measure this with my RCL meter because it does not have a great enough output voltage.
Thanks for any help.