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Stefan Wolfe wrote:
I think that when considering plastic and mica type materials for high capacitance values, component engineers do not necessarily look at dielectric constant as the most important property. Mylar, mica and polyethylene are common capacitor materials and have rather low dielctic constants just a little higher than teflon. What makes them most attractive is their ability to be manufactured in very thin sheets (increased C) and their high dielectric strengths (increased V ratings). Teflon is higher cost but is very good for high voltage ratings due to superior dielectric strength. Aluminum and tantalum oxides tend to have very high dielectric constants due to the capability of these metal oxide molecules to store electrons. What is more desirable however is their property of being very thin. What makes them a problem is their relatively low dielectric strengths thus their low voltage ratings. Actually, there are a lot more considerations yet. Some plastics are self-healing, so a momentary arc won't permanently destroy the capacitor. And some have exceptionally low leakage current. Various materials also have widely different temperature coefficients. In general, the very high k (dielectric constant) ceramics have higher temperature coefficients than lower k materials. Some ceramics, like the very high k ceramics used for Z5U and similar capacitors, are also hygroscopic, microphonic, piezoelectric, and their k varies with frequency and voltage. Many capacitors, depending largely on the dielectric, also have nonlinear properties such as "soak" (dielectric absorption) and "hook". Loss, expressed as loss tangent, ESR, or power factor, is also often an important consideration, and it can be very different for different dielectrics. Choosing the right capacitor for a particular job can be pretty demanding. This one, fortunately, is easier than some. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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