T
Tim Shoppa
Guest
I'm migrating some designs from through-hole and SMT electrolytics
and am beginning to learn what's possible with large ( 1 - 10uF )
ceramic caps.
The electrolytics are typically subassembly bypass capacitors and
caps used in switched-capacitor converters (i.e. MAX232) although there
are occasional uses in things like RC one-shots and AF-frequency voltage
shifting.
Right now I'm trying to get my mind into the mindset where ceramics
are reasonable alternatives and I'm still not completely converted.
Panasonic has a few app notes extolling all the virtues of these parts,
but my question is: what are the gotchas?
For bypass purposes the +80/-20 percent parts seem to be price competitive
with electrolytics at the very low uF range. The 10 percent ceramic
parts aren't so competitive, nor are the +80/-20's above 10uF or so.
Tim.
and am beginning to learn what's possible with large ( 1 - 10uF )
ceramic caps.
The electrolytics are typically subassembly bypass capacitors and
caps used in switched-capacitor converters (i.e. MAX232) although there
are occasional uses in things like RC one-shots and AF-frequency voltage
shifting.
Right now I'm trying to get my mind into the mindset where ceramics
are reasonable alternatives and I'm still not completely converted.
Panasonic has a few app notes extolling all the virtues of these parts,
but my question is: what are the gotchas?
For bypass purposes the +80/-20 percent parts seem to be price competitive
with electrolytics at the very low uF range. The 10 percent ceramic
parts aren't so competitive, nor are the +80/-20's above 10uF or so.
Tim.