Capacitor Calculator
Calculate series and parallel capacitor combinations, reactance, stored energy, and charge.
Capacitor Configuration
Series Total
Capacitor Values (3)
Calculated Values
Capacitor Formulas
What Is a Capacitor?
A capacitor is an electronic component that stores electrical energy in an electric field. It consists of two conductive plates separated by an insulating material (dielectric). Capacitors are fundamental to filtering, timing, coupling, and energy storage in electronic circuits.
| Property | Symbol | Unit | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Capacitance | C | Farad (F) | Ability to store charge |
| Voltage rating | V | Volts (V) | Maximum safe voltage |
| Charge | Q | Coulombs (C) | Stored electrical charge |
| Energy | E | Joules (J) | Stored energy |
| ESR | — | Ohms (Ω) | Equivalent series resistance |
| Tolerance | — | Percent (%) | Value accuracy |
Basic Capacitor Formula
Where:
- C= Capacitance in Farads
- Q= Charge in Coulombs
- V= Voltage in Volts
Capacitance Units and Prefixes
The Farad is a very large unit. Practical capacitors are measured in smaller subunits.
| Unit | Symbol | Value in Farads | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Farad | F | 1 | Supercapacitors, energy storage |
| Millifarad | mF | 10⁻³ F | Large power supply caps |
| Microfarad | µF | 10⁻⁶ F | Power filtering, audio coupling |
| Nanofarad | nF | 10⁻⁹ F | Signal filtering, timing |
| Picofarad | pF | 10⁻¹² F | RF circuits, high frequency |
Conversions: 1 µF = 1000 nF = 1,000,000 pF. When reading capacitor markings, context determines the unit used.
Capacitors in Series and Parallel
Capacitors combine opposite to resistors: parallel adds directly, series uses reciprocals.
| Configuration | Formula | Result | Voltage Handling |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parallel | Ctotal = C₁ + C₂ + C₃ + ... | Sum of all values | Same as lowest rated |
| Series (2 caps) | Ctotal = (C₁ × C₂) / (C₁ + C₂) | Less than smallest | Voltages add up |
| Series (n equal) | Ctotal = C / n | Value divided by count | n × single voltage |
| Series (general) | 1/Ctotal = 1/C₁ + 1/C₂ + ... | Use reciprocals | Voltages add |
Key insight: Parallel increases capacitance (more charge storage). Series decreases capacitance but increases voltage rating. This is opposite of resistors!
Series/Parallel Formulas
Where:
- C1, C2, C3= Individual capacitor values
- C_total= Combined equivalent capacitance
RC Time Constant
The RC time constant (τ) defines how quickly a capacitor charges or discharges through a resistor. After one time constant, the capacitor reaches ~63% of full charge.
| Time Constants (τ) | Charging (%) | Discharging (%) | Practical Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1τ | 63.2% | 36.8% | First significant change |
| 2τ | 86.5% | 13.5% | Mostly charged/discharged |
| 3τ | 95.0% | 5.0% | Nearly complete |
| 4τ | 98.2% | 1.8% | Essentially complete |
| 5τ | 99.3% | 0.7% | Considered fully charged |
RC Time Constant
Where:
- τ (tau)= Time constant in seconds
- R= Resistance in Ohms
- C= Capacitance in Farads
- e= Euler's number (~2.718)
Energy Storage in Capacitors
Capacitors store energy in their electric field. The stored energy depends on capacitance and voltage squared.
| Capacitor Type | Typical Capacitance | Voltage Range | Energy Storage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ceramic (small) | 1 pF - 100 nF | 10-1000V | Microjoules |
| Film | 1 nF - 100 µF | 50-2000V | Millijoules |
| Electrolytic | 0.1 µF - 100,000 µF | 6.3-450V | Millijoules to Joules |
| Supercapacitor | 0.1 F - 3000 F | 2.5-5.5V | Joules to Kilojoules |
Capacitor Energy Formula
Where:
- E= Energy in Joules
- C= Capacitance in Farads
- V= Voltage in Volts
- Q= Charge in Coulombs
Types of Capacitors
Different capacitor technologies suit different applications based on capacity, voltage, frequency, and stability requirements.
| Type | Capacitance Range | Voltage | Best For | Polarity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ceramic (MLCC) | 1 pF - 100 µF | 6.3-5000V | Bypass, high frequency | Non-polar |
| Film (polyester/polypropylene) | 1 nF - 100 µF | 50-2000V | Audio, timing, filters | Non-polar |
| Aluminum electrolytic | 0.1 µF - 1 F | 6.3-450V | Power supply filtering | Polar |
| Tantalum | 0.1 µF - 1000 µF | 2-50V | Compact, stable | Polar |
| Supercapacitor (EDLC) | 0.1-3000 F | 2.5-5.5V | Energy storage, backup | Polar |
| Mica/Silver mica | 1 pF - 10 nF | 100-1000V | RF, precision circuits | Non-polar |
Capacitive Reactance (AC Circuits)
In AC circuits, capacitors have capacitive reactance (Xc)—an opposition to current that decreases with frequency. Unlike resistance, reactance doesn't dissipate power.
| Frequency | Reactance | Current Flow | Behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| DC (0 Hz) | Infinite | Zero (after charging) | Open circuit |
| Low frequency | High | Low | Blocks low frequencies |
| High frequency | Low | High | Passes high frequencies |
| Very high frequency | Very low | Very high | Nearly short circuit |
Capacitive Reactance Formula
Where:
- Xc= Capacitive reactance in Ohms
- f= Frequency in Hertz
- C= Capacitance in Farads
- ω= Angular frequency (rad/s)
Worked Examples
Calculate RC Time Constant
Problem:
A 10 µF capacitor is connected to a 10 kΩ resistor. What is the time constant, and how long until 99% charged?
Solution Steps:
- 1Identify values: C = 10 µF = 10 × 10⁻⁶ F, R = 10 kΩ = 10,000 Ω
- 2Calculate τ: τ = R × C = 10,000 × 10 × 10⁻⁶
- 3τ = 0.1 seconds = 100 milliseconds
- 499% charge occurs at approximately 5τ
- 5Time to 99% = 5 × 0.1 = 0.5 seconds
Result:
τ = 100 ms; reaches 99% charge in 500 ms (0.5 seconds)
Combine Capacitors in Parallel
Problem:
What is the total capacitance of 100 µF, 47 µF, and 22 µF capacitors in parallel?
Solution Steps:
- 1Parallel formula: C_total = C₁ + C₂ + C₃
- 2Substitute values: C_total = 100 + 47 + 22
- 3Calculate: C_total = 169 µF
- 4Voltage rating: Use the lowest rated capacitor's voltage
Result:
169 µF total capacitance
Calculate Energy Stored
Problem:
How much energy is stored in a 1000 µF capacitor charged to 50V?
Solution Steps:
- 1Energy formula: E = ½ × C × V²
- 2Convert: C = 1000 µF = 0.001 F
- 3Substitute: E = ½ × 0.001 × 50²
- 4Calculate: E = 0.5 × 0.001 × 2500
- 5E = 1.25 Joules
Result:
1.25 Joules stored energy
Tips & Best Practices
- ✓Parallel capacitors add (C_total = C1 + C2); series capacitors use reciprocals—opposite of resistors!
- ✓The RC time constant τ = R × C gives the time to reach 63% charge; 5τ is essentially fully charged.
- ✓Electrolytic capacitors are polarized—connect negative to ground or lower voltage side.
- ✓For power supply filtering, use low-ESR capacitors near switching regulators.
- ✓Energy stored is proportional to V²—doubling voltage quadruples stored energy.
- ✓Capacitor value codes work like resistors but in picofarads: '104' = 100nF = 0.1µF.
- ✓Capacitors block DC but pass AC—the higher the frequency, the lower the reactance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
Last updated: 2026-01-22