Learning module

Capacitors

Capacitors store charge, smooth supplies, pass changing signals, and block steady DC.

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Mark lessons as complete as you work through the bench checks, then use the quiz to test the ideas.

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Current lesson

Capacitors

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Build an RC delay with a resistor, capacitor, and LED indicator, then change the capacitor value and observe the timing shift.

Key ideas

A capacitor stores energy in an electric field between two plates.

Capacitors resist sudden voltage changes, which makes them useful for smoothing and timing.

Small capacitors often handle noise and signal coupling; larger electrolytics often handle storage and supply smoothing.

Electrolytic capacitors are usually polarised and can fail badly if connected backwards.

Useful formulas

Charge: Q = C x V

Energy: E = 0.5 x C x V^2

RC time constant: tau = R x C

About 5 tau is close to fully charged

Bench checks

Check voltage rating before installing a capacitor.

Confirm polarity on electrolytics before powering.

Use the RC calculator to predict charge or delay behaviour.

Common mistakes

Using too low a voltage rating.

Putting a polarised capacitor backwards.

Assuming a charged capacitor is safe just because power is off.

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