Capacitors, like other electrical elements, can be connected to other elements either in series or in parallel. Sometimes it is useful to connect several capacitors in parallel in order to make a functional block such as the one in the figure. In such cases, it is important to know the equivalent capacitance of the parallel connection block.
Well, just replace C1 in the circuit above with a 100 µF and a 47 µF capacitor in parallel, and you end up with a total capacitance of 147 µF. Another typical place where you’ll see capacitors connected in parallel is with microcontroller circuits. Microcontroller chips often have several power pins.
Calculating capacitors in parallel is very easy. You just add the values from each capacitor. If you want to be fancy about it, here’s the formula: So if you place a 470 nF capacitor and a 330 nF capacitor in parallel, you’ll end up with 800 nF. You add as many capacitors as you want. Imagine that you connect three 1000 µF caps in parallel.
Ensure the circuit where the capacitor will be installed is powered off and disconnected from any power source. Identify the connection points in the circuit where the capacitor will be wired. Use wire strippers to carefully strip insulation from the wires at these connection points, exposing the conductive metal.
We can also define the total capacitance of the parallel circuit from the total stored coulomb charge using the Q = CV equation for charge on a capacitors plates. The total charge QT stored on all the plates equals the sum of the individual stored charges on each capacitor therefore,
One important point to remember about parallel connected capacitor circuits, the total capacitance ( CT ) of any two or more capacitors connected together in parallel will always be GREATER than the value of the largest capacitor in the group as we are adding together values.