Capacitors are rated according to how near to their actual values they are compared to the rated nominal capacitance with coloured bands or letters used to indicated their actual tolerance. The most common tolerance variation for capacitors is 5% or 10% but some plastic capacitors are rated as low as ±1%.
The stipulations for individual capacitor series are in accordance with the CECC type specifications. The rated or operational pulse rise time is specified as 1/10 of the test pulse rise time. The pulse rise time F given in V/µsec is also indirectly the maximum current capacity.
The characteristics of capacitors are frequency-dependent. At low frequencies, they function as expected, however, the performance of capacitors changes at higher frequencies because of factors like equivalent series resistance (ESR) and equivalent series inductance (ESL.
When sizing a capacitor, always choose one with a voltage rating higher than the maximum voltage in your circuit to prevent breakdown and damage. The capacitance value, measured in farads (F), indicates the amount of charge a capacitor can store for a given voltage.
The capacitance of a capacitor can change value with the circuit frequency (Hz) y with the ambient temperature. Smaller ceramic capacitors can have a nominal value as low as one pico-Farad, ( 1pF ) while larger electrolytic’s can have a nominal capacitance value of up to one Farad, ( 1F ).
A capacitor is measured by the size of its capacitance. A capacitance is the electric capacity of a capacitor, i.e. the amount of electrically charged carriers it can store. ɛ r . The relative dielectric constant can have values between ɛ r = 1 (air) and ɛ r ~ 10,000 (special ceramic materials).