An excellent explanation. Let me add that total inductance (L) of the cap also depends on the way it is connected to the power & return planes. In partcular: How many vias are used (the more, the lower L), how large the vias are (the bigger, the lower L) & how far the planes are from the cap (the shorter distance, the lower L).
You are completely right! If the capacitor connection are poorly made, you can get far more inductance from the traces than from the capacitor internals.
Great explanation. I would like to add something: make sure that you choose the right package for your capacitors. For example: if you have 3 decoupling capacitors (1u, 0.1u, 0.01u), the biggest value should come in a big case (let`s say 0805), and the lowest value in a small case (0402 is fine). This way when the frequency increases the impedance drops to a point and than starts fluctuating around that point. If all your capacitors come in a 0805 case, the impedance would keep rising after that point.
The current (sinusoidal steady-state) in a capacitor is due to the resultant electric field E_net (resultant of the applied field and an opposing electric field, the fringe field). If the capacitance of the capacitor C is made large, then the fringe field does not build as fast as it would have if C were to be smaller. With a large C, the charge sprays on the plates do not result in developing a large voltage in a given interval of time as evident from the capacitor voltage-charge relation Q = CV. The fringe field is smaller and the net field consequently is greater. Therefore, at a fixed frequency, the current increases as the size of the capacitor is increased. The current also increases as the frequency is increased. So, we say it passes higher frequencies of applied voltage. If the frequency is made smaller, the fringe field builds very rapidly and in the limit when it is dc, it blocks the applied voltage. If a resistor R is connected to the capacitor then the resistor limited current is not enough to dump charge fast enough at such high frequencies and of sufficient quantity to produce any significant opposing fringe field. Therefore, for a given RC combination the output voltage picked across the resistor is able to reproduce the input signal with less attenuation. We say that the capacitor bypasses the high frequencies …..in reality, the electric field of the input voltage passes “through” the capacitor with almost no opposition. This makes the capacitor useful as a coupling capacitor for ac signals in amplifiers and also as an emitter bypass capacitor in transistors that will afford larger output swings by reducing the amount of ac signal feedback without affecting stabilising dc feedback. It is not possible in this post to discuss in more detail current in capacitor circuits and capacitive reactance. Electrostatics and circuits belong to one science not two. To learn the operation of circuits, Current and the conduction process, resistors and how discussing these topics makes it easier to understand the principle of superposition of potential which is a direct consequence of the principle of superposition applied to electric fields, watch these two videos i. ruclips.net/video/TTtt28b1dYo/видео.html and ii. ruclips.net/video/8BQM_xw2Rfo/видео.html The last frame of video 1 contains in the References articles and textbooks which discuss the unified approach. Sections 3.1 to 3.3 in Chapter 3 of textbook 4 discuss the operation of the RC coupling circuit with sequential diagrams using the unified approach. Also, Section 3.6 in Chapter 3 of textbook 4 discusses the operation of the bypass capacitor tied across the emitter resistor using the unified approach with the help of sequential diagrams in a transistorised common-emitter amplifier.
Thank you for your very fascinating comment. I haven't thought about the topic in quite this way before, and the way you explain this mechanism is most insightful.
Hi...i am not able to simulate ciruit with inductor because it gives under shoot of around 2 kv .plz help me as i have spend whole day in it. I domt know what silly mistake i am making . May be current pulse setting plz attach ltspice software file of circuit or tell me about current pulse setting .plz help ASAP PLZ PLZ PLZ
Hello haimt1464 ! I guess you are referring to the first simulation only with the resistor and inductor. To make the simulation realistic, I didn't use a current source but rather a current load (its a setting for current sources found on the middle right side of the panel). By doing this, the current load will try to pull 1A if that is possible, if not, it just pulls as much current as is available. So in this case the load pulled current until voltage went down to 0, then there was no more current to pull (so it could not go to -2kV) - and this how a circuit would behave in real life.
@@FesZElectronics In case you have experience with Orcad Capture-Pspice, do you know if this same option is available for Orcad?, I've searched it on Capture but I could not find it. Thanks.
Hello! When you show and explain something on the screen (for example LTSpice), the viewers eyes are glued to the screen trying to go comprehend what is beeing explained at this very moment. But then you very often suddenly switch to face cam, which is too abrupt and distracting for me, because I was still trying to see whats going on on the screen. So my suggestion is, that you do not switch camera focus while there is still something on the screen. Or maybe implement the facecam as small picture-in-picture. I hope I explained it sufficiently, also that said, I thank you for the videos!
Thanks for the shoutout.
Good work needs to be appreciated!
Woah 🤩😱 crossover
I love your videos... It s a shame you dont have more viewers.....
Best explanation I've seen. Thx
Absolutely facinating. Thanks for breaking that down for me to be so easily understood.
This is the best video about decoupling capacitors. Thanx!!
I am glad I found your channel
Thank you for the kind words and support!
Great approach and execution as always!
Can't believe I missed these gems. Great mini- series to teach something to someone at every level. Awesome Fesz, thanks man.
great explaination love the spice simulation , keep up
An excellent explanation. Let me add that total inductance (L) of the cap also depends on the way it is connected to the power & return planes. In partcular: How many vias are used (the more, the lower L), how large the vias are (the bigger, the lower L) & how far the planes are from the cap (the shorter distance, the lower L).
You are completely right! If the capacitor connection are poorly made, you can get far more inductance from the traces than from the capacitor internals.
Thank you, exelent video, love to learn something new!
Great explanation. I would like to add something: make sure that you choose the right package for your capacitors. For example: if you have 3 decoupling capacitors (1u, 0.1u, 0.01u), the biggest value should come in a big case (let`s say 0805), and the lowest value in a small case (0402 is fine). This way when the frequency increases the impedance drops to a point and than starts fluctuating around that point. If all your capacitors come in a 0805 case, the impedance would keep rising after that point.
Thanks
Thank you for Sharing , your video has always bunch of information.
Keep uploading.......
Excellent tutorial with great practical advice.
I wish I had teacher like you when I was doing Electronics graduation.
Great video.
Excellent work! Keep it up.
The current (sinusoidal steady-state) in a capacitor is due to the resultant electric field E_net (resultant of the applied field and an opposing electric field, the fringe field). If the capacitance of the capacitor C is made large, then the fringe field does not build as fast as it would have if C were to be smaller. With a large C, the charge sprays on the plates do not result in developing a large voltage in a given interval of time as evident from the capacitor voltage-charge relation Q = CV.
The fringe field is smaller and the net field consequently is greater. Therefore, at a fixed frequency, the current increases as the size of the capacitor is increased. The current also increases as the frequency is increased. So, we say it passes higher frequencies of applied voltage.
If the frequency is made smaller, the fringe field builds very rapidly and in the limit when it is dc, it blocks the applied voltage.
If a resistor R is connected to the capacitor then the resistor limited current is not enough to dump charge fast enough at such high frequencies and of sufficient quantity to produce any significant opposing fringe field.
Therefore, for a given RC combination the output voltage picked across the resistor is able to reproduce the input signal with less attenuation. We say that the capacitor bypasses the high frequencies …..in reality, the electric field of the input voltage passes “through” the capacitor with almost no opposition.
This makes the capacitor useful as a coupling capacitor for ac signals in amplifiers and also as an emitter bypass capacitor in transistors that will afford larger output swings by reducing the amount of ac signal feedback without affecting stabilising dc feedback.
It is not possible in this post to discuss in more detail current in capacitor circuits and capacitive reactance.
Electrostatics and circuits belong to one science not two. To learn the operation of circuits, Current and the conduction process, resistors and how discussing these topics makes it easier to understand the principle of superposition of potential which is a direct consequence of the principle of superposition applied to electric fields,
watch these two videos
i. ruclips.net/video/TTtt28b1dYo/видео.html and
ii. ruclips.net/video/8BQM_xw2Rfo/видео.html
The last frame of video 1 contains in the References articles and textbooks which discuss the unified approach.
Sections 3.1 to 3.3 in Chapter 3 of textbook 4 discuss the operation of the RC coupling circuit with sequential diagrams using the unified approach.
Also, Section 3.6 in Chapter 3 of textbook 4 discusses the operation of the bypass capacitor tied across the emitter resistor using the unified approach with the help of sequential diagrams in a transistorised common-emitter amplifier.
Thank you for your very fascinating comment. I haven't thought about the topic in quite this way before, and the way you explain this mechanism is most insightful.
This helped out a lot. THX
Nice explanation
I put a like without to see the video. i know it is very good.
well prepared and presented.
Thanks, well done!
The best! Thanks for sharing!
nice, very nice
"hello... and welcome back" Wait what ? SUBSCRIBING !!!! 😂
Insightful. Thanks a lot
Glad it was helpful!
Excellent
good channel!
Hi...i am not able to simulate ciruit with inductor because it gives under shoot of around 2 kv .plz help me as i have spend whole day in it. I domt know what silly mistake i am making . May be current pulse setting plz attach ltspice software file of circuit or tell me about current pulse setting .plz help ASAP PLZ PLZ PLZ
At 4:15 the voltage drop appears at approx 400us, but the pulse statement delay field says 1m?
Hello! The initial transient statement is ".tran 0 1.5m .6m" this adds a 600u delay. The transient statement can be seen at 3:21
@@FesZElectronics That fixed it! Thanks
Hi , according to v=L*di/dt -> 2µ*1A/2n =2kv the voltage supposed to fall -2kv how in the LT it is full only to 0v ?
Hello haimt1464 ! I guess you are referring to the first simulation only with the resistor and inductor. To make the simulation realistic, I didn't use a current source but rather a current load (its a setting for current sources found on the middle right side of the panel). By doing this, the current load will try to pull 1A if that is possible, if not, it just pulls as much current as is available. So in this case the load pulled current until voltage went down to 0, then there was no more current to pull (so it could not go to -2kV) - and this how a circuit would behave in real life.
thank you for the clarification I didn't know that you use active current load, I learn something new today thanks again.
@@FesZElectronics In case you have experience with Orcad Capture-Pspice, do you know if this same option is available for Orcad?, I've searched it on Capture but I could not find it. Thanks.
@@hectorgonzalez6361 I'm sorry, I didn't really use Orcad. The option probably does exist though since its such a basic feature.
Where do you come from? I just can't guess it from your accent :)
Hello There! Well, I'm from Romania. But I guess my English doesn't really have a Romanian accent to it.
Hello! When you show and explain something on the screen (for example LTSpice), the viewers eyes are glued to the screen trying to go comprehend what is beeing explained at this very moment. But then you very often suddenly switch to face cam, which is too abrupt and distracting for me, because I was still trying to see whats going on on the screen. So my suggestion is, that you do not switch camera focus while there is still something on the screen. Or maybe implement the facecam as small picture-in-picture. I hope I explained it sufficiently, also that said, I thank you for the videos!