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Registered Member #1316
Joined: Thu Feb 14 2008, 03:35AM
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 365
What is a normal range for capacitor energy density (Joules/cubic inch) for electrolytic and film capacitors?
I just got a pule cap off ebay and was surprised on how small it is. Its poly film and 1440 VDC and 500uf. The dimensions are 4.1" by 5.5" by 1.4". This equates to a energy density of around 15 joules/inch^3
By comparison, a random electrolytic cap I have has an energy density around 4 joules/inch^3
Is the cap mislabeled? (It has a Aerovox manufacture sticker though) Or has film capacitor technology significantly improved?
Registered Member #2919
Joined: Fri Jun 11 2010, 06:30PM
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 652
Almost certainly not a pulse cap. An oil-paper Maxwell stores 250J and is ~12"x8"x2", which is a joule or two per inch^3. A *good* poly film cap will be significantly lower, (maybe 100mJ per inch^3 for a nice pulse cap).
Registered Member #1316
Joined: Thu Feb 14 2008, 03:35AM
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 365
The label says "Energy Discharge Capacitor 500uF 1440VDC" Its made by aerovox. They make pulse capacitors and defibrillator capacitors. I think it might be a defibrillator capacitor.
Registered Member #1451
Joined: Wed Apr 23 2008, 03:48AM
Location: Boulder, Co
Posts: 661
I doubt that the label is correct. Those wires coming out of the top are no where near large enough to handle the current that a pulse cap of that rating would produce. They also look like they could only hand 120V DC not 1.4kV. Maybe a decimal point was worn off and they are rated for 144V DC. That would seem way more likely a voltage for a defibrillator.
The description also says that the wires are rated for 10 KVA which is a strange rating for a pulse capacitor. It would be much more likely for wires of a cap to be rated in amps.
All in all this thing seems a little fishy to me. Careful charging it when you come to that.
Registered Member #1316
Joined: Thu Feb 14 2008, 03:35AM
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 365
I am holding one of the caps right now. It is clearly 500uf and 1440vdc. I think the "10KVA" rated leads are just seller hype. This weekend I am going to hook it up to the flashlamp for my er:yag laser head and see how it preforms.
Registered Member #1316
Joined: Thu Feb 14 2008, 03:35AM
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 365
From the aervox site, the capacitor could either be a pulse cap or a defibrillator cap. Their line of poly film pulse caps have an energy density of up to 1.1 j/cm^3. The defibrillator capacitors have an energy density of up to 1.47 j/cm^3.
My cap has an energy density of 0.83 j/cm^3
Based on the custom part number and the lower voltage/higher capacity then the defibrillator capacitors, I beleive that it migh be a pulse cap for a flashlamp or something similar.
Registered Member #2099
Joined: Wed Apr 29 2009, 12:22AM
Location: Los Altos, California
Posts: 1716
Weston wrote ...
From the aervox site, the capacitor could either be a pulse cap or a defibrillator cap. Their line of poly film pulse caps have an energy density of up to 1.1 j/cm^3. The defibrillator capacitors have an energy density of up to 1.47 j/cm^3.
My cap has an energy density of 0.83 j/cm^3
Based on the custom part number and the lower voltage/higher capacity then the defibrillator capacitors, I beleive that it migh be a pulse cap for a flashlamp or something similar.
You taught me something here, Weston: the surprisingly high energy density of modern metallized film pulse capacitors.
There is no question, this is an Energy Discharge Capacitor a.k.a. a Pulse Capacitor. The closest I found on Aerovox website is QL232EW195, 195 uF & 2330 V. Practically identical to yours in energy and volume. You may be right about the flashlamp application. Though whether for that or for a defibrillator (typical load is around 50 ohms resistive), , I bet these guys are not designed for sub-millisecond discharge times and the associated high currents. Metallized film is known for self-healing around dielectric defects, not for ultra-high currents.
Can you tell us if the wire insulation marking includes "10 kV" ? Then the ebay seller saying "10 kVA" would be an excusable error. If you tell us the wire gauge, we could determine the minimum discharge time if limited by wire heating (I bet it isn't).
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