Electrical – A question about the function of electrolyte in electrolytic caps

electrolytic-capacitor

I read in a textbook about electrolytic caps the following:

The foils are separated by paper saturated with an electrolyte for
current conduction — thus the name electrolytic capacitors

I'm confused. I thought there's no current conduction inside a cap but only electric field between the foils which are layered by aluminum-oxide. I thought electrolyte soaked paper is used for to heal the foils.

Is this argument from the text correct?

Edit: If cap dielectric should be an insulator why it is conductive Im completely confused.

Best Answer

The 'electrolytic capacitor' is not called that because it contains an electrolyte. It's called that because a key step in its manufacture is the formulation of thin layer of dielectric oxide on the positive aluminium plate by electrolysis.

The electrolytic capacitor gets its large capacitance from the very thin dielectric layer and the large area of the roughened plate. Without a liquid, the air or vacuum b

The electrolytic capacitor gets its large capacitance from the very thin dielectric layer and the large area of the roughened plate. Without a liquid, the air or vacuum between the plates would cause a huge loss in capacitance. The electrolyte (that is, conductive liquid) fills the interstices of the anode, and is effectively the cathode to the thick oxide layer on the anode.