Electrical – lum – Tantalum capacitor burning out

capacitortantalum

I am using a tantalum capacitor of 10 uF rated at 20V as a decoupling capacitor.
It is placed in parallel with a 5V supply. Now when the circuit is powered, the capacitor burns out.

I replaced the tantalum capacitor assuming that the previous capacitor was defective. But when I powered the circuit the capacitor burned out again.

I replaced the tantalum capacitor with electrolytic capacitor of 10 uF rated at 63V. This time the capacitor did not burn after powering the circuit.

I do not understand why the tantalum capacitor burns up?

Best Answer

Tantalum capacitors fail if you install them backwards. No surprise here.

They may also fail due to high surge current, e.g. if the capacitor is initially empty and then connected to a power supply with high peak current capability.

When connected to a power supply a high initial current will be present at the capacitor (can be in the order of 10 Ampere and more). This is due to the very low internal series resistance of the tantalums.

Albeit this is a short event it causes heat and stress within the capacitor and may result in a failure. To find out if this is the culpit you should - as a test - connect the tantalum with an additional series resistor of lets say 1 Ohm and see if this helps. If it does you have to limit the initial inrush current of your device.

Note that you may see such high current spikes even if your power supply is only rated at 500mA or so. One or multiple large and low ESR output capacitors are all what is needed.