![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| |||||||
| General Electronics Chat This forum is for general chat about electronics, eg: Dont know what a part does? Dont know how to read a circuit? Want to get an opinion? |
![]() |
| | Tools |
| | #1 |
|
Hello all, I've been inspecting datasheets of 50 F supercaps of Panasonic (goldcap) and Cooper Bussmann (x times more expensive). Both are officially rated at 1000 hours at 60 or 70 ° C. When applying the arrhenius formula that would give you a 2-3 years guaranteed life at 15°C. That is one part of the datasheet. They also show "typical data" where they seem to operate up to 10 years with only 30% decrease in capacitance. Highly acceptable, but how should I interpret this data? What could be the difference in price between these two manufacturers (is it different technology??). I would like my cap to last 5-10 years in parallel with a battery through a series resistor (the battery itself cant be discharged higher than a couple 100 mA). Also Cooper-Bussman lists "hybrid battery pack" under applications, not so Panasonic, this I find suspicious. Thanks J. | |
| |
| | #2 |
|
I don't think they've really been tested to that extent. The manufacturing processes are so new.. Their MTBF are just guesstimates.
__________________ "Because I be what I be. I would tell you what you want to know if I could, mum, but I be a cat, and no cat anywhere ever gave anyone a straight answer, har har." Last edited by Sceadwian; 29th October 2009 at 03:23 AM. | |
| |
| | #3 |
|
You need a lot of supercaps connected in series when connecting to a battery. Their nominal (max) charging voltage is 2.5V. You might also read the datasheets of the WIMA SuperCaps (up to 1,200F). Boncuk
__________________ Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance | |
| |
| | #4 |
|
Boncuk, he said he wants the super caps in parallel with the battery, and a current limit resistor not in series, and typically speaking, super caps aren't run in series, not sure why you would do that, and how many you need in series dpeends on the battery pack and the exact supercap you're using. the Superstor 1F ones that I have are 5V rated. Their more broad ranging models are 2.5v.
__________________ "Because I be what I be. I would tell you what you want to know if I could, mum, but I be a cat, and no cat anywhere ever gave anyone a straight answer, har har." | |
| |
| | #5 |
|
When they come out with 250 volt super caps in the 10000F range then I will take some serious interest. (55 gallon barrel sized most likely) ![]() But just think what that could do to your buddies screwdriver end!
__________________ "Issue a general safety warning. Then look the other way and allow stupidity the chance to eliminate itself." -- tcmtech "Those who can, Will. Those who can't, will achieve positions of power over those who can and then promptly stop them." -- tcmtech "Your impossibility may just be my day to day routine." -- tcmtech | |
| |
| | #6 |
|
Hello, I'm working at VinaTech, manufacturer of supercapacitor based in Korea. * As for 2.7V 50F, market price for some massive q'ty is set around $3. I can also see that some makers or online sellers offer over $10 in case of sample basis... * Life : You'd better see simply cycle life of supercap(room temperature condition). Most of supercaps, also VinaTech, offer over 500,000 cycles(from rated 2.7V down to half 1.35V charge/discharge). You are to get a real data about cycle life. * Regarding Arrehnius calculation, I also referred to this, but I guess the condition is "continous loaded at rated voltage", without one time cut off power over the whole life, similarly accelerated high temperature testing for 1000 hours at 70 C or 2000 hours at 60C. The real application of supercaps is not like that...I'm not so sure about arrehnius. Anyhow, I think it is better to see cycle life instead. If you have further questions to make clear, you are freely to contact at my email, jkim@vina.co.kr or hycap@vina.co.kr | |
| |
| | #7 |
|
No Boncuk is right, I need 2 in series. And then you have to watch out for balancing, but I have calculated that I can get away without balancing resistors. Ive been told goldcaps exist since the 80ies, its not so new then? Do you think I will be able to keep leakage current in the uA range? Last time I measured over a 24 h period it was 30 uA but that seems to come down over time. | |
| |
| | #8 |
|
tcmtech, you're an experimenter, you should try to make some of your own super caps. Get some large tin foil rolls and stretch film from an industrial supplier and wind some really big non-polar poly caps =) Juuuust for fun. Always wanted to do it, at the very least they could be used for motor run caps.
__________________ "Because I be what I be. I would tell you what you want to know if I could, mum, but I be a cat, and no cat anywhere ever gave anyone a straight answer, har har." Last edited by Sceadwian; 30th October 2009 at 12:05 AM. | |
| |
| | #9 |
|
I have seriously thought about it many times being things like motor start and run caps are rather pricey for bigger ones. I just dont know where to find the exact specs for which insulator materials and what thicknesses relate to what voltages and what capacitance per square unit of aria. I have some formulas some place for making HV glass plate capacitors but none that relate to paper or any types of plastics materials. Being I have my lathe, setting up the roll holders and the proper pretensioning systems for making very large capacitors would be all that hard. And I have several suppliers that carry about any type of plastic film needed already on rolls. I just need some proper design specs formulas! ![]() And what exactly makes up a super capacitors materials anyway? Yea, I know. Just Google it.
__________________ "Issue a general safety warning. Then look the other way and allow stupidity the chance to eliminate itself." -- tcmtech "Those who can, Will. Those who can't, will achieve positions of power over those who can and then promptly stop them." -- tcmtech "Your impossibility may just be my day to day routine." -- tcmtech | |
| |
| | #10 |
|
Buy the thickest poly wrap you can find, and high quality film is a must. Don't buy that sticky thin stretch film for cheap skid wrapping that is very common. Basically what you want is just good old plain basic constant thickness plastic wrap, no plasticizers, not adhesives nothing. Check out a few places near you I'm sure you'll find something that looks to you like decent plastic film (not stretchy gooey crap) find out where they get it and buy a roll. The foil is just the thickest aluminum foil you can find. As far as super caps go the only thing that makes them different is the surface area per unit volume. You can make a 'super cap' out of 'normal' materials... you just gotta make it bigger =) If you can find a supplier for some kind of wrap that you think would be okay, find out what thickness's they offer it in and what the material is, it's easy to look up the dieleectric constant and from the thickness determine the voltage that's safe, but as long as it's not chincy film you should be able to get 100+ volts out of it safely. I won't say more than that simply because the film itself is the really important part, and keeping it intact and even throughout construction is a must. You will have inductance and conductance problems with larger rolls though because winding the coil adds inductance and the longer the roll (diameter) is the more resistance the metal is going to have regardless. Also, just for fair warning, most plastics that you'll find have a relatively high dielectric absorption, which means especially with a higher value cap if you discharge it fast and then disconnect it, it can regain some of it's previous voltage. The 80u 180V electrolytic flash caps that I've used before will discharge from 200 volts down to 0 almost instantly, but when you disconnect them they'll recharge to up to 80 volts from the electrons that were trapped in the dielectric material.
__________________ "Because I be what I be. I would tell you what you want to know if I could, mum, but I be a cat, and no cat anywhere ever gave anyone a straight answer, har har." Last edited by Sceadwian; 30th October 2009 at 01:23 AM. | |
| |
| | #11 | |
| Quote:
even a 5V supercap can't be connected in parallel with a battery (even with a current limiting resistor). If a 5V cap is charged by a 6V battery it will blow up when exceeding the max allowable voltage. A 1F cap is not really a supercap (seems to be a gold cap). Supercaps start at a minimum of 400F. ![]() According to WIMA info it's not advisable to charge a supercap beyond the rated voltage because of the possibility of destruction. Using supercaps for supply power backup > 2.5 or 5V respectively I don't see any other way than connecting the appropriate number of caps in series to stay within limits. Of course this measure reduces the total capacitance drastically. Regards Hans
__________________ Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance Last edited by Boncuk; 30th October 2009 at 03:01 AM. | ||
| |
| | #12 | ||
| Quote:
I've run 5V super caps in parallel with lithium, and in replacement of NiMh one two and three packs before. Supercaps have no starting value what you consider it to be the starting point of the definition of a super cap is irrelevant and non-technical. Quote:
__________________ "Because I be what I be. I would tell you what you want to know if I could, mum, but I be a cat, and no cat anywhere ever gave anyone a straight answer, har har." | |||
| |
| | #13 | |
| Quote:
I'm almost right. Here is a WIMA SuperCap of 110F and 14V nominal voltage. If 110F don't suffice check page2 of the sheet. There is a 200F/14V SuperCap. You might connect that one in parallel with the battery. Don't forget to add a diode to prevent discharging of the cap into the battery when it depletes. If you need assistance translating the datasheet to English please feel free to PM me. Regards Boncuk
__________________ Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance Last edited by Boncuk; 30th October 2009 at 03:16 AM. | ||
| |
| | #14 |
|
Hi tcmtech, if you want to experiment with supercaps I suggest using silicone oil as insulator. A friend of mine built a high voltage cap (100KV) using that oil. It is normally used in foam cutting machines and shredders to prevent sticking of the material to the hot knifes. I probably used the wrong term for "foam". It's the kind of foam used for upholstery of furniture. The shredded foam (including the crust) is used for cheap pillows, and "spaghetti" type foam is used for high quality pillows. In large factories they use tons of that oil and knocking the door with the feet (hands full with two sixpacks) you'll certainly get the desired amout free. ![]() Regards Boncuk
__________________ Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance | |
| |
| | #15 | |
| Quote:
I should have written that this my personal opionion about caps. A cap (from my understanding) is a cap ranging from nF to µF, a cap-cap is in the low F range, and a supercap is in the hundreds (or thousands) F-range.
__________________ Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance | ||
| |
|
| Tags |
| capacitors, super, world |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
Similar | ||||
| Title | Starter | Forum | Replies | Latest |
| Around the world | uaefame | Robotics Chat | 5 | 25th September 2008 10:08 PM |
| Super capacitors | Overclocked | General Electronics Chat | 12 | 7th October 2007 05:50 AM |
| Super super noob question | hvgap | General Electronics Chat | 10 | 14th January 2007 12:12 AM |
| Super capacitors | ym2k | General Electronics Chat | 12 | 18th August 2006 12:53 PM |
| RC plane around the world :) | bloody-orc | Electronic Projects Design/Ideas/Reviews | 5 | 11th September 2004 06:24 AM |