Active devices of an
electronic system (e.g.
transistors,
integrated circuits,
vacuum tubes) are connected to their
power supplies through
conductors with finite
resistance and
inductance. If the
current drawn by an active device changes, the
voltage drop from the power supply to the device will also change due to these
impedances. If several active devices share a common path to the power supply, changes in the current drawn by one element may produce voltage changes large enough to affect the operation of others –
voltage spikes or
ground bounce, for example – so the change of state of one device is coupled to others through the common impedance to the power supply. A decoupling capacitor provides a bypass path for
transient currents, instead of flowing through the common impedance. The decoupling capacitor works as the device’s local
energy storage. The capacitor is placed between the power line and the
ground to the circuit the current is to be provided. According to the
capacitor current–voltage relation :i(t) = C \frac{d\,v(t)}{dt}, a voltage drop between a power line and the ground results in a current drawn out from the capacitor to the circuit. When capacitance is large enough, sufficient current is supplied to maintain an acceptable range of voltage drop. The capacitor stores a small amount of energy that can compensate for the voltage drop in the power supply conductors to the capacitor. To reduce undesired
parasitic equivalent series inductance, small and large capacitors are often placed in
parallel, adjacent to individual integrated circuits (see
§ Placement). In digital circuits, decoupling capacitors also help prevent radiation of
electromagnetic interference from relatively long circuit traces due to rapidly changing power supply currents. Decoupling capacitors alone may not suffice in such cases as a high-power amplifier stage with a low-level pre-amplifier coupled to it. Care must be taken in the layout of circuit conductors so that heavy current at one stage does not produce power supply voltage drops that affect other stages. This may require re-routing printed circuit board traces to segregate circuits, or the use of a
ground plane to improve the stability of power supply. ==Decoupling==