A
capacitor generally consists of two conducting surfaces, frequently referred to as plates, separated by an insulating layer usually referred to as a
dielectric. The original capacitor was the
Leyden jar developed in the 18th century. It is the accumulation of electric charge on the plates that results in
capacitance. Modern capacitors are constructed using a range of manufacturing techniques and materials to provide the extraordinarily wide range of capacitance values used in
electronics applications from femtofarads to farads, with maximum-voltage ratings ranging from a few
volts to several kilovolts. Values of capacitors are usually specified in terms of
SI prefixes of farads (F),
microfarads (
μF),
nanofarads (
nF) and
picofarads (
pF). The
millifarad (
mF) is rarely used in practice; a capacitance of 4.7 mF (0.0047 F), for example, is instead written as . The
nanofarad (
nF) is used more often in Europe than in the United States. The size of commercially available capacitors ranges from around 0.1 pF to (5 kF)
supercapacitors.
Parasitic capacitance in high-performance
integrated circuits can be measured in femtofarads (1 fF = 0.001 pF = F), while high-performance test equipment can detect changes in capacitance on the order of tens of attofarads (1 aF = F). A value of 0.1 pF is about the smallest available in capacitors for general use in electronic design, since smaller ones would be dominated by the
parasitic capacitances of other components, wiring or
printed circuit boards. Capacitance values of 1 pF or lower can be achieved by twisting two short lengths of insulated wire together. The capacitance of the Earth's
ionosphere with respect to the ground is calculated to be about 1 F.
Informal and deprecated terminology The picofarad (pF) is sometimes colloquially pronounced as "puff" or "pic", as in "a ten-puff capacitor". Similarly, "mic" (pronounced "mike") is sometimes used informally to signify microfarads. Nonstandard abbreviations were and are often used. Farad has been abbreviated "f", "fd", and "Fd". For the prefix "micro-", when
the Greek small letter "μ" or the legacy micro sign "μ" is not available (as on typewriters) or inconvenient to enter, it is often substituted with the similar-appearing "u" or "U", with little risk of confusion. It was also substituted with the similar-sounding "M" or "m", which can be confusing because M officially stands for 1,000,000, and m preferably stands for 1/1000. In texts prior to 1960, and on capacitor packages until more recently, "microfarad(s)" was abbreviated "mf" or "MFD" rather than the modern "μF". A 1940
Radio Shack catalog listed every capacitor's rating in "Mfd.", from 0.000005 Mfd. (5 pF) to 50 Mfd. (50 μF). "Micromicrofarad" or "micro-microfarad" is an obsolete unit found in some older texts and labels, contains a nonstandard
metric double prefix. It is exactly equivalent to a picofarad (pF). It is abbreviated μμF, uuF, or (confusingly) "mmf", "MMF", or "MMFD". Summary of obsolete or deprecated capacitance units or abbreviations: (upper/lower case variations are not shown) • μF (microfarad) = mf, mfd, uf • pF (picofarad) = mmf, mmfd, pfd, μμF is a square version of (, the Japanese word for "farad") intended for Japanese
vertical text. It is included in Unicode for
compatibility with earlier character sets.
Related concepts The reciprocal of capacitance is called
electrical elastance, the (non-standard, non-SI) unit of which is the
daraf. ==CGS units==