When selecting or designing with capacitors, engineers often focus on rated voltage, capacitance, or temperature range. However, one critical yet often overlooked aspect is the impedance (Z) and ESR (Equivalent Series Resistance) frequency characteristics.
Understanding these parameters helps ensure proper capacitor behavior in real-world operating conditions and prevents premature failures in circuit design.
Impedance (Z) is the total opposition a capacitor offers to alternating current (AC).
In an ideal capacitor, the only component of impedance is capacitive reactance (Xc), expressed as:
As frequency (f) increases, the capacitive reactance decreases — meaning the capacitor allows more AC to pass through.
However, real capacitors are not ideal. They include resistance from leads, electrode foils, and dielectric losses, as well as small amounts of parasitic inductance. Therefore, the actual impedance is a combination of:
Capacitive reactance (XC)
Equivalent Series Resistance (ESR)
Equivalent Series Inductance (ESL)
ESR represents the internal resistance of the capacitor when operating at high frequencies.
It indicates how much energy is lost as heat inside the component.
In simple terms:
Lower ESR → less energy loss, lower temperature rise, longer life.
Higher ESR → greater heat generation, shorter lifespan, and poorer efficiency.
Aluminum electrolytic capacitors typically have higher ESR than solid-state or ceramic capacitors, which is why ESR is a key parameter in high-frequency power applications such as DC-DC converters and switching power supplies.
The impedance of a capacitor is not constant — it changes with frequency and forms a U-shaped curve on a log scale.
At low frequencies, the capacitive reactance dominates. As frequency increases, impedance decreases rapidly.
At a certain frequency, the capacitive reactance and inductive reactance cancel each other out, producing the lowest impedance point — the self-resonant frequency (SRF).
At this point, the capacitor provides its best filtering performance.
Beyond the SRF, the capacitor behaves inductively; impedance increases again with frequency.
In this region, the capacitor no longer behaves as a capacitor, but more like an inductor.
ESR vs Frequency
ESR generally decreases with frequency up to a point, then rises slightly at very high frequencies.
The shape and minimum ESR depend on materials, structure, and temperature — all critical indicators of capacitor quality.
In high-frequency electronic systems such as:
Switching power supplies
DC-DC converter outputs
Amplifier decoupling circuits
Communication equipment power modules
If the capacitor’s ESR is too high or the resonance frequency too low, problems may include:
Poor filtering and excessive output ripple
Excessive heating and shortened lifespan
Oscillation or instability in the power system
Therefore, when selecting capacitors, engineers should not only check rated voltage and capacitance, but also review impedance-frequency and ESR-frequency curves in the datasheet.
For applications involving high-frequency or large ripple currents:
Choose low-ESR aluminum electrolytic capacitors
For even higher frequency operation, consider polymer or solid capacitors
Combine aluminum electrolytic and ceramic capacitors in parallel to improve high-frequency response and reduce ripple
At LINKEYCON, ESR and impedance optimization are key aspects of our aluminum electrolytic capacitor design philosophy.
We achieve superior performance by:
Using high-conductivity electrode foil and advanced electrolyte formulations
Optimizing internal structure to minimize parasitic inductance
Delivering stable ESR and impedance characteristics across a wide frequency range
These features make LINKEYCON capacitors ideal for power filtering, inverter circuits, and industrial control systems — ensuring your equipment runs more reliably and efficiently.
🔹 LINKEYCON — Reliable Capacitors. Global Quality.
R&D center: Headquarters Dongguan
Manufacturing center: Susong, Anqing, Anhui