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Power Supply Capacitor Calculation required for PIC MCU circuit ?

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asking

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Hello,

I have Question Regarding the Power Supply for my MCU Project. How should i keep the Capacitor value in my DC Side from LM7805. to powerup my Microcontroller and other Passive Units. Is it good to keep as high as possible ? i have 5V 1000uf capacitors available with me. But what is the benefit of keeping higher uF Capacitors ? can it be harmful or Fruitful ? to our circuit power requirements ?

is there any tool to calculate Capacitor for DC Circuit ?

Thanks...
 

What do you mean with "DC side". In- and output of the regulator are both DC.

There's no use in large capacitors on the 7805 output side. On the input, you usually have a rectifier filter capacitor, it's size depends on load current, input voltage, acceptable input ripple respectively regulator dropout voltage. The rated voltage of the filter capacitor would be larger than 5V.
 

Funny enough I was looking at this thread the other day: https://www.edaboard.com/threads/168139/

1000uF seems very high to me for the reg output. I'd normally use max 10uF, just to provide a little "tank" for I/O current spikes. I'd never put a single large cap on the output of a linear reg - I've heard bad things can happen. If I remember the 7805 data sheet specifies 0.1uF. More important is putting 100nF caps on each of your MCU supply pins, and 1uF caps on the end of any long thin PCB tracks.

Also, downside to large electrolytic caps is size and limited life.

Regards,
Martin
 

But what if i use 1000uF is there any Draw backs ? Life of cap is not an issue for me because i am doing sample circuits.. but just for information..i want to know what are the draw back of Large Capacitance in DC Power Circuits ?

Thanks...
 

Did you actually read the link above? Seems to explain things pretty well; Your reg may oscillate.

Just follow the manufacturers data sheet and everything will work fine. That's why they write them.

Regards,
Martin
 
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