Capacitor in series voltage imbalance

AI Thread Summary
Connecting capacitors in series with differing initial voltages can lead to voltage imbalances due to variations in leakage current and capacitance. Despite being the same brand and model, capacitors may not share voltage evenly if one has a higher leakage rate, which can cause it to discharge faster than others. The voltage across each capacitor will change uniformly when current flows, but significant initial voltage differences can persist if leakage is high. Additionally, electrolytic capacitors can exhibit a chemical memory effect, potentially complicating voltage recovery. Monitoring the setup is crucial to avoid damage, especially with lower-quality components.
ramonegumpert
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dear experts

i connected several capacitors in series .
their initial voltages are different. some were at 2.5v and some at 1v.

Connected them in series, the volt differences remained.

i am not sure why the voltage from to higher potential capacitor does not get.spread.across all tye rest.

all of them are same brand same capacity and model.

one thing to note about these caps is they appear to be sleeve shrinked using 2 caps.
one such sleeve shrinked cap is rated at 2.7v supercap.

is tye imbalance causer by such configuration?

thanks.

regards
ramone
 
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I need a better description of your test circuit. After connecting them in series did you close the circuit through a load ?

When Super-caps or electrolytics are used in series they should have a power diode wired across each. That will prevent some of them becoming significantly reverse biassed when close to discharge. Variations in leakage current can discharge one faster than the others. The one with the highest leakage will become reverse biassed first. Reverse bias can detonate tantalum capacitors, wear eye protection while testing.

If identical capacitors in series start out with different voltages and are charged or discharged through a load they will all have the same voltage change. That is because they must all have the same current flow and so the same change in charge. Remember that C = Q / V and Q = I * T, so dv = I * dt / C.

Voltage will be shared between series capacitors in an inverse relationship to their capacitance. If there are +/-10% variations in capacitance then a series charged group can vary 20% in voltage.

Electrolytic capacitors have a chemical memory and can behave like a battery sometimes. Once discharged they can recover some voltage later.
 
Dear Baluncore

Yes, I closed the circuit. The pack of 6 batteries started charging. But the volt differences remained.
So, each cap voltage was rising steadily. My concern is the fact that the caps with initial higher voltage does not seem to spread its charge to the caps with lower voltages, as should be the case.

If the volt difference is little, its quite normal. But the difference was higher than expected.

Yes, there seems to be quite a bit of leakage.

Thanks, now I know why the volt diff remains since they caps each get same charge.

I am using china-made supercaps that seems like Electrolytic caps.

Ok, i will monitor with caution.

Thanks very much for your advice!

Regards
Ramone
 
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