Definition
A capacitor stores electrical energy as charge on two conductive plates separated by an insulating dielectric. It opposes changes in voltage, making it the partner to the inductor in smoothing power and the first line of defense against electrical noise on every rail of a mining ASIC. Capacitance is measured in farads (F), though practical parts are in microfarads (uF), nanofarads (nF), or picofarads (pF).
Decoupling, bulk filtering, and ripple
Small ceramic (MLCC) capacitors sit right next to the ASIC chips as decoupling caps, supplying instantaneous current during fast switching transients and shunting high-frequency noise to ground. Larger electrolytic or polymer caps provide bulk filtering, smoothing the ripple left over after the rectifier and switching stages. A key spec is ESR (equivalent series resistance): high ESR means poor filtering and self-heating under ripple current.
Common failure modes
Capacitors are among the most frequently failed parts in mining gear. Electrolytics dry out and lose capacitance with heat and age; MLCCs crack from board flexing or thermal cycling and can fail short, dragging a rail down. A shorted decoupling cap on a core rail will keep a board from powering up and is found by checking each rail for a dead short to ground, then isolating the offending cap.
When troubleshooting a power stage, capacitors are inspected alongside the switching transistors and the voltage domain they support, since a single shorted cap can mimic a far more serious chip failure.
In Simple Terms
A capacitor stores electrical energy as charge on two conductive plates separated by an insulating dielectric. It opposes changes in voltage, making it the partner…
