I'm trying to make an estimate for self-discharge rate of a typical small capacitor, such as 0.1 uF ceramic capacitor. Horowitz and Hill says "A better measure of loss at low frequencies is Dissipation Factor [...] the low-frequency loss mechanism is dielectric loss, not metallic resistivity." (Art of Electronics, the X Chapters, p36).
Kemet's datasheet for one of its most common parts C0805C104K5RACTU (0.1 μF, 10%, 50 VDC, X7R) says:
- Dissipation factor: 2.5% 1 kHz 1.0 Vrms
- ESR at 100 Hz: ~150 Ω (The ESR graph only goes down to 100 Hz.)
Can we use these values to estimate the decay time to say 1% of original? Following the capacitor charging rule, V = e-t/RC, I'm hoping for something like t ≈ 5RC, but don't see what to use for R.
Am I chasing rainbows or is there a simple way to estimate this?
A test circuit would be this: after C1 is completely charged, we disconnect from the charging circuit and measure the Voutput.
simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab