Replacing aluminum capacitor by tantalum capacitor for accelerometer bulk bypass

You can replace the aluminum electrolytic with a tantalum, but using neither is a much better choice.

Nowadays, ceramics can easily cover the 10 µF at 10s of volts range. There is no point using either a electrolytic or tantalum. You also don't need a separate 100 nF (that value is so 1980s anyway) capacitor if you use a ceramic for the larger value.

Think about what is going on here and what the datasheet is trying to say. These devices are notorious for being quite sensitive to power supply noise. I've actually seen a similar part amplify power ripple from the power supply to the output. The datasheet therefore wants you to put a "large" amount of capacitance on the power line to the device. That's where the 10 µF came from. Back when this datasheet was written, or whoever wrote it stopped keeping up with developments, 10 µF was a unreasonably large request for any capacitor technology that was good at high frequencies. So they suggest a electrolytic for the 10 µF "bulk" capacitance, but to then place a 100 nF ceramic across that. That ceramic will have lower impedance at high frequencies than the electrolytic, despite the fact that it has 100 time less capacitance.

Even in the last 15-20 years or so, that 100 nF could have been 1 µF without being burdensome. The common value of 100 nF comes from the ancient thru-hole days. That was the largest size cheap ceramic capacitor that still worked like a capacitor at the high frequencies required by digital chips. Look at computer boards from the 1970s and you will see a 100 nF disk capacitor next to every one of the digital ICs.

Unfortunately, using 100 nF for high frequency bypass has become a legend on its own. However, the 1 µF multi-layer ceramic capacitors of today are cheap and actually have better characteristics than the old leaded 100 nF caps of the Pleistocene. Take a look at a impedance versus frequency graph of a family of ceramic caps, and you'll see the 1 µF has lower impedance just about everywhere compared to the 100 nF. There may be a small dip in the 100 nF near its resonant point where it has lower impedance than the 1 µF, but that will be small and not very relevant.

So, the answer to your question is to use a single 10 µF ceramic. Make sure whatever you use still is actually 10 µF or more at the power voltage you are using. Some types of ceramics go down in capacitance with applied voltage. Actually today you can use a 15 or 20 µF ceramic and have better characteristics across the board compared to the 100 nF ceramic and 10 µF electrolytic recommended by the datasheet.


Contrary to Olin Lathrop's answer, ceramic capacitors are not the solution to all board-level bypass problems. It is even possible for the choice of only ceramic capacitors to be detrimental to the performance of a design.

An important fact about certain ceramic dielectric formulations is that they exhibit piezoelectric behavior: they can convert mechanical energy to/from electrical energy. For an accelerometer, this microphonic behavior can couple 100s of Hz vibration into the power supply of the device. This vibration is exactly in the frequency band of interest because it's what the accelerometer is measuring, meaning that it can't be filtered out digitally.

Ceramic capacitors also have a characteristic loss of capacitance with applied DC bias. For instance, the capacitance versus DC bias curve of the Murata GRM188R61A106KAAL# device is:

Murata GRM188R61A106KAAL capacitance versus DC bias

From the interactive chart, at the typical 3.3V operating input, this specific capacitor only has an effective capacitance of 5.337uF, a loss of almost 50% of the rated capacitance at under half of the rated DC bias. While the bulk capacitance of this application does not require a specific value, this can be a "gotcha" for applications with a minimum capacitance requirement.

Additionally, the ESR of aluminum electrolytic and tantalum capacitors can be advantageous. Because it makes the capacitor lossy, it will dampen oscillations and can help limit the peaks of transients. Linear Technology has an application note describing the hazards of using only ceramic capacitors on hot-plug power supply inputs. Additionally, some power supplies have output bypass capacitance ESR requirements, as discussed in this TI application note. To use very-low-ESR ceramic capacitors actually requires defeating their low ESR by installing a 10s of milliohm resistor in series with the capacitor.


The aluminium capacitor appears to be a bulk bypass device.

Tantalums typically have lower ESR than aluminium devices, but that should not be of importance here as the ceramic device is going to be low ESR anyway.

So you should be fine using a tantalum device in place of the aluminium electrolytic.

Make sure you use a device rated for at least 2Vcc.