As electrolytic capacitors age, their internal resistance, also known as
"equivalent series resistance" (ESR), gradually increases. This can
eventually lead to equipment failure. Using this design, you can measure
the ESR of suspect capacitors as well as other small resistances.
Basically, the circuit generates a low-voltage 100kHz test signal, which
is applied to the capacitor via a pair of probes. An op amp then
amplifies the voltage dropped across the capacitor’s series resistance
and this can be displayed on a standard multimeter. In more detail,
inverter IC1d is configured as a 200kHz oscillator.
Its output
drives a 4027 J-K flipflop, which divides the oscillator signal in half
to ensure an equal mark/space ratio. Two elements of a 4066 quad
bilateral switch (IC3c & IC3d) are alternately switched on by the
complementary outputs of the J-K flipflop. One switch input (pin 11) is
connected to +5V, whereas the other (pin 8) is connected to -5V. The
outputs (pins 9 & 10) of these two switches are connected together,
with the result being a ±5V 100kHz square wave. Series resistance is
included to current-limit the signal before it is applied to the
capacitor under test via a pair of test probes. Diodes D1 and D2 limit
the signal swing and protect the 4066 outputs in case the capacitor is
charged.
A second pair of leads sense the signal developed across the probe tips.
Once again, the signal is limited by diodes (D3 & D4) before begin
applied to the remaining two inputs of the 4066 switch (pins 2 & 3
of IC3a & IC3b). These switches direct alternate half cycles to two
1μF capacitors, removing most of the AC component of the signal and
providing a simple "sample and hold" mechanism. The 1μF capacitors
charge to a DC level that is proportional to the test capacitor’s ESR.
This is differentially amplified by op amp IC4 so that it can be
displayed on a digital multimeter – 10Ω will be represented by 100mV, 1Ω
by 10mV, etc. To calibrate the circuit, first adjust VR1 to obtain
100kHz at TP3.
Next, momentarily short the test probes together
and adjust VR4 for 0mV at pin 6 of IC4. That done, set your meter to
read milliamps and connect it between TP4 and the negative (-) DMM
output. Apply -5V to TP2 and note the current flow, which should be
around 2.1mA. Transfer the -5V from TP2 to TP1 and adjust VR2 until the
same current (ignore sign) is obtained. Remove the -5V from TP1. Again,
set to your meter to read volts and connect it to the DMM outputs. Apply
the probes to a 10W resistor and adjust VR3 for a reading of 100mV.
Finally, ensure that all capacitors to be tested are always fully
discharged before connecting the probes.
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