I think there is ceramic capacitor with 10uF. For example, the one quoted by Farnell as the following:You have no choice. Ceramic capacitors are not made with such large values.
He can, but if he does he will need to connect another capacitor of, say, 10nF in parallel with it.you can use 10uF 64V ordinary electrolytic capacitor of reputed make.
I stand corrected. Thank you.I think there is ceramic capacitor with 10uF. For example, the one quoted by Farnell as the following:
MURATA - GRM31CR6YA106KA12L - CAPACITOR, 1206, 35V, X5R, 35V, 10uF, -55°C to +85°C
£0.22
Your good health.Cheers.
Otherwise they should have shown the load that the point where the oscilloscope is located. but the diagram shows load direct at output pins.
This statement is superseded by a comment related to the above shown test circuit:The NCS6 series does not require output capacitors to meet datasheet specification.
In other words, you can expect higher noise and ripple numbers without it.Ripple and noise measurements are performed with the following test configuration.
A 10 uF input capacitor is listed for NCS6S1212C.The module includes a basic level of fi ltering, the following table shows the additional input capacitor typically required to meet EN 55022 Curve A Quasi-Peak EMC limit, as shown in the below plots.
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