Polystyrene Capacitor: High Precision, Low Noise, Obsolete but Useful

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Complete guide to polystyrene capacitors: key specs, why they excelled in precision audio and timing circuits, why they’re obsolete, and the best modern replacements.

There is a certain irony in the story of the polystyrene capacitor. Electrically, it is one of the finest capacitor dielectrics ever put into production: extraordinarily low dielectric absorption, negligible distortion, near-zero voltage coefficient, and capacitance stability over temperature that rivals silver mica. In precision analog circuits, audio signal paths, and sample-and-hold networks, polystyrene capacitors were โ€” and in many legacy designs, still are โ€” the benchmark component. And yet, you cannot design one into a new product. The film stopped being made. The world moved on.

If you are servicing legacy gear, working with precision analog instrumentation from the 1970sโ€“1990s, or trying to understand why engineers of that era reached for these particular parts so consistently, this guide covers everything you need to know. It also explains what has replaced the polystyrene capacitor in modern designs โ€” and why some of those replacements are still not quite as good.

What Is a Polystyrene Capacitor?

A polystyrene capacitor is a film and foil capacitor that uses polystyrene (PS) film as its dielectric material. The construction is straightforward: two strips of aluminum foil electrodes are interleaved with two layers of polystyrene film, then wound into a cylindrical roll and encased in a plastic or lacquered tube. Sometimes referred to as “Styroflex” in European literature โ€” a brand name from the former Siemens/WIMA era โ€” these capacitors were introduced into production around 1949 and remained a preferred precision component for decades.

The wound cylindrical construction is worth noting from a circuit behavior standpoint: because the foil strips are rolled up like a coil, the polystyrene capacitor has a small but measurable self-inductance. This makes it unsuitable for high-frequency applications above a few megahertz, where the inductive reactance begins to dominate. Below that frequency limit, however, its electrical behavior is essentially ideal.

Key Specifications at a Glance

ParameterPolystyrene Capacitor
Dielectric materialPolystyrene (non-polar)
Capacitance range10 pF to ~47 nF
Typical toleranceยฑ5% to ยฑ10%; precision types ยฑ1% to ยฑ2%
Temperature coefficientโˆ’125 to โˆ’150 ppm/ยฐC (linear, negative)
Operating temperature rangeโˆ’40ยฐC to +85ยฐC (max +70ยฐC for value stability)
Rated voltage30 V to 630 V DC
Dissipation factor (DF)< 0.01% at 1 kHz, 25ยฐC
Dielectric absorption~0.02%
Insulation resistanceVery high (RC time constant > 100,000 s)
Frequency suitabilityUp to ~1 MHz (wound coil structure limits HF)
ConstructionFilm and foil only (no metallized version possible)
Physical formatThrough-hole only (axial or radial lead)
SMD availabilityNone โ€” cannot survive reflow soldering temperatures

Why the Polystyrene Capacitor Was So Highly Regarded

To understand why engineers still discuss polystyrene capacitors with something approaching reverence, you need to understand what makes a capacitor “good” for precision applications. It is not just about tight initial tolerance โ€” it is about how the capacitor behaves after manufacture, under bias, across temperature, and over time.

Dielectric Absorption: The Hidden Accuracy Killer

Dielectric absorption (DA) is the phenomenon where a capacitor, after being discharged, partially “recharges” itself from residual charge trapped in the dielectric. Think of it as a sponge that stays slightly wet even after wringing. In a sample-and-hold circuit, DA causes the output voltage to creep upward after the hold switch opens โ€” directly limiting the accuracy of the measurement. In a precision integrator, DA causes output errors proportional to the input signal history. In audio circuits, some engineers argue DA introduces a subtle smearing of transient response.

Polystyrene capacitors have a dielectric absorption of approximately 0.02% โ€” one of the lowest figures of any practical dielectric, comparable only to Teflon (PTFE). Polyester (Mylar) capacitors by comparison show 0.2% to 0.5% DA, which is 10 to 25 times worse. For sample-and-hold circuits in precision ADC front ends and for precision integrators in instrumentation, the polystyrene capacitor’s DA performance was genuinely class-leading.

Temperature Stability: Predictable and Linear

The temperature coefficient of a polystyrene capacitor is typically โˆ’125 to โˆ’150 ppm/ยฐC. This sounds significant, but the critical word is linear. Unlike Class 2 ceramic capacitors (X7R, X5R) whose capacitance changes non-linearly and unpredictably with temperature, polystyrene’s negative TC is consistent, repeatable, and predictable. Across the 0ยฐC to +50ยฐC range โ€” the operating window of most commercial electronics โ€” it delivers near-zero drift. The linearity also made polystyrene capacitors useful for deliberate temperature compensation in oscillator circuits, where their predictable โˆ’TC could offset the positive TC of other components.

Dissipation Factor: Nearly Lossless

The dissipation factor of a polystyrene capacitor is less than 0.01% at 1 kHz and room temperature. This means the polystyrene capacitor dissipates virtually no energy. In audio circuits, high dissipation factor is associated with audible coloration and loss of dynamics. In precision filters and timing circuits, high DF introduces phase errors and detuning. A dissipation factor below 0.01% means the capacitor is behaving as close to an ideal passive element as any practical component can achieve.

No Voltage Coefficient

Polystyrene capacitors show essentially no capacitance change with applied voltage. This is one of the chief advantages over Class 2 ceramic capacitors, which lose significant capacitance under DC bias โ€” sometimes 50โ€“80% of their rated value. In a precision filter or timing circuit, a capacitor that holds its value regardless of the signal voltage across it produces far more predictable and stable performance.

Long-Term Stability and Aging

Polystyrene capacitors do not undergo aging. The capacitance value measured the day they were manufactured is essentially the same decades later, provided they have never been overheated. Engineers servicing vintage test equipment from the 1960s and 1970s routinely find polystyrene capacitors still measuring within their original tolerance specification โ€” a longevity record that is genuinely remarkable for an analog passive component.

Why Polystyrene Capacitors Became Obsolete

The story of the polystyrene capacitor’s disappearance is partly technical and partly industrial. The glass transition temperature of polystyrene is around 95ยฐC, and the practical maximum operating temperature is +85ยฐC, with permanent, irreversible value change occurring at around +70ยฐC. This last point is critical: unlike most capacitors that recover after a brief thermal excursion, a polystyrene capacitor that sees excessive heat is permanently damaged. Its value simply shifts, and it does not return to the original specification on cooling.

This thermal sensitivity had two consequences. First, the polystyrene film could never be made in a metallized construction โ€” the process of vacuum-depositing metal onto the film requires temperatures the polystyrene cannot tolerate. Metallized film construction is what allowed other film capacitors to be made much smaller at the same capacitance. Second, polystyrene capacitors were incompatible with wave soldering and completely incompatible with reflow soldering. In the era when through-hole assembly was standard, this was manageable. As PCB manufacturing transitioned to automated SMT and reflow, polystyrene’s inability to survive the process made it a dead end for new product design.

The supply chain collapse was equally decisive. The demise of polystyrene capacitors began around 1990 when the suppliers of capacitor-grade polystyrene film decided the volume was not worth the manufacturing effort. Their primary business was making Styrofoam products, and the thin precision film required for capacitors was a small, difficult-to-justify part of their output. Capacitor manufacturers placed large one-time bulk orders to stock the film, but once those reserves were depleted, production effectively ended. By approximately 2012, polystyrene film capacitors were largely gone from the market as active production items, with remaining stock continuing to trickle out of distributor warehouses.

Where Polystyrene Capacitors Were โ€” and Still Are โ€” Used

Despite the supply situation, it is worth knowing precisely where polystyrene capacitors were deployed, because it tells you where to look when servicing legacy equipment and informs the selection criteria for replacement parts.

Precision Application Areas

ApplicationWhy Polystyrene Was the Right Choice
Sample-and-hold circuits (ADC front ends)Minimal DA prevents voltage creep after hold command
Precision active filters (Sallen-Key, state-variable)Stable capacitance, no voltage coefficient, low DF
Audio signal path coupling and equalizationNo distortion, no piezoelectric effect, no DA-induced smearing
Tuned IF filter networksPredictable linear TC allows deliberate temperature compensation
Precision RC timing circuitsStable value over temperature, no aging, predictable TC
Voltage-controlled filters (VCF) and oscillators (VCO)Capacitance independent of applied voltage, essential for linearity
Precision integratorsNear-zero DA is essential for accurate integration
High-end audio preamplifiers and equalization stagesLow distortion, highly regarded by audiophile designers
Legacy test and measurement instrumentsLong-term value stability keeps calibration valid for decades

The Heat Damage Problem: A Critical Handling Warning

This deserves emphasis for anyone working with existing polystyrene capacitors or sourcing NOS (new old stock) parts. A polystyrene capacitor exposed to temperatures above approximately 70ยฐC will undergo a permanent, irreversible shift in capacitance value. It does not recover on cooling. This means:

During manual soldering: Use a heat sink clip on the component lead between the capacitor body and the solder joint. Keep the iron time at the pad as brief as possible. This is not optional for precision applications.

In circuit: Keep polystyrene capacitors physically distant from heat-generating components โ€” power resistors, regulators, transistors. If the ambient PCB temperature in the intended mounting location exceeds 70ยฐC, polystyrene is the wrong component regardless of its electrical advantages.

For NOS stock: Verify values with a precision LCR meter before using stored polystyrene capacitors. Stock that has been exposed to heat or poor storage conditions may have shifted value permanently.

Modern Replacements for Polystyrene Capacitors

When the polystyrene capacitor cannot be sourced โ€” which is the situation for any new design today โ€” the question becomes which modern alternatives come closest to matching the characteristics that made polystyrene valuable.

Film Capacitor Dielectric Comparison for Precision Applications

DielectricDADF @ 1kHzTemp CoefficientMax TempSMD AvailableVoltage Coeff
Polystyrene (PS)0.02%< 0.01%โˆ’125 to โˆ’150 ppm/ยฐC+85ยฐCNoNone
Polypropylene (PP)0.02%< 0.05%โˆ’150 to โˆ’250 ppm/ยฐC+105ยฐCLimitedNone
PTFE (Teflon)~0.02%< 0.02%โˆ’200 ppm/ยฐC+200ยฐCNoNone
Polyphenylene Sulfide (PPS)~0.05%< 0.05%~โˆ’120 ppm/ยฐC+125ยฐCYesVery low
Polycarbonate (PC)~0.08%~0.05%~0 ppm/ยฐC+125ยฐCNoVery low
Polyester (PET/Mylar)0.2โ€“0.5%0.3โ€“1%Non-linear+125ยฐCYesLow
C0G / NP0 Ceramic< 0.06%< 0.01%0 ยฑ30 ppm/ยฐC+125ยฐCYesNone

Polypropylene film capacitors are the most commonly recommended replacement for polystyrene in precision and audio applications. The dielectric absorption is essentially identical at 0.02%, the dissipation factor is nearly as good, and the maximum operating temperature is higher at +105ยฐC. The key difference is a temperature coefficient of โˆ’150 to โˆ’250 ppm/ยฐC โ€” more negative than polystyrene, and not zero. This means polypropylene is more temperature-sensitive across a wide range, though for many applications within a narrow temperature window it performs similarly. Polypropylene cannot be made in exactly the same physical sizes as polystyrene, and for SMD designs only very limited options exist.

C0G / NP0 ceramic capacitors deserve serious consideration as a polystyrene replacement in precision digital and instrumentation circuits, particularly for values below 1 nF. C0G ceramics have near-zero temperature coefficient (ยฑ30 ppm/ยฐC), no voltage coefficient, no aging, and are available in SMD packages with excellent tolerances. Dielectric absorption is slightly higher than polystyrene but still very low at around 0.06%. For engineers comfortable with selecting and placing capacitors in PCB layouts, C0G ceramics in 0402 to 0805 packages are often the practical choice in modern designs where polystyrene values would have appeared in legacy schematics.

Polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) capacitors are an interesting middle ground โ€” available in SMD construction (unlike polypropylene film), with good temperature stability and better dissipation factor than polyester. For precision filter and timing applications that need SMD packaging and better stability than a standard ceramic, PPS is worth evaluating.

PTFE (Teflon) capacitors match polystyrene’s electrical performance and exceed it in temperature range, but are expensive, difficult to source in common values, and not available in SMD construction. They remain the choice for aerospace and military precision circuits where cost is secondary to performance.

Identifying Polystyrene Capacitors in Vintage Equipment

When servicing gear that may contain polystyrene capacitors, knowing what to look for matters. They typically appear as small cylindrical components, usually with a clear, pale yellow or pale blue outer body โ€” the rolled film construction is sometimes visible as a slightly transparent or translucent case. In European equipment, the Siemens/WIMA “KS” designation was common; in the U.S., manufacturers including Mallory, Cornell Dubilier, and Centralab produced variants. The capacitors are through-hole only, in either axial or radial lead configuration, and the axial style was far more common.

Values are typically in the range of 10 pF to 47 nF, marking them as the small-signal precision parts in a design rather than the bulk or bypass capacitors. If you find a small, unusually precise-looking leaded film capacitor in the feedback network of an op-amp, in a filter stage, or in the input path of a precision ADC, there is a reasonable chance it is polystyrene.

Useful Resources for Polystyrene Capacitors and Their Replacements

ResourceWhat It ProvidesLink
Electrocube White Paper: Polystyrene AlternativesDetailed discussion of supply collapse and modern substitute optionselectrocube.com
Electronics Notes: Polystyrene CapacitorsTechnical overview of properties and applicationselectronics-notes.com
RF Cafe: Capacitor Dielectric Comparison TableSide-by-side comparison of all film and ceramic dielectric typesrfcafe.com
Doeeet: PS and PPS Film CapacitorsDetailed engineering specifications for PS and PPS dielectricsdoeeet.com
WIMA Film CapacitorsOne of few remaining suppliers with NOS polystyrene stock; also produces polypropylene replacementswima.com
Vishay Film CapacitorsPolypropylene and PPS film capacitors as modern precision alternativesvishay.com/capacitors/film
DigiKey Film Capacitor SearchFilter by dielectric (polypropylene, PPS, PTFE) for sourcing replacement typesdigikey.com
KEMET Film Capacitor SeriesPHE and R series polypropylene; good reference specs for precision replacement selectionkemet.com

Frequently Asked Questions About Polystyrene Capacitors

1. Can I still buy polystyrene capacitors today?

You can find NOS (new old stock) polystyrene capacitors from specialist suppliers, vintage component stockists, and some audiophile component retailers. WIMA and a few other European manufacturers still have quantities of polystyrene film stocked from historical bulk orders. The supply is finite and depleting โ€” values in common precision ranges (100 pF to 4.7 nF) may still be found, but you cannot design a new product around the assumption of ongoing supply. For legacy repairs, check specialist suppliers like Michael Percy Audio, Hificollective, or Tedss.com for remaining stock.

2. What is the best replacement for a polystyrene capacitor in a vintage audio repair?

For audio signal path applications at values below 10 nF, polypropylene film capacitors (WIMA MKP or MKS2 series, Vishay MKP series, Panasonic ECQ series) are the closest direct replacement in terms of electrical performance. The DA and distortion characteristics are essentially identical to polystyrene. The temperature coefficient is slightly more negative (โˆ’150 to โˆ’250 ppm/ยฐC versus โˆ’125 ppm/ยฐC for polystyrene), but for audio applications operating in a narrow ambient temperature range, this difference is not audible or measurable in practice. For values below 1 nF where a surface-mount option is needed, a quality C0G ceramic from a reputable manufacturer (Murata, TDK, KEMET) is an excellent modern alternative.

3. Why can polystyrene capacitors not be made in SMD form?

Because polystyrene melts and permanently deforms at temperatures around 95ยฐC, well below the peak temperatures of both wave soldering and reflow soldering (typically 245โ€“260ยฐC peak for SAC305 solder). The dielectric would be destroyed during the assembly process. Additionally, attempts to create a metallized polystyrene film โ€” which would allow smaller physical sizes โ€” failed for the same reason: the metallization process damages the film thermally. The wound coil construction of the standard polystyrene film capacitor also does not translate easily to the flat chip format of SMD components.

4. What happens to a polystyrene capacitor if it gets too hot?

The damage is permanent and silent. If the capacitor body reaches temperatures above approximately 70โ€“75ยฐC during use or soldering, the polystyrene film physically deforms slightly, causing a permanent change in the effective plate area and separation. The capacitance shifts, and it does not recover when the component cools. This is unlike most other capacitor failures which are abrupt or detectable by inspection. A thermally damaged polystyrene capacitor may appear completely normal visually and may even continue to function, just with a shifted value that throws off precision circuits in ways that are difficult to trace. If you suspect heat damage, measure with a precision LCR meter.

5. Is a polypropylene capacitor electrically equivalent to polystyrene?

Very nearly, but not identically. The dielectric absorption and low-distortion behavior are essentially the same at approximately 0.02%. The dissipation factor of polypropylene is slightly higher at 0.02โ€“0.05% versus polystyrene’s < 0.01%, but both are far superior to polyester. The main practical difference is the temperature coefficient: polypropylene’s โˆ’150 to โˆ’250 ppm/ยฐC is more negative and slightly less linear than polystyrene’s, which matters in circuits designed to exploit polystyrene’s near-zero TC over a specific temperature range, particularly oscillator compensating networks. For most audio and general precision applications, polypropylene is the correct and recommended substitute. The higher maximum temperature of polypropylene (+105ยฐC) is also a genuine advantage โ€” you do not need to worry about accidental heat damage during assembly the way you do with polystyrene.

Summary

The polystyrene capacitor occupies a unique position in the history of electronics: a component that reached near-ideal electrical performance in its specific area of application, only to be killed by a supply chain problem rather than superseded by anything clearly superior. Its dielectric absorption of 0.02%, dissipation factor below 0.01%, near-zero voltage coefficient, and decades of proven stability made it the preferred choice for precision timing, audio signal paths, sample-and-hold circuits, and precision filters across a 40-year production run.

For new designs, it is no longer an option. Polypropylene film capacitors are the functional replacement for most analog precision applications, with C0G ceramics covering the small-value SMD territory. For servicing legacy equipment, treating polystyrene capacitors with appropriate care โ€” avoiding heat above 70ยฐC, verifying value with a precision meter, and knowing where to source remaining stock โ€” remains essential knowledge for any engineer working with precision analog hardware from the 1960s through the early 2000s.