Inquire: Call 0086-755-23203480, or reach out via the form below/your sales contact to discuss our design, manufacturing, and assembly capabilities.
Quote: Email your PCB files to Sales@pcbsync.com (Preferred for large files) or submit online. We will contact you promptly. Please ensure your email is correct.
Notes: For PCB fabrication, we require PCB design file in Gerber RS-274X format (most preferred), *.PCB/DDB (Protel, inform your program version) format or *.BRD (Eagle) format. For PCB assembly, we require PCB design file in above mentioned format, drilling file and BOM. Click to download BOM template To avoid file missing, please include all files into one folder and compress it into .zip or .rar format.
Oil-Filled Capacitor: Industrial Power Applications, Types, and Selection Guide
If you’ve spent any time designing or troubleshooting high-voltage industrial power systems, you’ve almost certainly run into the oil-filled capacitor — sometimes called a liquid-filled or oil-impregnated capacitor. From the first time I pulled one out of a failed motor drive and felt the weight of the thing, it was obvious these weren’t your garden-variety film caps from a PCB BOM. They’re a different breed, built for environments where a standard electrolytic wouldn’t survive a single power cycle.
This guide covers what oil-filled capacitors actually are, how they work, where they’re used, and how to pick the right one — written from the perspective of someone who works with power electronics, not a marketing brochure.
An oil-filled capacitor is a capacitor in which the internal wound element — typically a polypropylene or paper/film dielectric — is immersed in an insulating liquid medium. The liquid (commonly refined mineral oil, synthetic ester, or silicone oil) fills all the air voids inside the sealed metal can, dramatically improving voltage breakdown performance, heat dissipation, and long-term reliability.
Oil-filled capacitors have been used for many years in a variety of high-current and high-voltage applications, including motor-run, energy storage, and power factor correction. The oil helps cool the large capacitors, displaces air to help prevent corrosion, reduces the chance of destructive corona, and increases the voltage breakdown for a given dielectric thickness.
The word “oil” is somewhat misleading. The term covers a wide variety of liquids, many of which you might not think of as being “oils.” For that reason, some engineers prefer the term “liquid-filled” instead of oil-filled.
It’s also worth noting: unlike aluminum electrolytic capacitors, which are nearly always polarized, oil-filled capacitors are non-polar and can therefore be used in all voltage reversal applications. That’s a big deal for AC circuits.
How the Oil Dielectric Works
The physics here is elegant. When you impregnate a wound capacitor element with insulating oil under high vacuum, the liquid penetrates every microscopic air pocket in the kraft paper, polypropylene film, and end connections. Air is the enemy in high-voltage capacitors — it ionizes at comparatively low field strengths, creating corona discharge that slowly eats through the dielectric.
Impregnate fluid replaces air pockets in the zinc spray and helps eliminate partial discharges at the end contacts. Oil-impregnated capacitors have much higher partial discharge voltage compared to dry-type capacitors.
In liquid impregnate, transfer of heat by conduction and convection mode is fast, resulting in uniform cooling of capacitors, which reduces temperature rise of active elements. This gives an extra edge by increasing the life of the capacitors and allows them to handle rugged service conditions.
Construction and Materials
Understanding the build helps you spec these correctly. A typical oil-filled capacitor consists of:
Insulating Liquid: Mineral oil, synthetic ester (like castor oil), silicone, or proprietary blends. The choice of liquid affects dissipation factor, operating temperature range, and environmental compliance.
Metal Can: Drawn steel, aluminum, or stainless steel — welded or crimped sealed. Most industrial grades are hermetically sealed.
Terminals: Ceramic bushings for high-voltage versions; screw or quick-connect terminals for lower-voltage motor-run types.
Very early high-voltage capacitors used petroleum oils and waxes. They were made with mineral oil-impregnated paper as the dielectric, and aluminum foil electrodes, and were first used in the 1920s. In 1963, polypropylene (PP) was introduced as a dielectric by G.E., and was used in PP/oil/paper hybrid designs. PP has a much lower dissipation factor than oil — less than 0.1%, while various oils are typically 0.5 to 3.5%, depending on type and temperature.
Types of Oil-Filled Capacitors
Type
Dielectric
Voltage Range
Key Feature
Typical Use
AC Motor Run
Metallized PP/Oil
250–660 VAC
Non-polar, self-healing
HVAC compressors, motors
DC Oil-Filled
Paper/Film/Oil
600–100 kV DC
High energy density
Power supply filtering
Pulse/Energy Storage
Foil/Oil
600–100 kV DC
Fast discharge, low ESR
Pulsed laser, railguns
Snubber/Commutating
Metallized PP/Oil
600–3,000 VDC
Low inductance
SCR/thyristor circuits
Power Factor Correction
Metallized PP/Oil
230–15 kV AC
High kVAr rating
Utility, industrial PFC
Water-Cooled
Foil/Oil + cooling
Up to 1,250 VRMS
Extreme current handling
Induction heating
AC Oil-Filled Capacitors (Motor Run)
These are the workhorses of industrial HVAC and motor control. Oil-filled capacitors are used where high-peak-voltages, high-current, and long operating life are needed. This includes high-voltage filtering and energy storage, motor run, motor start, commutating, high-voltage lighting, HVAC, and arc suppression (snubber) applications.
Motor-run capacitors live a hard life — they’re energized continuously at line voltage, subject to temperature cycling, vibration, and sometimes harsh chemical atmospheres. An oil-filled design extends service life substantially compared to a dry-film version in these conditions.
DC Oil-Filled Capacitors for Power Supplies
As one of the few remaining manufacturers of DC-rated oil-filled capacitors, Cornell Dubilier continues to design robust paper and film combination dielectrics for high-performance power conversion and power supply applications. This includes a wide range of oil-impregnated DC-rated capacitors for filtering.
DC filtering capacitors in industrial power supplies — particularly those feeding induction heaters, electroplating rectifiers, and high-power laser systems — demand components that can handle sustained ripple current without degrading. Oil-filled designs manage heat better than dry types in these high-current scenarios.
Pulse Power and Energy Storage Capacitors
This is where oil-filled technology really shines. WL-Series are high-energy capacitors used in pulse power and power conditioning applications. With welded metal cases of stainless steel, mild steel, aluminum, or brass, these robust oil-filled capacitors offer the highest energy stored per unit, typically 3–100 kJ.
For maximum peak power, an available option is a 100 kVDC bushing with a coaxial current return ring enabling the capacitor to have less than 40 nH of inductance and deliver up to a 250 kA repetitive peak pulse current. That’s the kind of spec you see in electromagnetic launchers, pulsed fusion research, and industrial EDM.
Snubber and Commutation Capacitors
SCR Series oil-filled capacitors are designed for snubber and commutation applications, covering 0.25 to 15 µF capacitance at 600 to 3,000 VDC, housed in drawn plated steel cans.
In thyristor and SCR-based power converters — still common in large DC motor drives, electrochemical processes, and traction applications — the commutating capacitor must handle extremely fast dV/dt events and repetitive charge/discharge cycles. The oil fill improves corona resistance and extends life under these conditions.
High-Power Water-Cooled Oil-Filled Capacitors
For induction heating and other very high-current RF applications, air cooling isn’t enough. AR Series water-cooled oil-filled capacitors handle 6 to 1,400 µF capacitance, 800 to 1,250 VRMS, 240 to 2,000 ARMS, 300 to 2,000 kVA, at frequencies up to 25 kHz. That’s industrial-scale induction heating territory.
Industrial Power Applications Deep Dive
Power Factor Correction (PFC) Banks
Power factor correction is probably the highest-volume application for oil-filled capacitors in industry. Any industrial installation fed from a high voltage system includes resistive loads such as ovens and lamps and inductive loads such as transformers and motors. The ratio of actual power consumed to apparent power is the power factor. Improving power factor cuts penalties for excessive reactive energy consumption, reduces line losses, increases line power carrying capacity, and reduces voltage drop.
Oil capacitors, with features such as high partial discharge voltages and hermetically sealed structures, are recognized as suitable options for conditions that require greater durability, particularly in tropical conditions where free flow of impregnate provides uniform cooling.
In a large industrial facility — say a steel mill or chemical plant — a PFC bank can contain dozens of oil-filled capacitor units, each rated at several hundred kVAr. The oil-filled design handles the heat load from continuous operation and the voltage transients from switching operations.
Induction Heating Systems
High Energy Corporation capacitors are used in HV power supplies, X-ray equipment, HF radio equipment, induction heating machinery, cable fault finders, and other RF, HV, and high-current applications.
Induction heating is particularly demanding because the resonant circuit capacitor must handle high circulating currents at elevated frequencies with minimal losses. The low dissipation factor of polypropylene/oil designs keeps heat generation manageable, while the oil fill conducts that heat away efficiently.
HVAC and Industrial Motor Starting/Running
Commercial and industrial HVAC compressors — scroll, reciprocating, and centrifugal — rely on motor-run capacitors to maintain the phase split required for single-phase operation of three-phase-equivalent windings. Oil-filled capacitors are found in industrial heating systems, AC motors, DC motors, high-intensity discharge (HID) lighting, high-voltage lighting ballasts, and power supplies.
For large HVAC installations, reliability is paramount. A failed motor-run capacitor shuts down a chiller or AHU, leading to costly downtime. Oil-filled designs typically outlast dry film types by a significant margin in these continuous-duty environments.
High-Intensity Discharge (HID) Lighting
Industrial and warehouse lighting using mercury vapor, metal halide, and high-pressure sodium lamps uses ballast circuits that include capacitors for power factor correction and ignition. These operate at elevated temperatures near the fixture and need the thermal stability that oil-filled construction provides.
Arc Suppression and Snubber Circuits
In any system switching inductive loads — motor controllers, relay output boards, solenoid drivers — you need snubber capacitors to absorb the energy spike from collapsing magnetic fields. Oil-filled snubbers handle the repetitive high-voltage transients better than dry film types in heavy industrial switchgear.
Oil-Filled Capacitor vs. Dry-Type: What to Choose
This is a question that comes up constantly in industrial power design. Here’s the engineering reality:
Parameter
Oil-Filled
Dry-Type
Partial Discharge Voltage
Higher
Lower
Heat Dissipation
Better (convection in oil)
Poorer
Hermetic Sealing
Yes (atmospheric isolation)
Usually not
Fire Risk
Higher (oil is flammable)
Lower (gas/epoxy suppresses)
Oil Leakage Risk
Present
None
Weight
Heavier
Lighter
Environmental
Oil disposal concerns
Cleaner
Tropical Suitability
Excellent (uniform cooling)
Good
Self-Healing
Depends on construction
Metallized PP types yes
Lifespan (hot/humid)
Longer
Shorter in some conditions
When selecting power filter capacitors, considering safety and stability, dry-type capacitors are generally recommended. However, in high-voltage power supply systems, oil-filled capacitors are recommended due to their superior heat dissipation performance.
From a practical standpoint: if you’re working above 1,000V, in a hot industrial environment, or with high continuous ripple currents, the oil-filled design is usually the better call. Below 1,000V in a controlled environment, dry-type may be adequate and is easier to handle and dispose of.
Key Specifications and Parameters
When you’re sourcing oil-filled capacitors, these are the specs that matter:
Parameter
What It Means
Typical Range
Capacitance
Stored charge capacity
0.25 µF – 1,400 µF
Voltage Rating (VDC/VAC)
Max operating voltage
250V – 100 kV
Current Rating (ARMS)
Continuous RMS current
1A – 2,000A
Frequency Range
Operating frequency
DC – 25 kHz
Dissipation Factor (DF)
Energy loss per cycle
0.1% – 3.5%
Temperature Range
Operating temperature
-40°C to +85°C
Insulation Resistance
Leakage resistance
>1,000 MΩ
ESR
Series resistance
Application-dependent
ESL / Inductance
Series inductance
< 40 nH for pulse types
Capacitance Tolerance
Accuracy
±5% to ±10% typical
One thing PCB engineers sometimes miss when selecting high-power oil-filled capacitors: the kVAr rating for AC PFC applications. This combines voltage and current handling into a single figure of merit, and it’s what the industrial power world uses when sizing PFC banks.
Selection Guide: How to Specify an Oil-Filled Capacitor
Here’s the decision process I use when a project calls for one of these:
Step 1 — Define the electrical environment. Is this AC or DC? What’s the peak voltage, including transients? What’s the RMS current? What frequency?
Step 2 — Determine duty cycle. Continuous duty (motor run, PFC) demands different construction than pulsed duty (energy storage, snubber).
Step 3 — Consider the thermal environment. Ambient temperature, airflow, enclosure size. Oil-filled capacitors handle heat better but the oil itself has a maximum temperature rating.
Step 4 — Check regulatory requirements. UL810a approval is standard for motor-run capacitors in North America. IEC61270 covers power capacitors internationally. RoHS compliance if required.
Step 5 — Verify mounting and form factor. Oval cans, round cans, rectangular — terminals up, terminals down, bushing-mount. These aren’t interchangeable with dry-film types dimensionally.
Step 6 — Confirm dielectric fluid type. Modern oil-filled capacitors use non-PCB fluids. If you’re working with legacy equipment, PCB testing may be required before handling.
PCB and Safety Considerations
If you’re retrofitting or repairing older industrial equipment, the historical PCB (polychlorinated biphenyl) issue is real. In the 1930s, PCBs became associated with a variety of health risks, but it took until 1977 for their use and manufacture to be banned or severely restricted in most industrialized countries. Large PCB-filled transformers and capacitors have mostly been destroyed or decontaminated. However, small PCB capacitors such as motor-starter size may still be found in older industrial equipment.
Modern oil-filled capacitors use vegetable oils, synthetic esters, mineral oils, or silicone — all non-toxic by comparison. When in doubt on vintage equipment, treat any oil-filled capacitor as potentially PCB-containing until tested.
For working engineers, the practical safety rules are: don’t open sealed oil-filled capacitors in the field, discharge them fully before handling (some can store dangerous charge for extended periods), and follow local regulations for disposal of oil-containing components.
Leading Manufacturers and Where to Source
Manufacturer
Notable Product Lines
Strengths
Cornell Dubilier (CDE)
WL, WF, SCR, AR Series
Pulse power, custom HV
High Energy Corporation (HEC)
CC, SCR Series
RF, HV, custom designs
General Electric / Electro Industries
Motor-run, PFC
Legacy industrial, HVAC
Aerovox
Motor-run, filtering
Wide availability
Anhui Tongfeng
Metallized PP/oil
Power factor correction
ASC (American Shizuki)
AC/DC oil-filled
Motor run, PFC
For engineering datasheets and parametric search, the following resources are useful for sourcing and comparing oil-filled capacitor specifications.
Useful Resources and Databases
Here are some reliable resources for deeper research, datasheets, and procurement:
Technical Standards and Datasheets
IEC 61270 — International standard for shunt power capacitors for AC power systems above 1,000V
IEC 60831 — Shunt power capacitors below 1,000V
UL 810 — UL standard for capacitors in the US market
IEEE Std 18 — IEEE standard for shunt power capacitors
High Energy Corporation Catalog: highenergycorp.com — custom and standard HV oil-filled lines
Eaton Power Factor Correction White Paper: Published technical document covering oil vs. dry capacitor technology comparisons
Parametric Search and Procurement
GlobalSpec Industrial Directory — parametric search for oil-filled high-voltage capacitors
DirectIndustry — international manufacturer directory for industrial capacitors
Richardson RFPD — distributor with stocked oil-filled capacitor inventory
General Capacitor Engineering Reference
For a broader look at capacitor types, construction, and selection across all technologies, PCBSync’s capacitor resource covers the fundamentals useful for board-level and system-level design decisions.
5 FAQs About Oil-Filled Capacitors
Q1: Can I replace an oil-filled motor-run capacitor with a dry-film type of the same value?
In many cases yes, for lower-voltage motor-run applications (e.g., 370VAC or 440VAC rated), modern metallized PP dry-film capacitors meet or exceed the specifications of older oil-filled types and are RoHS-compliant and easier to dispose of. However, in high-temperature environments or for higher-voltage applications above 1,000V, verify that the dry-type unit meets the ripple current, temperature, and partial discharge specs of the oil-filled original. Don’t assume a direct swap is electrically equivalent — check the datasheet against the original spec.
Q2: How do I safely discharge an oil-filled capacitor before working on it?
Never assume a large oil-filled capacitor is discharged just because the equipment has been powered off. Energy storage capacitors can hold dangerous voltage for minutes or hours. Use an appropriate bleed resistor (value depends on capacitance and voltage — typically chosen to discharge in 5–10 time constants) connected across the terminals, and verify discharge with a calibrated high-voltage meter before touching any terminals. For industrial pulse capacitors with high stored energy (kJ range), follow the manufacturer’s specific discharge procedure.
Q3: What’s the typical lifespan of an oil-filled capacitor in industrial service?
For motor-run and PFC applications, oil-filled capacitors are typically rated for 60,000–100,000 hours at rated voltage and maximum temperature. In practice, units operated below maximum rated voltage and in moderate temperatures often outlast these ratings significantly. The main failure modes are dielectric aging (accelerated by temperature), corona damage (from overvoltage), and mechanical damage to the hermetic seal leading to moisture ingress or oil leakage.
Q4: Do modern oil-filled capacitors contain PCBs?
No. PCB (polychlorinated biphenyl) use in capacitors was banned in the US in 1977 and in most industrialized countries around the same period. All modern oil-filled capacitors use non-PCB dielectric fluids — mineral oils, synthetic esters, or silicone. If you’re handling vintage equipment from before the mid-1980s, test before assuming the fluid is non-PCB. Many industrial facilities have specific disposal protocols for anything that might contain legacy PCB fluids.
Q5: What causes an oil-filled capacitor to fail and swell or leak?
Swelling and leakage in oil-filled capacitors is typically caused by internal gas generation from dielectric breakdown or corona discharge within the winding. This creates pressure inside the sealed can. Some capacitors include a pressure-sensitive interrupter that disconnects the unit before rupture. If you find a swollen or leaking oil-filled capacitor, do not attempt to re-energize it — replace it immediately, and treat the leaked fluid with appropriate chemical caution (though modern oils are generally non-toxic, they may contain degradation products).
Inquire: Call 0086-755-23203480, or reach out via the form below/your sales contact to discuss our design, manufacturing, and assembly capabilities.
Quote: Email your PCB files to Sales@pcbsync.com (Preferred for large files) or submit online. We will contact you promptly. Please ensure your email is correct.
Notes: For PCB fabrication, we require PCB design file in Gerber RS-274X format (most preferred), *.PCB/DDB (Protel, inform your program version) format or *.BRD (Eagle) format. For PCB assembly, we require PCB design file in above mentioned format, drilling file and BOM. Click to download BOM template To avoid file missing, please include all files into one folder and compress it into .zip or .rar format.