Utter waste of money.
I hope you use current limiting Rs - the disposition of tantalums to self-ignite in
this aplication has long been discussed in this group.
My advice - tantalums are a waste of money and a source of unreliability.
Oddly, I've never had an adverse experience with a tantalum cap. Then
again, I once fell into a gold mine of "surplus" parts - a company where I
consulted had just bought out another company, for a lump sum. Ergo,
everything in the old company's stock room was, essentially, free. There
were bins of LEDs, bins of transistors, bins of resistors, bins of caps,
even some exotic stuff like 10-turn precision pots, and optical
interruptors.
I did a lot of breadboarding in those days. I had a proto-board that I
populated with a 10 uF tantalum about every three inches along the power
buses. Admittedly, for the 100 uF at the board power entry point, I've
always used aluminum.
But I can't understand the bad rap Tantalum seems to have. I don't think
I've ever seen a tantalum cap fail. (of course, neither has Lassie, but
I _have_ seen stuff, like a selenium stack in a pressurized power supply
clearing the room when you open the unit...)
Cheers!
Rich