Can anybody please give me the difference between Bipolar and Non-polar
capacitors ?
The first are polarized, the second are not.
It has everything to do with getting sufficient capacitance into
a small enough package. For larger values, electrolytics are really
the only means of doing that. But electrolytics by the construction
are polarized.
For most places electrolytics are used (because of a need for higher
capacitance), polarized capacitors are not a problem. Either they
are filtering power supply lines where they are seeing pretty much
a single polarity signal, or they are carrying AC where one terminal
is clearly more positive than the other.
Rare is the case where high values of capacitance are needed and
they must be non-polarized. But for those few occasions they can
manufacture electrolytics so they are not polarized, and there you
go. In effect non-polarized electrolytics are the equivalent of
two electrolytics in series inside the package:
---||-||---
+ - +
which of course can be emulated by putting two discrete electrolytics
in series with the proper polarity (and remembering that it will be
half the capacitance).
Note that most capacitors are "non-polarized". But since they don't
come in polarized versions, since the construction doesn't make them
polarized, they don't need to be referred to as "non-polarized".
We are talking about ceramic, paper, polystyrene and any other type
of capacitor except for electrolytics and tantalums. YOu will also
find that it's rare to find these types of capacitors in anything
much larger than 1uF or so.
Michael