For the same reason, when you turn off the motor, the natural tendency is for it to stop immediately, with the same effects. If the motor is used to move a robot, for instance, this abrupt stop can cause it to fall over.

With the block shown in Figure 1, we can add some inertia to a dc motor.

 

   Figure 1 – Adding inertia
Figure 1 – Adding inertia

 

This means that, when you power up the circuit, the motor produces a “soft” start, because the capacitor must be charged. This is shown by the curves in Figure 2.

 

Figure 2 – The effect of a capacitance
Figure 2 – The effect of a capacitance

 

By the same principle, when the motor is turned off, the energy stored in the capacitor is released, powering down the motor over a few seconds. The larger the capacitor, the more inertia is added.

In a robot, for instance, this means that the machinery doesn't encounter a sudden stop when the motor is turned off; due the inertia, the stop is soft.

You can experiment with capacitors with capacitances between 100 and 4,700 µF, or even higher depending the application, when using motors up to 1 A and 15 V.

 

 

Datasheets


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