I have been searching on tantalum and have some questions based on the above. When you are designing a new circuit on a breadboard or in Spice, and have a 1uF cap from the output of an op-amp in-line to further processing (not to ground), do you use film or tantalum?My capacitor recommendations:
470pF and below: silver mica or MLCC. Silver mica is better, especially in the signal path. They are wider, so fitting is sometimes difficult.
470pF to 1uF: film except when MLCC or electrolytic are specifically called out in the build docs or PCB silkscreen.
1uF to 47uF: tantalum electrolytic. Tantalum caps are far superior electrically (and more expensive) compared to aluminum.
above 47uF: aluminum electrolytic.
Or only use tantalum in an actual build, not on a breadboard, due to noise?
If tantalum is far superior, does it make sense to use it whenever a 1uF cap is needed in the signal path?
Does tantalum have a lifespan issue like aluminum electrolytics?