Basically, a capacitor consists of two parallel conductive plates separated by insulating material. Due to this insulation between the conductive plates, the charge/current cannot flow between the plates and is retained at the plates. The plates may be of different shapes like rectangle, square, circular, and can be made into. The image below is showing a simple circuit to show how capacitor charging and discharging takes place in a circuit. As the changeover switch moves. As we know that when a voltage source is connected to conductor it gets charged say by a value Q. And since the charge is proportional to the voltage. Capacitors are used in almost every field of electronics, and play a very significant role in power circuits as well. Depending on the application we may. The standard unit of capacitance is Farad, named after scientist Michael Faraday. 1 Farad=1 coulomb/volt Farad is a very large unit, in practice, we generally use smaller units like Nano farads, Pico farads, Micro farads, etc.