Thermal Derating Curves

How component ratings reduce with ambient temperature — capacitors, resistors, semiconductors.

Reference Reference Updated Apr 19, 2026
Reference

General pattern

  • Components are rated at a reference ambient (typically 25 °C or 70 °C).
  • Above reference, maximum power / current / voltage must be reduced linearly to zero at T_max.
  • Derate further for reliability — 50% of rated is conservative engineering practice.

Typical derating references

Part T_max rating Reference temp Derate from
Power resistor 155 °C case 25 °C Linear to 0 W at T_max
Aluminum electrolytic cap 85 or 105 °C 40–85 °C Life halves per 10 °C rise
MLCC (ceramic cap) 85–125 °C Also DC-bias derate (capacitance loss)
TO-220 transistor 150 °C junction 25 °C Linear to 0 W at T_J,max
LED 85 °C junction 25 °C Linear to 0 mA at T_J,max
Crystal oscillator Varies 25 °C Frequency drifts with T

Capacitor lifetime (rule of thumb)

Arrhenius
Life doubles per 10 °C below rated
Example
Cap rated 2 000 h @ 85 °C operated at 55 °C → 2³ × 2 000 h = 16 000 h

Voltage derating

X7R ceramic at DC
Capacitance drops to ~50% at rated DC voltage — derate to 50% for bulk
High-voltage film
Derate 25–50% below V_rated for reliability
MLCC in automotive
Typical guidelines derate 50% of rated DC voltage

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