Replacing tantalum capacitor with ceramic capacitor for Op Amps

In most circuits, yes. And in your circuit this would be fine.

Capacitance is just capacitance and ceramic MLCCs capacitance values have increased quite a bit in the last few decades, leading to a much wider applicability (and the ongoing production shortage).

But you must be aware of a couple of caveats that are mostly exclusive to ceramics:

  • In some circuits capacitive ESR is a needed part of the circuit, a minimum value is expected and ceramics tend to have extremely low ESR. In some cases this can lead to instability and oscillations. Of particular concern would be the input of switching DC-DC converters and long DC supply cables that can be connected live.

  • MLCCs tend to have very strong voltage dependencies. These can lose 60% or more of their capacitance value under DC bias. In addition to the capacitive loss, this is a non-linear behavior that can be of concern in some circuits.

  • MLCCs ceramics are piezoelectric. Any vibration or temperature gradients can cause noise to be injected into the circuit. And, in some switching applications, you will actually hear the buzzing in the capacitors which can lead to mechanical failures.


Yes, it is fine from the point-of-view of the op-amps. Be careful about the voltage coefficient of the capacitors, you may need 10uF or 20uF nominal capacitance to get 6.8uF at the 15V bias voltage (they have a large voltage coefficient). (as an aside, that's a bit of a beast of a GHz range CFA so the smaller ceramic capacitors (100nF + 100pF) are really important in this particular application, see Peter Smith's comment about using reverse geometry caps for the lower capacitances - they have terminals along the long sides of the chip so less parasitic series impedance).

For example, here is a 25V 10uF 1210 capacitor that is typically down about -35% at 15V bias. Smaller capacitors will likely be worse.

From a system point of view, having a number of very low ESR capacitors bypassing the supplies could cause stability problems with your power supply regulation. If it's a lab supply or 7815/7915 linear regulators it won't be an issue (at least with the 7815), but with LDO linear regulators or negative regulators it might cause issues.