Make sure you use one with a high enough voltage rating.
Electrolytic instead of ceramic.
Capacitors are measured in farads or microfarads not in ohms.
It also has more leakage than a ceramic and poorer performance at high frequencies.
Mlcc caps are made in a surface mount package most commonly though they can be found in leaded packages as shown in the photo.
And i was wondering if i could use 1uf electrolytic capacitors instead of the 1uf tantalum capacitors and the 1uf ceramic capacitors on this circuit since i couldn t find any tantalum or ceramic anywhere in my country.
When using ceramics in power rail applications their capacitance vs.
Electrolytic and ceramic caps have different characteristics and one may or may not work well in place of the other.
0 47µf is small for a electrolytic and is a polarized cap.
The ones shown the photo appear to be the mlcc type.
Another problem would be that a 220nf electrolytic will be very hard to find because very few manufacturers make electrolytics below 1uf.
0 47µf is large for a ceramic and is a non polarized high quality cap.
They re almost all ceramic save the 33pf off 8 which looks like it might be a mylar or tantalum though honestly ceramic should be fine there too.
It would be better to use ceramic and also for the 10uf and 1uf cap as well.
The polarization may mean it cannot be used in this application.
You know when you re using electrolytics they re polarized and the values are larger.
If you can get ceramic caps even several parts in parallel do that instead of electrolytics.
Mylar is a bit more subtle but nowadays you can use ceramic for most of those purposes.
Sounds like you are reading the value of the ceramic capacitor incorrectly.