By the time you get to the filter caps, it's way too far from the problem to effectively fix it. If you look at the combined impedance of any reasonable size film bypass across an electrolytic it doesn't help. Parallel caps in RF and logic circuits can work (see Jim Williams) but pitfalls abound without measurement.
The dissipation factor for film/foil capacitors is lower than for metallized film capacitors, due to lower contact resistance to the foil electrode compared to the metallized film electrode. The dissipation factor of film capacitors is frequency-, temperature- and time-dependent.
What is a film capacitor?
A film capacitor, also known as a plastic film capacitor, uses plastic film as its dielectric. There are many types of capacitors, including electrolyte capacitors, paper capacitors, film capacitors, ceramic capacitors, mica capacitors, and air capacitors.
While ceramic capacitors offer better dv/dt capabilities, film capacitors are good (with a maximum value of 2200 V/µs) making them suited for use in snubber circuits. Film capacitors also have low equivalent series resistance (ESR), low equivalent self-inductance (ESL) and can tolerate large peak currents.
There are two different types of plastic film capacitors, made with two different electrode configurations: Film/foil capacitors or metal foil capacitors are made with two plastic films as the dielectric. Each is layered with a thin metal foil, usually aluminum, as the electrodes.
What is a thin film capacitor?
A thin film capacitor is a type of film capacitor, which is a capacitor with a metal foil as an electrode and a thin film such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, or polycarbonate, that is overlapped from both ends and wound into a cylindrical structure. (Typical schematic diagram of thin-film capacitors)
Metallized film capacitors are not affected strongly by DC bias. Their volumetric efficiency is not as great as that for multilayer ceramic chip (MLCC) capacitors or electrolytic capacitors. These capacitors (as well as ceramics) are used in safety applications for EMI/RFI reduction and safe failure modes.