A typical requirement would be 20uF, 50V, 2Arms @ 1KHz.
Ok. Well, 16Vrms (20uF @ 1kHz is 8 ohms, * 2A is..), 50V peak then I guess.
That's a little high in current for NP but it sounds like a typical use case.
I was under the impression that any sustained reverse voltage would degrade polarised capacitors, just that it is severe enough at <1V that they go bang. What i'm trying to find out is that if the average voltage is positive and it doesn't heat up to the point that it goes bang, do they still degrade long term or does the forward voltage repair the damage that was done in the negative part of the cycle.
I think the reverse figure is more like 5-10% of rating, or 3-5V, whichever is smaller. Not sure if the mechanism is un-forming, which would then be re-formed. At frequencies above the diffusion rate (pretty much anything), it shouldn't have much if any effect on structure.
But I don't really know if that's true, or something else happens in reverse..
Using diodes is a standard way of preventing reverse bias; or if you have DC available, you can use a large resistor to polarize the middle node, so both caps see proper forward bias.
Tim