This is only a preview of the April 2025 issue of Silicon Chip. You can view 45 of the 104 pages in the full issue, including the advertisments. For full access, purchase the issue for $10.00 or subscribe for access to the latest issues. Items relevant to "Discrete 555 timer":
Items relevant to "The Pico 2 Computer":
Articles in this series:
Items relevant to "Weather monitor":
Articles in this series:
Articles in this series:
Items relevant to "Rotating Light for Models":
Articles in this series:
Items relevant to "433MHz Transmitter Module":
Items relevant to "Power LCR Meter, Part 2":
Purchase a printed copy of this issue for $13.00. |
SILICON
SILIC
CHIP
www.siliconchip.com.au
Publisher/Editor
Nicholas Vinen
Technical Editor
John Clarke – B.E.(Elec.)
Technical Staff
Bao Smith – B.Sc.
Tim Blythman – B.E., B.Sc.
Advertising Enquiries
(02) 9939 3295
adverts<at>siliconchip.com.au
Regular Contributors
Allan Linton-Smith
Dave Thompson
David Maddison – B.App.Sc. (Hons 1),
PhD, Grad.Dip.Entr.Innov.
Geoff Graham
Associate Professor Graham Parslow
Dr Hugo Holden – B.H.B, MB.ChB.,
FRANZCO
Ian Batty – M.Ed.
Phil Prosser – B.Sc., B.E.(Elec.)
Cartoonist
Louis Decrevel
loueee.com
Founding Editor (retired)
Leo Simpson – B.Bus., FAICD
Silicon Chip is published 12 times
a year by Silicon Chip Publications
Pty Ltd. ACN 626 922 870. ABN 20
880 526 923. All material is copyright ©. No part of this publication
may be reproduced without the written
consent of the publisher.
Subscription rates (Australia only)
6 issues (6 months): $70
12 issues (1 year):
$130
24 issues (2 years):
$245
Online subscription (Worldwide)
6 issues (6 months): $52.50
12 issues (1 year):
$100
24 issues (2 years):
$190
For overseas rates, see our website or
email silicon<at>siliconchip.com.au
* recommended & maximum price only
Editorial office: Unit 1 (up ramp), 234
Harbord Rd, Brookvale, NSW 2100.
Postal address: PO Box 194,
Matraville, NSW 2036.
Phone: (02) 9939 3295.
ISSN: 1030-2662
Printing and Distribution:
Editorial Viewpoint
Ferrite beads are not inductors
I often see ferrite beads drawn in circuit diagrams as if
they are inductors, with “Lx” designators. While many
circuit designers likely realise that they are not true
inductors, treating them as such could cause confusion,
especially for those reading the diagrams. This might
lead them to assume that a ferrite bead is just another
type of inductor, when in reality, it serves a very different
purpose.
Ferrite beads clearly exhibit some inductance – as do
most components, including wires and PCB tracks – but their operation does not
rely on it. At their simplest, ferrite beads are just a piece of wire passing close to
(or through a hole in) a piece of ferrite.
Some of the confusion may stem from the fact that ferrite is used as a core
material in high-frequency inductors and transformers. However, in those
applications, the ferrite core is surrounded by multiple turns of wire to create
significant inductance. In contrast, a ferrite bead typically has just one or a few
turns and thus a relatively low inductance.
Ferrite is a ceramic material that contains iron oxide. Like other magnetic core
materials, it provides a path for magnetic flux, but only up to a certain frequency.
Beyond that, ferrite becomes highly ‘lossy’, converting much of the magnetic
energy to heat, due to hysteresis and eddy current losses within the ferrite material.
Ferrite beads take advantage of this property to suppress unwanted highfrequency signals by dissipating their energy, effectively acting as a frequencydependent resistor rather than an inductor. Unlike an inductor, a ferrite bead
does not store energy or resonate. It simply increases its effective resistance in a
targeted frequency range to block unwanted signals.
Ferrite beads are available with all sorts of resistances and curves, with the
resistance peaking at different frequencies depending on the exact construction
of the bead. At very high frequencies, the impedance of the ferrite bead drops as
the parasitic capacitance across it starts to cause the signal to bypass it.
While you can make a ferrite bead yourself, by passing a wire through a ferrite
core, they are also available as pre-built SMD ‘chip’ devices that you can simply
solder across pads on a board. Pre-formed through-hole beads are also available
but are less common these days.
A bead’s peak resistance can range from a few ohms up to a few kilohms,
although most fall between 100W and 1kW. Many have a DC resistance well under
1W and can handle from a few hundred milliamps to several amps. However, those
with a higher peak resistance usually also have a higher base resistance at DC.
The impedance peak is usually between 100MHz and 1GHz and can be fairly
broad, allowing the bead to block RF signals over a wide range of frequencies
(to some extent, at least). Much of the impedance is real resistance, but not all.
The accompanying figure from the
TDK MPZ1608 data sheet should give
you some idea of the behaviour of a
range of different ferrite beads.
So, rather than thinking of
ferrite beads as inductors, it’s more
accurate to consider them as a lossy
impedance element that selectively
dampens high-frequency signals. That
distinction matters.
The 2020-2024 block of Silicon Chip
PDFs on USB is now available (see
p95). Order the set at siliconchip.au/
Shop/digital_pdfs
by Nicholas Vinen
9 Kendall Street, Granville NSW 2142
2
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
|