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Microphones In this chapter we will learn: what input and output transducers do what a microphone does and how to recognize its symbol to recall four important properties of a microphone to recall the main features of moving coil, ribbon, capacitor, crystal, carbon and wireless microphones (including impedances and output voltages) Transducers Transducers change energy from one form to another. Those in which electrical energy is the input or output will be considered; they enable electronic systems to communicate with the outside world. A transducer must he matched to the system with which it is designed to work. Sometimes this means ensuring there is maximum voltage transfer between transducer and system, at other times we have to transfer maximum power. In all cases, the impedance of the transducer is a critical factor (rather than its resistance since many transducers have inductance or capacitance and we are generally dealing with a.c.). About microphones A microphone changes sound into electrical energy, its symbol is and there are four important properties of a microphone: The impedance. The output voltage. The frequency response. Ideally this should cover the audio frequency range from 20 Hz or so to about 20 kHz, and the sensitivity should be the same for the full range, i.e. sounds of the same intensity but different frequency should produce the same output. The directional sensitivity. A microphone may be more sensitive, i.e. give a bigger output, for sound coming from one or more directions than from others. This is shown by polar diagrams like those in the figures below a, b, c for uni-, bi-, and omni- directional microphones respectively. In these, the length of the line from the origin 0 to any point P on the diagram is a measure of the sensitivity in the direction OP. Microphones fall into three main groups: velocity-dependent, amplitude-dependent and carbon. Velocity-dependent microphones The output voltage of these depends on the velocity of vibration of the moving parts, which in turn depends on the sound received. Moving-coil or dynamic type This is a popular type because of its good quality reproduction, robustness and reasonable cost. One is shown in the figure below. It consists of a small coil of many turns of fine wire wound on a tube (the former) which is attached to a light disc (the diaphragm) as shown below. When sound strikes the diaphragm, the coil moves in and out of the circular gap between the poles of a strong permanent magnet. Electromagnetic induction occurs and the alternating e.m.f. induced in the coil (typically 1 to 10 mV) has the same frequency as the sound. A moving-coil microphone has an impedance of 200 to 600 . Uni- and near-omnidirectional models are available. Ribbon type The moving part is a thin corrugated ribbon of aluminium foil suspended between the poles of a powerful magnet as shown below. Sound falling on either side of the ribbon makes it vibrate at the same frequency and a small e.m.f. is induced in it. Ribbon microphones are bidirectional and have a very low impedance (e.g. 0.2 ). Their performance is similar to that of the rnoving-coil type but they can be damaged by blasts of air. Amplitude-dependent microphones In these types the output depends on the amount by which the sound waves displace the diaphragm from its rest position, i.e. on the amplitude of the motion. Capacitor (or condenser) type This is used in broadcasting studios, for public address systems and for concerts where the highest quality is necessary. It consists of two capacitor plates, A and B. Plate B is fixed while the metal foil disc A acts as the movable diaphragm. Sound waves make the diaphragm vibrate and as its distance from B varies, the capacitance changes. A small battery in the microphone causes the resulting charging and discharging current to produce a varying p.d. across a resistor. This p.d. provides the input to a small amplifier in the stem of the microphone. Capacitor microphones, like the tie (clip-on) model above, may be uni- or omnidirectional and have impedances of the order of 1 k. Crystal type The action of a crystal microphone depends on the piezoelectric effect. In this, an electric charge and so also a p.d. is developed across opposite faces of a slice of a crystal when it is bent, because of the displacement of ions. The effect is given by natural crystals such as Rochelle salt (sodium potassium tartrate) and quartz and by synthetic ceramic crystals of lead zirconium titanate. When sound waves set the diaphragm vibrating, the crystal bends to and fro and an alternating p.d. is produced between metal electrodes deposited on two of its faces. The crystal microphone has a high output (e.g. 100 mV), is usually omnidirectional and has a very high impedance (several megohms). Its performance is not as good as the previous types but it is inexpensive and much used in cassette recorders. Carbon microphone This is used in telephone handsets but it is not a high quality device. The principle of the latest type is shown below: Sound makes the diaphragm vibrate and vary the pressure on the carbon granules between the movable carbon dome, which is attached to the diaphragm, and the fixed carbon cup at the back. An increase of pressure squeezes the granules together and reduces their electrical resistance. Reduced pressure increases the resistance. Direct current through the microphone from a supply (of 50 V at the telephone exchange) varies accordingly to give a varying d.c. which can be regarded as a steady d.c. plus a.c. having the frequency of the sound. Current variations represent information in a carbon microphone, whereas in other types, e.g. crystal, the representation is in the form of a varying voltage. In the first case a current analogue is produced, in the second it is a voltage analogue. Wireless microphones This type incorporates a small radio transmitter which sends the sound falling on the microphone as a frequency modulated (FM) v.h.f. signal up to a distance of about 100 metres. Its short aerial (e.g. 6 cm) transmits to any normal FM receiver and allows the performer/lecturer/public speaker greater freedom of movement since it has no long trailing cables attached. It is battery operated and usually tunable over the range 88 to 108 MHZ. Questions: What are transducers ? What is the difference between VELOCITY-dependent and AMPLITUDE-dependent microphones ? Which are the four most important properties of microphones and what do they mean ? What are the main features of: moving coil, ribbon, capacitor, crystal, carbon and wireless microphones ? New words in order of appearance transducer to recognize property feature Wandler, Umformer (wieder-) erkennen Eigenschaft Merkmal, Charakteristikum moving coil, ribbon, capacitor, crystal, carbon and wireless microphones Tauchspul-, (Lautsprecher) Band-, Kondensator-, Kristall-, Kohle- und drahtlose Mikrofone to enable to match to ensure voltage transfer frequency response to cover es möglich machen an-, zusammenpassen sicherstellen, dafür sorgen, dass .. Spannungsübertragung Frequenzverhalten, Frequenzgang abdecken