Transfer factor

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The electroacoustic transfer factor  B E of a sound pick-up is the sensitivity ( English responsivity ) with which the sound pressure of microphones - that is sound receivers and sensors  - is converted into electrical signal voltage ( modulation voltage ). The sensitivity is often referred to in data sheets as the field operating transmission factor or field no-load transmission factor and applies - unless otherwise specified - for the frequencykHz .

The factor B E represents the relationship between the generated electrical alternating voltage U and the sound pressure p at 1 kHz, expressed in mV / Pa and is an essential quality mark of electroacoustic transducers :

The higher the transfer factor, the more the electrical output voltage  U at the microphone increases while the sound pressure p at the input remains the same  . The usual B E value of a condenser microphone is around 10 mV / Pa and is significantly lower for a dynamic microphone at around 0.5 mV / Pa.

Figures in the USA

In the USA the transfer factor is z. In some cases, do not  specify mV / Pa in the SI unit , but rather as sensitivity in dB  or in where the dB values ​​are negative.

Usual information, depending on the selected reference value:

  • Condenser microphone: about -40 dB or -60 dB
  • dynamic microphone: about -66 dB or -86 dB

Reference values:

  • the sound pressure p  = 1  Pa corresponds to a sound pressure level of L p  = 94 dBSPL (1  Pa → 94 dBSPL).
  • the sound pressure p  = 1  dyn / cm² corresponds to a sound pressure level of L p  = 74 dBSPL (1  dyn / cm² → 74 dBSPL).

Transfer factor for amplifiers

In the case of an amplifier, the gain or the transfer factor is defined as the quotient of output and input voltage:

This definition does not require a reference measure, since the input and output variables have identical units.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. sengpielaudio.com