Electromagnetic interference (RFI/EMI) can significantly degrade the performance of carefully designed circuits, often rendering them nonfunctional. This technical challenge represents not just an engineering problem but also a substantial waste of time and resources.
Ferrite materials are typically divided into two main categories, each optimized for different frequency ranges and performance characteristics:
Applications:
Performance benefits: NiZn ferrites demonstrate optimal performance between 2 MHz and several hundred MHz, making them the preferred choice for most baluns, ununs, and high-frequency RFI/EMI suppression applications.
Applications:
| Mix # | Material | Initial Permeability | RFI/EMI Suppression Range | Tuned Circuits | Broadband Transformers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31 | MnZn | 1500 | 1-300 MHz | – | 1:1, <300 MHz |
| 43 | NiZn | 800 | 25-300 MHz | <10 MHz | 3-60 MHz |
| 52 | NiZn | 250 | 200-1000 MHz | <20 MHz | 1-60 MHz |
| 61 | NiZn | 125 | 200-1000 MHz | <100 MHz | 1-300 MHz |
| 73 | MnZn | 2500 | <50 MHz | <2 MHz | <10 MHz |
| 75/J | MnZn | 5000 | 150 kHz–10 MHz | <0.75 MHz | 0.1-10 MHz |
Ferrites are ceramic materials with unique electromagnetic properties. They are rigid and brittle, with colors ranging from silver-gray to black. Their electromagnetic characteristics can be affected by operating conditions including temperature, pressure, field strength, frequency, and time.
There are two fundamental types of ferrites: "soft" ferrites that don't retain significant magnetization, and "hard" ferrites with permanent magnetization characteristics. The materials discussed in this article are all "soft" ferrites.
Ferrites have a cubic crystal structure with the chemical formula MO·Fe 2 O 3 , where MO represents a combination of divalent metal oxides (such as zinc, nickel, manganese, and copper). Varying these metal oxide combinations creates materials with properties tailored for specific applications.
The history of ferrites (magnetic oxides) dates back centuries before Christ with the discovery of naturally magnetic stones. The most abundant deposits were found in the Magnesia region of Asia Minor, giving rise to the name magnetite (Fe 3 O 4 ).
Early applications included lodestones used by navigators to locate magnetic north. Scientific understanding progressed through contributions from William Gilbert, Hans Christian Ørsted, Michael Faraday, James Clerk Maxwell, Heinrich Hertz, and others.
Modern ferrite development began in the 1930s in Japan and the Netherlands, with J.L. Snoek at Philips Research Laboratories achieving the first commercially viable "soft" ferrites in 1945. Today, ferrites serve three primary electronic applications: low-level signal processing, power applications, and electromagnetic interference (EMI) suppression.
Electromagnetic interference (RFI/EMI) can significantly degrade the performance of carefully designed circuits, often rendering them nonfunctional. This technical challenge represents not just an engineering problem but also a substantial waste of time and resources.
Ferrite materials are typically divided into two main categories, each optimized for different frequency ranges and performance characteristics:
Applications:
Performance benefits: NiZn ferrites demonstrate optimal performance between 2 MHz and several hundred MHz, making them the preferred choice for most baluns, ununs, and high-frequency RFI/EMI suppression applications.
Applications:
| Mix # | Material | Initial Permeability | RFI/EMI Suppression Range | Tuned Circuits | Broadband Transformers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 31 | MnZn | 1500 | 1-300 MHz | – | 1:1, <300 MHz |
| 43 | NiZn | 800 | 25-300 MHz | <10 MHz | 3-60 MHz |
| 52 | NiZn | 250 | 200-1000 MHz | <20 MHz | 1-60 MHz |
| 61 | NiZn | 125 | 200-1000 MHz | <100 MHz | 1-300 MHz |
| 73 | MnZn | 2500 | <50 MHz | <2 MHz | <10 MHz |
| 75/J | MnZn | 5000 | 150 kHz–10 MHz | <0.75 MHz | 0.1-10 MHz |
Ferrites are ceramic materials with unique electromagnetic properties. They are rigid and brittle, with colors ranging from silver-gray to black. Their electromagnetic characteristics can be affected by operating conditions including temperature, pressure, field strength, frequency, and time.
There are two fundamental types of ferrites: "soft" ferrites that don't retain significant magnetization, and "hard" ferrites with permanent magnetization characteristics. The materials discussed in this article are all "soft" ferrites.
Ferrites have a cubic crystal structure with the chemical formula MO·Fe 2 O 3 , where MO represents a combination of divalent metal oxides (such as zinc, nickel, manganese, and copper). Varying these metal oxide combinations creates materials with properties tailored for specific applications.
The history of ferrites (magnetic oxides) dates back centuries before Christ with the discovery of naturally magnetic stones. The most abundant deposits were found in the Magnesia region of Asia Minor, giving rise to the name magnetite (Fe 3 O 4 ).
Early applications included lodestones used by navigators to locate magnetic north. Scientific understanding progressed through contributions from William Gilbert, Hans Christian Ørsted, Michael Faraday, James Clerk Maxwell, Heinrich Hertz, and others.
Modern ferrite development began in the 1930s in Japan and the Netherlands, with J.L. Snoek at Philips Research Laboratories achieving the first commercially viable "soft" ferrites in 1945. Today, ferrites serve three primary electronic applications: low-level signal processing, power applications, and electromagnetic interference (EMI) suppression.