A microphone (colloquially called a mic or mike; both pronounced /ˈmaɪl/) is an acoustic-to-electric transducer or sensor that converts sound into an electrical signal. Microphones are used in many applications such as telephones, tape recorders, karaoke systems, hearing aids, motion picture production, live and recorded audio engineering, FRS radios, megaphones, in radio and television broadcasting and in computers for recording voice, speech recognition, VoIP, and for non-acoustic purposes such as ultrasonic checking or knock sensors.
Most microphones today use electromagnetic
induction (dynamic microphone), capacitance change (condenser
microphone), piezoelectric
generation, or light modulation to produce an electrical voltage signal from
mechanical vibration.
COMPONENTS
The sensitive transducer element of
a microphone is called its element or capsule. A complete
microphone also includes a housing, some means of bringing the signal from the
element to other equipment, and often an electronic circuit to adapt the output
of the capsule to the equipment being driven. A wireless microphone
contains a radio transmitter.
VARITIES
Microphones are referred to by their
transducer principle, such as condenser, dynamic,
etc., and by their directional characteristics. Sometimes other characteristics
such as diaphragm size, intended use or orientation of the principal sound
input to the principal axis (end- or side-address) of the microphone are used
to describe the microphone.
Condenser
microphone
Inside the Oktava 319 condenser
microphone
The condenser microphone,
invented at Bell Labs in 1916 by E. C. Wente[2] is also called a capacitor
microphone or electrostatic microphone — capacitors were
historically called condensers. Here, the diaphragm
acts as one plate of a capacitor, and the
vibrations produce changes in the distance between the plates. There are two
types, depending on the method of extracting the audio signal from the transducer: DC-biased and
radio frequency (RF) or high frequency (HF) condenser microphones. With a
DC-biased microphone, the plates are biased with a fixed charge (Q). The voltage maintained across the capacitor plates
changes with the vibrations in the air, according to the capacitance equation
(C = Q⁄V), where Q = charge in coulombs, C = capacitance in farads
and V = potential difference in volts. The capacitance of the
plates is inversely proportional to the distance between them for a
parallel-plate capacitor. (See capacitance for details.) The assembly of fixed
and movable plates is called an "element" or "capsule".
A nearly constant charge is
maintained on the capacitor. As the capacitance changes, the charge across the
capacitor does change very slightly, but at audible frequencies it is sensibly
constant. The capacitance of the capsule (around 5 to 100 pF)
and the value of the bias resistor (100 MΩ
to tens of GΩ) form a filter that is high-pass for the audio signal, and
low-pass for the bias voltage. Note that the time constant of an RC circuit equals the product of the resistance
and capacitance.
Within the time-frame of the
capacitance change (as much as 50 ms at 20 Hz audio signal), the
charge is practically constant and the voltage across the capacitor changes
instantaneously to reflect the change in capacitance. The voltage across the
capacitor varies above and below the bias voltage. The voltage difference
between the bias and the capacitor is seen across the series resistor. The
voltage across the resistor is amplified for performance or recording. In most
cases, the electronics in the microphone itself contribute no voltage gain as
the voltage differential is quite significant, up to several volts for high
sound levels. Since this is a very high impedance circuit, current gain only is
usually needed with the voltage remaining constant.
AKG C451B small-diaphragm condenser microphone
RF condenser microphones use a
comparatively low RF voltage, generated by a low-noise oscillator. The signal
from the oscillator may either be amplitude modulated by the capacitance
changes produced by the sound waves moving the capsule diaphragm, or the
capsule may be part of a resonant circuit
that modulates the frequency of the oscillator signal. Demodulation yields a
low-noise audio frequency signal with a very low source impedance. The absence
of a high bias voltage permits the use of a diaphragm with looser tension,
which may be used to achieve wider frequency response due to higher compliance.
The RF biasing process results in a lower electrical impedance capsule, a
useful by-product of which is that RF condenser microphones can be operated in
damp weather conditions that could create problems in DC-biased microphones
with contaminated insulating surfaces. The Sennheiser "MKH" series of microphones
use the RF biasing technique.
Condenser microphones span the range
from telephone transmitters through inexpensive karaoke microphones to
high-fidelity recording microphones. They generally produce a high-quality
audio signal and are now the popular choice in laboratory and recording studio applications. The inherent
suitability of this technology is due to the very small mass that must be moved
by the incident sound wave, unlike other microphone types that require the
sound wave to do more work. They require a power source, provided either via
microphone inputs on equipment as phantom power or from a small battery. Power is
necessary for establishing the capacitor plate voltage, and is also needed to
power the microphone electronics (impedance conversion in the case of electret
and DC-polarized microphones, demodulation or detection in the case of RF/HF
microphones). Condenser microphones are also available with two diaphragms that
can be electrically connected to provide a range of polar patterns (see below),
such as cardioid, omnidirectional, and figure-eight. It is also p179.
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