Electret Microphones
Electret Microphones
Electret Microphones
1 di 8
Store
Forums
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
Wiki
Learning
About Us
Electret Microphones
Electret microphones are the most commonly used microphones today.
Every cellphone and laptop has one embedded into it, and many studio
microphones are also electrets. They can have an extremely wide frequency
response (from 10Hz to 30kHz ), and typically cost less than a dollar. They
are also very small and quite sensitive. Despite these good characteristics,
they can also have a few drawbacks, such as a high noise floor, high
distortion, and uneven frequency response. We will dissect an electret
microphone, explain how it works, and talk about the reasons for its various
attributes.
Recent Articles
Temperature
Compensation of
Analog Exponential
Converters
OML now distributing
through SynthCube!
Shipping hiatus and
new store!
x0x-heart panels are
in!
MICrODEC
MIDIvampire-I
MIDIvampire-II
Article Topics
Mixtape Alpha
arduino
avr
rePatcher
floppy-audio
Stomp Shield
getting started
how-to
x0x-heart
ISP
microdec
Shipping FAQ
modifications
updates
wiki
Home
About Us
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
2 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
Underneath this dust cover is a small hole in the aluminum capsule. This is
where the sound enters the microphone. On a directional microphone there
are also holes in the back of the capsule (through the PCB) to help cancel out
sounds from the sides.
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
3 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
The aluminum capsule contains the electret material itself, and a small
amplifier, which can be seen in Figure 5.
The electret material is the shiny silver circle shown in the middle of Figure
5. It is made of a metalized mylar film which is adhered to a metal washer.
There is also a small red plastic spacer to keep the film a fixed distance from
the amplifier module. Both the spacer and electret are extremely thin (.001
or less).
Figure 6 Close up of plastic spacer and electret diaphragm. Note that the electret
diaphragm is mounted to a small metal washer.
The electret material is capable of holding a fixed electric charge, which does
not decay with time. This is different from a conventional condenser
microphone which needs to have a charge placed on it (i.e. phantom power).
When air impinges upon the diaphragm, it moves back and forth, changing
the distance to the amplifier module pick-up plate, which in turn creates a
voltage difference. How exactly this works will be explained later, but the
plastic spacer keeps the diaphragm from touching the pick-up plate of the
amplifier module. An exploded view of the amplifier module is shown below.
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
4 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
Figure 7 Exploded view of the amplifier module (pick-up plate, transistor, plastic
housing, PCB).
The amplifier module consists of the pick-up plate, a plastic housing, a single
transistor, and the PCB. The pick-up plate has holes in it for the displaced air
to move through, and is connected to one lead of the transistor (usually by a
small tack weld, but sometimes by spring force of the transistor lead itself).
The other two leads of the transistor are soldered to the PCB. So, on a
through-hole electret capsule, the two leads sticking out the bottom are just
the leads of the transistor itself. The plastic housing keeps all of these
elements rigidly fixed within the aluminum housing, and insulates the
pick-up plate from shorting to the housing.
The amplifier consists of a single JFET transistor, with the gate connected to
the pick-up plate, the source connected to ground, and the signal appearing
on the drain. This is called a common-source configuration, as the source is
connected to ground, which is common to all signals. The JFET in this
electret microphone is a 2SK596, which is designed for low-noise
applications. A datasheet for it can be found here.
The transistor is connected to the PCB, which has two conductive pads, and a
conductive ring around the outside. One of the pads is connected to this ring,
and acts as a ground trace. When the aluminum housing is placed on, it is
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
5 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
bent into contact with this ring, grounding the whole case.
Since the electret material has a conductive film on the outside, and is
connected to a metal washer which touches the aluminum capsule, the entire
assembly is essentially sealed in a grounded case. A cross section of the
entire electret microphone module is shown below.
As can be seen above, the charged electret material and the amplifier
pick-up plate are very closely spaced and have a lot of area facing one
another, and therefore create a capacitor. In the olden days, capacitors were
called condensers, hence the name condenser microphone. The electrical
schematic of the full electret microphone is shown below.
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
6 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
The JFET has three pins: the gate (G), drain (D), and source (S). The gate is
the control pin, and goes to one plate of the microphone capacitor (with
the electret material forming the other plate). The source is connected to
ground, and the drain is connected to a resistor and power supply in your
external circuit. In a 3 terminal microphone element, both the source and
the drain would be pinned out, and a third pin for ground would be used.
This allows for using a different amplifier configuration.
So, how does this all work?
The electret maintains a fixed charge, and therefore maintains a voltage
across the capacitor. The mathematical equation for the voltage on a
capacitor is V=Q/C, where Q is the charge on the capacitor, and C is the
capacitance. In the case of the microphone, since the diaphragm is moving
back and forth, the shape of the capacitor is changing, and its capacitance
changes accordingly. The equation for a parallel plate capacitor is C=e*A/t,
where e is a material constant representing the properties of the material
between the plates, A is the area of the plates, and t is the separation
between the plates. As the electret material moves due to sound pressure
variations, t becomes larger and smaller, and the voltage varies linearly with
this distance since V=Q/C=Q/(e*A/t)=Q*t/e*A.
As the voltage at the gate varies, the gate to source voltage (Vgs) varies since
the source is grounded. This variation in Vgs causes the JFET to conduct
more and less, and the current through the drain (Id) changes, producing a
signal across the drain resistor (R). The output is taken from the drain.
A JFET is used as the amplifier because it has a really high input resistance
(30Mohms or more). This means that almost no current is pulled off the
electret capacitor. If the amplifier had a lower input resistance, the low
frequency response of the microphone would suffer. This is because the
input stage acts like a high-pass filter, with the electret being the capacitor,
and the input of the amplifier being the resistor, and larger values of R and C
give lower cut-off frequencies.
Where is the noise?
The main noise sources in this microphone are pick-up noise and transistor
noise. Since the entire capsule is sealed and grounded, the pick-up noise is
very low and usually not noticeable. The transistor noise, on the other hand,
can be quite high, due to the high input resistance on the JFET. Typical
values are around -120dB to -110dB, which may sound rather low, but the
audio signal level is usually less than -40dB, so its only an 80dB signal to
noise ratio (SNR). This is a common issue with condenser microphones due
to the high input resistances required. Fortunately, this noise floor does not
increase appreciably with signal level, so the SNR can improve greatly for
high audio levels.
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
7 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
4/10/2015 7:50 AM
8 di 8
http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/sensors/electret-microphones/
inexpensive, so you can afford to try a few dozen and see what works for you.
4/10/2015 7:50 AM