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A ferrite bead is a passive electric component, which is commonly used for suppressing high frequency noise in electronic circuits.

8 votes

How to select appropriate ferrite beads for power supply rails

Ferrite beads tend to work effectively in the resistive region of their frequency response. Take a look at this: - Sub 1 MHz to about 10 MHz the bead is acting as an inductor so, if you plan to use …
Andy aka's user avatar
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5 votes

Purpose of high resistance ferrite beads?

From what I understand, it is exactly the low parallel resistance that damps resonances... That inductive reactance at the peak blocking frequency has diminished greatly at the operating frequency ( …
Andy aka's user avatar
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2 votes

Value of Ferrite Bead

If you use a search engine like Mouser then select 1806 as the package size; then select 60 Ω as the impedance and, opt for 6 amp/6000 mA current (as per 60Z_6000mA_100MHz in your picture), there are …
Andy aka's user avatar
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4 votes

Inductor : how to choose toroidal ferrite core material

With an \$A_L\$ of 69 nH/turn\$^2\$, to get 2200 \$\mu H\$ requires 178.6 turns i.e. turns squared x 69 nH = 2201 \$\mu H\$. With an \$A_L\$ of 4200 nH/turn\$^2\$, to get 2200 \$\mu H\$ requires 22.9 …
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10 votes
Accepted

Does the position of the Ferrite bead matter?

My answer hopefully applies to beads but also ferrite clamps on cables. If it's preventing susceptibility problems due to interference coming down a cable then its position is not that critical. Howe …
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1 vote
Accepted

PDN with ferrite bead

The thing that I am unable to understand is, why would be put something into PDN that actually makes the frequency response of the PDN much worse? It does not make sense. If you have a type of suppl …
Andy aka's user avatar
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4 votes

Ferrite bead attenuation frequency

I understand that using a ferrite bead attenuates high frequency currents and can help reduce EMI. Correct. They act as a high resistance series block at high frequencies usually in the range 30 MHz …
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2 votes

Why use a ferrite bead at a USB input

How would I calculate the value for this ferrite bead? You don't need to; you just read the BoM and it tells you what type was used: Item 32 on the BoM is: - 32 100Ω L3 L0805 1 LCSC GZ20 …
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2 votes

Characteristics of Ferrite cores

Why can't ferrite cores be used at lower frequencies like 50Hz? To my knowledge, they can only operate at high frequencies. Core saturation is the issue. Ferrite cores saturate in a lower H-fie …
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1 vote

What is the purpose of the ferrite bead on DC Adaptors?

Firstly, it’s not a ferrite bead; it is much bigger than what is generally regarded as a ferrite bead and, as such, it will have a noise reducing effect in the low hundreds of kHz to probably over 10 …
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1 vote

Question on EMI filtering

My question is that whether the author is right or not? The author isn't considering that FBs are predominantly used as a lossy component and so, I think he either misunderstands FBs or he's being l …
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6 votes
Accepted

Are bypass caps reason why uC don't have flyback diode across ferrite bead in the sample sch...

A typical ferrite bead impedance graph: - This one peaks around 400 ohms and as you can see the impedance is virtually purely resistive. These are the eddy current losses in the magnetic material. …
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12 votes
Accepted

Regarding Ferrite Bead

Here's a fairly generic picture of a ferrite bead: - At low frequencies (<10 MHz) its impedance is dominated by its reactance with resistive losses being low. It's basically operating like a piece o …
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1 vote
Accepted

Understanding Ferrite Chokes

A ferrite ring with maybe ten loops (both send and return) will be a pretty good common mode choke i.e. any higher frequency AC noise that occurs on both wires will not easily pass through: - As yo …
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3 votes
Accepted

Ferrite bead selection and simulations for a 2.4 GHz ESP32 3V3 power line

I want to be able to filter the 3V3 power line going out of the ESP32 MCU Well, it seems to me that you have your ferrite bead in the wrong position; it should either be to the right of the 3 parall …
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