RF Inductors Key Characteristics and Applications

This article based on Knowles Precision Devices blog explains RF Inductors via their key characteristics and applications.

Inductors are a fundamental component in electronic circuits, but not all inductors perform equally across different frequency ranges.

At high frequencies, standard power inductors suffer from increased losses, reduced efficiency, and undesirable parasitic effects.

RF inductors, specifically designed for radio frequency and microwave applications, address these challenges by minimizing resistive losses, optimizing self-resonant frequency, and maintaining signal integrity.

Here, we examine the distinguishing characteristics of RF inductors, highlighting how they differ from other inductor types and why they are essential in high-frequency applications.

How Are RF Inductors Different from Other Inductors?

An RF inductor is a specialized passive electronic component designed to operate efficiently at radio frequencies and microwave frequencies. Unlike power inductors, which manage energy transfer and filtering in power supply applications, RF inductors are optimized for minimal energy loss and high signal integrity at high frequencies.

The primary difference between RF inductors and other inductors lies in:

Key Electrical Properties for Selecting RF Inductors

Selecting the right RF inductor requires an understanding of its key electrical properties, which includes:

ApplicationInductanceMaximum DC Current (IDC)Self-Resonant Frequency (SRF)Quality Factor 
(Q)
DC Resistance (RDC)
High-frequency resonance circuits (RF)LowLowVery HighVery HighLow
EM coupling (Power)HighHighLowVery Low
Filter circuits (Power)HighHighHighLowVery Low
Switch-mode power supplies, DC/DC converters (Power)HighMediumLowVery Low

RF inductors are essential in high-frequency applications, enabling critical functions in communication, medical, and defense systems. They are used in RF filters and oscillators to control frequency bands, amplifier biasing circuits for impedance matching, and MRI preamplifiers (Figure 1) to ensure low-noise signal processing. Additionally, they support radar and communication systems across VHF, UHF, and S-band frequencies and maintain signal integrity in RF test equipment.

Figure 1: In MRI preamplifiers, RF inductors are critical in low-noise signal amplification and maintaining signal integrity, which is essential for high-sensitivity imaging.
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