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Sensitivity (electronics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Minimum magnitude of input signal to produce a specified output by an electronic device

Thesensitivity of anelectronic device, such as acommunications system receiver, or detection device, such as aPIN diode, is the minimummagnitude of inputsignal required to produce a specified output signal having a specifiedsignal-to-noise ratio, or other specified criteria. In general, it is the signal level required for a particular quality of received information.[1]

Insignal processing, sensitivity also relates tobandwidth andnoise floor as is explained in more detail below.

In the field of electronics different definitions are used for sensitivity. The IEEE dictionary[2][3] states: "Definitions of sensitivity fall into two contrasting categories." It also provides multiple definitions relevant to sensors among which 1: "(measuring devices) The ratio of the magnitude of its response to the magnitude of the quantity measured.” and 2: "(radio receiver or similar device) Taken as the minimum input signal required to produce a specified output signal having a specified signal-to-noise ratio.”. The first of these definitions is similar to the definition ofresponsivity and as a consequence sensitivity is sometimes considered to be improperly used as a synonym forresponsivity,[4][5] and it is argued that the second definition, which is closely related to thedetection limit, is a better indicator of the performance of a measuring system.[6]

To summarize, two contrasting definitions of sensitivity are used in the field of electronics

  • Sensitivity first definition: the ratio between output and input signal, or the slope of the output versus input response curve of atransducer,microphone orsensor. An example is given in the section below on electroacoustics.
  • Sensitivity second definition: the minimum magnitude of input signal required to produce an output signal with a specified signal-to-noise ratio of an instrument orsensor. Examples of the use of this definition are given in the sections below on receivers and electronic sensors.

Electroacoustics

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The sensitivity of amicrophone is usually expressed as thesoundfield strength indecibels (dB) relative to 1V/Pa (Pa =N/m2) or as the transfer factor in millivolts perpascal (mV/Pa) into anopen circuit or into a 1 kiloohmload.[citation needed] The sensitivity of ahydrophone is usually expressed as dB relative to 1 V/μPa.[7]

The sensitivity of aloudspeaker is usually expressed as dB / 2.83 VRMS at 1 metre.[citation needed] This is not the same as theelectrical efficiency; seeEfficiency vs sensitivity. This is an example where sensitivity is defined as the ratio of the sensor's response to the quantity measured. One should realize that when using this definition to compare sensors, the sensitivity of the sensor might depend on components like output voltage amplifiers, that can increase the sensor response such that the sensitivity is not a pure figure of merit of the sensor alone, but of the combination of all components in the signal path from input to response.

Receivers

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Sensitivity in a receiver, such aradio receiver, indicates its capability to extract information from a weak signal, quantified as the lowest signal level that can be useful.[8] It is mathematically defined as the minimum input signalSi{\displaystyle S_{i}} required to produce a specified signal-to-noise S/N ratio at the output port of the receiver and is defined as the mean noise power at the input port of the receiver times the minimum required signal-to-noise ratio at the output of the receiver:

Si=k(Ta+Trx)BSoNo{\displaystyle S_{i}=k(T_{a}+T_{rx})B\;\cdot \;{\frac {S_{o}}{N_{o}}}}

where

Si{\displaystyle S_{i}} = sensitivity [W]
k{\displaystyle k} =Boltzmann constant
Ta{\displaystyle T_{a}} =equivalent noise temperature in [K] of the source (e.g. antenna) at the input of the receiver
Trx{\displaystyle T_{rx}} = equivalent noise temperature in [K] of the receiver referred to the input of the receiver
B{\displaystyle B} = bandwidth [Hz]
SoNo{\displaystyle {\frac {S_{o}}{N_{o}}}} = Required SNR at output [-]

The same formula can also be expressed in terms of noise factor of the receiver as

Si=NiFSNRo=kTaBFSNRo{\displaystyle S_{i}=N_{i}\;\cdot \;F\;\cdot \;SNR_{o}=kT_{a}B\;\cdot \;F\;\cdot \;SNR_{o}}

where

F{\displaystyle F} =noise factor
Ni{\displaystyle N_{i}} = input noise power
SNRo{\displaystyle SNR_{o}} = required SNR at output.

Because receiver sensitivity indicates how faint an input signal can be to be successfully received by the receiver, the lower power level, the better. Lower input signal power for a given S/N ratio means better sensitivity since the receiver's contribution to the noise is smaller. When the power is expressed in dBm the larger the absolute value of the negative number, the better the receive sensitivity. For example, a receiver sensitivity of −98 dBm is better than a receive sensitivity of −95 dBm by 3 dB, or a factor of two. In other words, at a specified data rate, a receiver with a −98 dBm sensitivity can hear (or extract useable audio, video or data from) signals that are half the power of those heard by a receiver with a −95 dBm receiver sensitivity.[citation needed].

Electronic Sensors

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For electronic sensors the input signalSi{\textstyle S_{i}} can be of many types, like position, force, acceleration, pressure, or magnetic field. The output signal for an electronicanalog sensor is usually a voltage or a current signalSo{\textstyle S_{o}}. Theresponsivity of an ideal linear sensor in the absence of noise is defined asR=So/Si{\textstyle R=S_{o}/S_{i}}, whereas for nonlinear sensors it is defined as the local slopedSo/dSi{\displaystyle \mathrm {d} S_{o}/\mathrm {d} S_{i}}. In the absence of noise and signals at the input, the sensor is assumed to generate a constant intrinsic output noiseNoi{\textstyle N_{oi}}. To reach a specified signal to noise ratio at the outputSNRo=So/Noi{\displaystyle SNR_{o}=S_{o}/N_{oi}}, one combines these equations and obtains the following idealized equation for its sensitivity[5]S{\displaystyle S}, which is equal to the value of the input signalSi,SNRo{\textstyle S_{i,SNR_{o}}} that results in the specified signal-to-noise ratioSNRo{\displaystyle SNR_{o}} at the output:

S=Si,SNRo=NoiRSNRo{\displaystyle S=S_{i,SNR_{o}}={\frac {N_{oi}}{R}}SNR_{o}}

This equation shows that sensor sensitivity can be decreased (=improved) by either reducing the intrinsic noise of the sensorNoi{\textstyle N_{oi}} or by increasing its responsivityR{\textstyle R}. This is an example of a case where sensivity is defined as the minimum input signal required to produce a specified output signal having a specified signal-to-noise ratio.[2] This definition has the advantage that the sensitivity is closely related to thedetection limit of a sensor if the minimum detectableSNRo is specified (SNR). The choice for theSNRo used in the definition of sensitivity depends on the required confidence level for a signal to be reliably detected (confidence (statistics)), and lies typically between 1-10. The sensitivity depends on parameters likebandwidthBW or integration timeτ=1/(2BW) (as explained here:NEP), because noise level can be reduced bysignal averaging, usually resulting in a reduction of the noise amplitude asNoi1/τ{\displaystyle N_{oi}\propto 1/{\sqrt {\tau }}} whereτ{\displaystyle \tau } is the integration time over which the signal is averaged. A measure of sensitivity independent of bandwidth can be provided by using the amplitude or powerspectral density of the noise and or signals (Si,So,Noi{\displaystyle S_{i},S_{o},N_{oi}}) in the definition, with units like m/Hz1/2, N/Hz1/2, W/Hz or V/Hz1/2. For awhite noise signal over the sensor bandwidth, its power spectral density can be determined from the total noise powerNoi,tot{\displaystyle N_{oi,\mathrm {tot} }} (over the full bandwidth) using the equationNoi,PSD=Noi,tot/BW{\displaystyle N_{oi,\mathrm {PSD} }=N_{oi,\mathrm {tot} }/BW}. Its amplitude spectral density is the square-root of this valueNoi,ASD=Noi,PSD{\displaystyle N_{oi,\mathrm {ASD} }={\sqrt {N_{oi,\mathrm {PSD} }}}}. Note that in signal processing the words energy and power are also used for quantities that do not have the unit Watt (Energy (signal processing)).

In some instruments, likespectrum analyzers, aSNRo of 1 at a specified bandwidth of 1 Hz is assumed by default when defining their sensitivity.[2] For instruments that measure power, which also includes photodetectors, this results in the sensitivity becoming equal to thenoise-equivalent power and for other instruments it becomes equal to the noise-equivalent-input[9]NEI=Noi,ASD/R{\displaystyle NEI=N_{oi,ASD}/R}. A lower value of the sensitivity corresponds to better performance (smaller signals can be detected), which seems contrary to the common use of the word sensitivity where higher sensitivity corresponds to better performance.[6][10] It has therefore been argued that it is preferable to usedetectivity, which is the reciprocal of the noise-equivalent input, as a metric for the performance of detectors[9][11]D=R/Noi{\displaystyle D=R/N_{oi}}.

As an example, consider apiezoresistive force sensor through which a constant current runs, such that it has a responsivityR=1.0 V/N{\displaystyle R=1.0~\mathrm {V} /\mathrm {N} }. TheJohnson noise of the resistor generates a noise amplitude spectral density ofNoi,ASD=10 nV/Hz{\displaystyle N_{oi,{\textrm {ASD}}}=10~\mathrm {nV} /{\sqrt {\mathrm {Hz} }}}. For a specifiedSNRo of 1, this results in a sensitivity and noise-equivalent input ofSi,ASD=NEI=10 nN/Hz{\displaystyle S_{i,ASD}=NEI=10~\mathrm {nN} /{\sqrt {\mathrm {Hz} }}} and a detectivity of(10 nN/Hz)1{\displaystyle (10~\mathrm {nN} /{\sqrt {\mathrm {Hz} }})^{-1}}, such that an input signal of 10 nN generates the same output voltage as the noise does over a bandwidth of 1 Hz.

References

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  1. ^Hernandez, Marco; Mucchi, Lorenzo (2014).Chapter 1 - Survey and Coexistence Study of IEEE 802.15.6™ -2012 Body Area Networks, UWB PHY. Academic Press. pp. 1–44.doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-396520-2.00001-7.ISBN 978-0-12-396520-2. Retrieved19 March 2024.
  2. ^abc100-2000 - The Authoritative Dictionary of IEEE Standards Terms, Seventh Edition (Report). 2000.doi:10.1109/ieeestd.2000.322230.ISBN 0-7381-2601-2.
  3. ^Vig, J.R.; Walls, F.L. (2000)."A review of sensor sensitivity and stability".Proceedings of the 2000 IEEE/EIA International Frequency Control Symposium and Exhibition (Cat. No.00CH37052). IEEE. pp. 30–33.doi:10.1109/FREQ.2000.887325.ISBN 978-0-7803-5838-6.
  4. ^Book: Sensors and Transducers Characteristics, Applications, Instrumentation, Interfacing M..J. Usher and D.A. Keating
  5. ^ab"Lecture 2: Noise processes and measurement sensitivity — Open Quantum Sensing and Measurement Notes".interactivetextbooks.tudelft.nl. Retrieved2024-08-19.
  6. ^abEkins, Roger; Edwards, Philip (1997-10-01)."Point On the meaning of "sensitivity"".Clinical Chemistry.43 (10):1824–1831.doi:10.1093/clinchem/43.10.1824.ISSN 0009-9147.
  7. ^"Underwater Acoustics".resource.npl.co.uk. Retrieved2020-12-04.
  8. ^Layne, Dennis."Receiver Sensitivity and Equivalent Noise Bandwidth".High Frequency Electronics.Archived from the original on 2020-08-23. Retrieved2020-08-23.
  9. ^abJones, R. (1959)."Phenomenological Description of the Response and Detecting Ability of Radiation Detectors".Proceedings of the IRE.47 (9):1495–1502.doi:10.1109/JRPROC.1959.287047.ISSN 0096-8390.
  10. ^"sensitivity",Wiktionary, the free dictionary, 2024-08-19, retrieved2024-08-21
  11. ^Clark Jones, R. (1952)."'Detectivity': the Reciprocal of Noise Equivalent Input of Radiation".Nature.170 (4335):937–938.Bibcode:1952Natur.170..937C.doi:10.1038/170937b0.ISSN 1476-4687.

Public Domain This article incorporatespublic domain material fromFederal Standard 1037C.General Services Administration. Archived fromthe original on 2022-01-22. (in support ofMIL-STD-188).

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