Handbook for Sound Engineers

(Wang) #1

518 Chapter 16


16.4.4 Various Microphone Sensitivities


Microphones are subjected to sound pressure levels
anywhere from 40 dB SPL when distant micing to
150 dB SPL when extremely close micing (i.e., ¼ inch
from the rock singer’s mouth or inside a drum or horn).


Various types of microphones have different sensi-
tivities, which is important to know if different types of
microphones are intermixed since gain settings, SNR,
and preamplifier overload will vary. Table 16-1 gives
the sensitivities of a variety of different types of
microphones.


16.4.5 Microphone Thermal Noise


Since a microphone has an impedance, it generates
thermal noise. Even without an acoustic signal, the
microphone will still produce a minute output voltage.
The thermal noise voltage, En, produced by the elec-
trical resistance of a sound source is dependent on the
frequency bandwidth under consideration, the magni-


tude of the resistance, and the temperature existing at
the time of the measurement. This voltage is

(16-11)
where,
k is the Boltzmann’s constant, 1.38 × 10–23 J/K,
t is the absolute temperature, 273° + room temperature,
both in °C,
R is the resistance in ohms,
bw is the bandwidth in hertz.

To change this to dBv use

(16-12)

The thermal noise relative to 1 V is 198 dB for a
1 Hz bandwidth and 1: impedance. Therefore,

(16-13)

where,

Figure 16-60. Microphone sensitivity conversion chart.

SPL
620

100

10

1.0

0.1

0.01

0.001

0.002


110


100


90


80


70


60


50


40


30


20

0.01

0.1

1.0

10.0

100.0


90


80


70


60


50


40


30

Threshold of pain

$ 0.1% atmosphere
Peak rms sound with lips at
microphone; riveter at 35 ft.

Reference sound field
Peak rms sound pressure at
1 ft from man's mouth,
conversational speech

Average rms sound
Ordinary conversation at 3 ft
Average medium office
Decibels

Theater with audience

Country house

Rustle of leaves
in gengle breeze

Threshold of hearing
Sound pressure level

Dynes/square centimeter

SV Millivolts

Open-circuit voltage response
SV = 20 LOG10 E/P dB
E = Open circuit voltage
P = Sound pressure in dB referred to 1 MBAR
Open Circuit power response
SP = SV LOG R + 44 dB
R = Nominal impedance
Sensitivity response
GM = SV 10 LOG 10 RMR 50 dB
RMR = Center value of nominal
impedance range

Impedance RMR
40,000

9,600

2,400

600

150

38

Nominal
impedance
in ohms

100,000
80,000
60,000
40,000

20,000
10,000
8,000
6,000
4,000

2,000

1,000
800
600
400

200

100
80
60
40
20

10
8
6
4
2

1

Gm

190


180


170


160


150


140


130


120

130

120

110

100

90

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

En= 4 ktR bw

EINdBv 20

En
0.775

= log-------------

TN
1 V

---------=–10198 dB++log bw 10 logZ
Free download pdf