Form factor (electronics)

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In electronics, the form factor of an alternating current waveform (signal) is the ratio of the RMS (Root Mean Square) value to the average value (mathematical mean of absolute values of all points on the waveform).[1] It identifies the ratio of the direct current of equal power relative to the given alternating current. The former can also be defined as the direct current that will produce equivalent heat.[2]

Calculating the form factor

For an ideal, continuous wave function over time T, the RMS can be calculated in integral form:[3]


X_\mathrm{rms} = \sqrt {{1 \over {T}} {\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T} {[x(t)]}^2\, dt}}

The rectified average is then the mean of the integral of the function's absolute value:[3]


X_\mathrm{arv} = {1 \over {T}} {\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T} {|x(t)|\, dt}}

The quotient of these two values is the form factor, k_\mathrm{f}, or in unambiguous situations, k.


k_\mathrm{f} = \frac \mathrm{RMS} \mathrm{ARV} = \frac{\sqrt {{1 \over {T}} {\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T} {[f(t)]}^2\, dt}}}{{1 \over {T}} {\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T} {|x(t)|\, dt}}} = \frac{\sqrt{T\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T}{{[f(t)]}^2\, dt}}}{\int_{t_0}^{t_0+T} {|x(t)|\, dt}}

X_\mathrm{rms} reflects the variation in the function's distance from the average, and is disproportionately impacted by large deviations from the unrectified average value.[4] It will always be at least as large as X_\mathrm{arv}, which only measures the absolute distance from said average. The form factor thus cannot be smaller than 1 (a square wave where all momentary values are equally far above or below the average value; see below), and has no theoretical upper limit for functions with sufficient deviation.

\mathrm{RMS}_\mathrm{total} = \sqrt{{{\mathrm{RMS}_1}^2} + {{\mathrm{RMS}_2}^2} + ... + {{\mathrm{RMS}_n}^2}}

can be used for combining signals of different frequencies (for example, for harmonics[2]), while for the same frequency, \mathrm{RMS}_\mathrm{total} = \mathrm{RMS}_1 + \mathrm{RMS}_2 + ... + \mathrm{RMS}_n.

As ARV's on the same domain can be summed as \mathrm{ARV}_\mathrm{total} = \mathrm{ARV}_1 + \mathrm{ARV}_2 + ... + \mathrm{ARV}_n, the form factor of a complex wave composed of multiple waves of the same frequency can sometimes be calculated as

k_{\mathrm{f}_\mathrm{tot}} = \frac{\mathrm{RMS}_\mathrm{tot}}{\mathrm{ARV}_\mathrm{tot}} = \frac{\mathrm{RMS}_1 + ... + \mathrm{RMS}_n}{\mathrm{ARV}_1 + ... + \mathrm{ARV}_n}.

Application

Digital AC measuring instruments are often built with specific waveforms in mind. For example, many digital AC multimeters are specifically scaled to display the RMS value of a sine wave. Since the RMS calculation can be difficult to achieve digitally, the absolute average is calculated instead and the result multiplied by the form factor of a sinusoid. This method will give less accurate readings for waveforms other than a sinewave.[5]

Properties

As discussed above, the form factor is the quotient of the RMS and the ARV. The independent properties and similarities of these two values define the properties of the form factor.

For example, both RMS and ARV are directly proportional to the Amplitude a. However, their division removes the amplitude from the equation, meaning that form factor of a given waveform is the same regardless of how large or small the alternating current or voltage may be.

The squaring in RMS and the absolute value in ARV mean that both the values and the form factor are independent of the wave function's sign (and thus, the electrical signal's direction) at any point. For this reason, the form factor is the same for a direction-changing wave with a regular average of 0 and its fully rectified version.

The form factor, k_\mathrm{f}, is the smallest of the three wave factors, the other two being crest factor k_\mathrm{a} = \frac{X_\mathrm{max}}{X_\mathrm{rms}} and the lesser-known averaging factor k_\mathrm{av} = \frac{X_\mathrm{max}}{X_\mathrm{arv}}.

k_\mathrm{av} \ge k_\mathrm{a} \ge k_\mathrm{f}[2]

Due to their definitions (all relying on the Root Mean Square, Average rectified value and maximum amplitude of the waveform), the three factors are related by k_\mathrm{av} = k_\mathrm{a} k_\mathrm{f},[2] so the form factor can be calculated with k_\mathrm{f} = \frac{k_\mathrm{av}}{k_\mathrm{a}}.

Specific form factors

a represents the amplitude of the function, and any other coefficients applied in the vertical dimension. For example, 8 \sin(t) can be analyzed as f(t) = a \sin(t),\ a = 8. As both RMS and ARV are directly proportional to it, it has no effect on the form factor, and can be replaced with a normalized 1 for calculating that value.

D = \frac{\tau}{T} is the duty cycle, the ratio of the "pulse" time \tau (when the function's value is not zero) to the full wave period T. Most basic wave functions only achieve 0 for infinitely short instants, and can thus be considered as having \tau = T, D = 1. However, any of the non-pulsing functions below can be appended with \frac{\sqrt{D}}{D} = \frac{1}{\sqrt{D}} = \sqrt{\frac{T}{\tau}}

to allow pulsing. This is illustrated with the half-rectified sine wave, which can be considered a pulsed full-rectified sine wave with D = \frac{1}{2}, and has k_\mathrm{f} = k_{\mathrm{f}_\mathrm{frs}}\sqrt{2}.

Waveform Image RMS ARV Form Factor
Sine wave Simple sine wave.svg \frac{a}{\sqrt{2}}[2] a\frac{2}{\pi}[2] \frac{\pi}{2\sqrt{2}} \approx 1.11072073[3]
Half-wave rectified sine Simple half-wave rectified sine.svg \frac{a}{2} \frac{a}{\pi} \frac{\pi}{2} \approx 1.5707963
Full-wave rectified sine Simple full-wave rectified sine.svg \frac{a}{\sqrt{2}} a\frac{2}{\pi} \frac{\pi}{2\sqrt{2}}
Square wave, constant value Square wave.svg a a \frac{a}{a} = 1
Pulse wave Pulse wide wave.svg a\sqrt{D}[6] aD \frac{1}{\sqrt{D}} = \sqrt{\frac{T}{\tau}}
Triangle wave Triangle wave.svg \frac{a}{\sqrt{3}}[7] \frac{a}{2} \frac{2}{\sqrt{3}} \approx 1.15470054
Sawtooth wave 100px \frac{a}{\sqrt{3}} \frac{a}{2} \frac{2}{\sqrt{3}}
Gaussian white noise U(-1,1) \frac{1}{\sqrt{3}}[citation needed] \frac{1}{2}[citation needed] \frac{2}{\sqrt{3}}

References

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