If that IEEE paper is the only evidence, I am going to cry B.S.!
1st, they had a HUGE 400 hz mechanical resonance on that board, which looked more like a bass drum head than a circuit board at resonance! Surprised the chip did not depart the board after the test! They probably had 100s of Gs of force vibrating the board, with mechanical harmonics and all. All they had to do was to add 20 more screws and posts, the resonance would have shifted up to 20 KHz, and the data might be believeable.
2nd, how do you know it is not noise pickup in their measuring setup. The board is on a HUGE electromagnet, powered by swept sine waves. It would be reasonable to assume that there was going to be a 1/2 nanoamp of induced loop current in their board from the vibration stand itself. Did they elevate their test board off of the vibration stand by an inch and re-run the test to see how much magnetic pickup they had? No!
I am unconvinced. Show me some corroborating data!
This might be of interest:
http://www.kemet.com/kemet/web/homepage/kfbk3.nsf/vaFeedbackFAQ/118EBDDDFA5D532C852572BF0046B776/$file/2007%20CARTS%20-%20Reduced%20Microphonics%20and%20Sound%20Emissions.pdf
Keith.
The piezo effect of high dielectric ceramic capacitors is well known and well documented so I'm slightly surprised why you have such an issue with it.
If you apply stress to a piezo material it generates potential differences within the material and this causes noise. That's the way piezo microphones work.
Also, it you apply a large switching voltage across a (piezo) susceptible ceramic capacitor then the reverse effect takes place. The capacitor starts to 'sing' because it acts like a mini piezo speaker.
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I tried a cut and paste but I couldn't get access to the doc. It showed as not found on the Kemet site?
No, if your satisfied with several 100 mOhm ESR instead of a few mOhm.Is it any problem?
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