standard inductor
standard inductor
[′stan·dərd in′dək·tər] (electromagnetism)
An inductor (coil) having high stability of inductance value, with little variation of inductance with current or frequency and with a low temperature coefficient; it may have an air core or an iron core; used as a primary standard in laboratories and as a precise working standard for impedance measurements.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
References in periodicals archive
The inductors selected are a
standard inductor with thin metal underpass, a MLP multilayer inductor with 9 [micro]m thick spiral metallization and a 3-D inductor.
With all of these technology attributes, a Q of 17 can be achieved for a 1 nH inductor at 5 GHz by using a
standard inductor device from the device library.
Another solution is to use two
standard inductors symmetrically placed.
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