VIAS Encyclopedia provides a collection of tables and definitions commonly needed in science and engineering.


Decibel - A Unit for Expressing Ratios

In electronics it is often necessary not only to measure voltage, current and power but also relationships between voltage, current and power. Examples of relationships of two voltages are the voltage gain of an operational amplifier, the noise figure, or the gain of an antenna.

Such relationships are dimensionless in principle and can span a vast range. In order to facilitate computation of such relationships, one can use logarithms for the measurements in question, transforming the division into a subtraction and the multiplication into an addition. Logarithm-based relationships are indicated with the designation 'Bel' (after the inventor of the telephone, Graham Bell). However, usually a tenth of a Bel is used: the decibel or dB.

Since the relationship between voltage and power or current and power at a resistance is quadratic, the definition for the unit decibel results an expression which is different for current and voltage, and for power:

Voltage: dB = 20lg(V1/V0)

Current: dB = 20lg(I1/I0)

Power: dB = 10lg(P1/P0)

If a certain value is defined for V0, I0 or P0, then the quantity dB indicates the relationship between V1, I1 or P1 and the defined value. The defined value is called the zero level; the indication in dB is generally denoted as the level. When indicating a level, the base factor must also always be indicated, which usually occurs in the form an additional specification attached to the designation dB (e.g. dBμV, dbW or dBm).

In audio technology, the zero-level is specified as that voltage, which allows 1 mW power loss to develop at a resistance of 600 ohms. This level is indicated by 'dBm', and its zero-level amounts to 0.775 V. The same applies (for example in antenna technology) to dBm and dbW, if it is used for indicating the power. Hence, dBm then refers to 1 mW, and dbW to 1 W.

The following table indicates the appropriate voltage and power relationships for the most important dB-values as well as frequently used voltage levels and power data.

dB V1/V0 P1/P0 dBW dBm Level Power
60 1000 1000000 30 60 774.6 V 1 kW
50 316.2 100000 20 50 244.9 V 100 W
40 100 10000 10 40 77.46 V 10 W
30 31.62 1000 0 30 24.49 V 1 W
20 10 100 -10 20 7.746 V 100 mW
10 3.162 10 -20 10 2.449 V 10 mW
6 2 4 -30 0 775 mV 1 mW
3 1.41 2 -40 -10 244.9 mV 100 μW
0 1.0 1 -50 -20 77.5 mV 10 μW
-3 0.707 0.5 -60 -30 24.49 mV 1 μW
-6 0.5 0.25
-10 0.3162 0.1 dBW = 10 lg(P/1 W)
-20 0.1 0.01 dBm = 10 lg(P/1 mW) =
-30 0.03162 0.001 20 lg(V/0.775 V)
-40 0.01 0.0001
-50 0.003162 0.00001
-60 0.001 0.000001

 


Last Update: 2010-12-14