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  2. Ceramic resonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_resonator

    A ceramic resonator is an electronic component consisting of a piece of a piezoelectric ceramic material with two or more metal electrodes attached. When connected in an electronic oscillator circuit, resonant mechanical vibrations in the device generate an oscillating signal of a specific frequency. Like the similar quartz crystal, they are ...

  3. Crystal oscillator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_oscillator

    A crystal oscillator is an electric oscillator type circuit that uses a piezoelectric resonator, a crystal, as its frequency-determining element. Crystal is the common term used in electronics for the frequency-determining component, a wafer of quartz crystal or ceramic with electrodes connected to it. A more accurate term for "crystal" is ...

  4. Crystal oscillator frequencies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_oscillator_frequencies

    Ceramic resonator used in some intermediate frequency filters and low-cost oscillators. Also used in DTMF generator oscillators. 0.500000 radio (filter) Ceramic resonator used in some intermediate frequency filters and low-cost oscillators 0.524288 2 19 allows binary division to 1 Hz and 32.768 kHz. 1.000 10 6 allows decade division to 1 Hz and ...

  5. Crystal filter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_filter

    Crystal filter. A 9 MHz crystal ladder filter with four matched crystals. A crystal filter allows some frequencies to 'pass' through an electrical circuit while attenuating undesired frequencies. An electronic filter can use quartz crystals as resonator components of a filter circuit. Quartz crystals are piezoelectric, so their mechanical ...

  6. Resonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resonator

    Resonator. A resonator is a device or system that exhibits resonance or resonant behavior. That is, it naturally oscillates with greater amplitude at some frequencies, called resonant frequencies, than at other frequencies. The oscillations in a resonator can be either electromagnetic or mechanical (including acoustic).

  7. Dielectric resonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dielectric_resonator

    Dielectric resonator. A dielectric resonator is a piece of dielectric (nonconductive but polarizable) material, usually ceramic, that is designed to function as a resonator for radio waves, generally in the microwave and millimeter wave bands. The microwaves are confined inside the resonator material by the abrupt change in permittivity at the ...

  8. Pierce oscillator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierce_oscillator

    Extremely low-cost applications sometimes use a piezoelectric PZT crystal ceramic resonator rather than a piezoelectric quartz crystal resonator. The crystal in combination with C 1 and C 2 forms a pi network band-pass filter , which provides a 180° phase shift and a voltage gain from the output to input at approximately the resonant frequency ...

  9. Thin-film bulk acoustic resonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin-film_bulk_acoustic...

    A thin-film bulk acoustic resonator (FBAR or TFBAR) is a device consisting of a piezoelectric material manufactured by thin film methods between two conductive – typically metallic – electrodes and acoustically isolated from the surrounding medium. The operation is based on the piezoelectricity of the piezolayer between the electrodes.