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Resonance Frequency Calculator | LC Circuit & RLC Resonant Frequency Tool

Resonance Frequency Calculator

Calculate LC circuit resonant frequency, inductance, or capacitance
L
C
Find Frequency
Find Inductance
Find Capacitance
H
mH
µH
nH
F
µF
nF
pF
Common LC Circuit Presets
Resonant Frequency (f₀)
1.59 MHz
L = 100 µH, C = 100 pF
Angular Frequency (ω)
1.0×10⁷ rad/s
Period (T)
6.28×10⁻⁷ s
Reactance (Xʟ, Xᴄ)
100 Ω
LC Resonance
At resonance: Xʟ = Xᴄ, impedance minimized in series, maximized in parallel
Resonance Formulas
f₀ = 1 / (2π√(LC))
ω₀ = 1 / √(LC)
f₀: Resonant frequency (Hz)
L: Inductance (henries, H)
C: Capacitance (farads, F)
ω₀: Angular resonant frequency (rad/s)
Period: T = 1/f₀
Reactance at resonance: Xʟ = Xᴄ = ω₀L = 1/(ω₀C)
Series resonance: Minimum impedance, maximum current
Parallel resonance: Maximum impedance, minimum current
People Also Ask
⚡ What is resonance frequency in LC circuits?
Frequency where inductive and capacitive reactances cancel: Xʟ = Xᴄ. Formula f = 1/(2π√(LC)). Used in tuning radios, oscillators, filters.
📻 How to calculate resonant frequency for a radio tuner?
Given L and C, f = 1/(2π√(LC)). For AM band (530-1700 kHz), typical L=100µH, C ranges from 365pF (low end) to 100pF (high end).
🔄 Series vs parallel resonance – what's the difference?
Series: minimum impedance at resonance, current max. Parallel: maximum impedance at resonance, current min. Both have same frequency formula.
📊 How does quality factor Q affect resonance?
Q = ω₀L/R = 1/(ω₀CR). Higher Q means sharper resonance, narrower bandwidth. Bandwidth Δf = f₀/Q. Critical for filter selectivity.
🔍 What happens to impedance at resonance?
Series LC: Z = R (minimum). Parallel LC: Z = L/(RC) (maximum). At resonance, energy oscillates between L and C.
🌍 Real-world applications of resonance?
Radio tuners, oscillators, filters, impedance matching, induction heating, wireless power transfer, MRI machines, tesla coils.
What is Resonance Frequency?

Resonance frequency is the natural frequency at which a circuit or system oscillates with maximum amplitude. In an LC circuit, it's the frequency where the inductive reactance (Xʟ = 2πfL) equals the capacitive reactance (Xᴄ = 1/(2πfC)). At this point, energy oscillates between the inductor's magnetic field and the capacitor's electric field, and the circuit exhibits special impedance characteristics depending on configuration.

Why is Resonance Important?

Resonance enables selective frequency response in electronic circuits. It's fundamental to radio receivers (tuning to specific stations), oscillators (generating precise frequencies), filters (passing or blocking certain frequencies), and many wireless systems. Understanding resonance allows engineers to design circuits that efficiently transfer energy at desired frequencies.

Key resonance concepts:

  • Resonant frequency: f₀ = 1/(2π√(LC))
  • Angular frequency: ω₀ = 1/√(LC) rad/s
  • Impedance at resonance: Series: Z = R (minimum), Parallel: Z = L/(RC) (maximum)
  • Bandwidth: Δf = f₀/Q, where Q = quality factor
  • Selectivity: Ability to discriminate between close frequencies
How to Use This Calculator

This calculator solves for any parameter in the LC resonance equation:

Three Calculation Modes:
  1. Find Frequency: Enter L and C → Get resonant frequency f₀
  2. Find Inductance: Enter f₀ and C → Get required inductance L
  3. Find Capacitance: Enter f₀ and L → Get required capacitance C

The calculator provides:

  • Complete resonant parameters: Frequency, angular frequency, period, reactance
  • Multiple unit support: L (H, mH, µH, nH), C (F, µF, nF, pF), f (Hz, kHz, MHz, GHz)
  • Common circuit presets: AM/FM radio, WiFi, crystal radio, audio filters
  • Impedance analysis: Calculates reactance at resonance for series/parallel understanding
  • Educational insights: Explains circuit behavior at resonance
Common LC Circuit Examples

Typical inductance and capacitance values and their resonant frequencies:

ApplicationInductance (L)Capacitance (C)Resonant FrequencyBand
AM Radio (low end)100 µH365 pF530 kHzMedium Wave
AM Radio (high end)100 µH100 pF1590 kHzMedium Wave
FM Radio (88 MHz)0.1 µH32 pF88 MHzVHF
FM Radio (108 MHz)0.1 µH22 pF108 MHzVHF
WiFi 2.4 GHz2 nH1.8 pF2.4 GHzUHF/SHF
WiFi 5 GHz1 nH1 pF5.0 GHzSHF
Crystal Radio500 µH365 pF370 kHzLong Wave
Audio Filter100 mH0.1 µF1.59 kHzAudio
Induction Heating10 µH0.1 µF159 kHzMedium Frequency
Tesla Coil (primary)100 µH0.1 µF50 kHzLow Frequency
Frequency Band Guide:

Audio (20 Hz - 20 kHz): Large L and C values (mH, µF)
Radio Frequency (100 kHz - 100 MHz): µH and pF combinations
VHF/UHF (100 MHz - 3 GHz): nH and pF (stray capacitance matters)
Microwave (>3 GHz): Distributed elements, not lumped LC

Common Questions & Solutions

Below are answers to frequently asked questions about resonance frequency:

Calculation & Formulas
How to calculate resonant frequency for a tank circuit?

Use the formula f = 1 / (2π√(LC)).

Example Calculation:

Given: L = 100 µH = 100×10⁻⁶ H, C = 100 pF = 100×10⁻¹² F

LC = 100×10⁻⁶ × 100×10⁻¹² = 1×10⁻¹⁴

√(LC) = √(1×10⁻¹⁴) = 1×10⁻⁷

2π√(LC) = 2π × 1×10⁻⁷ ≈ 6.2832×10⁻⁷

f = 1 / (6.2832×10⁻⁷) ≈ 1.59×10⁶ Hz = 1.59 MHz

Quick approximation: For L in µH and C in pF, f (MHz) ≈ 159.15 / √(L_µH × C_pF).

How to account for stray capacitance and inductance?

Real circuits have parasitic capacitance and inductance that shift resonance:

Stray Effects:
  • PCB traces: Add small inductance (~1 nH/mm) and capacitance (~0.2 pF/mm)
  • Component leads: Inductance ~1 nH/mm, capacitance ~0.5 pF
  • Adjacent conductors: Increase capacitance
  • Dielectric materials: Change effective capacitance

Correction: f_actual = 1/(2π√((L+L_parasitic)(C+C_parasitic)))

At high frequencies (>100 MHz), these effects dominate. Use simulation or measurement.

Practical Applications
How does an LC tank circuit work in oscillators?

LC tank circuits store energy and oscillate at their resonant frequency, used in oscillators to generate sine waves:

ComponentRole in OscillatorExample Circuit
LC TankDetermines oscillation frequencyColpitts, Hartley oscillators
AmplifierCompensates for losses (provides negative resistance)Transistor, op-amp
FeedbackSustains oscillationsCapacitive or inductive divider
Start-up conditionLoop gain >1 initiallyBiasing network

Example Colpitts: Two capacitors in series with inductor across them. Frequency = 1/(2π√(L×(C₁C₂/(C₁+C₂)))).

How to design a resonant circuit for wireless power transfer?

Wireless power uses resonant inductive coupling at the same frequency:

Resonant Wireless Power Design Steps:
  1. Choose frequency: Typically 100-200 kHz for Qi standard, 6.78 MHz for AirFuel
  2. Design coils: Self-inductance L₁ and L₂ based on size and turns
  3. Add capacitors: Choose C₁ and C₂ so that f₀ = 1/(2π√(L₁C₁)) = 1/(2π√(L₂C₂))
  4. Match impedance: Use series or parallel resonance to optimize power transfer
  5. Consider coupling coefficient k: Changes effective inductance, may need tuning

Example: f₀=100kHz, L=100µH → C = 1/((2π×100e3)² × 100e-6) ≈ 25 nF.

Science & Engineering
What is the significance of quality factor Q in resonance?

Quality factor Q measures the sharpness of resonance and energy efficiency:

ParameterFormulaMeaning
Q (series RLC)Q = ω₀L / R = 1/(ω₀CR)Higher Q → lower loss, sharper peak
Q (parallel RLC)Q = R / (ω₀L) = ω₀CRHigher Q → higher impedance at resonance
Bandwidth (Δf)Δf = f₀ / QFrequency range where power > half
Energy relationshipQ = 2π × (energy stored / energy lost per cycle)Measure of damping

Practical Q values: Air-core coils Q ≈ 50-200, ferrite-core Q ≈ 20-100, quartz crystal Q ≈ 10⁴-10⁶. High-Q circuits used in filters, oscillators for stability.

How does resonance work in mechanical systems?

Mechanical resonance is analogous to electrical resonance:

ElectricalMechanical Equivalent
Inductance LMass (inertia)
Capacitance CCompliance (spring constant inverse)
Resistance RDamping (friction)
Resonant frequency f = 1/(2π√(LC))f = 1/(2π√(m/k)) (spring-mass system)
Voltage across capacitorDisplacement of mass
Current through inductorVelocity of mass

Examples: Pendulum, bridge vibrations, tuning forks, musical instruments. At resonance, amplitude increases dramatically, can cause structural failure (Tacoma Narrows Bridge).

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