Abracon AIMC-04UHQ Multi-layer RF Inductors

Abracon AIMC-04UHQ Multi-layer RF Inductors are ultra-small and high Q RF ceramic multilayer inductors with high Self-Resonant Frequency (SRF) ranging from 1900MHz to 17000MHz. These inductors are designed with a broad range of inductances from 0.2nH to 56nH and with tight tolerances. The high-Q characteristics minimize energy loss, improving signal integrity and efficiency, making these inductors ideal for filtering, impedance matching, and other high-performance RF tasks. The AIMC-04UHQ inductors offer good DC Resistance (DCR) ranging from 0.01Ω to 4.2Ω and current carrying characteristics. These inductors' benefits are ultra-compact, high selectivity, high-frequency performance, discrete design, high reliability, and cost-effectiveness. The AIMC-04UHQ inductors are used in RF amplifiers, mobile devices, satellite communication, IoT technologies, medical devices, drones, LNAs, impedance-matching networks, and signal couplers.

Features

  • Ceramic base with high SRF ranging from 1900MHz to 17000MHz
  • Excellent DC Resistance (DCR) ranging from 0.01Ω to 4.2Ω and current-carrying characteristics
  • Multilayer monolithic construction yields high reliability
  • 0.2nH to 56nH inductance range
  • Tight tolerances down to ±0.05nH
  • Good quality factor
  • 100mA to 1000mA (typical) rated current (Irms)
  • Wide range of inductor options
  • 0.4mm x 0.2mm x 0.3mm dimensions
  • RoHS/RoHS II compliant
  • Moisture Sensitivity Level-1 (MSL-1)

Applications

  • Wireless communication
  • RF amplifiers
  • Filters
  • Oscillators
  • Mobile devices
  • Satellite communication
  • IoT technologies
  • TV transmitters
  • RFID systems
  • Medical devices
  • GPS systems
  • Drones
  • Bluetooth
  • Impedance matching networks
  • Low-Noise Amplifiers (LNAs)
  • Signal coupler
  • Mixers
  • Tuned circuits
  • Phase-Locked Loops (PLLs)
  • RF combiners
  • Diplexers

Mechanical Drawings

Mechanical Drawing - Abracon AIMC-04UHQ Multi-layer RF Inductors
Publicado: 2025-01-07 | Actualizado: 2025-01-10