Friis formulas for noise

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Friis formula or Friis's formula (sometimes Friis' formula), named after Danish-American electrical engineer Harald T. Friis, is either of two formulas used in telecommunications engineering to calculate the signal-to-noise ratio of a multistage amplifier. One relates to noise factor while the other relates to noise temperature.

The Friis formula for noise factor

Amplifier chain with known power gain factors G1,2,3 und noise factors F1,2,3. Friis's formula is used to calculate the total noise factor of a cascade of stages, each with its own noise factor and power gain (assuming that the impedances are matched at each stage). The total noise factor can then be used to calculate the total noise figure. The total noise factor is given as

Ftotal=F1+F21G1+F31G1G2+F41G1G2G3++Fn1G1G2Gn1

where Fi and Gi are the noise factor and available power gain, respectively, of the i-th stage, and n is the number of stages. Both magnitudes are expressed as ratios, not in decibels.

Consequences

An important consequence of this formula is that the overall noise figure of a radio receiver is primarily established by the noise figure of its first amplifying stage. Subsequent stages have a diminishing effect on signal-to-noise ratio. For this reason, the first stage amplifier in a receiver is often called the low-noise amplifier (LNA). The overall receiver noise "factor" is then

Freceiver=FLNA+Frest1GLNA

where Frest is the overall noise factor of the subsequent stages. According to the equation, the overall noise factor, Freceiver, is dominated by the noise factor of the LNA, FLNA, if the gain is sufficiently high. The resultant Noise Figure expressed in dB is:

NFreceiver=10log(Freceiver)

Derivation

For a derivation of Friis' formula for the case of three cascaded amplifiers (n=3) consider the image below. Chain of three amplifiers A source outputs a signal of power Si and noise of power Ni. Therefore the SNR at the input of the receiver chain is SNRi=Si/Ni. The signal of power Si gets amplified by all three amplifiers. Thus the signal power at the output of the third amplifier is So=SiG1G2G3. The noise power at the output of the amplifier chain consists of four parts:

  • The amplified noise of the source (NiG1G2G3)
  • The output referred noise of the first amplifier Na1 amplified by the second and third amplifier (Na1G2G3)
  • The output referred noise of the second amplifier Na2 amplified by the third amplifier (Na2G3)
  • The output referred noise of the third amplifier Na3

Therefore the total noise power at the output of the amplifier chain equals

No=NiG1G2G3+Na1G2G3+Na2G3+Na3

and the SNR at the output of the amplifier chain equals

SNRo=SiG1G2G3NiG1G2G3+Na1G2G3+Na2G3+Na3.

The total noise factor may now be calculated as quotient of the input and output SNR:

Ftotal=SNRiSNRo=SiNiSiG1G2G3NiG1G2G3+Na1G2G3+Na2G3+Na3=1+Na1NiG1+Na2NiG1G2+Na3NiG1G2G3

Using the definitions of the noise factors of the amplifiers we get the final result:

Ftotal=1+Na1NiG1=F1+Na2NiG1G2=F21G1+Na3NiG1G2G3=F31G1G2=F1+F21G1+F31G1G2.

General derivation for a cascade of n amplifiers: The total noise figure is given as the relation of the signal-to-noise ratio at the cascade input SNRi=SiNi to the signal-to-noise ratio at the cascade output SNRo=SoNo as Ftotal=SNRiSNRo=SiSoNoNi. The total input power of the k-th amplifier in the cascade (noise and signal) is Sk1+Nk1. It is amplified according to the amplifier's power gain Gk. Additionally, the amplifier adds noise with power Na,k. Thus the output power of the k-th amplifier is Gk(Sk1+Nk1)+Na,k. For the entire cascade, one obtains the total output power So+No=((((Si+Ni)G1+Na,1)G2+Na,2)G3+Na,3)G4+ The output signal power thus rewrites as So=Sik=1nGk whereas the output noise power can be written as No=Nik=1nGk+k=1n1Na,kl=k+1nGl+Na,n Substituting these results into the total noise figure leads to Ftotal=Nik=1nGk+k=1n1Na,kl=k+1nGl+Na,nNik=1nGk=1+k=1n1Na,kl=k+1nGlNim=1nGm+Na,nNik=1nGk=1+k=1n1Na,kNim=1kGm+Na,nNik=1nGk =1+Na,1NiG1+k=2n1Na,kNim=1kGm+Na,nNik=1nGk Now, using Fk=1+Na,kNiGk as the noise figure of the individual k-th amplifier, one obtains Ftotal=F1+k=2nFk1l=1k1Gl =F1+F21G1+F31G1G2+F41G1G2G3++Fn1G1G2Gn1

The Friis formula for noise temperature

Friis's formula can be equivalently expressed in terms of noise temperature:

Teq=T1+T2G1+T3G1G2+

Published references

  • J.D. Kraus, Radio Astronomy, McGraw-Hill, 1966.

Online references