Multisine Signals: Fundamentals and Practical Applications

Multisine vs. Single-Tone Testing: Benefits and Trade-offs

Overview

Testing signals are central to characterizing linear and nonlinear systems. Two common approaches are single-tone (pure sine) testing and multisine testing (superposition of multiple sinusoids). Each method has strengths and limitations depending on goals such as frequency resolution, measurement speed, distortion detection, and signal-to-noise considerations. This article compares both approaches and offers practical guidance for choosing and applying them.

What they are

  • Single-tone testing: Excite the system with one sinusoidal frequency at a time, sweep across frequencies to build a frequency response.
  • Multisine testing: Excite the system with many sinusoids simultaneously (possibly with carefully chosen amplitudes, phases, and frequency spacing).

Key benefits — Multisine

  • Faster frequency coverage: Measures many frequencies in a single acquisition, reducing test time.
  • Higher effective SNR: Energy concentrated on test frequencies allows longer integration and averaging, improving SNR for those bins.
  • Nonlinearity detection: Harmonics and intermodulation products appear outside the excited bins and can be measured directly if not excited, enabling clear separation of linear response and nonlinear distortion.
  • Flexible design: Can shape amplitude across bands, include random-phase or optimized-phase multisines to control crest factor and measurement dynamics.
  • Concurrent system identification: Good for time-varying systems where sweeping would misrepresent dynamics.

Key benefits — Single-tone

  • Simplicity and interpretability: Straightforward to implement and analyze; phase and amplitude at a single frequency are easy to interpret.
  • Low crest factor: Single sine has minimal crest factor, reducing amplifier clipping and peak-power issues.
  • Fine control at each frequency: Allows targeted, controlled excitation and settling at each frequency (useful for very narrowband nonlinear calibration).
  • Classic techniques compatibility: Easily used with lock-in amplifiers and narrowband measurement setups that excel at extracting small signals in noise.

Trade-offs and limitations

  • Test duration: Single-tone sweeps can be slow—especially at high resolution—while multisines shorten total test time.
  • Leakage and resolution: Multisine requires windowing and careful frequency bin alignment to avoid spectral leakage; single-tone can use longer dwell per frequency to minimize uncertainty.
  • Crest factor and dynamic range: Multisines typically have higher crest factor than single sine; this raises peak demands on signal sources and power stages and can provoke nonlinear behavior if peaks clip. Phase optimization can mitigate but not eliminate this.
  • Complexity: Multisine design (frequency selection, phase optimization, amplitude shaping) and processing (bin alignment, harmonic analysis) are more complex than single-tone methods.
  • Nonlinearity interaction: While multisines reveal nonlinear products efficiently, their simultaneous multiple excitations can produce complex intermodulation, making root-cause analysis harder than isolated single-tone harmonic testing.
  • Transient and time-varying systems: Single-tone with steady-state per frequency can give clearer per-frequency steady-state measures; multisines are better when you must capture system behavior quickly or when the system changes over time.

Practical guidelines for choice

  • Use multisine when:

    • You need rapid broadband measurements (e.g., vibration testing, acoustic rooms, electrical networks).
    • You want to quantify or separate nonlinear distortion from linear response efficiently.
    • The system is time-varying or testing time is limited.
    • You can manage crest factor and ensure your hardware handles peaks.
  • Use single-tone when:

    • Highest peak-power efficiency and minimal crest factor are required.
    • You need very precise, narrowband characterization or stepwise tuning.
    • Simplicity is preferred or measurement hardware uses narrowband synchronous detection.
    • Root-cause isolation of a specific harmonic under controlled excitation is desired.

Design and measurement tips

  • For multisines:
    • Align excited frequencies to FFT bins and use integer-multiple record lengths to avoid leakage.
    • Optimize phases to reduce crest factor (e.g., Schroeder phases) if hardware peak limits are tight.
    • Reserve unexcited bins to measure harmonics/intermodulation directly.
    • Use averaging across repeated multisine periods to improve SNR while preserving nonlinear signatures.
  • For single-tone sweeps:
    • Use sufficient settling time at each frequency for steady-state measurement.
    • Employ lock-in or synchronous detection to maximize sensitivity.
    • Consider finer frequency steps in regions of rapid change (resonances).

Example comparison (short)

  • Measurement time: multisine much faster (one-shot) vs. single-tone long sweeps.
  • Nonlinear detection: multisine reveals intermodulation across bands; single-tone shows harmonics from controlled amplitude.
  • Hardware stress: multisine higher peaks → more risk of clipping.

Conclusion

Multisine and single-tone testing each have clear roles. Multisine excels at fast, broadband, and nonlinear-aware testing but requires careful design to control crest factor and spectral leakage. Single-tone testing remains the preferred method for simple, low-peak, precise narrowband characterization and when analysis simplicity is paramount. Choose based on test duration limits, nonlinearity interest, hardware constraints, and desired analysis simplicity.

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