Chris Gammell
Analog Life, LLC
Presented at the Hackaday Superconference 2019
I wanted this talk to help shortcut some of the struggles I had (and have) when I was getting started with the field of RF.
Higher speed stuff like digital was always there as well, but usually nothing very high speed either (<100 MHz)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TnRn3Kn_aXg
What happens when things go wrong on the bench?
What happens when things go wrong at the $10K/day test lab?
Your signals might interfere with someone else's signals and that's not nice.
Especially for beginners
They are asking about the frequency content contained within a signal that exists in the real world.
http://tiny.cc/RigolFFTplot
You're going to see units like "dB", or "dBm" which an easy way to refer to things that change in value by orders of magnitude
As an added bonus: Gains add together
Most RF circuits deal in power, not in just voltage or current
This is referred to as the "link budget"
Image courtesy of osmocom.org
You won't transmit as far as you thought
Your system will be less efficient
Energy is "bounced back" and is usually lost to heat or radiated emissions (bad)
It may not work at all
You might damage your output driver section
Environmental conditions can affect it, including things like the enclosure or thing surrounding the antenna
Antenna manufacturing variations means you might have different specs than stated
http://tiny.cc/mo0mbz
"Match a 1000-Ω source to a 100-Ω load at frequency (f) of 50 MHz. You desire a bandwidth (BW) of 6 MHz."
http://tiny.cc/mo0mbz
http://tiny.cc/RigolSA
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This is actually a measurement tool, which plots various measurements
Image courtesy digikey.com
Also known as "reflection coefficient"
Image courtesy antenna-theory.net
omlinc.com
A wire is just a wire
PCBs construction isn't as important as the components placed on that PCB
A capacitor is there for charge storage
Current can be isolated by ground cuts
Current follows the path of least resistance
http://tiny.cc/Inductor_QR
Image courtesy makerspaces.com
http://tiny.cc/AAC_impedance
https://tiny.cc/Stackup_JLC
Image courtesy of Wikipedia
Image courtesy of iFuture Technology
http://tiny.cc/KemetCapPDF
http://tiny.cc/KemetCapPDF
https://www.analog.com/en/analog-dialogue/articles/staying-well-grounded.html
http://tiny.cc/ECE_SE_highspeed
http://tiny.cc/EIU_edu_wires
(and most are really brand names)
"A Practical Guide To RF And Mixed Signal Printed Circuit Board Layout" - Brendon Parise and Scott Nance[1]
[1]: https://amzn.to/2ZdnUzm
[2]: https://amzn.to/2HmQwey
[3]: https://amzn.to/2HnSWcY
Twitter: @Chris_Gammell
E-mail: chris@analoglife.co
Many thanks to Jeff Keyzer (@mightyohm) and Derek Kozel (@derekkozel) for reviewing this presentation