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![]() "Richard Hosking" a écrit dans le message news: ... Dear all I want to design a DDS board which has attenuators on the output to provide a low level output (-100dBm) I have a venerable HP8640B which can give a calibrated output to -137dBm To achieve this HP have gone to extraordinary lengths to shield the oscillator attenuator/output amp circuits and any control lines - I note there are at least two stages of bypassing/low pass filtering with an intermediate shielded section My question is: how do I get data and power lines into my DDS chip (in a shielded enclosure) and prevent RF leakage out which will limit the useful minimum level out from the DDS board? I presume I will have to use a buffer of some sort for the data lines and extensive bypassing on the power lines. I want reasoanbly quick update speeds for my DDS, which is a serial port, which will mean data rates in the MHz region. Richard, I don't have direct experience about this but I'm developping a VNA with pretty tight specs so I had to think about things like this. Here are some of my reflexions, and also some ideas provided by other people : Low output level is not the same thing as low leakages : it depends on where leakages couples. What you don't want is leakages coupled to the output port, but you may have some leakages that will be stopped by your main enclosure (OK, not mW though) and still maintain low level at the output port. Whether this can be tolerated or not depends on the rest of your equipment. Besides the DC/command lines, to achieve accurate low level output will require good internal shielding between the DDS section and the attenuator : 1dB accuracy at -100dBm means leakages coupled to the output has to be under -120dBm and 0.1dB lower this to -140dBm. At this level, ground plane management can be "difficult". Depending on your frequency range it might also help to provide separation between the DDS and the attenuator with a small xformer. You'll have to think to current paths for both cases, high frequency and low frequency, if your frequency span doesn't allow an xformer, because currents spreads differently, depending on freq. I've used fasthenry (a freeware prog) with great success to model this kind of things in another application. If you really need very, very good shielding (radiated power inside the enclosure) it might be easier/better to "double shield" the beast and to add a lowpass section between the 2 shields. Again, think to current paths and that common mode is your enemy ("ground" potential that's shifted by return currents). For the DDS command lines, optos might help, but maybe not as much as expected if you want a high speed link. If you really want high speed and isolation I'd go for an optic fiber. Not very expensive and coupled with a double shielded box, you'll have vanishingly low leakages. Just think to neglect nothing and you're OK. Thanks, Fred. |
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