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Electromagnetic near-field scanner (NFS[1]) is a measurement system to determine a spatial distribution of an electrical quantity provided by a single or multiple field probes acquired in the near-field region of a device under test possibly accompanied by the associated numerical post-processing methods enabling a conversion of the measured quantity into electromagnetic field.
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (December 2016) |
Depending on a signal receiver detecting the probe signal, voltage as a function of time or frequency is a typical measured quantity. It should be underlined that as the DUT may be considered any object radiating or storing electromagnetic field energy intentionally or unintentionally, e.g. the antenna radiation excited beyond its resonance frequency. The voltage pattern is usually mapped on planar, cylindrical or spherical geometrical surfaces as a collection of a finite number of spatial samples.
First scanners were built in the 1950s to map probe signal variations in front of microwave antennas. Determination of a far-field radiation pattern constitutes the primary application of antenna near-field scanners. This novel technique offered an attractive alternative to conventional open area test sites for measurements of high gain, electrically large antennas or antenna arrays (gain > 20 dBi, diameter > 5λ) in an indoor, controlled and all-weather capability environment. Among well recognized and analyzed errors of the near-field measurements, multiple reflections between an antenna under test (AUT) and an electromagnetically non-transparent field detection system (scatterer) belong to the most contributing errors when the AUT has a high gain. Therefore, the scanning surface is recommended to be located outside the reactive near-field region of the AUT.
In EMI applications, the main focus of a scanner system is on locating real electromagnetic interference (EMI) sources distributed in a device under test, the DUT. Accordingly, the scanning surface is located in the highly reactive region of the DUT to enable a precise spatial localization of the electric charges and current surface densities directly from the mapped pattern of probe signals. Typically the separation between the scanning surface and the DUT is much smaller than the largest physical dimension of the DUT. Typical distances are 1 mm for scanning of PCBs and 30 μm for scanning of integrated circuits on a die level. In order to quickly localize field emission in the frequency domain, time domain detection techniques together with signal processing based on fast Fourier transform could be employed, e.g. utilizing a digital storage oscilloscope as a signal receiver.
IEC/TS 61967-3: Integrated circuits - Measurement of electromagnetic emissions, 150 kHz to 1 GHz - Part 3: Measurement of radiated emissions - Surface scan method. International Electrotechnical Commission. June 2005.
Stuart Gregson, John McCormick and Clive Parini (2007). The Principles of Planar Near-Field Antenna Measurements. London, United Kingdom: The Institution of Engineering and Technology.
Slater, Dan (1991). Near-Field Antenna Measurements. Norwood, MA, USA: Artech House, Inc.
Tankielun, Adam (2008). Data Post-Processing and Hardware Architecture of Electromagnetic Near-Field Scanner. Aachen, Germany: Shaker Verlag.
Yaghjian, Arthur D. (January 1986). "An Overview of Near-Field Antenna Measurements" (PDF). IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation. AP-34 (1): 30–45. Bibcode:1986ITAP...34...30Y. doi:10.1109/tap.1986.1143727.
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