Title: Welcome to Power Measurement Basics
1Welcome to Power Measurement Basics
2Agenda
3Importance of Proper Power Levels
- Power too low
- Signal buried in noise
- Power too high
- Nonlinear distortion can occur
4Importance of Power in Microwave Applications
5Units and Definitions
- Unit of power is the watt (W) 1W 1 joule/sec
- The watt is a basic unit 1 volt is defined as 1
W/ampere - Relative power measurements are expressed in dB
P(dB) 10 log(P/Pref) - Absolute power measurements are expressed in dBm
P(dBm) 10 log(P/1 mW)
6Power P (I)(V)
AC component of power
DC component of power
P
Amplitude
t
I
V
7Power Measurements at Different Frequencies
- DC
- Low Frequency
- High Frequency
V
-
I
V
I
8Agenda
9Types of Power Measurements
- Average Power
- Pulse Power
- Peak Envelope Power
CW RF signal
Pulsed RF signal
Gaussian pulse signal
10Average Power
Average over several modulation cycles
time
Average over many pulse repetitions
11Pulse Power
- Complete modulation envelope analysis
Pulse Top Amplitude
90 amplitude points
50 amplitude points
Average Power
Pulse Base Amplitude
10 amplitude points
t
Offtime
Risetime
Falltime
PRI
12Peak Envelope Power
For pulses that are not rectangular
13Measurement Types Summary
- For a CW signal, average, pulse, and peak
envelope power give the same results - Average power is more frequently measured because
of easy-to-use measurement equipment and highly
accurate and traceable specifications - Pulse and peak envelope power can often be
calculated from average power
14Agenda
- Importance and definitions of power measurements
- Types of power measurements
- Measurement uncertainty
- Sensor types and power meters
- Considerations in choosing power measurement
equipment
15Sources of Power Measurement Uncertainty
- Sensor and source mismatch errors
- Power sensor errors
- Power meter errors
Sensor
Mismatch
Meter
16Calculation of Mismatch Uncertainty
Power Meter
Signal Source 10 GHz
Power Sensor
HP 8481A
HP 437B
SWR 1.18
SWR 2.0
r 0.33
r 0.083
SOURCE
SENSOR
Mismatch Uncertainty 2 r r
100
SOURCE
SENSOR
Mismatch Uncertainty 2 0.33 0.083 100
5.5
17Power Sensor Errors (Effective Efficiency)
Various sensor losses
Power Meter
DC signal
P
r
Power Sensor
P
gl
Cal Factor
18Power Meter Errors
Zero Carryover
/- 1 count
Power reference error
Drift
Noise
Zero Set
Instrumentation error
19Calculating Power Measurement Uncertainty
Mismatch uncertainty Cal factor
uncertainty Power reference uncertainty Instru
mentation uncertainty Now that the
uncertainties have been determined, how are they
combined?
5.5 1.9 1.2 0.5
20Worst-Case Uncertainty
- In our example worst case uncertainty would
be 5.5 1.9 1.2 0.5
9.19.1 10 log (1 0.091) 0.38 dB-
9.1 10 log (1 - 0.091) - 0.41 dB
21RSS Uncertainty
- In our example RSS uncertainty would be
2
2
2
2
(5.5) (1.9) (1.2) (0.5)
6.0 6.0 10 log (1 0.060) 0.25 dB -
6.0 10 log (1 - 0.060) -0.27 dB
22Agenda
- Importance and definitions of power measurements
- Types of power measurements
- Measurement uncertainty
- Sensor types and power meters
- Considerations in choosing power measurement
equipment
23Methods of Sensing Power
Power Meter
Substituted DC or low frequency equivalent
Net RF power absorbed by sensor
Power Sensor
24Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
Characteristic curves of a typical thermistor
element
25Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
- A self-balancing bridge containing a thermistor
Thermistor mount
26Power Meters for Thermistor Mounts
Thermistor mounts are located in the sensor, not
the meter.
27Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
- Physics of a thermocouple
E-field
Bound Ions
Diffused Electrons
28Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
- The principles behind the thermocouple
Metal 1
Cold junction
Hot junction
-
Metal 2
V V V - V
1
2
h
0
29Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
RF power
gold leads
gold leads
- Thermocouple implementation
cold junction
C
c
Thin-Film Resistor
n - Type Silicon
hot
hot junction
n - Type Silicon
RF Input
Thin-Film Resistor
cold
To dc Voltmeter
Thermocouples
30Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
Linear Region
Square Law Region of Diode Sensor
V
µ
(log)
o
Noise Floor
watts
0.1 nW
0.01 mW
-20 dBm
-70 dBm
31Thermistors Thermocouples Diode Detectors
- How does a diode detector work?
-
32The Basic Power Meter
Meter
Diode Sensor
Synchronous Detector
Diode Detector
LPF
BPF
ADC
Ranging
Chopper
DC
RF
AC
AUTOZERO
Square Wave Generator
µProcessor
220 Hz
DAC
33Agenda
- Importance and definitions of power measurements
- Types of power measurements
- Measurement uncertainty
- Sensor types and power meters
- Considerations in choosing power measurement
equipment
34Considerations in Choosing Power Measurement
Equipment
35Thermistors as Transfer Standards
Microcalorimeter National Reference Standard
NIST
Working Standards
NIST
Commercial Standards Laboratory
Rising Costs / Better Accuracy
Measurement Reference Standard
Manufacturing Facility
Transfer Standard
General Test Equipment
User
36Power Ranges of the Various Sensor Types
Thermocouple square-law region
Extended range using an attenuator
Diode detector square-law region
dBm
-70
--60
-50
-40
-30
-20
-10
10
20
30
40
50
0
37Susceptibility to Overload
38Frequency Ranges
39Reflection Coefficient
40Any Questions?