1 / 26

Establishing Traceability for Quantities Derived from Multiple Traceable Quantities

Establishing Traceability for Quantities Derived from Multiple Traceable Quantities. Alberto Campillo, Jian Liu Agilent Technologies alberto_campillo@agilent.com jian_liu@agilent.com. Sharing of learning experience. Target audience: Engineers new to metrology and traceability

aram
Télécharger la présentation

Establishing Traceability for Quantities Derived from Multiple Traceable Quantities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Establishing Traceability for Quantities Derived from Multiple Traceable Quantities Alberto Campillo, Jian Liu Agilent Technologies alberto_campillo@agilent.com jian_liu@agilent.com

  2. Sharing of learning experience • Target audience: • Engineers new to metrology and traceability • Learning objectives: • Concept of SI, base quantity, derived quantity and traceability. • General approach of establishing traceability. • Concept, measurement techniques and traceability of phase noise.

  3. Agenda • Derived quantity and traceability: concept • Establishing traceability: general approach • Phase noise: example • Definition and expressions • Direct spectrum method • Phase detector method • Summary

  4. Agenda • Derived quantity and traceability: concept • Establishing traceability: general approach • Phase noise: example • Definition and expressions • Direct spectrum method • Phase detector method • Summary

  5. Introduction • Traced to the same quantity STD weight: 50 g ± 0.1 g UUT weight: 50 g ± 1 g • Derived from several different quantities • v = d / t • I = V /R • phase noise = f(x1,x2,…)

  6. Derived quantity concept * http://www.bipm.org/en/si/si_brochure/ International System of Units (SI)*

  7. Derived quantity concept / top of traceability chain voltage (Josephson) resistance (Quantum Hall) traceable voltage traceable resistance NOT EXACTLY SO! speed voltage current phase noise Any quantities can be derived SI base quantities =

  8. Derived quantity concept * JCGM 200:2008, International vocabulary of metrology - Basic and general concepts and associated terms (VIM) International Vocabulary of Metrology (VIM)*

  9. Traceability concept * JCGM 200:2008, International vocabulary of metrology - Basic and general concepts and associated terms (VIM) International Vocabulary of Metrology (VIM)*

  10. Agenda • Derived quantity and traceability: concept • Establishing traceability: general approach • Phase noise: example • Definition and expressions • Direct spectrum method • Phase detector method • Summary

  11. Establishing traceability: general approach • Required content: • Measurand • Measurement method • Measurement equation(s) • Uncertainty equation(s) • MU contributors • Final MU • Supporting evidences • Physical principle: most essential!

  12. Agenda • Derived quantity and traceability: concept • Establishing traceability: general approach • Phase noise: example • Definition and expressions • Direct spectrum method • Phase detector method • Summary

  13. Definition and expressions • Expression 1: • Single sideband power • 1 Hz bandwidth • frequency f offset from the carrier • referenced to the carrier frequency power. f Phase noise: short-term frequency stability in frequency domain

  14. Definition and expressions • Expression 2: • Spectral density of phase fluctuations • Phase variance per 1 Hz BW • In dB when referenced to 1 rad/sqrt(Hz) When total phase fluctuation in the modulation sideband << 1 radian (small angle criterion):

  15. 8563A SPECTRUM ANALYZER 9 kHz - 26.5 GHz Direct spectrum method Spectrum Analyzer UUT

  16. Direct spectrum method Phase noise traced to Frequency RF power Attenuation Reflection coefficient • Major MU contributors: • Bandwidth normalization (shape of IF filter & amplifier) • Amplitude accuracy • High offset frequency Mismatch

  17. Phase detector method

  18. Phase detector method Major MU contributors: Phase detector K factor Baseband analyzer accuracy Test set frequency response PLL suppression correction High offset frequency mismatch Phase noise traced to Frequency RF power AC Voltage Attenuation Reflection coefficient Noise

  19. Summary • Derived quantity & traceability: concept • Derived quantity in SI and on traceability chain are not the same • Measurement uncertainty determines the validity of traceability • Establishing traceability: general approach • Details from measurement method to final MU should be documented. • Pay special attention to the physical principle. • Phase noise: example • Different measurement methods and ranges may give different traceability.

  20. THANK YOU!Questions & comments?

  21. Backup slides

  22. Phase Noise Overview

  23. 8563A SPECTRUM ANALYZER 9 kHz - 26.5 GHz Direct Spectrum Method Spectrum Analyzer UUT Overall sensitivity limited by SA internal LO

  24. Phase Detector Method • PROS • AM noise suppression • Low overall noise floor • Wide offset frequency range • Wide carrier frequency range • CONS • Requires an extra reference source (and downconverter) with much lower phase noise (15 dB less than the UUT) • High drift rate UUT requires high peak-tune-range (PTR) reference source • Close-in measurements require additional correction

  25. Phase Noise traced to Noise Figure 1 http://www.hparchive.com/seminar_notes/HP_PN_seminar.pdf

  26. Phase Noise traced to Noise Figure 2 http://www.hparchive.com/seminar_notes/HP_PN_seminar.pdf

More Related