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Practical Radio design

Practical Radio design. Practical Antennas PCB-layout for optimum performance UART-extentions: Pairing Radiocrafts modules with other equipment. Practical Antennas. Quarterwave copper on FR-4 laminate. Quarterwave whip coated with plastic. Helical . Yagi: Increased directivity.

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Practical Radio design

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  1. Practical Radio design • Practical Antennas • PCB-layout for optimum performance • UART-extentions: Pairing Radiocrafts modules with other equipment Radiocrafts

  2. Practical Antennas Quarterwave copper on FR-4 laminate Quarterwave whip coated with plastic Helical Yagi: Increased directivity Radiocrafts

  3. Practical Antennas • The most easy way to reduce range is by thinking about antenna as “any piece of wire” • EM-waves are travelling along the antenna conductor and we want to radiate as much as possible of the power (when we transmit) or receive as much as possible (when we receive) • To achieve this, the wire should be as long as possible while maintaining resonance to the centre frequency. • Radiation is prevented by; Nearby grounding, metal obstacles (like metal enclosures…). • Shorted antennas always reduces range but sometimes is required due to available space Radiocrafts

  4. Practical Antennas λ = c / f x 0.95 Feeding point It is important that the antenna has correct length which is a multiple of a quarter wave. When so, the impedance will be purely resistive in the feeding point, and we will get max power transfer from a resistive source (usually 50 ohm) Radiocrafts

  5. Antenna “classes” • Monopole: Usually λ/4 or 5/8λ. Electric field dominates • Dipole: Usually λ/2 (can also be 5/8λ). El. field dominates • Loop (magnetic field dominates). Not covered. • Helical (combination of electric and magnetic) Antennas containing “elements” of the above • 5/8 λ: Can be either monopole or dipole (Note: serial inductor is needed for impedance match). • Yagi: Extra Directive antennas (lobe in one direction). Has one Dipole antenna element and directors + reflectors Radiocrafts

  6. Monopole vs. dipole Monopole quarterwave Dipole halfwave Radiocrafts

  7. Radiation patterns Gain:0 dBi 5.15 dBi5/8λ: 8.2 dBi 2.15 dBi5/8λ: 5.2 dBi 5-10 dBi(or more) Radiocrafts

  8. Practical Antenna guidelines • Use quarter-wave stubs with sufficient ground plane extensionSufficient ground: Preferably the “longest length” the same as the antenna length • Can be considered as a wire, either in the shape of a “whip” antenna or a PCB-trace. • Length should be L=(c/f) / 4 x 0.95, i.e:2.9 cm (2.4 GHz), 8.2cm (910MHz), 7.8cm (868MHz) or 16.4cm (434MHz). • Coated whip antennas: www.procom-dk.com, www.badland.co.uk, www.elcard.fi Radiocrafts

  9. Radiocrafts Range measurement setup Antenna quarterwave, from RC1240DK, approximately 17cm Cu-side FR4 board size 24x24 cm or at least 15x15cm, antenna placed in center SMA-SMA adaptor in drilled hole in PCB Coax-cable with conducting SMA-connector fastened tightly to adaptor and connecting to Cu-plane Radiocrafts

  10. Shortened antennas • If not available space, shorter antennas can be used but an inductor (or more complex matching) must be added at the base to achieve better impedance match. Radiates less! Measure impedance! • Dielectric antennas: Ceramic material where λ gets shorter. Maintains resonance (see datasheet for req. match) but radiates less. Available for all frequencies 433-2400 MHz (www.fractus.com, www.johansontechnology.com, www.yageo.com ) • PCB-antennas: Can be made more area-efficient by folding the antenna, which also is good for receiving different polarizations. Width: 3mm is OK (the broader the width, the lower the resistive loss) Radiocrafts

  11. PCB antenna example, 2 layer PCB, λ/4-monopole Note; There is NO gnd in layer 2 under antenna-trace!! ”Free space” inside, both layers. Total length of antenna 16.4 cm Do NOT route antenna close to ground or metallic parts ”Large” groundplane Radiocrafts

  12. Helical antenna at 433/868 MHz • Radiates in the direction normal to the axis • Can be seen as monopole antenna shorted by coiling up the whip • Resonance can be achieved for a much shorter construction • Higher gain than with a non-helical structure of the same size • www.stecom.com Radiocrafts

  13. Helical antenna at 433/868 MHz Radiocrafts

  14. PIFA-Planar Inverted F-antenna (2.4 GHz) Feeding point, 50ohm line Ground, GND Radiocrafts

  15. Practical Antennas cont. • Usually, FR-4 laminate is used; Thickness and material does not affect length (as the antenna is a wire, not a transmission line) • If orientation varies (equipment is used both vertical and horizontal), make a 90 degrees bend at the middle • If there is any length from RF pin of module, use 50ohm trace in PCB until antenna launches (connector or solder joint). Radiocrafts

  16. Layer 1 RF routing RC-MODULE h=board thickness Gnd-plane in inner- or bottom layer, as large as possible, as un-penetrated as possible.Remember NO ground under PCB-antennas!! Via to ground RC1xx0/RC2x00/RC220x GNDCTSRTSCONFIGTXDRXDGND SMA Antenna feeding point or coax launch to external antenna RF ”50ohm trace”; Width is 1.8 x h for typical FR-4 material. See litterature for general calculations of characteristic impedance ALL vias to ground in entire design; As close to the pad as possible. One via per ground-pad (do not share with others as this tends to increase length of trace, increasing inductance/impedance to ground) PCB Routing guidelines Radiocrafts

  17. RF Basics • The higher the frequency, the higher the loss in the air, the lower the range • The higher the data rate, the lower the range (bandwidth is high=wider internal filter=receiver receives more natural electromagnetic noise, masking a weak signal) • The higher the frequency, the more straight line the EM signal is following • Reflections: All EM-signals are reflected, giving local field minimums or maximums. As frequency increases, these min/max occur more frequently Radiocrafts

  18. UART extentions www.wiznet.co.kr Radiocrafts

  19. UART extentions II www.oxsemi.com www.ftdichip.com Radiocrafts

  20. UART extentions III www.informasic.com Radiocrafts

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