- Controlling Radiated Emissions by Design (978-3-319-04770-6) - Einband - fest (Hardcover)

Controlling Radiated Emissions by Design
von Michel MardiguianIn all possible industrial, military and household/personal  applications, the number of digital devices operating with data rates  of hundreds of Megabits, using processor chips with Gigahertz clocks,  has increased astronomically. At the same time, a myriad of popular RF  receivers like portable telephones, laptop PCs with integrated  wireless modems, wireless Internet, and other electronic devices, are  becoming ubiquitous, such that the number of sensitive, licit  receivers operating within a square kilometer of an urban area can be  counted in tens of thousands. In the crowded space that they share,  the conjunction of both events is increasing the number of potential  interference situations, especially in the upper VHF and UHF regions  where spurious radiations are most difficult to contain. There is, in  addition, a growing, although controversial, concern about the  possible health hazard caused by long exposure to near fields of low  power radio transmitters. All these aspects result in a continuous  effort for lowering RF radiations.
  This new edition of Controlling Radiated Emissions by Design  retains the step-by-step approach for incorporating EMC into every new  design, from the ground up. Quite different from other classical EMC  books, it approaches the problem from a development engineer's  viewpoint, starting with the selection of quieter IC technologies,  their implementation into a noise-free printed circuit layout, and the  gathering of all these into a low radiation packaging, including I/O  filtering, connectors and cables considerations. 
  Equally far from a cookbook of recipes, all guidelines are supported  by thorough, but relatively easy and comprehensive calculated  examples, allowing a quantitative design, instead of purely  qualitative. New to this edition is material on surface mount  techniques, IC's ground-bounce, random-versus-periodic frequency  spectra and recent progress in low cost ferrite and filter components.  Also included is detailed information on radiation from high-speed  chips (e. g. Pentium >200 MHz) and the efforts by some manufacturers  to reduce it. The book has numerous tables, all of which have been  updated to reflect the latest changes in the field, including a brief  overview of the U. S. and worldwide emission tests.
  Controlling Radiated Emissions by Design is an invaluable tool  for helping design engineers, EMC specialists and technicians develop  more efficient and economical control of emissions.





