Lecture 24
Lecture 24
Akhtar
EE 644A – EMI/EMC Techniques
𝑴𝑰𝑵𝑫
𝑵𝑬 𝑴𝑪𝑨𝑷
𝑵𝑬 𝒊𝒇 𝑳𝒎 /𝑪𝒎 𝑹𝑭𝑬 𝑹𝑳
The inductive coupling dominates the capacitive coupling in the far-end crosstalk voltage in (24.b)
𝑙 𝑙 𝑐 𝑐 𝑐
𝑴𝑰𝑵𝑫
𝑭𝑬 𝑴𝑪𝑨𝑷
𝑭𝑬 𝒊𝒇 𝑳𝒎 /𝑪𝒎 𝑹𝑵𝑬 𝑹𝑳 𝐿
𝑙 𝑙
… . . 5. 𝑎 𝐶 𝑐 𝑐 𝑐 … . . 5. 𝑏
1 0 𝐿𝐶 𝐶𝐿 𝜇𝜖𝐼 … . 8
𝐼 .. 9
0 1
𝑹𝑭𝑬 𝑹𝑳 𝑹𝑭𝑬 𝑹𝑳 𝑹𝑵𝑬 𝑹𝑳 𝑹𝑵𝑬 𝑹𝑳
< 𝟏 … . . 𝟐𝟔. 𝒂 < 𝟏 … . . 𝟐𝟔. 𝒃 𝒍𝒎 𝒍𝑮 𝒍𝑹
𝑳𝒎 /𝑪𝒎 𝒁𝑪𝑮 𝒁𝑪𝑹 𝑳𝒎 /𝑪𝒎 𝒁𝑪𝑮 𝒁𝑪𝑹 ≡ ≡
𝒄𝒎 𝒄𝑮 𝒄𝒎 𝒄𝑮 𝒄𝒎
Inductive coupling dominates capacitive coupling for
The characteristic impedances of each circuit in the presence of the termination impedances that are low impedances (with
other circuit are defined by respect to the circuit characteristic impedance). Similarly,
capacitive coupling dominates inductive coupling for
𝒍𝑮 𝒍𝑹 termination impedances that are high impedances (with
𝒁𝑪𝑮 … . . 𝟐𝟕. 𝒂 𝒁𝑪𝑹 … . . 𝟐𝟕. 𝒃
2023-24-II
Crosstalk
Reduction
There are two common methods for reducing the crosstalk For wire-type lines; replace the
generator and/or receptor wire with
A shielded wire
A twisted pair.
Shielded wires
Adding a shield around the receptor circuit wire to reduce
crosstalk
TWISTED WIRES
Reducing crosstalk
A twisted pair is the dual to a shielded wire in the
following sense.
Shielding
The term shield usually refers to a metallic enclosure that completely encloses an electronic product
or a portion of that product.
Shielding Effectiveness
The effectiveness of a shield may be interpreted as the ratio of the magnitude of the electric
(magnetic) field that is incident on the barrier to the magnitude of the electric (magnetic) field that
is transmitted through the barrier.
A shielding effectiveness of 100 dB means that the incident field as been reduced by a factor of
100,000 as it exits the shield.
Hence, if the electronics product is surrounded by a shield, then the effectiveness of the shield
may be defined as the ratio of the electric (magnetic) field incident on the product with the shield
removed to that with the shield in place (insertion loss).
In order to realize these ideal and extremely large values of shielding effectiveness, the shield
must completely enclose the electronics and must have no penetrations such as holes, seams,
slots or cables. Any penetrations in a shield unless properly treated, may drastically reduce the
2023-24-II
𝑬𝒊 𝑯𝒊
𝑺𝑬 𝟐𝟎𝒍𝒐𝒈𝟏𝟎 𝑺𝑬 𝟐𝟎𝒍𝒐𝒈𝟏𝟎
𝑬𝒕 𝑯𝒕
For example, a shielding effectiveness of 120 dB means that the magnitude of the transmitted field
is reduced from the magnitude of the incident field by a factor of 10 .
2023-24-II
𝛿 𝜋𝑓𝜇𝜎
Ref. Electromagnetic Compatibility by C. R. Paul
Lecture 24 – EMI Shielding Prof. M. J. Akhtar
EE 644A – EMI/EMC Techniques
The shielding effectiveness can be broken into the product of three terms each
representing one of the phenomena of reflection loss, absorption loss, and multiple
reflections. In decibels these factors add to give
where R represents the reflection loss caused by reflection at the left and right
interfaces, A represents the absorption loss of the wave as it proceeds through the
barrier, and M represents the additional effects of multiple reflections and
transmissions.
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Solution for the Shielding Effectiveness: Far-Field Approximation Uniform Plane Wave
𝐸
𝐄𝒊 𝐸𝑒 𝒂𝒙 𝐇𝒊 𝑒 𝒂𝒚
𝜂
𝐄𝒓 𝐸𝑒 𝒂𝒙 𝐇𝒓 𝑒 𝒂𝒚
𝐇𝟏 𝑒 𝒂𝒚
𝐄𝟏 𝐸𝑒 𝒂𝒙
𝐄𝟐 𝐸 𝑒 𝒂𝒙 𝐇𝟐 𝑒 𝒂𝒚
𝜇
𝛽 ω 𝜇 𝜖 𝜂 𝛾 𝑗ωμ 𝜎 𝑗ω𝜖
𝜀
𝛼 𝑗𝛽
𝐇𝒕 𝑒 𝒂𝒚 𝑗ω𝜇
𝐄𝒕 𝐸𝑒 𝒂𝒙 𝜂̂ 𝜂 <𝜃
2023-24-II
𝜎 𝑗ω𝜖
Ref. Electromagnetic Compatibility by C. R. Paul
Lecture 24 – EMI Shielding Prof. M. J. Akhtar
EE 644A – EMI/EMC Techniques
The exact solution for the shielding effectiveness may be obtained by solving the equations given
on the previous page and applying appropriate boundary conditions on the field vectors at the two
boundaries z=0 and z=d.
However, approximate solution for the shielding effectiveness may be obtained in much simplified
way by making following two assumptions:
𝜂≪𝜂
The barrier thickness is much greater than a skin depth at the frequency of the incident wave
𝑡≫𝛿
Reflection Loss
Assuming that the barrier thickness is much greater than a
skin depth at the frequency of the incident wave, the
portion of the incident wave that is transmitted across the
left interface 𝐸 , is greatly attenuated by the time it reaches
the right interface.