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8.3 The Solutions to Pass CE102, RE102, and RS103 Tests

319

8.3 The Solutions to Pass CE102, RE102, and RS103 Tests

8.3.1 The EMC Failure Location

There are four main methods to locate failures in CE102, RE102, and RS103 tests:

(1)Method of exclusion: It is applicable to finding the major cause (which is a certain module) of failure in the equipment/subsystem. Using this method, we start from the equipment, and gradually check the modules and circuits. This method can locate the failure down to the equipment or circuit level.

(2)Method of replacement: Replace a circuit module in the equipment with a simulated load to determine whether the module is the main cause of the test failure. This method is simple to implement and can diagnose at the equipment or circuit level.

(3)Method of interchange: Replace a circuit module in the equipment with a circuit module without EMC problem to determine whether the circuit module is the main cause of the test failure. This method can diagnose the failure at equipment or circuit level.

(4)Method of diagnostic test: When the equipment/subsystem fails a test item, the method of diagnostic test is a convenient and effective way to determine the main factors causing the problem, such that the problem can be solved fast and accurately. Diagnostic tests generally use sensors such as probes, combined with spectrum analyzers and oscilloscopes, to test local electric field strength, magnetic field strength or time-domain waveform, amplitude, etc. Diagnostic tests sometimes do not require standard test equipment and test sites. We can use simple and versatile equipment without a high accuracy requirement. As long as the test is highly targeted, it is easy to find out the problem through testing and determine the effectiveness of the improvement measures. When using the method of diagnostic test, we can get a better result if we also combine other methods described above.

8.3.2 Trouble Shooting Suggestions

1. CE102

In Example 8.1, the failure of CE102 was because that there was no appropriate filtering added toward the power module. Therefore, in order to meet the limit requirement of CE102, it is necessary to include filtering measures such as:

(1)Install internal filter:

An EMI filter shall be installed on the 280 V bus in the case, as shown in Fig. 8.9. However, due to the space limitation in the case, the internal inductance and the capacitor component of the filter are limited in size, such that they cannot be

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8 EMC Engineering Case Analysis

13.3kHz Low Voltage Level

PWM Signal

 

 

 

 

280V Chopped Wave

Treble Phase

Rectifier

EMI

 

Motor

115V

Driver Control

Filter

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. 8.9 Schematic diagram of EMI filter installation

Fig. 8.10 CE102 test result after installing the internal filter

well grounded, causing the performance of the filter not meeting the application requirements. After the internal 280 V DC bus was installed with the filter, there were still three frequency points failing the test, and the maximum value exceeds the limit by 4 dB, as shown in Fig. 8.10. Compared with Fig. 8.2, it can be seen that the result of CE102 has been significantly improved after the filter was installed.

(2)Install power filter:

A power supply filter could be installed at the inlet of the three-phase 115 V power leads of the product. The test results showed that after the external filter was installed, the CE102 test result as shown in Fig. 8.11 can meet the standard limit value. However, the external filter was rather bulky, and the overall weight of the product increased.

Since the internal circuit board of the product has been basically determined, it is difficult to install and connect the internal filter. What’s more, it is difficult to optimize the filter parameters. The final measure is to install a power filter.

8.3 The Solutions to Pass CE102, RE102, and RS103 Tests

321

Fig. 8.11 CE102 test result after installing the power filter

Screw

Case

Case

side wall

top cover

Fig. 8.12 Measures to strengthen the shielding

2. RE102

In Example 8.2, the RE102 test did not satisfy the standard limit value due to the insufficient design of the case cover. Therefore, in order to pass RE102, a more reasonable case shielding structure should be adopted as shown in Fig. 8.12.

However, because the sidewall of the case is thin, it is not suitable for this modification. The final shielding scheme is adding copper reeds at the seam between the upper cover and the sidewall of the case, thereby increasing the electrical continuity of the case.

In Example 8.3, since the fan power cable was taken out from the opening of the case wall, the shielding strength of the case has been greatly reduced, resulting in a failure of the RE102 test. To solve the problem, we can connect a feed-through capacitor in series to the fan power cable and well ground the feed-through capacitor;

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8 EMC Engineering Case Analysis

Fig. 8.13 RE102 test results before and after taking measures—a the product without any measures; b after the feed-through capacitor is added to the power cable of the fan

thus, the radiation emission of the product can be greatly reduced to meet the standard limit requirement of RE102. Figure 8.13a, b shows the RE102 test result of the equipment before and after the series connection of the feed-through capacitor to the fan power cable.

3. RS103

In Example 8.4, the main reason that the product failed the RS103 test was that the sensor, the transmission cable, and the connection location of the product were the main path of picking up electromagnetic energy.

According to the interference mechanism and physical structure of the front-end sensor of the product, the designed shielding structure shall not affect the physical variable that the sensor induced, and at the same time, the external electromagnetic wave shall be effectively shielded and attenuated. Therefore, the sieve structure shield

8.3 The Solutions to Pass CE102, RE102, and RS103 Tests

323

Fig. 8.14 Structure of the shield

is designed based on the actual usage, as shown in Fig. 8.14. The practical application shows that the structure can effectively protect the sensor and the connecting part of the cable from the external electromagnetic environment and thus ensure the normal signal acquisition.

Appendix A

Introduction to System-Level EMC Quantitative Design Software Platform

There is complex mutual EMI between equipment/subsystems in large systems such as airplanes. The key issue in EMC design is how to avoid the mutual interference among equipment/subsystems from the top layer and improve the overall performance and compatibility of the platform. The Institute of EMC Technology of Beihang University has developed a system-level EMC design software (EMCIC). The software can be used for EMC modeling, simulation, prediction, evaluation, indicator decomposition and iterative optimization design of the platform from the perspective of the entire system. The software automatically writes all the design processes into the design documents and stores in the database, such that the EMC design process can be traced back and the design quality can be controlled. At the same time, the development cycle as well as the cost-effectiveness ratio can be reduced.

The EMCIC software has a navigation window. The function of the whole software can be embodied through the navigation window. Different navigation windows can be customized by setting different design indicators, and the function can be controlled and organized this way. The software also has a good version management and process control function. Figure A.1 shows the navigation window of the overall EMC design process of an aircraft.

It can be seen from Fig. A.1 that the software includes six main functional modules: pre-processing, post-processing, program management, EMC evaluation, system-level EMC design and database management. The basic functions of EMCIC are listed in Table A.1.

© National Defense Industry Press and Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2019

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D. Su et al., Theory and Methods of Quantication Design on System-Level Electromagnetic Compatibility, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-3690-4

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Appendix A: Introduction to System-Level EMC Quantitative

Fig. A.1 Overall software function

Table A.1 Summary of basic functions of EMCIC

Pre-processing

Post-processing

Program management (version control,

Matlab (Mathworks) visualization

create/inherit, delete, copy, etc.)

 

Indicator customization

Visualization of parameter S

Software platform wizard

Visualization of antenna pattern (2D, 3D)

Platform import, extraction and transformation

Visualization of the E/H near eld distribution

 

(2D, 3D)

Antenna layout visualization and adjustment

Report generation in the format of Microsoft

 

Word

Program management

EMC evaluation

Transmitter management

EMC pre-analysis

Receiver management

EMC interference correlation matrix

Transceiver management

Simulation and prediction of isolation between

 

antennas

Non-RF equipment management

Simulation and prediction of the near-eld

 

distribution

Management of Interference correlation

Simulation and prediction of antenna pattern

relationship

characteristics

Management of simulation analysis

Simulation and prediction of the shieling

frequencies

effectiveness

Spectrum browsing

Simulation and prediction of eld-line coupling

Behavioral modeling

Simulation and prediction of line-line coupling

System-level EMC design

Database management

Frequency-domain design

Model database

Margin design (power design, susceptibility

Test database

design, out-of-band emission attenuation

 

design, out-of-band rejection design for

 

receiver, shielding effectiveness design, layout

 

design, protection design)

 

Time-domain design

Simulation task release and download