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Keywords = near-field immunity test (NFIT)

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18 pages, 3542 KiB  
Article
Near-Field Immunity Test Method for Fast Radiated Immunity Test Debugging of Automotive Electronics
by Jawad Yousaf, Doojin Lee, JunHee Han, Hosang Lee, Muhammad Faisal, Jeongeun Kim and Wansoo Nah
Electronics 2019, 8(7), 797; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics8070797 - 16 Jul 2019
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 5810
Abstract
This study presents a near-field immunity test (NFIT) method for the fast debugging of radiated susceptibility of industrial devices. The proposed approach is based on the development of an NFIT setup which comprises of developed near-field electric and magnetic field probes and device [...] Read more.
This study presents a near-field immunity test (NFIT) method for the fast debugging of radiated susceptibility of industrial devices. The proposed approach is based on the development of an NFIT setup which comprises of developed near-field electric and magnetic field probes and device under test (DUT). The developed small-size and handy near-field testing probes inject the high electric (up to 1000 V/m) and magnetic (up to 2.4 A/m) fields on the DUT in the radar pulse ranges (1.2 to 1.4 GHz and 2.7 to 3.1 GHz) with the lower fed input power (up to 15 W) from the power amplifier in the developed NFIT setup. The proof of concept is validated with the successful near-field immunity debugging of an electric power steering (EPS) device used in the automotive industry with the developed NFIT setup. The radiated susceptibility debugging test results of developed NFIT method and conventional method of ISO 11452-2 test setup turned out to be close to each other for the tested DUT in immunity performance. The proposed procedure has advantages of industry usefulness with fast, handy, and cost-effective radiated immunity debugging of the DUT without the requirement of large antenna, high-power amplifiers, optical DUT connecting harness, and an anechoic chamber as needed in ISO 11452-2 standard setup for the debugging analysis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microwave and Wireless Communications)
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