Figure 1: The typical EFT test signal consists of multiple exponential pulses arranged as pulse bursts. |
The typical compound waveform used for EFT testing is shown in Figure 1.
Figure 2: Acquisition of two EFT bursts at 1.25 GS/s, zoomed to show several timing epochs. |
The two EFT pulse burst are shown in the upper left-hand trace (the two pink blocks). A series of zoom-on-zoom traces are opened to show several timing epochs. Trace Z2 (second from top left) shows a single burst. The zooms keep expanding the horizontal scale until finally at Z8 (bottom right) we see a single EFT pulse.
Following are six, important things to do to make sure you get the best EFT test measurements from your oscilloscope.
1. Set a Sufficiently High Sample Rate
Given the fast rise time of the EFT pulse, the oscilloscope’s sample rate should be high enough to characterize the fast edge and to guarantee that the peaks are adequately sampled. For the examples shown here, the sample rate was set to 1.25 GS/s. This assures over six samples on the fast edge and a good characterization of the peaks of the waveform.
2. Use Parameter Acceptance to Isolate Pulse Repetition Rate
One measurement of interest is the pulse repetition rate within the burst. The frequency parameter can be used to make this measurement, but because the source waveform (C2) is a burst waveform, it will show the pulse repetition rate along with the burst repetition rate. To look at only the higher frequency pulse repetition rate, use parameter acceptance to report only measured values that fall within a user-defined range. Figure 2 shows the Accept subdialog set up for a range of 9 to 11 kHz. Parameter P1 shows the corrected measurement of 10 kHz.
3. Use Parameter Acceptance to Measure Inter-burst Gap Time
Figure 3: Parameter acceptance reports only the negative widths that are between 80 ms and 1 s to capture the gap between pulse bursts. |
4. Set Measurement Thresholds Correctly
Figure 4: Measuring EFT pulse rise time requires setting the measurement threshold based on the 0 to maximum amplitude levels, not top and base. |
5. Use Math on Parameters to Calculate Energy Correctly
Figure 5: Measuring peak (maximum) amplitude, area under the pulse, and pulse energy using waveform math and parameter math. |
To calculate energy, follow these steps (Figure 5):
1. Measure maximum pulse amplitude (P5).
2. Use a Math function to square the pulse voltage (F2), taking the product of the input channel times the input channel (C2*C2).
3. Integrate the area under the squared voltage by applying the Area measurement (P6) to the squared voltage math function (F2).
4. Use Math on Parameters to divide the area measurement by the oscilloscope’s input impedance, in this case 50 Ω:
a. Set a constant of 50 Ω using the P Const operator (P7).b. Take the ratio of the area (P6) and the constant (P7) using the P Ratio operator (P8).
The energy of our EFT pulse is automatically calculated at 7.35 micro-Joules.
6. Use Sequence Mode to Acquire Only Pulses of Interest
Figure 6: 20 pulses captured using sequence mode at 50 MS/s using only 5000 samples per segment. The entire acquisition uses only 100,000 samples. Time stamps show the time between pulses. |
The event of interest is a narrow pulse (15 µs width), followed by an electrical idle for the balance of the 500 ms period, representing a duty cycle of only 0.003%. By using sequence mode with a trigger set on the 15 µs width, you can capture 20 segments at 50 MS/s using only 5000 samples per segment, a total of only 100,000 samples, instead of the 50 million samples it would take to capture 10 such pulses using real-time sampling mode.
For more EMC electrical fast transient testing tips, watch our on-demand webinar, "How to Get the Most Out of Your EMC/EMI Lab Oscilloscope Pt. 1".
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