FAQ

  • Q What is the difference between active and passive components?

    A
    Component classification: passive components and active components; passive components and active components;
    Passive components (Passive Components) is the name used by the Taiwanese electronics industry for certain electronic components, which is different from active components). In mainland China, they are called passive devices and active devices. At present, passive components (capacitors, resistors, inductors) and active components (integrated circuits) are commonly used in China.
    If the electronic components work without any form of power inside, then this device is called a passive device.

    From the nature of the circuit, passive devices have two basic characteristics:
    (1) It does not consume electrical energy by itself, or convert electrical energy into other energy in different forms.
    (2) Only need to input signal, it can work normally without external power supply.
    Passive components: Compared to active components, it refers to a circuit component that does not affect the basic characteristics of the signal, but only passes the signal without modification. The most common ones are resistors, capacitors, inductors, ceramic oscillators, crystal oscillators, transformers, etc.
    Active components: components in circuit components that can perform data operations and processing. Including all kinds of wafers, such as active crystals in semiconductor devices, integrated circuits, image tubes, and displays are all active devices.
    All our products currently belong to the field of passive components or passive devices;
  • Q What is inductance? What is a coil?

    A In general terms, all products of the company are inductors or coils; all products are composed of one or more coil windings, and each independent winding has the characteristics of inductance.
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  • Q What is the definition and classification of inductance, coil and transformer?

    A
    The inductor industry is usually subdivided into Inductor, Coil Coil, Transfoemer Transformer;
    The coil with a magnetic core is habitually called an inductance, and the pure habit of winding a coil is called a coil.
    The transformer is a device that uses the principle of electromagnetic induction to change the AC voltage. The main components are the primary coil, the secondary coil, and the iron core (magnetic core). The main functions are: voltage transformation, current transformation, impedance transformation, isolation, coupling, distribution, voltage regulation (magnetic saturation transformer), etc. It can be divided into power transformers and special transformers (electric furnace transformers, rectifier transformers, power frequency test transformers, voltage regulators, mining transformers, audio transformers, intermediate frequency transformers, high frequency transformers, impact transformers, instrument transformers, electronic transformers) , Reactors, transformers, etc.)
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  • Q Directional Couplers

    A directional coupler characteristics.
    1. The output signals are unequal in amplitude. The larger signal is at the main-line output port. The smaller signal is at the coupled port.
    2. The main-line insertion loss depends upon the signal level at the coupled port, as determined by design. The relationship is as follows:
    Coupling, dB Theoretical Minimum Main Line Insertion Loss, dB
    6 1.2
    10 0.46
    15 0.14
    20 0.04
    30 0.004
    3. There is high isolation between the coupled port and the output of the main-line. A schematic representation of the coupler is as follows; the arrows show signal flow:
    COUPLER-FAQ
    Key characteristics of a directional coupler include coupling coefficient, coupling flatness,main-line loss and directivity, defined on the next page. EASTEVER's full line of directional couplers, spanning 5 kHz to 2 GHz, provide excellent performance. They feature
    1. flat coupling over a broad bandwidth
    2. low main-line loss, as low as 0.1 dB
    3. directivity as high as 55 dB and
    4. a wide range of coupling values, from 6 dB to 30 dB.

    directional coupler applications
    The high performance characteristics of these units enable the following signal processing functions to be accomplished:
    measure incident and reflected power to determine VSWR,
    signal sampling,
    signal injection,
    signal generator/oscillator leveling,
    and power flow monitoring.
    The following diagram shows how a high-directivity coupler is connected to sample reflected power from a load, which is connected to the setup after a fully-reflecting termination has been used to obtain a 0 dB return-loss reference.
    COUPLER-FAQ1
    The coupler is connected so that its coupled port samples power reflected from the load. It can thus be used to monitor fault conditions causing high VSWR, or to align the load device for low VSWR. A coupler used in this manner is called a reflectometer.
    A leveling application is illustrated below.
    COUPLER-FAQ2
    The coupler is connected between a signal generator and a load, such that the coupled port samples power coming from the generator. It can thus monitor generator output independent of load conditions. The coupled-port signal can be used to level the generator output. Since generator output-power variation caused by load mismatch is suppressed by this feedback technique, the generator-coupler combination will have a source VSWR which is much better than that of the generator if it were not leveled.

    Modern Definition of Terms
     
    coupling coefficient
    The ratio in dB of the incident power fed into the main port to the coupled port power when all ports are terminated by reflection less terminations.
    coupling tolerance
    The allowable unit-to-unit variation in nominal coupling.
    coupling flatness
    The maximum peak-to-peak variation in coupling coefficient that may be expected over a specified frequency range.
    coupling Loss
    The reduction in power available to the main-line output due solely to power transferred to the coupled line. It is equal to the theoretical minimum main-line insertion loss.
    main-line loss
    The change in load power, due to the insertion of the coupler in a transmission system, with reflectionless terminations connected to the ports of the coupler. The main-line loss includes the effect of power transferred to the coupled line.
    directivity
    The difference in dB of the power output at a coupled port, when power is transmitted in the desired direction, to the power output at the same coupled port when the same amount of power is transmitted in the opposite direction. In the case of a bi-directional coupler, an alternative definition is the difference in dB of the power output of the two coupled ports, when power is transmitted in a constant direction on the main-line. Reflectionless terminations are assumed to be connected to all ports.
    average power
    The CW average power handling capability with one-way transmission through the main line of the coupler under matched load conditions.
    vswr
    The standing-wave ratio at any port of a coupler is specified for the case of reflectionless terminations at all other ports. As with any device, VSWR is a measure of the quality of match relative to a given characteristic impedance.
    bandwidth
    The range of frequencies over which performance falls within specific limits.
    bi-directional coupler
    Another name for a 4-port coupler; that is, a single coupler having no internal termination. It is intended to allow forward and reflected signals to be sampled simultaneously.
    dual directional coupler
    The combination of two 3-port couplers having their main lines cascaded, and their internally terminated ports facing each other at the interface between the couplers. This provides bi-directional coupler action, but with independent use of the coupled ports: A mismatched load applied to either of them will not affect the other.

    Most Often Asked Questions About Directional Couplers
     
    Q. What is the difference between a 3-port and a 4-port coupler?
    A. A directional coupler is basically a 4-port network. The main-line and auxiliary line each have 2 ports: A 3-port coupler has one end of this auxiliary line, the "isolated port," internally terminated. When all 4 ports are made available to the user, the device is called a "bi-directional coupler."
     
    Q. What advantage does a 3-port coupler have over a 4-port?
    A. Directivity of a coupler is strongly affected by the impedance match provided by the termination at the isolated port. Furnishing that termination internally ensures high performance.
     
    Q. Can a 4-port coupler be used to sample forward and reflected power simultaneously, by placing measuring instruments at both ports of the coupled line?
    A. Yes, but with care to provide good impedance match at all 4 ports of such a "bi-directional coupler." A coupler's directivity can be no better than the return loss of the terminations at the far-end main-line and coupled line ports; poor directivity causes inaccurate power monitoring by leaking forward and reflected signals into one another's paths. An alternative approach which overcomes this limitation is to use two 3-port couplers back-to-back; this combination is called a "dual directional coupler."
     
    Q. Is a coupled port an input or an output?
    A. It can be used as either. The coupling factor determines the attenuation between main-line and coupled line signals in both cases.
     
    Q. How is directivity measured when the 4th port is internally terminated?
    A. Measure the loss from the main-line input to the coupled port with the main-line output terminated. Then reverse the main-line connections. The difference in dB readings is the directivity.
     
    Q. How good does the directivity of a coupler have to be, as a reflectometer, to measure the return loss of an unknown impedance?
    A. A mathematical determination requires knowledge of phase relationships in a given case, but as a guide, less than 1dB error will result when the directivity is 20dB greater than the unknown's return loss.
     
    Q. How is power rating determined for pulsed-RF operation?
    A. The first limitation to peak pulse power which a coupler can handle is determined by dividing the average power rating by the duty factor of the pulse train. This applies when the duration of each pulse is much shorter than the thermal time constant of the internal terminating resistor. If the pulse duration is greater than about a millisecond, the peak-power should be reduced.
    A further limitation may be necessary to avoid saturation of the transformer core used in the coupler to avoid compression and distortion of the signal. For specific applications, consult the factory.
     
    Q. What performance degradation occurs if a 50-ohm directional coupler is used in a 75ohm system?
    A. The most pronounced effect is a reduction in directivity because the internal 50-ohm termination would give a VSWR of 1.5:1. The directivity would be limited to the corresponding return loss, 14 dB.
     
    Q. What effect does DC current through the main-line have upon performance?
    A. Most Mini-Circuits' couplers have their ports at DC ground. Therefore DC current would not pass through from in to out. However, for those models designed to pass DC current, when the current is large relative to RF current, signal compression and distortion due to core saturation may occur.
     
    Q. Does the input power rating apply equally to the main-line and coupled port?
    A. Not for a 3-port coupler. The coupled port rating is less, because power applied to the coupled port is almost entirely dissipated in the internal termination.
     
    Q. If the external load on the output port is mismatched, where does the reflected power go?
    A. Most goes back to the input port. A portion of it, corresponding to the coupling factor, is dissipated in the internal termination.
     
    Q. How do similar coupler designs in different case styles or with different connectors compare in performance?
    A. Performance is similar, except at high frequencies, where the rule generally is "the smaller, the better."
     
    Q. How important is grounding of pins?
    A. All ground pins should be connected to ground with short path length to obtain full directivity and VSWR performance.

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