Near-field scanner for the detection of passive intermodulation sources in base station antennas

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Abstract

Passive intermodulation (PIM) distortion is a challenging problem in the design and manufacturing of base station antennas. Small nonlinearities, typically in junctions, may cause a distortion signal that interferes with the receiver even with a level of -155 dBc in a GSM900 system. The PIM level specification of an outdoor base station antenna is difficult to achieve and the sources of PIM generation are laborious to track down. In this paper, a near-field measurement method is presented to localize and investigate passive intermodulation sources in antennas and open transmission lines. The principle of the PIM near-field measurement is otherwise the same as in a common reactive near-field measurement, but instead of measuring the signal at the input frequency, the signal amplitude and phase at the PIM frequency of interest are acquired. The constructed measurement system is capable of measuring PIM signal levels down to -110 dBm with 2 × 43 Dbm transmit power in the GSM900 frequency band. As demonstration measurements, PIM sources in a two-element base station antenna and in a microstrip line are localized. © 2004 IEEE.

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APA

Hienonen, S., Golikov, V., Vainikainen, P., & Räisänen, A. V. (2004). Near-field scanner for the detection of passive intermodulation sources in base station antennas. IEEE Transactions on Electromagnetic Compatibility, 46(4), 661–667. https://doi.org/10.1109/TEMC.2004.837958

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