Connection interferance Flashcards

1
Q

Define “Interference”

A

The unwanted coupling of signals from outside the system under consideration.

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2
Q

Define “Signal”

A

Any waveform that is generated systematically somewhere.

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3
Q

Define “Crosstalk”

A

Unwanted coupling of signals from within the system under consideration

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4
Q

Define “Noise”

A

Random process which may originate internally or externally of the system under consideration.

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5
Q

Define “Coupling mechanism”

A

The unwanted circuit element equivalents that can explain the interference problem

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6
Q

Define “Parasitic coupling mechanism”

A

> Unwanted but inevitable noise
Example: Capacitor dielectric leakage can cause a resistance which forms an ‘equivalent series resistor’ (ESR). ESR is dependent on frequency.

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7
Q

Define “Stray coupling mechanism”

A

> Unwanted electrical element which exists between circuit components.
Two wires will both have capacitance and mutual inductance between them.

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8
Q

What is capacitive coupling?

A

A capacitance that occurs between any two stray points, not between the plates of a manufactured capacitor.

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9
Q

What is the biggest example of capacitive coupling?

A

Electrical mains power cables near sensitive electronics or between two PCB traces

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10
Q

How can we plan to combat capacitive coupling?

A

> We can estimate the possible size of the capacitance and use this to add an approximate equivalent capacitor to the circuit.
We can then change the design to include this capacitance

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11
Q

What is the equation for the capacitance of a capacitor?

A
C = εA / d
C = Capacitance
ε = Permittivity of the medium
A = Area of the plate
d = Distance between plates
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12
Q

What is the equation for capacitive coupling?

A
C = πε / ln⁡(d / a) 
C = Capacitance
ε = Permittivity of the medium
A = Area of the plate
d = Distance between plates
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13
Q

What are the units of capacitive coupling?

A

Farads / meter

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14
Q

When do we use the equation for the capacitance of a capacitor?

A

When d &laquo_space;A

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15
Q

When do we use the equation for capacitive coupling?

A

When d&raquo_space; A

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16
Q

What can happen with capacitive coupling and high resistances?

A

> This can accidentally form an RC network and filter frequencies.
This also load resistors in the parallel circuit when the parallel circuit is not powered
[Picture48]

17
Q

What is the problem with bread boards?

A

Prototyping boards have a small stray capacitance between each strip ≈ 3pF and 30-40pF across the long bus strips.

18
Q

What can help to stop capacitive coupling? (2)

A

> A grounded screen (or shield) can be placed around the circuits that might be affected.
For PCB traces a grounded guard trace could be placed between the two traces where cross talk might be a problem.

19
Q

What is mutual inductance?

A

> Where two current-carrying conductors are in proximity, there will be a mutual inductance between them
This will form an induced voltage source on the victim circuit.

20
Q

Will mains supply cables cause mutual inductance?

A

Mains supply cables are less likely to cause inductive coupling because the magnetic fields around the live and neutral conductors tend to cancel each other out.

21
Q

Can you use screening to block inductive coupling? What is the best solution to blocking it?

A

Screening is not effective for inductive coupling as it is magnetic in nature. The best defence is to separate the source of inductive coupling.

22
Q

What is the equation for mutual inductance?

A
e.m.f = M(di / dt)
M = The mutual inductance
23
Q

Define “balanced lines”

A

Two conductors which have the same impedance with respect to a common, external ground.

24
Q

What is XLR?

A

This is a form of balanced lines used for audio applications

25
Q

What are the conductors in XLR?

A

> 2 balanced lines

> 1 Grounded shield.

26
Q

What are two method of converting unbalanced lines to balanced ones?

A

> Using a differential amplifier. Two inputs will therefore have the same impedance.
Use a transformer to couple signals from an unbalanced system of conductors to a balanced system (Called baluns [balanced to unbalanced transformer])

27
Q

What are ground loops?

A

Caused by connecting signals from one item of equipment to another and, in doing so, making a duplicate ground connection because both items of equipment have the mandatory protective earth connections

28
Q

Why are ground loops an issue in the situation [Picture49]?

A

No current flows in the protective conductor but is free to pick up interference. This produces a potential difference between a point on the ground cable and ground. Problems occur when the source of interference creates a voltage drop within the loop.

29
Q

What are the solutions to ground loops?

A

> Break the loop
Double insulation
Using battery-powered equipment.
Isolated electrically floating inputs or outputs

30
Q

What happens if you break the ground loop?

A

> Bad solution: Disconnecting the signal cable ground. Requires the return signal to flow through the mains earth conductor.
Very bad solution: Disconnect the mains protective ground on one of the items of equipment.

31
Q

What is the best way to break the ground loop?

A

[Picture50]
> To use isolated electrically floating inputs or outputs
> Locally ground system that is not directly connected to the mains power supply ground.

32
Q

What happens when you share a ground path with lots of devices?

A

> There will be IR voltage drops along this path due to the resistance of the wire.
This can be a problem for sensitive circuits

33
Q

What is the solution for sensitive circuits on a ground path shared with lots of devices?

A

> Separate ground paths for sensitive circuits routed directly to low impedance ground point near to the supply circuit

34
Q

What happens when sensitive circuits share a ground path with digital circuits?

A

> Digital circuits can draw significant current pulses which must be returned via the ground path.
For sensitive analogue circuits we can use separate ground paths for analogue and digital circuits.