RF Basics
RF Basics
RF Basics
RF stands for Radio Frequency, but it often used in the
sense of anything related with EM signals.
The sine wave is the basic example of a signal that can
be generated, transmitted and received with RF
equipment.
It may be characterized by:
Frequency
Amplitude
RF Basics
Frequency: the number of times a signal goes through
a complete up and down cycle in one second of
time. It is measured in Hertz.
Amplitude: the difference between the maximum and
the minimum value during one cycle. It is measured in
Volts, and it is related with the strength, or power, of
the signal.
RF Basics
Hz
RF Basics
We use the Scientific Notation that uses the power of
ten to multiply the values.
milli (m)
-3
10
1 mV
micro()
-6
10
1 V
kilo(k)
3
10
1 kHz
mega(M)
6
10
1 MHz
giga(G)
9
10
1 GHz
RF Basics
Frequency Band: the standard name of a specific
range of frequencies.
HF: High Frequency, 3 MHz to 30 MHz
VHF: Very High Frequency, 30 MHz to 300 MHz
UHF: Ultra High Frequency, 300 MHz to 3 GHz
SHF: Super High Frequency, 3 GHz to 30 GHz
EHF: Extra High Frequency, 30 GHz to 300 GHz
RF Basics
Bandwidth: width of the range of frequencies that a
signal occupies on a given transmission medium. It is
the difference between the highest-frequency signal
component and the lowest-frequency signal
component.
Voice transmission: 3 kHz
FM radio broadcast: 200 kHz
Analog TV broadcast: 6 MHz
RF Basics
Wavelength: the distance a radio wave will travel
during one cycle.
=c/f
is the wavelength, in meters
c is the speed of light, 299793 m/s
f is the frequency, in Hz
RF Basics
Frequency
Wavelength
900 MHz
0.33 m
2.4 GHz
0.125 m
5.0 GHZ
0.06 m
RF Basics
Power: in the RF world, the power is commonly used
to quantify a signal, instead of the amplitude.
Power is expressed in Watts.
For low-frequency signals, the power is given by
P=EI
For high-frequency signals with no reactance, by the
root-mean-square values.
For high-frequency signals with reactance, RF power is
a vector, 2-D, quantity.
RF Basics
Decibel: the decibel (abbreviated as dB) is a
logarithmic expression of the ratio between the
power, voltage, or current of two signals.
Signal one, with a power of P1 Watts
Signal two, with a power of P2 Watts
P =10log (P /P )
dB
10
RF Basics
If the load impedance is constant, decibels can be
calculated in terms of effective voltage.
Signal one, with an RMS voltage of V1 across a load
Signal two, with an RMS voltage of V2 across a load
V =20log (V /V )
dB
10
RF Basics
When the decibel figure is positive, the second signal
is stronger than the first one, and the power ratio is
called gain.
When the decibel figure is negative, the second signal
is weaker than the first one, and the power ratio is
called loss.
In amplifiers the gain, also called the amplification
factor, in often expressed in decibels.
RF Basics
+ 3 dB
two times
bigger
+10 dB
ten times
bigger
-3 dB
one half
-10 dB
one tenth
RF Basics
To express power using decibels we need a specific
power to be assumed as a reference.
In the RF world the common standard is to refer
powers to 1 mW (0.001 Watts).
Such power ratio, expressed in decibels, is called
dBm.
P =10log (P /1mW)
dBm
10
watts
100 W
1 mW
10 mW
100 mW
1W
10 W
100 W
=
=
=
=
=
=
=
-10 dBm
0 dBm
10 dBm
20 dBm
30 dBm
40 dBm
50 dBm
RF Basics
Amplifier
Cable 1
Receiver
Cable 2
1
1
= PTransmitter "
" Amplification "
Attenuation Cable1
AttenuationCable2
RF Basics
Using amplification and attenuation factors and
expressing the powers in Watts, we obtain the value of
the power at the receivers input in this way:
Prec=Ptransm x (1/Attcable1) x Amp x(1/Attcable2)
If we use dB to express the gains and the losses and
dBm to express the powers, the calculation becomes a
simple addition:
Prec=Ptransm + Losscable1 + Gainamp + Losscable2
This procedure is called Power Budget Calculation
RF Basics
Signals are characterized by frequency.
We are interested in signals at 2.4 GHz.
At 2.4 GHz, the wavelength is 12.5 cm.
We will use dB, so we can use Power Budget
Calculation.