Test & Measurement

Calibration options enhance vector network analysers

27th January 2022
Mick Elliott
0

Two important calibration options have been added to its PicoVNA vector network analyser by Pico Technology.

Existing and new customers of the PicoVNA 108 8.5 GHz analyser can now benefit from automated E-Cal calibration and TRL/TRM calibration.

Quite typically, owners and users of a vector network analyser insist upon an automated calibration solution. 

The obvious benefits of automation are speed, efficiency and a simplified process suited to the widest possible breadth of skills and applications across the workplace. 

Perhaps not quite so obvious, and to some counterintuitive, is that automated VNA calibration can improve overall calibration quality and even reduce uncertainties or errors. 

The PicoVNA 108 achieves calibration automation through either male SMA or female SMA E-Cal modules. 

These are USB-powered and controlled to electronically select the various short, open, load and through reference standards as they are needed within the calibration process. 

Users power the module, make a single connection of the E-Cal standard between the PicoVNA test ports, and then initiate the automated procedure from within the PicoVNA 108 user interface.

The switches, it can be argued, introduce undesirable sources of error to the calibration process.  The Pico trick is to mitigate these errors by characterizing and correcting for them as fully as possible, and by controlling temperature and temperature gradients through the heating of a thermal island within the device. 

RF Business Development Manager Mark Ashcroft claims that Pico achieves its high-coverage characterization through unique processing of no less than seventeen device s-parameters.

The resulting residual errors of a PicoVNA E-Cal calibration are amongst the lowest achievable and can compare favourably with those arising from the repeated connect-disconnect and test lead flexing of the equivalent manual approach.

Within their supplied carry and storage case, Pico include a fully characterised, polarised port adapter with each of their E-Cal modules; allowing both the male and female SMA devices to also calibrate insertable male-female and female-male test ports. 

TRL (Through Reflect Line) and TRM (Through Reflect Match) calibration typically gain favour when needing to measure substrate-mounted DUTs, for example surface-mounted networks or components on a PCB or ceramic. 

The necessary transmission lines, low-frequency match and reflections (shorts or opens) can all be readily fabricated at precise on-substrate measurement reference planes. 

Additionally, if necessary, the calibration will account for the environmental conditions and any variability of the test substrate.

Whilst the TRM technique can readily address lower frequencies (in practice below around 1.5 GHz), the TRL technique employs a reference line length, of significantly more than 0° phase delay and significantly less than 180°.

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