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Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

1999

Electric Connectors

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Emi Associated With Inter-Board Connection For Module-On-Backplane And Stacked-Card Configurations, Xiaoning Ye, Jim Nadolny, James L. Drewniak, Todd H. Hubing, Thomas Van Doren, Richard E. Dubroff Aug 1999

Emi Associated With Inter-Board Connection For Module-On-Backplane And Stacked-Card Configurations, Xiaoning Ye, Jim Nadolny, James L. Drewniak, Todd H. Hubing, Thomas Van Doren, Richard E. Dubroff

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

EMI associated with inter-board connection was studied through common-mode current measurements and FDTD modeling for stacked-card and module-on-backplane configurations. Three types of connections were investigated experimentally including an open pin field connection, an "ideal" semi-rigid coaxial cable connection, and a production connector. Both microstrip and stripline signal routing on the PCB were investigated. The results indicated signal routing on the PCBs or the inter-board connection can dominate the EMI process. Several cases of connector geometries were studied using FDTD modeling and good agreement was achieved between the measured and FDTD results.


Signal Induced Emi In Fibre Channel Cable-Connector Assemblies, Minjia Xu, S. Radu, James L. Knighten, James L. Drewniak, Todd H. Hubing, L. O. Hoeft, J. T. Dibene Ii Aug 1999

Signal Induced Emi In Fibre Channel Cable-Connector Assemblies, Minjia Xu, S. Radu, James L. Knighten, James L. Drewniak, Todd H. Hubing, L. O. Hoeft, J. T. Dibene Ii

Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works

The EMI performance of cable-connector assemblies designed for FC-0 transmission has been studied. Two types of cable and two connector styles were evaluated. Experimental results show that the dominant radiation mechanism for short cable lengths is the common-mode current caused by source and PCB skew that leaks to the exterior of the shield via the transfer impedance of the connector. However, the cable imbalance becomes a more significant source of common-mode current than the source skew when the cable assembly is tens of meters long.