How to Measure S-Parameter Data with the LibreVNA

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 08. 2024
  • Technical Consultant Zach Peterson is ready to have some fun! So today he's diving into the LibreVNA. Follow along to learn how to retrieve and analyze the relevant S-Parameter data with this low-cost vector network analyzer.
    0:00 Intro
    0:48 Our Test Board
    1:18 S-Parameters Overview
    4:44 Three-Port S-Parameters Design Techniques
    8:51 How Our Test Board Works
    10:49 Connecting the VNA
    12:06 Initial Results
    14:20 Swapping Ports
    For more Signal Integrity videos, click here: • Signal Integrity
    For more S-Parameters Deep Dive, click here: • S-Parameters Deep Dive
    For more PCB Design for Beginners videos, click here: • PCB Design for Beginners
    For more Tech Consultant Zach Peterson videos, click here: • Technical Consultant Z...
    👉 Exclusive One Month Free Altium Designer Access: altium.com/yt/altium-academy
    Don't forget to follow us on social to stay up-to-date on the latest Altium Academy content.
    👉 Follow Altium on Twitter: / altium
    👉 Follow Altium on Linkedin: / altium
    👉 Follow Altium on Facebook: / altiumofficial
    👉 Ready to try the industry's best-in-class design experience yourself? Download it today and get started! www.altium.com/downloads?utm_...
    The Altium Academy is an online experience created to bring modern education to PCB Designers and Engineers all across the world. Here you can access a vast library of free training and educational content covering everything from basic design to advanced principles and step-by-step walkthroughs. Join industry legends as they share their career knowledge, review real-life design projects, or learn how to leverage one of Altium's leading design tools. No matter your level of experience, the Altium Academy can help you become a better Designer and Engineer!
    About Altium LLC
    Altium LLC (ASX:ALU), a global software company based in San Diego, California, is accelerating the pace of innovation through electronics. From individual inventors to multinational corporations, more PCB designers and engineers choose Altium software to design and realize electronics-based products.
    #Altium #PCBdesign #LibreVNA
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 19

  • @holgerbauer8406
    @holgerbauer8406 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Great Tutor!

  • @Jota_VA
    @Jota_VA Před rokem +1

    Excelent video, it heps me a lot to understand. Regards.

  • @DaSmik101
    @DaSmik101 Před 2 lety +4

    You should add a heatsink to the exterior of the LibreVNA. It gets pretty hot after a few minutes and you'll get some pretty nasty temperature drift due to that.
    I personally measured some TekBox attenuators and the accuracy was very good up to 6GHz with a heatsink.
    Without a heatsink you get a drift of about 5dB.

    • @DaSmik101
      @DaSmik101 Před 2 lety +1

      You can also boost the frequency up to 8GHz by using harmonic mixing.
      The accuracy is decent between 6GHz and 8GHz.

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 2 lety +3

      Oh I noticed, we were using it for awhile during filming and I could feel it getting very warm. I've never tried doing a frequency test but I think I need to now!

    • @chromatec4311
      @chromatec4311 Před 9 měsíci

      What would be required to achieve measurement up to 8GHz@@DaSmik101

  • @joaopaulocoelho5401
    @joaopaulocoelho5401 Před rokem

    I realy, realy love your videos. If the 50R load has a BW larger than 5GHz, would not be better to terminate the unused ports? How about the filters. How are they physically implemented? A schematic of the splitter would be nice. Finally, I believe that NanoVNA is way more popular than LibreVNA (due to the price tag I guess). For this reason, probably more people will relate to the video if the former VNA was used.

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 11 měsíci

      Thank you, Yes NanoVNA is much more popular just because of the price, but when I purchased the Libre it had the higher bandwidth so it was worth the price. I've used it on some test boards since buying it with good results. In a real 3-port or 4-port measurement it would be best to terminate with a calibration standard if you are planning to terminate to a specific impedance value (not an open or close) because of the BW requirement as you mention. In my case, I left it open because it's just a demo, but I did check that the open on that connector actually behaves close enough to the open circuit calibration standard terminator so that there is little error. But in general if you are not sure or have not measured that an open on your connector really behaves like your open circuit calibration standard, then you should just terminate with the calibration standard because that standard will (or should) be good up to some frequency limit beyond the measurement instrument's bandwidth.

  • @erwansenechal7807
    @erwansenechal7807 Před 8 měsíci

    Hello, where can i fin the file of calibration "SOLT1" beacause it wasn't in my release folder ?

  • @zandanshah
    @zandanshah Před 4 měsíci

    Can you make a presentation for VNA calibration based on v1.5.1?

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 4 měsíci +1

      No promises but I can add it to our list, we have a very long list of topics so it might take awhile to get to this.

  • @glasslinger
    @glasslinger Před 10 měsíci

    So do you feel the about $600 difference in price from the nanoVNA is worth it? (The Libra is now right at $700)

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 9 měsíci +1

      To be honest I have never used the NanoVNA so I can't really comment on it. But based on reviews of these tools I have seen on youtube, I'm glad I put down extra for the Libre, even if it is not a game changer for client projects. Other thing I really appreciate is the software interface for the Libre, sometimes with lower cost hardware the capabilities of the hardware is not the problem, it's the quality of the software that comes with it. My little 200 MHz Hantek scope is just as capable as the equivalent 150 MHz Tektronix scope for about the same price, but the Hantek software is garbage.

    • @jholworld
      @jholworld Před 9 měsíci

      @@Zachariah-PetersonHi Zach. Did you get the chance to check drift etc? I’ve used very high end vna’s and also nanovna but my main issue with cheaper ones is reliability/repeatability especially when you power off the unit and power it back on next day and load file then does the cal hold good for same cal file when you look at smith chart or you see a drift on market positions between low and highest freq point? Thanks

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 7 měsíci

      @@jholworld I only use this for demos or test boards, but you're right the cal might be off if you come in the next day. What I do when I need to use it is I first turn it on, let the unit come up to its operating temp, recalibrate it, and then start using it. I've had to do the same thing in the past with spectrometers.

  • @karlodomic2890
    @karlodomic2890 Před 7 měsíci

    Why are you not terminating third port?

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 7 měsíci +1

      In this situation where the 3rd port shares the same reference (ground) as the other two ports, you do not need to terminate directly, you just need to know the reflection coefficient at that port. Obviously you could terminate to 50 Ohms, but you could also leave open or short it. I calibrated with the open circuit standard for the Libre, which should closely mimic the open circuit I have with a physically open port. It might be more accurate to have terminated the 3rd port with the open calibration standard, but I did not check this so it is still an open question.

  • @BB-me9po
    @BB-me9po Před 2 lety +3

    It should perhaps be added that for most applications (and probably virtually all hobbyist applications), simply terminating the third port at the characteristic impedance and then measuring the S-parameters with a 2-port VNA and filling in the S-parameter matrix, should yield sufficient accuracy. There should be no real need to recalculate the S-parameters for the error. The National Physical Laboratory did a study that compared the accuracy of this method against the more rigorous mathematical-correction method. The EVM error they observed was under about 0.02 for frequencies below 50 GHz and under about 0.05 for frequencies above 50 GHz. You can get "close enough" results by simply terminating the ports using termination loads that are closely matched, and then filling in the matrix with the observed 2-port results. Here is NPL's analysis: projects.npl.co.uk/hf-circuits/docs/presentations/20150603-anamet/03.pdf

    • @Zachariah-Peterson
      @Zachariah-Peterson Před 2 lety

      I was not aware of the study but will definitely take a look.