This is an old revision of the document!
The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) allocates the unlicensed 5.8 GHz industrial, scientific, and medical (ISM) radio frequency band for use worldwide. Advancements in wireless technologies and standards, as well as minimal regulatory compliance requirements, have made this frequency band popular for short range, wireless communication systems.
The 5.8GHz band is preferred for short-range digital communication applications (such as WiFi) because of the number of channels and the bandwidth available. While the transmission range is shorter than that of the 2.4GHz band, its 150MHz bandwidth accommodates up to 23 non-overlapping WiFi channels. Additional common uses include software defined radio, wireless access points, public safety radio, wireless repeaters, femtocells, and LTE/WiMAX/4G, BTS infrastructure.
This design provides a high gain, robust overpower monitoring, and protection all in a small footprint, a great addition to any ISM band application where low signal strength or distance may be a complication. The circuit shown in the figure below is a high performance RF receiver system with 10dB of gain, optimized for operation at a center frequency of 5.8GHz. By keeping the input unfiltered and using a filter to attenuates out-of-band interferers at the amplifier output, the entire system noise figure performance is at 2dB. The circuit includes a high speed overpower cutoff that protects sensitive downstream equipment connected to the receiver system. The receiver system also automatically turns back on when once the RF power input is now within the acceptable range.
The RF inputs and outputs are standard SMA connectors, and the entire design is powered from a single micro USB connector.
The SMA connectors are used for the RF input and output connections.
The plot shown below is the ADALM Pluto output with the RF TX and RX connected directly with transmit power set to -30 dBFS producing a 63.5 dB RSSI RF power input reading:
And with transmit power set to -10 dBFS producing a 43.5 dB RSSI RF power input reading:
The plot is as shown below with transmit power set to -30 dBFS producing a 41.5 dB RSSI RF power input reading providing a gain of 22dB in reference with the loop back test operation:
The plot is as shown below with transmit power set to -10 dBFS producing a 40.25 dB RSSI RF power input reading providing a 20 dB attenuation in reference with the loop back test operation:
Connecting the EVAL-CN0534-EBZ Board directly to the input (Rx) of a radio or other piece of RF equipment may exceed the absolute maximum ratings for the RF Input. (which is +2.5 dBm for the ADALM-PLUTO). Doing this may permanently damage the input.
EVAL-CN0534-SDPZ Design & Integration Files
End of Document