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Banana Skins – March 2018 (#28-47)

We hope you enjoy the column and look forward to continuing the tradition of sharing these valuable stories.

ESD Control in the World of IoT

The Industry 4.0 IoT platform automatically becomes a reliable and dependable venue for compliance verification, eliminating the traditional way of tedious predefined period manual checks.

The Useful Mirror Technique

The mirror technique is a very old technique to be used with PCBs when failing in radiated EMC tests. An easy solution to avoid changes in layout if the technique can be applied to your product.

What Every Electronics Engineer Needs to Know About: ESD Simulators

ESD simulators a.k.a. “ESD Guns” play an important role in product development and their proper selection and use are considered essential to any EMC test laboratory. The focus of this paper is on ESD simulators that perform testing of complete apparatus in accordance with IEC 61000-4-2 and other system level test standards.

Guard Trace Impact on Crosstalk Between PCB Traces

This article discusses the crosstalk reduction between PCB traces by utilizing a guard trace between the traces and investigating the effect of the guard trace grounding.
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Harmonics in Clocks Creating EMI Problems

Clock signals from 1 to 100MHz are usually responsible for radiated EMC problems in HF/VHF range. Harmonics are the culprits, but think in current, not in voltage.

Latch-up Qualification

Often (very) fast transients have been proven to trigger latch-up. This kind of latch-up is called transient induced latch-up, commonly known as “transient latch-up” (TLU).

Banana Skins – February 2018 (#20-27)

We regularly receive requests from readers to publish stories about real EMI/EMC problems faced by real engineers.

What Every Electronics Engineer Needs to Know About: RF Amplifiers

This brief article is geared towards EMC test practitioners who are tasked with specifying broadband RF amplifiers for RF immunity testing and need to quickly get up-to-speed on the key factors involved in the buying decision before actually making the purchase of an expensive amplifier.

Common-Impedance Coupling Between Circuits

For common-impedance coupling to occur, two circuits must share a current path (with a non-negligible impedance)
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