This paper deals with a measurement method to determine the absolute impulse response of ultra-wideband (UWB) antennas. At this the antenna is placed into the testing volume of a gigahertz transverse electromagnetic (GTEM) cell, augmenting the use-case of this well-known EMC measurement device. The unit consisting of cell and antenna is excited by an UWB pulse. The chief attraction is that the impulse response of the GTEM cell can be modeled by a dirac distribution within a distinct time interval, so that within this interval an approximately plane TEM wave impinges on the antenna under test without being dispersively distorted by parasitic multimode wave propagation. Hence, the impulse response of a receiving antenna can exclusively be obtained within this distinct time interval, if further constraints, like maximal antenna size or estimated impulse response length are carefully adapted to the cell's properties. In order to verify the proposed method, it is applied to a UWB cone antenna and measurement results are compared with those derived from the two antenna method, a reference measurement incorporating two equally shaped antennas, as well as from simulations.
Abstract. This contribution deals with the results of a transient measurement campaign incorporating ultra-wideband (UWB) pulses applied to a large GTEM cell. The main purpose is to analyse the distortion effects on such a feeding pulse when transformed into a field pulse inside the cells testing volume. We will investigate if the TEM field distribution is interfered by multimode propagation, that may lead to location-dependent pulse distortion and ringing. Finally, conclusions on the applicability of GTEM cells for standardized transient EMC measurements will be drawn.
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