A New Coaxial Flow Calorimeter for Accurate RF Power Measurements up to 100 Watts and 1 GHz

A. S. Brush
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Abstract

Establishing traceability of RF power measurements at power levels in excess of a few watts has historically used methods that we will categorize into two major branches. One class of methods uses low-power sensors traceable through microcalorimeters operating in the milliWatt range. This class is exemplified by the power measurement technique described by Bramall [4], in which the low power sensors are used to measure the insertion loss of attenuators or couplers, which are then cascaded to provide the required attenuation or coupling factor to enable measurement of high power using low power sensors. The other major division is the direct measurement of the higher power using high power calorimeters. The basic theory and history of flow calorimeters is described well in chapter 5 of Fantom [1], and recently available commercial flow calorimeters are described in their respective user manuals [2][7].The cascaded coupler method has been refined to the point at which, for 100 Watt measurements below 1 GHz, NIST reports the ability to calibrate transfer standards with an uncertainty of 0.67% [3][8]. This uncertainty seems adequate to provide traceability for typical power sensors giving an overall uncertainty of 3% to 4% [5], but is higher than the 0.6% required to calibrate the most accurate of high-power RF sensors [6]. The method is also reported to be, “cumbersome and lengthy”[8].Commercially available calorimeters [2][7] represent that the user will obtain measurement uncertainty in the neighborhood of 1.25%. One of the referenced models claims 0.5%, but “not including load error”, which apparently does not include offset due to a leakage path. In real calibrations performed by the authors, that unit’s total error exceeded 2% of full scale. However much better results have been shown to be possible, such as by Bird[6] showing that their lab can calibrate to 0.6% when required. In the project being reported on, the authors addressed the challenge of finding as many of the sources of error in a flow calorimeter as possible, and followed up on the findings by developing new instrumentation, process automation, and heat flow to minimize error as much as possible.
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一种新的同轴流量量热计,用于精确测量高达100瓦和1 GHz的射频功率
在超过几瓦的功率水平上建立射频功率测量的可追溯性历来使用的方法,我们将其分为两个主要分支。一类方法使用低功率传感器,可通过工作在毫瓦范围内的微热量计跟踪。Bramall[4]描述的功率测量技术就是这类技术的例证,该技术使用低功率传感器来测量衰减器或耦合器的插入损耗,然后将衰减器或耦合器级联以提供所需的衰减或耦合因子,从而能够使用低功率传感器测量高功率。另一个主要部分是使用高功率量热计直接测量更高的功率。流量量热仪的基本理论和历史在Fantom的第5章中有很好的描述[1],最近市面上的流量量热仪在它们各自的用户手册中也有描述[2][7]。级联耦合器方法已经过改进,在1 GHz以下的100瓦测量中,NIST报告能够以0.67%的不确定度校准传输标准[3][8]。这种不确定性似乎足以为典型的功率传感器提供可追溯性,总体不确定性为3%至4%[5],但高于校准最精确的大功率射频传感器所需的0.6%[6]。该方法也被报道为“繁琐而冗长”[8]。市售量热计[2][7]表示用户将获得1.25%附近的测量不确定度。其中一个参考模型声称为0.5%,但“不包括负载误差”,这显然不包括由于泄漏路径造成的偏移。在作者进行的实际校准中,该装置的总误差超过了满量程的2%。然而,更好的结果已经被证明是可能的,例如Bird[6]表明他们的实验室可以在需要时校准到0.6%。在报告的项目中,作者解决了在流量量热计中尽可能多地找到误差来源的挑战,并通过开发新的仪器、过程自动化和热流来跟踪这些发现,以尽可能地减少误差。
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