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Near-field electromagnetic characterization and perturbation of logic circuits
Dubois T., Jarrix S., Pénarier A., Nouvel P., Gasquet D., Chusseau L., Azaïs B.
IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement 57, 11 (2008) 2398-2404 - http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00329821
Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture
Sciences de l'ingénieur/Electronique
Near-field electromagnetic characterization and perturbation of logic circuits
T. Dubois, S. Jarrix 1, A. Pénarier 1, P. Nouvel 1, D. Gasquet 1, L. Chusseau 1, B. Azaïs
1 :  Institut d'Electronique du Sud (IES)
CNRS : UMR5214 – Université Montpellier II - Sciences et techniques
Place Eugène Bataillon 34095 MONTPELLIER CEDEX 5
France
We propose here a nondestructive electromagnetic (EM) near-field test bench for both EM compatibility and susceptibility of circuits. This setup permits both the collection of the near field and injection without contact of a disturbing EM field, all through a probe. Exhaustive characterizations of probes are undertaken via simulations and experiments. According to their design, they are supposedly linked more to the electric or the magnetic field. Simulations of their EM behavior are undergone to fix their optimal geometries, leading to the best measurement performances. It is shown by both the simulations and the S-parameter measurements that their presence does not interfere with the electric behavior of the device under test. Then, logic circuits are characterized from the EM point of view, with the help of this test bench. Circuits are placed on three different printed boards: one double-sided low-frequency board without a ground plane and two single-sided boards with a ground plane and a design that is more or less optimized. EM near-field mappings highlight the strong field areas of the circuits. The need for a ground plane is highlighted. Field patterns on the traces are linked with those observed on microstrip lines. Then, an EM aggression is injected over a supposed sensitive zone of the circuit. Whichever printed board is considered, a parasitic signal superimposes itself on the output signal of the gates. Deepened studies are undergone to exhaustively explain the phenomena observed
Anglais

IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement
Publisher Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
ISSN 0018-9456 
internationale
11/2008
57
11
2398-2404

EM interference (EMI) – Electromagnetic (EM) compatibility – imaging – probe antennas – sensitivity