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but it says "Impedance - Unbalanced/Balanced 50 / 100 Ohm"confused . . . so do I use a 100ohm or a 50ohm impedance balun?Is lower impedance always a good thing?
but it says "Impedance - Unbalanced/Balanced 50 / 100 Ohm"confused . . . so do I use a 100ohm or a 50ohm impedance balun?
Is lower impedance always a good thing?
TERMINAL FUNCTIONS1 Unbalanced Port2 GND or DC feed+ RF GND3 Balanced Port4 Balanced Port5 GND6 N.C.
Quotebut it says "Impedance - Unbalanced/Balanced 50 / 100 Ohm"confused . . . so do I use a 100ohm or a 50ohm impedance balun?This means that the unbalanced side is 50 Ohm and the balanced side is 100 Ohm. That Balun transforms the impedance in a 1:2 ratio as well.
Another question . . . where on the balun does the antenna go?The attached file shows the balun, and the schematic I need to build. Not sure where stuff connects ie where the balanced/unbalanced lines go wrt the schematic.
Hmmmm mouser doesn't list impedance ratios . . . whats a good ratio for 2.4GHz? I'm guessing 2:1 will work fine . . .
Quote from: Admin on February 26, 2010, 10:13:29 AMAnother question . . . where on the balun does the antenna go?The attached file shows the balun, and the schematic I need to build. Not sure where stuff connects ie where the balanced/unbalanced lines go wrt the schematic.What goes on the other (non-antenna) side of the balun?
RFP is the positive terminal for the bi-directional, differential RF I/O port.RFN is the negative terminal for the bi-directional, differential RF I/O port.
The Balun ratio is to match the output impedance of your device (RF amplifier) to the input impedance of your antenna and has nothing to do with the frequency. It is the actual value of the components that make a Balun that are dependent on frequency.
. . . and why are there 50ohm:50ohm baluns?
Are the Zigbees really 50W? (Sounds like a lot of power for such a device). And a true balanced in-/output?
The antenna goes on the side marked "RF" in your drawing.
Quote from: Admin on February 26, 2010, 11:01:20 PM. . . and why are there 50ohm:50ohm baluns?To go from balanced to unbalanced (or v.v.) where both sides are 50 Ohm.
"The 50W single-ended RF input is transformed to the 100W differential RF port impedance using Balun B1.
Quote"The 50W single-ended RF input is transformed to the 100W differential RF port impedance using Balun B1.This must be a typo since a passive device can not create power. Or more likely the translation program didn't know what the Omega character was a it translated to a W. I believe it should read as:"The 50 Ohm single-ended RF input is transformed to the 100 Ohm differential RF port impedance using Balun B1." Which now makes perfect sense.
To determine if you need a Balun and what its ratio would be you do need to design to antenna first.
Note that they use a Balun built with discrete components for matching modules balanced (RFN/RFP) output to the single ended (unbalanced) antenna. They use mircostrip to maintain the trace impedance.
So does this mean that the transceiver has 100ohm impedance, while the antenna was 50ohms, and that the balun did a 2:1 ratio to balance them?
Well, I can make the antenna to be whatever I want, as long as it fits on my PCB. My plan is for it to be a straight strip trace monopole antenna, with a length of probably 1/8 wavelength and width of whatever balances the impedance. Lets say I make it a 50ohm impedance antenna.
There is a Positive and Negative connection (RFP/RFN), is there a difference? If I get them backwards, would I end up inverting the 0's and 1's?