Showing posts with label rf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rf. Show all posts

Cell Phone RF Radiation Detector LED

Friday, September 19, 2014 | Labels: , , , , , | 0 comments |
From rookieelectronics: This is my favorite project, its too simple and very interesting because it does not require any voltage source. it converts RF frequency waves from cell phone (whenever you call or send a text) to little current to flash a LED.


Cell Phone RF Radiation Detector

Actually this project is also called as LED power meter, it is used to test RF equipments. It can detect output power of our FM transmitters, by simply connecting voltmeter in the place of the load(LED) of this circuit.
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RF Fm 88 108 MHz 20W amplifier

Thursday, April 11, 2013 | Labels: , , , , , , | 0 comments |
This Fm rf power amplifier has 2 transistors from Philips : BLV 10 and BLW 87. The 2 rf transistors work in class C and this fm amplifier has a total gain of 21dB ( 100 X ) and efficiency 55 – 65%.
One low pass filter with 9 components ensures 60dB rejection on the second harmonic. There is no need for tune-up to cover the whole 88 – 108 MHz FM frequencies.


source [link] 
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Linear RF Power Meter Circuit

Wednesday, April 10, 2013 | Labels: , , , , | 0 comments |

The National Semiconductor LMV225 is a linear RF power meter IC in an SMD package. It can be used over the frequency range of 450 MHz to 2000 MHz and requires only four external components. The input coupling capacitor isolates the DC voltage of the IC from the input signal. The 10-k? resistor enables or disables the IC according to the DC voltage present at the input pin. If it is higher than 1.8 V, the detector is enabled and draws a current of around 5–8 mA. If the voltage on pin A1 is less than 0.8 V, the IC enters the shutdown mode and draws a current of only a few microampères. The LMV225 can be switched between the active and shutdown states using a logic-level signal if the signal is connected to the signal via the 10-kR resistor.
Circuit diagram:
linear-rf-power-meter-circuit-diagram1 Linear RF Power Meter Circuit Diagram
 
The supply voltage, which can lie between +2.7 V und +5.5 V, is filtered by a 100nF capacitor that diverts residual RF signals to ground. Finally, there is an output capacitor that forms a low-pass filter in combination with the internal circuitry of the LMV225. If this capacitor has a value of 1 nF, the corner frequency of this low-pass filter is approximately 8 kHz. The corner frequency can be calculated using the formula fc = 1 ÷ (2 p COUT Ro) where Ro is the internal output impedance (19.8 k?). The output low-pass filter determines which AM modulation components are passed by the detector.

rf-power-meter-circuit-diagram2 
The output, which has a relatively high impedance, provides an output voltage that is proportional to the signal power, with a slope of 40 mV/dB. The output is 2.0 V at 9 dBm and 0.4 V at –40 dBm. A level of 0 dBm corresponds to a power of 1 mW in 50 R. For a sinusoidal wave-form, this is equivalent to an effective voltage of 224 mV. For modulated signals, the relationship between power and voltage is generally different. The table shows several examples of power levels and voltages for sinusoidal signals. The input impedance of the LMV225 detector is around 50 R to provide a good match to the characteristic impedance commonly used in RF circuits.

The data sheet for the LMV225 shows how the 40-dB measurement range can be shifted to a higher power level using a series input resistor. The LMV225 was originally designed for use in mobile telephones, so it comes in a tiny SMD package with dimensions of only around 1 × 1 mm with four solder bumps (similar to a ball-grid array package). The connections are labelled A1, A2, B1 and B1, like the elements of a matrix. The corner next to A1 is bevelled.
 
 
 
http://streampowers.blogspot.com/2012/06/linear-rf-power-meter-circuit.html 
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