Part of how Cell phones work relies on reducing electromagnetic
interference that can impact clarity of calls between users. This
is don through various forms of EMI shielding on the parts that
make the phone work, the outer casing of the phone, and on the
antennas used to transmit the signal across the network. How
electromagnetic shielding does this is through reduction of the
electromagnetic field around the components and the item itself in
order to enhance the clarity if the signal being received and
transmitted. This shielding is related to RF shielding also, which
blocks radio frequencies in the electromagnetic spectrum. Typically
EMI shielding is formed of conductive and/or magnetic substances
and applied to enclosures, cables, and other areas that require
protection from interference.
RF shielding is designed to reduce the coupling of radio waves
specifically, while EMI shielding can be applied to this subset as
well as those shields that cut electromagnetic and electrostatic
fields (one form that does this is the Faraday cage) as well.
Common static inducing or low frequency magnetic fields are not
blocked by these types of shields however. A number of factors are
related to exactly how effectively the shields work, including
material type, material thickness, shielded volume, frequency of
the fields, size of the fields, and shape plus orientation of
apertures in a shield to an incident.
For cellular antenna EMI shielding can be created from a number of
things, like sheet metal, metal screen, and metal foam. The mesh
size in a screen shield must be smaller then the wavelength being
shielded against. Interior sides of plastic cases requiring EMI
shielding may be coated with metallic ink or similar substances to
create the proper shield against interference. Commonly used metals
for this include copper and nickel. Shielded cables, as one might
find as power devices, usually have a wire mesh around the inner
core that keeps the signal from escaping the conductor material and
prevents outside radiation from impacting the quality of the
signal. RF shielding is used on a wide number of applications
including shielding RFID chips included on passports, computer and
keyboards used by the military, medical and laboratory equipment,
and AM, FM, and TV broadcast facilities.
Shielding can work in several ways, by either canceling the field
inside it with an opposing charge, or by creating a varied field
that generates eddy currents that reflects the radiation away. RF
shields are limited because the electrical resistance factor of the
conductor prevents a complete cancellation of the incidental field,
the ferromagnetic response to low-frequencies prevents full
attenuation, and gaps or holes that exist in the material cause the
current to flow around them, thereby creating holes in the shield
itself to the frequencies that are needing to be reflected.
The types of EMI that mobile technology needs to be shielded from
is vast and varied. Not only do internal components need to be
blocked from each other, the system needs to be protected from
signals that might interfere with the clarity of the calls being
processed. Disturbance from the external radiation can cause
serious degrading in the quality and performance that a cellular
system offers the consumer. Sources of this can come from anything
that carries rapidly changing electrical currents including the sun
it self.
When looking at the types of EMI or RFI being shielded or tested
for one should be aware of the two forms that it is characterized
as. Narrowband EMI is typically from intentional transmission
sources like radio and TV stations, pagers, cell phones, and
similar devices. Broadband interference is related to incidental
emitters like electric power lines, motors, thermostats, bug
zappers and other devics that have rapid on/off patterns. RFI that
is broadband can be very hard to filter out once it has penetrated
into a receiver chain.
Where internal components are concerned one will find that
integrated circuits use bypass of decoupling capacitors to reduce
the EMI they might transmit There may also be rise time control of
high-speed signals through series resistors and Vcc filtering.
These are used first with actual shielding be applied only as a
last resort because of the additional expense that shielding has.
Even so we can easily find examples of digital equipment designed
with metal or conductive coated plastic cases which act as EMI
shields. In order to check the effective nature of such shielding
designers need to test new prototypes for RF immunity inside
anechoic chambers with a controlled RF environment in order to gain
proper readings of the capability of integrated circuits to reject
RF.
The use of EMI shielding is a must for testing and getting the full benefit from mobile technology. There are many other terms used in this procedure which include EMC/EMI testing, bandwidth testing as well as knowledge of electromagnetic interference. Having a sound knowledge of all these terms will enable you to use your cellular service in a much better way.
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