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Mds

The document discusses methods for calculating a system's minimum detectable signal (MDS). It explains that the MDS is dependent on white noise contributions from thermal noise and measurement bandwidth, as well as receiver noise. The white noise power in a 1 Hz bandwidth at room temperature is -174 dBm. Larger bandwidths increase the noise power by 10log(bandwidth in Hz). Receiver noise is calculated from its noise figure, which is the sum of component losses. The MDS is the total noise power from white noise and receiver contributions. An example calculation for a given system is provided.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
104 views5 pages

Mds

The document discusses methods for calculating a system's minimum detectable signal (MDS). It explains that the MDS is dependent on white noise contributions from thermal noise and measurement bandwidth, as well as receiver noise. The white noise power in a 1 Hz bandwidth at room temperature is -174 dBm. Larger bandwidths increase the noise power by 10log(bandwidth in Hz). Receiver noise is calculated from its noise figure, which is the sum of component losses. The MDS is the total noise power from white noise and receiver contributions. An example calculation for a given system is provided.

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analogak
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Overview of Calculating System Minimum Detectable Signal

Overview of Calculating System Minimum Detectable Signal

White Noise Contribution


There are a wide range of applications for which it is desirable or necessary to know the
minimum power level at which a system receiver can detect an incoming signal. Because the
minimum detectable signal (MDS) also pertains to the noise floor of system receiver, this is of
particular import when the received power level may be close to the MDS. Knowledge of the
MDS is also necessary when calculating the dynamic range or signal to noise ratio for a
particular receiver configuration. The following treatment outlines a straightforward method to
derive the MDS.
White noise is the blanket noise, containing a uniform power density per unit frequency interval,
that is present in all electrical system. It can be shown that the noise power contained in an
millimeter-wave receiver is given by Boltzmans Law, i.e.,
NoisePower = kT
(1)
k = Constant
T = Absolute Temperature (Kelvin)
= Measurement Bandwidth
In 1 Hz of measurement bandwidth, and at room temperature (293 Kelvin), the noise power
contribution to the system receiver by white noise is:
kT = -174 dBm.
(2)
Rather than recalculating the noise power for other arbitrary measurement bandwidths using (1)
above, a simplified method, utilizing (2), can be used.
MDS = Noise Floor = -174 dBm + Additional Noise Power in N Hz Bandwidth.
(3)Consider the logarithmic (dB) relation between a measurement bandwidth of 1 Hz and 1 MHz
10 6 Hz
(10-6 Hz); dB1 (1 MHz to 1 Hz) = 10 log (
) = 60 dB .
(4)
1 Hz

This value can be arrived at quickly for any magnitudes of 1 Hz by taking the exponent of the measurement
bandwidth and multiplying by ten (In the example above 6 exponent times to = 60).
Rev. 01 C 091701

1
Millitech, LLC 29 Industrial Drive East, Northampton, MA 01060 USA
Phone: (413)582-9620 FAX: (413)582-9622 Email: [email protected] Website: www.millitech.com

Overview of Calculating System Minimum Detectable Signal

Using (3), the additional noise power in a 1 MHz measurement bandwidth over that in its 1 Hz
counterpart is:
kT 1 MHz Bandwidth = kT 1 Hz Bandwidth + Additional Noise Power in 1 MHz = -174 dBm + 60 dB
= -114 dBm in 1 MHz measurement bandwidth.
Similarly, in 1 GHz (109 Hz) of measurement bandwidth:
kT 1 GHz Bandwidth = kT 1 Hz Bandwidth + Additional Noise Power in 1 GHz = -174 dBm + 90 dB
= -84 dBm in 1 GHz measurement bandwidth.
Receiver Noise Contribution
The contribution to the system noise power by the receiver is found by determining the system
noise figure (NF). For receivers with amplifiers, the receiver noise figure is given as;
NF Receiver = NF1 Component +

NF2 ND Component
Gain 1st Component

NF3rd Component
Gain 1st Component Gain 2 nd Component

(5)

Typically, for amplifiers with gains of greater than 13 dB, noise figure terms following the
amplifier can be discounted2.
For most millimeter-wave components, the insertion loss or conversion loss is specified but the
noise figure is not. At room temperature (293 K), the component noise figure can be taken as
equal to the insertion loss or conversion loss value. For other ambient temperatures, the noise
temperature of the component can be determined via;
T = (L-1)TAMB +
T = Component Noise Temperature
TAMB = Ambient Temperature in which component operates
L = Fractional Loss of Component
This can be converted into a NF value using;
T
NFComponent = 10 log Component
295 K


+ 1 .

(6)

A table of noise temperature to noise figure conversions can be used.


The receiver noise figure can be found by adding the component contributions using (5) above.

Consider an input amplifier with 13 dB of gain. 13 dB 20 that, when substituted for Gain1stComponent in (4) yields a

second component noise figure contribution of

NF2 nfr Component


20

Rev. 01 C 091701

2
Millitech, LLC 29 Industrial Drive East, Northampton, MA 01060 USA
Phone: (413)582-9620 FAX: (413)582-9622 Email: [email protected] Website: www.millitech.com

Overview of Calculating System Minimum Detectable Signal

Receiver Minimum Detectable Signal (Noise Floor)


The MDS or noise floor for any receiver system can then be found by adding the noise power
contributions obtained from (3) and (5) above.
Example:
The system diagrammed below resides at room temperature. The measurement bandwidth is
GAUSSIAN OPTICS ANTENNA

FILTER

BALANCED
LOW NOISE AMPLIFIER
MIXER

TO PROCESSING COMPONENTS

I.L. 1 dB

N.F. 3 dB
GAIN 20 dB

I.L. -.5 dB
C.L. -5 dB

I.L. INSERTION LOSS


C.L. CONVERSION LOSS

LO INPUT

100 kHz
The relative noise power at a measurement bandwidth of 100 kHz to that at 1 Hz is 50 dB (100
kHz = 105) yielding a white noise power contribution of 174 dBm + 50 dB = -124 dBm. Using
the insertion loss or conversion loss to noise figure equivalence approximation at room
temperature and adding for the components in the diagram yields a receiver noise figure of 1.0
dB + 0.5 dB + 5.0 dB + 3 dB = 9.5 dB3. Adding these two values yields an MDS or noise floor
value of 114.5 dBm.

The approximation on post amplifier noise power contributions has been ignored due to the high gain of the amp.

Rev. 01 C 091701

3
Millitech, LLC 29 Industrial Drive East, Northampton, MA 01060 USA
Phone: (413)582-9620 FAX: (413)582-9622 Email: [email protected] Website: www.millitech.com

Overview of Calculating System Minimum Detectable Signal

A Brief Description of Y-Factor Radiometric Measurements

A generic test setup is shown below.


AMBIENT LOAD

POWER OR VOLTAGE MEASUREMENT DEVICE

T1
ANTENNA

POWER OR VOLTAGE OUT

DUT
LOAD LN 2

T2

Figure 1: Measurement Test Setup


The receiver/radiometer4 is allowed to reach a thermal steady state of TAMB1. A load
consisting of absorbing material (carbon based) at T1 (known ambient laboratory
temperature) serves as the hot calibration load while the same absorbing material, bathed
in liquid Nitrogen (LN2; T2 = 77 K), serves as the cold load. The absorbing material,
residing at THOT (TCOLD) and then TCOLD (THOT) (T1 and T2 in Figure 1 above), is placed in
front of the receiver/radiometer such that it fills the entire field of view of the antenna.
The voltage5 or power output of the measurement device is then recorded for each
temperature yielding:
Phot = Power measurement at ambient load temperature= VHOT
Pcold = Power measurement at LN2 load temperature. = VCOLD
The delta Y-Factor value is obtained from the slope, dY, of the graph of the temperatures
verses their respective voltages depicted in Figure 2 below.
The slope of the graph can be written in terms of the hot and cold Y-Factor temperatures
and the temperature of the device under test via the following equation:
dY =

PHOT
T
+ TDUT
= HOT
; THOT = T1 , TCOLD = T2 .
PCOLD TCOLD + TDUT

Solving for TDUT yields:


TDUT =

4
5

THOT - dY TCOLD
dY 1

TMIXER will be used to denote the noise temperature of receiver, radiometer or device under test.
A detector operating in the square law region yielding a voltage that is directly proportional to the input power.

Rev. 01 C 091701

1
Millitech, LLC 29 Industrial Drive East, Northampton, MA 01060 USA
Phone: (413)582-9620 FAX: (413)582-9622 Email: [email protected] Website: www.millitech.com

Overview of Calculating System Minimum Detectable Signal

The noise figure can then be calculated from the DUT noise temperature via:
T

NFDUT ( dB ) = 10 log DUT + 1


295

It is important to note that the above calculation does not take into account the noise added by the antenna or by any
other device in the measurement chain.

Rev. 01 C 091701

2
Millitech, LLC 29 Industrial Drive East, Northampton, MA 01060 USA
Phone: (413)582-9620 FAX: (413)582-9622 Email: [email protected] Website: www.millitech.com

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