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Under a Lewis Research Center Small Business Innovation Research
(SBIR) contract, EMC Technology, Cherry Hill, New Jersey, established
a family of temperature-compensating electronic attenuators.
These devices reduce the impact of heat upon amplifier gain.
Special thermistor materials were developed by EMC Technology,
thanks to the SBIR-funded work, devices that are particularly
useful in certain types of low power amplifiers used in satellite
applications. This novel approach to temperature compensation
spurred the company's ThermopadTM
temperature compensating attenuator product line.
Not only did the materials developed satisfy NASA requirements,
the SBIR work has also proven useful on several new commercial
fronts. Devices with greater temperature compensation and lower
loss have been developed and used by companies such as Hughes
Space and Communications, Motorola, Lucent, Ericcson, and General
Instrument.
One added result stemming from the EMC Technology work has
been a component that provides a temperature-compensated DC voltage
that is proportional to the power dissipated in a radio frequency
termination with a frequency range of 200 to 5440 Megahertz.
Communication systems that require accurate, reliable, low cost
power detection for level control and alarm circuits have benefited
by this development.
This peerless set of products was enhanced by materials developed
with the funding from an SBIR Phase II award, says Joseph Mazzochette,
EMC Technology's Vice President of Engineering. "The performance
improvements due to these materials is quite dramatic,"
he says. Moreover, as an added company dividend, those enhancements
open the door to new applications.
For over three decades, EMC Technology has been an industry
leader with innovative, high quality microwave components. EMC
Technology products are a mainstay in the wireless telecommunications
industry, in particular. Knowing that the needs of the marketplace
change quickly, the company is poised to respond to these changes
with cost-effective new solutions.
The passive temperature compensating attenuator best examples
this company strategy.
Now patented by EMC Technology, this component is an absorptive
microwave attenuator, providing power dissipation that varies
with temperature. The device can be used in any application that
requires a known amount of attenuation change for a particular
temperature shift. This is particularly useful for maintaining
the output of gain stages, mixers, power dividers, and other
signal processing components over temperature.
This electronic component is the ideal temperature compensation
solution, claims EMC Technology, for cost, performance, and reliability.
Presently used closed-loop temperature compensation circuits
can be replaced with a single chip device requiring no bias or
control. It excels in multiple signal applications such as cellular
telephone networks. With low cost and no signal distortion, the
attenuator provides high reliability for spacecraft applications.
Available in a wide assortment of package styles, the compensating
attenuator reduces component count, increases reliability, and
saves the buyer money.
TMThermopad is a trademark
of EMC Technology.
| NASA-funded materials
research helped in the fabrication of electronic attenuators
that compensate for temperature changes in amplifiers, mixers,
and oscillators. |
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