Is passing coexistence testing always good?

The growth of wireless electronics continues in several important ways. While this is good to the extent that new applications contribute to human flourishing, the competition for bandwidth on the electromagnetic spectrum becomes more challenging with every passing minute.

Wireless technologies proliferating quickly

Consider the many ways that wireless technologies are expanding into new applications. Applications that were non-existent or unusual a decade ago are now common and essential parts of daily life.

These wireless communications technologies make wireless coexistence more important and more challenging than ever, and many manufacturers rely on a document from the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) known as ANSI C63.27 to guide their wireless coexistence testing. The C63.27 document, entitled American National Standard for Evaluation of Wireless Coexistence, outlines four coexistence test methods, and each has its advantages and disadvantages.

Method 1: RF conducted test uses RF cables to combine and transmit signals between your equipment under test (EUT), its companion device, and some combination of transmitters or signal generators that simulate unintended signals. Because this method uses cables to conduct the signals, it is very repeatable. The use of cables, however, makes it less realistic than some other methods.

Method 2: Multiple chamber test uses two shielded anechoic chambers, one for the EUT and the other for its companion device. RF cables connect the two chambers, and an attenuator in the path between the chambers allows you to vary the signal strength. You also use transmitters or signal generators or both to pump simulated unintended signals into one or both chambers. Because this is a radiated test, it does not require cables to the EUT or the companion device. However, it does require that you have multiple chambers, and this adds significant cost.

Method 3: Radiated anechoic chamber test is conducted in a large, shielded room that contains the EUT, the companion device, and the interfering signal generators or transmitters. This extremely flexible method allows for a wide range of distances and orientations between the various items. You can also move equipment and rotate antennas in real time to see how the EUT’s key performance indicators (KPIs) change under various circumstances. The major drawback to this approach is that the cost of building and maintaining a shielded room of this type may easily be several millions of dollars. There are test houses that rent space and equipment for this purpose, but arranging for time in the room often must be done well ahead of time, and if your EUT fails, there may be a long wait for a subsequent test.

Method 4: Radiated open environment test is like radiated anechoic chamber test, but it is performed in an open environment, which means there may be unintended interference from other users. Like radiated anechoic chamber test, it is extremely flexible, but it is much less expensive because it does not require an anechoic chamber. Of course, the electromagnetic context of the open environment is less predictable than that within an anechoic chamber, so the test is not as repeatable. On the other hand, the unpredictability of the environment adds an element of “real life” to the method.

Your device passed its coexistence test: is that good?

Regardless of which test method you choose, passing a test may or may not indicate that your device is ready for the real world. The ANSI C63.27 document gives excellent descriptions of the four test methods, but it necessarily leaves many factors of the test design to the judgment and discretion of the device manufacturer. There is wide latitude in how the four methods are used, so passing a coexistence test may mean that your device performs robustly, or it may mean that your coexistence test is insufficiently challenging.

Before designing a coexistence test plan, test engineers should work with the cross-functional product development team and make sure that they understand answers to the following questions.

What is the purpose of the EUT, and what is the intended electromagnetic environment where will it be used? Consider challenging corner cases, such as a damaged building with several disabled access points or a busy emergency room with several active police and emergency responder radios.

By carefully considering these questions, you will increase the likelihood that passing your coexistence test means your device is ready for the real world, and not simply the beneficiary of an insufficiently rigorous test.

Brad Jolly is a Senior Applications Engineer at Keysight Technologies. Brad has worked for Keysight Technologies for more than 25 years, in charge of software research and development.