drkirkby
Full Member level 6
I know the coaxial "open" standard used for calibration of Agilent/HP vector network analysers (and possibly other makes), is modelled as some offset (in ps) and a polynomial representing the capacitance as a function of frequency.
In a book recently published on VNAs by Dr. Joel Dunsmore at Agilent
**broken link removed**
there's plot of capacitance vs frequency for an open, and that shows an increasing capacitance vs frequency, but the reasons are not explained. (I've asked on the Agilent VNA forums, so I'm sure Joel will answer). I highly reccommend that book to anyone using VNAs seriously.
Someone else asked the same sort of question some time ago on the EDA forums, when his simulations with Sonnet showed an increasing capacitance with frequency, and he did not know why.
https://www.edaboard.com/threads/64338/
Someone posted a PDF for him to read
But having read that short paper, it only says the capacitance does increase with frequency, until the self-resonate frequency is reached. That models a practical capacitor as a seriel R L C circuit, where R is the ESR and Ls is the self-inductance. There's an equation there, which gives the effective capacitance Ceff at some frequency f, as a function of the capacitance at 1 MHz Cm.
(I purposely changed the symbols used, so not to conflict with the Agilent one, since both use C0, but for a different purpose).
But the paper gives no physical understanding of why capacitance changes with frequency.
I can understand why a capacitor becomes self-resonate at some frequency - that would happen even if the capacitance remains fixed. But what I can't understand is why capacitance changes as a function of frequency.
(For what it is worth, the inductance of a coaxial "short" also changes with frequency, but the effects of that on VNA calibration can be ignored below about 6 GHz, whereas the change in fringing capacitance of a coaxial "open" are significant at much lower frequencies).
Any ideas why fringing capacitance should vary with frequency?
Dave
Code:
C(f)=C0 + C1 f + C2 f[SUP]2[/SUP] + C3 f[SUP]3[/SUP]
In a book recently published on VNAs by Dr. Joel Dunsmore at Agilent
**broken link removed**
there's plot of capacitance vs frequency for an open, and that shows an increasing capacitance vs frequency, but the reasons are not explained. (I've asked on the Agilent VNA forums, so I'm sure Joel will answer). I highly reccommend that book to anyone using VNAs seriously.
Someone else asked the same sort of question some time ago on the EDA forums, when his simulations with Sonnet showed an increasing capacitance with frequency, and he did not know why.
https://www.edaboard.com/threads/64338/
Someone posted a PDF for him to read
But having read that short paper, it only says the capacitance does increase with frequency, until the self-resonate frequency is reached. That models a practical capacitor as a seriel R L C circuit, where R is the ESR and Ls is the self-inductance. There's an equation there, which gives the effective capacitance Ceff at some frequency f, as a function of the capacitance at 1 MHz Cm.
Code:
C[SUB]eff[/SUB](f)=C[SUB]m[/SUB]/(1-(2 π f)[SUP]2[/SUP] L[SUB]s[/SUB] C[SUB]m[/SUB])
(I purposely changed the symbols used, so not to conflict with the Agilent one, since both use C0, but for a different purpose).
But the paper gives no physical understanding of why capacitance changes with frequency.
I can understand why a capacitor becomes self-resonate at some frequency - that would happen even if the capacitance remains fixed. But what I can't understand is why capacitance changes as a function of frequency.
(For what it is worth, the inductance of a coaxial "short" also changes with frequency, but the effects of that on VNA calibration can be ignored below about 6 GHz, whereas the change in fringing capacitance of a coaxial "open" are significant at much lower frequencies).
Any ideas why fringing capacitance should vary with frequency?
Dave