Concepts and Features
R&S
®
ZNB/ZNBT
183
User Manual 1173.9163.02 ─ 38
●
Calibration can be performed at the DUT's ports. If necessary (e.g. for compensat-
ing for the effect of a test fixture) it is possible to shift the calibration plane using
length offset parameters.
4.6.2.2
Deembedding a DUT
Deembedding and embedding are inverse operations: A deembedding problem is
given if an arbitrary real network connected to the DUT is to be virtually removed in
order to obtain the characteristics of the DUT alone. Deembedding is typically used for
DUTs which are not directly accessible because they are inseparably connected to
other components, e.g. for MMICs in a package or connectors soldered to an adapter
board.
To be numerically removed, the real network must be described by a set of S-parame-
ters or by an equivalent circuit of lumped elements. Deembedding the DUT effectively
extends the calibration plane towards the DUT ports, enabling a realistic evaluation of
the DUT without the distorting network. Deembedding can be combined with length off-
set parameters; see
Chapter 4.6.1, "Offset Parameters"
The simplest case of single port deembedding can be depicted as follows:
4.6.2.3
Circuit Models for 2-Port Networks
The lumped element 2-port transformation networks for (de-)embedding consist of the
following two basic circuit blocks:
●
a capacitor connected in parallel with a resistor
●
an inductor connected in series with a resistor
The 2-port transformation networks comprise all possible combinations of 2 basic
blocks, where either one block represents a serial and the other a shunt element or
both represent shunt elements. In the default setting the resistors are not effective,
since the serial resistances are set to 0 Ω, the shunt resistances are set to 10 MΩ and
the shunt inductances are set to 0 Siemens.
The first network is defined by its S-parameters stored in an imported two-port Touch-
stone file (
*.s2p
). No additional parameters are required.
Offset Parameters and Embedding