Single-Ended and Differential S-Parameters
Differential circuits have been important in communication systems for many years. In the past, differential communication circuits operated at low frequencies, where they could be designed and analyzed using lumped-element models and techniques. With the frequency of operation increasing beyond 1GHz, and above 1Gbps for digital communications, this lumped-element approach is no longer valid, because the physical size of the circuit approaches the size of a wavelength. Distributed models and analysis techniques are now used instead of lumped-element techniques. Scattering parameters, or S-parameters, have been developed for this purpose [1]. These S-parameters are defined for single-ended networks. S-parameters can be used to describe differential networks, but a strict definition was not developed until Bockelman and others addressed this issue [2]. Bockelman’s work also included a study on how to adapt single- ended S-parameters for use with differential circuits [2]. This adaptation, called “mixed-mode S- parameters,” addresses differential and common- mode operation, as well as the conversion between the two modes of operation. This application note will explain the use of single- ended and mixed-mode S-parameters, and the basic concepts of microwave measurement calibration.
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