IEC 61000-4-21: “Testing and measurement techniques–Reverberation chamber test methods”

IEC

IEC 61000-4-21 doesn’t give any pass/fail criteria; it is solely aimed at standardizing radiated test methods conducted in reverb chambers. It was originally published in 2003 and last revised in 2011. You can purchase a copy here.

 

TIP:

Whenever possible, consider testing in a reverb chamber to save test time. Particularly for automotive testing, you don’t have to move the test object to illuminate three different orientations, since in reverb testing it will be hit from all angles. This is also a better correspondence to real-world conditions; in the automotive industry I ran into a few cases where a unit that passed ALSE testing failed during vehicle testing; the unit was then re-tested in reverb and failed there. It’s always better to troubleshoot at the module level than at the platform level.

 

This is one of those standards where the meat of the technical content is in the Annexes, so I’m listing them here:

Annex A (informative) Reverberation chamber overview

Annex B (normative) Chamber calibration for mode-tuning

Annex C (normative) Chamber calibration for mode-stirring

Annex D (normative) Radiated immunity tests

Annex E (normative) Radiated emissions measurements

Annex F (informative) Shielding effectiveness measurements of cable assemblies,cables, connectors, waveguides and passive microwave components

Annex G (informative) Shielding effectiveness measurements of gaskets and materials

Annex H (informative) Shielding effectiveness measurements of enclosures

Annex I (informative) Antenna efficiency measurements

Annex J (informative) Direct evaluation of reverberation performance using field anisotropy and field inhomogeneity coefficients

“Informative” annexes have information and context that may be useful for the user, where “normative” annexes contain steps and procedures that must be followed to use the standard correctly. 

The annexes provide a fairly clear and practical overview of reverb chamber testing, including the statistical math needed to properly setup the test environment and interpret measured data. It has details about tuner steps and field uniformity volume, as well as chamber loading and sampling requirements.

Figure A.5 from IEC 61000-4-21, typical reverb chamber setup
 

TIP:

I’d like to draw attention to Annex F, for measuring shielding effectiveness of cables. This is generally an excellent option for testing cables at high frequencies, and not otherwise covered in IEC 62153. However, the test method compares the power received by a shielded cable to that received by a reference antenna within the uniform field volume of the chamber (see below). This may overestimate the attenuation provided by the shield, since an unshielded cable may not have similar gain as the reference antenna. Although it requires an extra step and extra cable sample, it may be more representative of real-world conditions to test both a shielded and unshielded cable, then compare the power received by each instead of comparing to a tuned antenna.

 
Figure F.1 from IEC 61000-4-21, typical test setup for cable shielding effectiveness

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IEC 62153: “Metallic communication cables test methods”