Radio-frequency engineering

 

Radio-frequency engineering

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Radio-frequency engineering
Occupation
NamesRadio-frequency engineer
  • Outside Broadcast Radio-frequency engineer
Occupation type
Profession
Description
CompetenciesTechnical knowledge, Management skills, Professionalism
Education required
MathematicsPhysicsElectronicsInformation technology
Fields of
employment
RadioTelevisionMilitary
Related jobs
TechnologistBroadcast engineerEngineering technicianTechnical Operator












Radio-frequency (RF) engineering is a subset of electronic engineering involving the application of transmission linewaveguideantenna and electromagnetic field principles to the design and application of devices that produce or utilize signals within the radio band, the frequency range of about 20 kHz up to 300 GHz.[1][2][3]

It is incorporated into almost everything that transmits or receives a radio wave, which includes, but is not limited to, mobile phonesradiosWi-Fi, and two-way radios. RF engineering is a highly specialized field that typically includes the following areas of expertise:

  1. Design of antenna systems to provide radiative coverage of a specified geographical area by an electromagnetic field or to provide specified sensitivity to an electromagnetic field impinging on the antenna.
  2. Design of coupling and transmission line structures to transport RF energy without radiation.
  3. Application of circuit elements and transmission line structures in the design of oscillators, amplifiers, mixers, detectors, combiners, filters, impedance transforming networks and other devices.
  4. Verification and measurement of performance of radio frequency devices and systems.[4]

To produce quality results, the RF engineer needs an in-depth knowledge of mathematicsphysics and general electronics theory as well as specialized training in areas such as wave propagation, impedance transformations, filters and microstrip printed circuit board design.

Radio electronics

Radio electronics is concerned with electronic circuits which receive or transmit radio signals.

Typically, such circuits must operate at radio frequency and power levels, which imposes special constraints on their design. These constraints increase in their importance with higher frequencies. At microwave frequencies, the reactance of signal traces becomes a crucial part of the physical layout of the circuit.

List of radio electronics topics:

  • RF oscillatorsPLLVoltage-controlled oscillator
  • TransmittersTransmission linesRF connectors
  • AntennasAntenna theory
  • ReceiversTuners
  • Amplifiers
  • ModulatorsDemodulatorsDetectors
  • RF filters
  • RF shieldingGround plane
  • DSSSNoise power
  • Digital radio
  • RF power amplifiers
    • MOSFETsPower MOSFETLDMOS
    • Bipolar junction transistors
  • Baseband processors (CMOS)
  • RF CMOS (mixed-signal integrated circuits)

Duties

Radio-frequency engineers are specialists in their respective field and can take on many different roles, such as design, installation, and maintenance. Radio-frequency engineers require many years of extensive experience in the area of study. This type of engineer has experience with transmission systems, device design, and placement of antennas for optimum performance. The RF engineer job description at a broadcast facility can include maintenance of the station's high-power broadcast transmitters and associated systems. This includes transmitter site emergency power, remote control, main transmission line and antenna adjustments, microwave radio relay STL/TSL links, and more.

In addition, a radio-frequency design engineer must be able to understand electronic hardware design, circuit board material, antenna radiation, and the effect of interfering frequencies that prevent optimum performance within the piece of equipment being developed.

Mathematics

Diagram of the electric fields (blue) and magnetic fields (red) radiated by a dipole antenna (black rods) during transmission.











There are many applications of electromagnetic theory to radio-frequency engineering, using conceptual tools such as vector calculus and complex analysis.[5][6] Topics studied in this area include waveguides and transmission lines, the behavior of radio antennas, and the propagation of radio waves through the Earth's atmosphere. Historically, the subject played a significant role in the development of nonlinear dynamics.[7]

See also

  • Broadcast engineering
  • Information theory
  • Microwave engineering
  • Overlap zone
  • Radio resource management
  • Radio-frequency current
  • SPLAT! A software program for visualizing terrain and performing Longley-Rice path loss and coverage prediction using the Irregular Terrain Model.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
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