Title :
Compact traveling-wave physical simulator for human ESD
Author :
MacLeod, Leesa M. ; Balmain, Keith G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Toronto Univ., Ont., Canada
fDate :
5/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Existing travelling-wave electrostatic discharge (ESD) simulators satisfactorily reproduce the characteristics of a human discharge but have dimensions comparable to a human subject, so they are inconveniently large for practical ESD susceptibility testing of electronic equipment. This paper describes the design of a compact travelling-wave ESD simulator with benchtop-scale dimensions. The design process utilized frequency-domain measurements and computer simulations of wave attenuation on the part of the simulator representing the human arm. From these results, it was deduced that the ESD simulator arm could be shortened from its original human-scale length of 60 cm to a more compact 30 cm without significantly affecting the currents flowing on it. The part of the simulator representing the human body was designed on the basis of capacitance. The resulting travelling-wave simulator (arm and body) is approximately half the size of the original simulator. Measurements are presented comparing the compact simulator with a previously-designed full-size simulator and with a human test subject, with regard to arm currents, swept-frequency input impedance, and capacitance
Keywords :
bioelectric phenomena; capacitance; electromagnetic compatibility; electronic equipment testing; electrostatic discharge; frequency-domain synthesis; simulation; ESD simulator arm; arm currents; benchtop-scale dimension; body; capacitance; compact traveling-wave physical simulator; frequency-domain measurements; human ESD; human arm; human discharge; swept-frequency input impedance; travelling-wave electrostatic discharge simulators; wave attenuation; Attenuation measurement; Biological system modeling; Capacitance; Computational modeling; Computer simulation; Electronic equipment; Electronic equipment testing; Electrostatic discharge; Humans; Process design;
Journal_Title :
Electromagnetic Compatibility, IEEE Transactions on