IEEE C63.15 2010
$37.38
American National Standard Recommended Practice for the Immunity Measurement of Electrical and Electronic Equipment
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2010 | 51 |
– Active. This immunity measurement and measurement instrumentation specification document complements the recommended procedures for making emission measurements as specified in ANSI C63.4. The immunity methods are alternative methods that might be of use to manufacturers who want to ensure a reliable product and reduce customer complaints by adding some additional immunity into their products beyond that required by law or by correcting problems experienced in the field not related to regulatory requirements. This document generally covers the frequency range of 30 Hz to 10 GHz.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | ANSI C63.15-2010 cover page |
2 | ANSI C63.15-2010 title page |
5 | Introduction Notice to users Laws and regulations Copyrights Updating of IEEE documents Errata Interpretations |
6 | Patents |
7 | Paticipatns |
9 | Contents |
11 | 1. Scope |
12 | 2. Normative references |
13 | 3. Definitions |
14 | 4. General requirements 4.1 Safety precautions 4.2 Input power requirements 4.3 Measurement tolerances |
15 | 4.4 Annexes 4.5 Test reports 5. Conducted immunity 5.1 CI-1: Power-line immunity, 30 Hz to 150 kHz 5.1.1 General considerations 5.1.2 Measurement procedure 5.1.3 Performance degradation 5.1.4 Suggested immunity levels |
16 | 5.2 CI-2: Power-line and signal-line immunity, bulk current injection, 10 kHz to 200 MHz 5.2.1 General considerations 5.2.2 Measurement procedure 5.2.3 Suggested immunity level 5.3 CI-3: Communications receiver antenna input immunity (receivers other than broadcast), 30 Hz to 10 GHz 5.3.1 General considerations 5.3.2 Immunity signal |
17 | 5.3.3 Test setup and procedure |
18 | 5.3.4 Performance degradation 5.3.5 Test equipment |
20 | 5.4 CI-4: Receiver antenna input immunity for TVs and VCRs, 0.5 MHz to 30 MHz 5.4.1 General considerations 5.4.2 Measurement procedure 5.5 CI-5: Power/interconnection line surge voltage 5.5.1 General considerations |
21 | 5.5.2 Measurement procedure 5.5.3 Suggested immunity level 5.6 CI-6: Electrical fast transient/burst 5.6.1 General considerations 5.6.2 Measurement procedure 5.6.3 Suggested immunity level |
22 | 5.7 CI-7: Telecommunications terminal equipment line voice band line immunity, 10 kHz to 30 MHz 5.7.1 General considerations 5.7.2 Immunity signal 5.7.3 Test set-up and procedure |
23 | 5.7.4 Performance degradation 5.7.5 Test equipment |
27 | 5.8 CI-8: Telecommunications telephone terminal equipment, immunity requirements for equipment having an acoustic output, 150 kHz to 30 MHz 5.8.1 General considerations 5.8.2 Measurement procedure 5.8.3 Immunity signal 5.8.4 Compliance criteria |
28 | 6. Radiated immunity 6.1 RI-1: Uniform magnetic field immunity, Helmholtz coil, 30 Hz to 100 kHz 6.1.1 Measurement procedure 6.1.2 Description of the Helmholtz coil |
29 | 6.2 RI-2: Magnetic field immunity, point source, 30 Hz to 100 kHz 6.2.1 Measurement procedure 6.2.2 Suggested immunity level 6.2.3 Correction factor 6.3 RI-3: Power frequency magnetic induction field |
30 | 6.3.1 Measurement procedure and test setup 6.3.2 Immunity signal 6.3.3 Performance degradation 6.3.4 Required test equipment |
31 | 6.4 RI-4: Spikes-inductive field immunity 6.4.1 Measurement procedure and test setup |
32 | 6.4.2 Immunity signal 6.4.3 Performance degradation 6.4.4 Test equipment |
33 | 6.5 RI-5: Electric field immunity in a TEM cell, 10 kHz to 80 MHz 6.5.1 Measurement procedure 6.5.2 Immunity signal 6.6 RI-6: Electric field immunity, 80 MHz to 10 GHz 6.6.1 Measurement procedure |
34 | 6.6.2 Suggested immunity level |
35 | Annex A (informative) Immunity testing tutorial A.1 Basic issues A.2 Immunity environment |
36 | A.3 Immunity trade-offs A.4 Present day radiated immunity test facilities A.4.1 Open-area test sites |
37 | A.4.2 Shielded enclosures A.4.3 Anechoic shielded rooms A.4.4 Transverse electromagnetic cells |
38 | A.4.5 Mode-stirred reverberation chambers A.4.6 Fully anechoic rooms (FARs) A.4.7 Summary of radiated immunity test facilities A.5 Immunity compliance criteria A.5.1 General |
39 | A.5.2 Survey of specific degradation criteria A.5.2.1 MIL-STD-461E A.5.2.2 MDS-201-0004 A.5.2.3 RTCA DO-160E |
40 | A.5.2.4 Degradation for analog and digital home entertainment equipment A.5.2.4.1 Analog signals (noticeable degradation) A.5.2.4.2 Digital signals A.5.3 Degradation for automotive electronics A.5.4 Classification of functional status |
41 | A.6 Other performance degradation concepts |
42 | Annex B (informative) Recommended test equipment for measurement methods where measurement procedure is in a referenced document B.1 Test equipment recommended for method CI-1: power-line immunity B.2 Test equipment recommended for method CI-2: power-line and signal-line immunity, bulk current injection |
43 | B.3 Test equipment recommended for CI-4: receiver antenna input immunity for TVs and VCRs B.4 Test equipment recommended for method CI-5: power-line surge voltage test (IEC 61000-4-5) B.5 Test equipment recommended for method CI-6: electrical fast transient test (IEC 61000-4-4) |
44 | B.6 Test equipment recommended for method CI-8: telecommunications equipment with an acoustic output, 150 kHz to 30 MHz |
45 | B.7 Test equipment recommended for method RI-1: magnetic field immunity, Helmholtz coil |
46 | B.8 Test equipment recommended for method RI-2: magnetic field immunity, point source |
47 | B.9 Test equipment and other considerations recommended for method RI-5: electric field immunity, 10 kHz to 80 MHz (TEM cell method per NBS TN 1013) B.9.1 Test equipment |
48 | B.9.2 Summary for TEM cell method |
49 | B.10 Test equipment recommended for RI-6: electric field immunity, 80 MHz to 10 GHz (IEC 61000-4-3) |