Anyone who has worked on distributed antenna systems will eventually have a head‑on fight with PIM. This post skips the fluff and only shows the engineering math.
Two frequencies f1, f2 pass through a non‑linear node (loose connector, oxidized plating, magnetic material) and generate intermodulation products:
Amplitude decreases with order, but 3rd order has the highest power. Typical in‑band frequencies (China example but general principle applies): mobile uplink 890‑909MHz, downlink 935‑954MHz; telecom uplink 1920‑1935MHz, downlink 2110‑2125MHz; Unicom uplink 1940‑1955MHz, downlink 2130‑2145MHz. If a 3rd order product falls inside an uplink band, it becomes self‑interference.
Example: f1=935MHz (mobile downlink), f2=954MHz (also mobile downlink) → 2f1-f2 = 916MHz. Does it fall in mobile uplink (890‑909)? No. But more dangerous combos come from cross‑operator mixing. The most troublesome are 2nd order intermodulation f1+f2 or |f1-f2|, and 3rd order 2f1-f2 landing in someone else's uplink. Labs typically test with 2×43dBm dual tones, reporting PIM in dBc (relative to carrier) or dBm absolute.
ΔNF ≈ PIM_floor(dBm) + 174 - NF_system - 10log(BW)
Assume system noise figure NF = 5dB, uplink bandwidth BW = 10MHz (LTE), PIM power = -120dBm. Then ΔNF ≈ -120 +174 -5 -70 = -21dB? That can't be right because -120+174=54, 54-5=49, 49-70= -21. Negative means PIM is below thermal noise? Exactly: thermal noise in 10MHz is -174+70= -104dBm. PIM at -120dBm is lower than -104, so no degradation.
Engineering rule of thumb: when PIM is 10dB above the noise floor, uplink sensitivity drops ~0.5dB; when 20dB above, sensitivity drops ~3dB. Many cheap components in cascade produce system PIM as high as -90dBm – then the noise floor is pushed to -90dBm level, cutting uplink coverage radius in half.
Materials: cavity uses aluminum 6061 or brass; inner conductor must be non‑magnetic; plating is silver or ternary alloy. Cheap components use iron with zinc plating – a single screw can contribute -110dBc PIM. Machining tolerance: low‑PIM power dividers control microstrip impedance to 50±1Ω, standard parts are ±5Ω. Connectors: DIN 7/16 is the low‑PIM king, N‑type next, SMA is unusable for high power. Many cheap “low‑PIM” products use N‑type with nickel plating – nickel is weakly magnetic and cannot pass -150dBc PIM.
Standard: IEC 62037-1 defines PIM test methods, typically requiring -150dBc @ 2×20W (or 2×43dBm) as the “low‑PIM” threshold. But be careful: reflective PIM (measuring only the reflected product with a duplexer) is much stricter than transmission PIM. Some vendors spec transmission‑mode numbers which look great but reflective PIM in the field is terrible.
Trap 1: Looking only at specs, ignoring bandwidth
A coupler rated -160dBc may only achieve that at 800‑900MHz; at 2600MHz it drops to -120dBc. A proper test report gives full‑band curves, at least one point every 200MHz.
Trap 2: Ignoring torque
Low‑PIM connector torque requirements: DIN 7/16 ~25‑30N·m, N‑type ~1.7‑2.2N·m. Field workers tighten by feel – under‑torque or cross‑threading causes micro‑discharge. PIM degradation rate: 20% torque deviation can worsen PIM by 10‑20dB. We measured the same jumper: at 1.5N·m PIM was -135dBc, at 2.0N·m it was -165dBc – huge difference.
Trap 3: Mixing different vendors' components
Vendor A's power divider uses silver inner conductor, vendor B's coupler uses copper. The contact forms a galvanic cell; oxide layer grows over time and PIM drifts from -150dBc to -110dBc. This slow degradation is hardest to troubleshoot – everything tests fine at installation, but complaints start six months later.
Trap 4: Forgetting loads
Every unused port must be terminated with a low‑PIM load. A standard load might only achieve -110dBc PIM; one bad load ruins the whole system. Dummy loads in equipment rooms are often ignored – check them first.
With a spectrum analyzer + directional coupler, look for a comb‑like spectrum in the uplink band while the base station is transmitting. Or use swap method: suspect a power divider, exchange it with an identical unit from another location and see if the noise floor follows.
Most reliable: rent a PIM analyzer (e.g., Summitek SI‑900). Transmit 2×43dBm dual tones, measure reflective PIM at each component. Pass/fail: ≤-150dBc (-117dBm) is excellent, -140 to -150dBc is marginal, below -140dBc scrap it.
Assume a project uses 200 power dividers + couplers:
Saving $5200 buys you:
Conclusion: the $5200 premium is insurance. Unless the project is tiny (<10 components) and source power <30dBm, don't try to save it.
A real DAS passive components supplier will openly give you per‑band PIM test data, material composition reports, and connector torque curves. Anyone who only prints “-165dBc typical” in a small corner of the datasheet — walk away.
– Eight years of in‑building optimization, veteran's take
Tags :
هل لديك أي أسئلة ؟
اتصل بنا : +86 551 65329702