Filter-feedthrough-failure flash
By Wayne Miller, Wayne Miller Associates LLC -- 5/14/2009
I had been working as a consultant for a number of years, and most of my clients were microwave companies. Each client had its own product specialties, so I had no problems with possible conflict of interest. There were commonalities among the various companies, however, in that most of their products looked like aluminum bricks of various sizes and proportions, with a variety of coaxial connectors and filter feedthroughs sprouting from one or more of the surfaces. My main contribution involved the bits of circuitry to interface between the microwave portion and the customer interface. This interface always involved filter feedthroughs to carry the dc power and to monitor both internal and external control functions. As I went from client to client, I found that this same common construction was embedded into their culture, and it haunted me wherever I went.
It is difficult to avoid the use of filter feedthroughs in these applications. They require good RF and microwave shielding, and, in many cases, the units require environmental sealing. I was in a unique position to be able to see the suppliers to each company, how each company handled them, and how the companies tested the equipment. The only common element that I could find was a high failure rate.
|
Finally, I got the break I needed. A major client had shipped hundreds of units to a customer in Indonesia. They began to fail in large numbers. The client elected me to go and determine the cause of the problem. Indonesia is close to the equator and comprises more than 10,000 islands surrounded by water. It defined to me in a completely new way the meaning of the term hot and humid. This type of weather turned out to be an important factor in the failures.
Here’s a hint: As previously noted, you use filter feedthroughs to pass a voltage—usually with a dc component—through a housing wall to give RF isolation and an environmental seal against humidity. It stands to reason, then, that most filter feedthroughs spend at least some of their lives with a dc voltage applied and in a humid environment. In this common application, all silver-plated filter feedthroughs are destined to fail unless you further protect them from humidity by applying a conformal coating after soldering a wire to the center pin. A more practical approach is to specify feedthroughs with gold or palladium plating.
| Author Information |
| Wayne Miller is a technical consultant at Wayne Miller Associates LLC (Stanhope, NJ). You can reach him at wlm@wlm.name. |
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.
