Electromagnetic Compatibility in the Off-Highway Vehicle Part II: Electromagnetic Immunity (EMI) 921653
Electromagnetic immunity (EMI) for off-highway vehicles (OHV) is a vehicle's ability to resist radiated and conducted electromagnetic interference. Interference can originate within the OHV from the various systems designed to control its operational functions; external sources can also cause serious disruption of the electronic control mechanisms. Knowledge of how and where interferences originate gives the electronic designer insight into how to avoid the pitfalls which can cause malfunctions. Verification of designs through testing will ensure that safety and reliability are built into every OHV produced. This paper discusses the mechanisms that cause susceptibility of electronic circuits to electromagnetic interference, and presents test methods to help the designer improve circuit design and verify the immunity of the complete vehicle.
This is the second in a series of papers on electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) in the off-highway vehicle. The first paper was an overview of a complete EMC program with discussion of several important segments. This paper is an in-depth discussion of electromagnetic immunity, what it is, and how it is verified.
Citation: Polonis, J., McGinnis, W., and Martinez, I., "Electromagnetic Compatibility in the Off-Highway Vehicle Part II: Electromagnetic Immunity (EMI)," SAE Technical Paper 921653, 1992, https://doi.org/10.4271/921653. Download Citation
Author(s):
James J. Polonis, William H. McGinnis, Ismael Martinez
Affiliated:
Southwest Research Institute
Pages: 9
Event:
International Off-Highway & Powerplant Congress & Exposition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
SAE 1992 Transactions: Journal of Commercial Vehicles-V101-2
Related Topics:
Electromagnetic compatibility
Test procedures
Technical review
Reliability
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