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Products » Radio Frequency » Lightning / EMP Protectors » Knowledge Base » Protector principles

Print viewProtector principles

Overvoltage protection in the field of RF engineering must meet special requirements in comparison with general, low-frequency signal transmission and power supply applications. In particular, coupling capacitances towards ground must be minimized in order to prevent any significant loss of the transmitted RF signals. This essentially rules out the wide-band application of varistors and semiconductor diodes.

There are three principal designs for coaxial lightning/EMP protection components in RF applications:


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Gas discharge tube GDT (spark gap) – the well-known principle in electronics since many years

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High-pass – a principle which has certain disadvantages due to the necessary inductance which increases the residual pulse level. Therefore, it is not applied by HUBER+SUHNER.

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Bandpass – a very effective principle which HUBER+SUHNER employs with their quarter-wave shorting stub protectors featuring the lowest possible inductance. The operation frequency band can be properly adjusted to any application.
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