The CMT PXIe-S5090 is a 2 port vector network analyzer (VNA) for PXI Express that you can use to measure amplitude, phase, and impedance; perform time-domain analysis; and calculate the S-parameters of 2-port RF devices.
The S5090 features a 300 kHz to 9 GHz frequency range, a wide dynamic range, and fast sweep speeds for automated design validation and production test. The CMT PXIe-S5090 supports automatic precision calibration, full vector analysis, and reference plane extensions.
| Key Features |
| Frequency range: 300 kHz - 9 GHz |
| Wide output power adjustment range: -45 dBm to +13 dBm |
| Dynamic range: 138 dB (10 Hz IF bandwidth) typ. |
| Measurement time per point: 16 µs per point, min typ. |
| Up to 16 logical channels with 16 traces each max |
| Automation programming in LabVIEW, IVI drivers, IVI-C drivers, IVI.NET drivers |
| Time domain and gating conversion included |
| Frequency offset mode, including vector mixer calibration measurements |
| Up to 500,001 measurement points |
| Multiple precision calibration methods and automatic calibration |
| Specifications* |
|
| PXIe-S5090 |
|
| Features | Parameters |
| Impedance | 50 Ohm |
| Test Port Connector | 3.5 mm, female |
| Number of Test Ports | 2 |
| Frequency Range | 300 kHz to 9 GHz |
| Full Frequency Accuracy | ±5·10⁻⁶ |
| Frequency Resolution | 1 Hz |
| Number of Measurement Points | 2 to 500,001 |
| Measurement Bandwidths (with 1/1.5/2/3/5/7 steps) | 1 Hz to 1 MHz |
Dynamic Range**
300 kHz to 1 MHz
1 MHz to 5 MHz
5 MHz to 6.5 GHz
6.5 GHz to 8.0 GHz
8 GHz to 9 GHz
|
123 dB (129 dB typ.)
133 dB (138 dB typ.)
138 dB (140 dB typ.)
133 dB (136 dB typ.)
125 dB (130 dB typ.)
|
| Environmental |
|
| Operating Temperature | +5 °C to +40 °C
(41 °F to 104 °F)
|
| Storage Temperature | -50 °C to +70 °C
(-58 °F to 158 °F)
|
| Humidity | 90 % at 25 °C (77 °F) |
| Atmospheric Pressure | 70.0 kPa to 106.7 kPa |
Dimensions
Length
Width
Height
Weight
|
221 mm
129 mm
20 mm
0.6 kg (21.2 oz)
|
Notes:
* All specifications subject to change without notice
** The dynamic range is defined as the difference between the specified maximum power level and the specified noise floor. The specification applies at 10 Hz IF bandwidth.