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To the RF gurus out there: bandpass filtering S11 harmonic?


 

Hello everyone!

RF newbie and first time poster here. Recently purchased a NanoVNA-H for a specific experiment I'd like to perform. Without going into the unnecessary details of the experiment itself, what I'd like to do is use the nano as a fixed RF frequency gen, probably in the ~900MHz ISM band, to be fed to an amp and transmitted via an antenna. A probe on S21 will then be used for obtaining relative phase angle measurements.

I know the nano generates a square wave output, thus the dominating frequencies are the fundamental and odd order harmonics, along with some even order and spurious frequencies. I also know that the nano will rely on the 5th harmonic of some fundamental in order to reach my desired fixed frequency. Since not only would it be irresponsible to transmit those various other frequencies, but I also think my experiment would be better served by having as spectrally pure signal as is reasonably possible. To avoid any confusion, my intended TX signal chain is as follows:
nanoVNA S11 -> bandpass filter (probably LC?) -> RF amp -> antenna

So my question is this: how sophisticated does the filter realistically need to be? Would a 1st order LC bandpass do, or do I need something else? Are there any common "gotchas" that trip up newbs that I should be aware of?

Thanks!
Mark

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