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Misinformation!
IP2 is simply 2nd harmonic test. You drive the DUT at various power levels, and measure the second harmonic. If you are looking for critical measurements, you should lowpass filter the frequency source, and highpass the input to the spectrum analyzer--so you get only the DUT's 2nd harmonic.
IP2 is also a cross modulation, an important parameter in direct conversion as two strong outband RF signals can result in inteference in baseband passband. First reply method is correct but usually done with two signals on either side of intended passband to avoid IP3 product showing up in baseband passband.
see this:
**broken link removed**
I think the answer is, "what are you using the IP2 measurement for?".
[RCinFLA] Not exactly. Two signals will create a modulated nulling pattern and single generator does not (unless it is a DSB suppressed carrier modulated signal). It is the high amplitude modulation that creates the IP2 product.
[cnm] Why two signals created a modulated nulling pattern? Are you referring to the beat tone pattern from two signals that are close in frequency?
[RCinFLA] Measuring 2nd harmonic is pretty useless for finding out actual semiconductor amp IP2 at RF frequencies since there is almost alway some matching circuitry that has a frequency response. You will be measuring the input /output filter response attenuation of second harmonic not just the device IP2.
[cnm] Not true. Lots of multi-octave systems do care 2nd harmonic IP2 more.
BTW, which amp does not have input/output matching? Measuring device IP2 is great. But eventually the complete amplifier (with matching networks)'s IP2 is what matters, right? Who is going to use a bare device by itself?
I seriously suspect that the matching network affect IP2 much. Most passive matching networks are practically consider as linear components. Normally they don't contribute to second order distortions. Yes, they do have attenuation. However, considering that IP2 is an mathematically extraplated figure of merit. Measuring IP2 at a lower power level (considering matching network's loss) vs. at a high power level (removing matching network's loss), does it really make much difference in figuring out the IP2 intercept point?
I am often concerned with 2nd order distortion as I design a lot of wideband receiver products. When trying to receive very small signals it is IP2 terms that often pop up first to cause interference (compared to IP3).
So I often have to measure 2*F1=RF or F2+-F1 = RF or 2*F1=IF or F1+-F2=IF etc
In reality I end up making lots of 2nd order measurements across the range whilst looking for the weakest link.
IP2 means Intermodulation Product of second order. Not exclusively second harmonic. Yes, multi-octive bandwidth amps are concerned with second harmonic distortion.
If your interest is 2nd harmonic output then measure second harmonic.
If you interest is 2nd order intermodulation then measure 2nd order intermod product.
The first is not equal the second and the second is not equal the first.
You can't use a second harmonic test to measure a mixer's IP2 performance.
You can't use an IP2 two tone test to measure second harmonic performance of a saturated mode, excitation biased, RF PA.