Valve
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My research engineers say we need a very expensive 3 to 6 GHz VNA to do this work. I say we don't. I've told them they can design, build, test and manufacture the product with our existing equipment (i.e. multimeters, oscilloscopes etc.).
Although I am at a loss to know why your engineers need a 3 to 6 GHz VNA, when their frequency range is 1.5 to 3 GHz, I am appalled that you would question the very people you need to produce a working product. What is your background? Do you have the expertise to question what your engineers say is a requirement? If the equipment that you do have is in line with your "mulimeters, oscilloscopes, etc.", then your company DOES NOT HAVE THE EXPERTISE TO EVEN BEGIN THIS PROJECT.
I would question how much information can be gained about the attenuation and group delay of a sample 1 mm thick using 1.5 to 3 GHz. Unless the material has particularly high permittivity, the phase difference is going to be pretty small. The free space wavelength at 3 GHz is 100 mm, so phase change is only going to be a few degrees.
I can see why a CEO would question what is required, and what is not. That seems good business sense to me. The CEO should also budget for a cal kit and phase stable cables, not just the VNA.
I would question how much information can be gained about the attenuation and group delay of a sample 1 mm thick using 1.5 to 3 GHz. Unless the material has particularly high permittivity, the phase difference is going to be pretty small. The free space wavelength at 3 GHz is 100 mm, so phase change is only going to be a few degrees. It's not immediately clear the best way to couple to such a sample either.
But yes, a VNA seems like it would be pretty essential!
He wrote "up to 1m thick" and that should give large effect
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