Published January 18, 2026 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Systematic EMI Optimization for Compact Wi-Fi Relay Modules: A Gate-Based Methodology with Experimental Validation

Description

Compact IoT modules integrating Wi-Fi communication, microcontroller logic, and electromechanical switching face severe EMI challenges due to multiple interference mechanisms operating simultaneously. This paper presents a systematic optimization methodology based on quantitative decision gates applied to a representative Wi-Fi relay module (ESP8266/N76E003). Unlike conventional approaches focusing on single subsystems, we identify four critical EMI sources—power distribution network (PDN), high-speed buses, relay switching, and cable-driven common-mode currents—and demonstrate their interdependencies. Through combined finite element modeling and experimental validation, we achieve CISPR Class B compliance by reducing the aggregate EMI index JEMI from 0.55 (non-compliant) to 0.08 (compliant) through targeted optimizations: PDN impedance control (9 dB gain at 100 MHz), bus front management (7 dB NEXT reduction), RC snubber relay damping (4-6 dBµV attenuation), and connector-level CM suppression (22 µH choke, 7 dBµA reduction). The gate-based methodology with traceable model-measurement correlation (ρ = 0.89) provides transferable design guidelines for compact IoT devices.

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