I am trying to do a project that involves proximity detection. I need a few devices omnidirectionally detecting each other at short distance (under 20 feet). It seemed to me that sub-1Ghz RF is the way to go. I got a few MRF49XA transceivers. The datasheet for the chip provides a reference balun circuit schematic, but considering my requirements, I wonder if I really need one and if I do, can I get a pre-made balun IC rather than building my own. All I need is for the devices to be able to detect each other at around 15-20 feet range, hopefully with the lowest possible analog RSSI value and get to highest RSSI when right next to each other.
I do not have EE education and I am very new to the field, so if the question doesn't make sense or requires more information, please be patient with me.
Best Answer
If you read quickly the datasheet (page 73), you'll see that you have to use a balun circuit in order to match the IC's pins high input impedances to the antenna's impedance which is likely to be 50 \$\Omega\$
If you go further and read page 13 :
So you definitely need a 50 \$\Omega\$ unbalanced to 250 \$\Omega\$ differential impedance matching circuit, the technology you want to use is up to you.
In RF electronics, impedance matching between interconnected circuits is mandatory, should it be for signal integrity reasons or hardware safety reasons.