As I understand it, EMC (electromagnetic compatibility) is the desired outcome: not being affected by electromagnetic noise in the local environment. Sometimes EMC is meant only in the physical sense, sometimes it includes the local regulations. It is not clear to me when.
EMI (electromagnetic interference) is the umbrella term for the unwanted effects of electromagnetic noise on an electrical circuit. There are four types of electromagnetic interference, or four types how noise can couple to the the electrical circuit:
- conductive, directly via wires
- inductive, via varying magnetic fields to conductive surfaces
- capacitive, via varying electric fields to conductive surfaces
- radiative, via EM radiation to antenna-like structures
Then for EMC purposes, we are safe to assume all such connections outside the shield are spaghetti, and thus subject to unlimited external fields, and will offer potentially unlimited impedance (albeit only at resonant frequencies) between nodes in the circuit.
Well, no, because that is kinda-sorta part of the question: where should the shielding
start? Should the (entire?) supply side be covered by the same/continuous shield? Would a break in the shielding after DC filtering before the "sensitive" circuits help?
You see, I can freely choose between different types of switchmode supplies, and decide whether they're within the shield or not, or perhaps separately shielded, but I don't want to build it from scratch, because I don't like dealing with voltages in excess of 20 volts or so. I want to add a filtering and post-regulation stage, too, dropping a couple of volts (to say 5V at say max. 1A load), getting a nice clean DC output.
The secondary questions – after the initial shielding connection question – involve whether the SMPS should it be within the same shielding as the switchmode supply, or unshielded, or within the device shielding? I believe the answer is dictated by the practical behaviour of noise currents in SMPSes, depending on they're configured wrt. EMI suppression capacitors, so I wanted to show all my practical easy options above. It would be pretty funny to make an enclosure which generates a lot of EMI and traps it inside itself, blasting the circuits with more EMI inside than outside.. but not practical.
We all know how standard and compliant circuits and wiring is done, I'm not looking for that. This is something I haven't seen before in practice, so I want to know why, specifically the reasons why it is not done in practice. The reasons could vary from "it's not how we do stuff" to highly specific engineering or manufacturing reasons to legal/code limitations.
For now, we can leave the load as a simple black box. For wiring between "modules", I do intend to use connectors and cabling where the shield is continuous and not easily accessed inside the shielded environment. While this does mean transmission line behaviour in the shield, it is that equally for the DC supply rails, so I'm ignoring that part for now as unavoidable.
]When do we get to the EMC part then--?
Other than the switchmode supply, although the load is digital circuits, it is low voltage and low current, and doesn't radiate much (although I have no equipment to measure that), as it is just your typical run of the mill microcontroller stuff. So, I'm not worried about emissions inside the shielding. I might even stick the MCU inside a secondary metal can, connecting the can and related shielding to the DC GND, if it is a problem.
Outside the shielding is either a normal household environment, or a nasty workshop environment with brushed motors and sparky welding equipment within a hands reach. The latter is enough to occasionally glitch a microcontroller running in free air. This, because workshop shenanigans and DIY microcontroller gadgetry as soon as I have my own workshop.
So, we can consider the shielding to exist solely for the outside nasty environment, plus an occasional ESD event due to a highly charged human touching the shielding, which I don't want to generate a ground bounce within the shielded circuitry.