With the large-scale adoption of UAVs in power inspection, surveying, security, and emergency response, electromagnetic interference has shifted from an occasional risk to a persistent engineering challenge. The diversity of interference sources, the dynamic nature of the spectrum environment, and the decreasing threshold of GNSS spoofing have made anti-interference capabilities no longer a single-module enhancement, but a system-level requirement across navigation, communication, flight control, and hardware design.
This paper analyzes the core mechanisms, technical difficulties, and engineering paths of UAV anti-interference from a practical engineering perspective.
I. Characteristics and Risks of Multi-Source Interference
UAVs are inherently vulnerable due to their reliance on wireless communication and weak GNSS signals. Common interference scenarios include:
1. Electromagnetic Interference (EMI)
High-voltage transmission lines, substations, and radar sites generate strong EM fields that can cause:
- Increased IMU and magnetometer noise
- Reduced GNSS signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
- Higher error rate in video transmission
- Fluctuating RC link RSSI
2. Co-channel / Adjacent-channel Interference
Consumer devices operating in 2.4/5.8 GHz bands create congestion, resulting in:
- Lower carrier-to-noise ratio (C/N0)
- OFDM frame loss
- Reduced effectiveness of frequency hopping
3. GNSS Spoofing and Jamming
GNSS signals are extremely weak (around –130 dBm) and easily overwhelmed or replaced, causing:
- Position drift from tens to hundreds of meters
- Flight attitude estimation errors
- Incorrect return-to-home (RTH) direction
4. Multipath & Signal Blockage
Urban canyons, steel structures, and tunnels produce:
- Increased pseudorange errors
- Low RTK fixing rate (fixed → float)
- Unstable multi-constellation baselines
These interferences may lead to yaw deviation, link loss, downgraded modes, or even uncontrolled flight.
II. Four-Layer Architecture of UAV Anti-Interference Systems
Anti-interference capability is a system composed of Navigation, Communication, Flight Control, and Physical Structure.
Layer 1: Navigation Anti-Interference (Core Technical Challenge)
Navigation robustness relies on four pillars:
1. Multi-Constellation, Multi-Frequency GNSS
Industrial UAVs typically adopt:
- GPS + BeiDou + GLONASS + Galileo
- L1/L2/L5 triple-frequency receivers
- RTK/PPP high-precision modes
Advantages:
Distributed robustness: different constellations behave differently under interference
Multi-frequency improves spoofing resistance
Maintaining usable navigation when one constellation degrades
2. GNSS Interference Detection & Rejection
Typical algorithms include:
- Pseudorange residual consistency checks
- Cross-constellation validation
- Dynamic C/N0 anomaly monitoring
- Direction-of-arrival (AoA) analysis via multi-antenna arrays
When anomalies are detected, the system automatically switches to a degraded mode.
3. Inertial Navigation & VIO/SLAM Fusion
When GNSS degrades, UAVs rely on:
- High-bandwidth IMU (gyroscopes + accelerometers)
- Visual-inertial odometry (VIO)
- LiDAR SLAM (in certain industrial-grade models)
Tight-coupling fusion enables navigation even with fewer than four visible satellites.
4. Magnetometer Noise Rejection and Replacement
In strong EMI environments (e.g., substations), magnetometers may be unreliable. Engineering approaches include:
- Hard-iron/soft-iron calibration with dynamic compensation
- Heading estimation based on IMU and wind-field models
- Vision-based heading output as a magnetometer replacement
Layer 2: Communication Link Anti-Interference
UAV communication involves RC links and video transmission. Robustness is achieved via:
1. Frequency Hopping (FHSS) & Adaptive Frequency Selection (AFH)
The system continuously measures:
- Noise power density
- Bit error rate (BER)
- Adjacent-channel occupancy
High-end systems can evaluate channels hundreds of times per second.
2. MIMO/OFDM Physical-Layer Enhancements
Industrial UAVs employ:
- 2×2 or 4×4 MIMO
- Adaptive OFDM modulation (QPSK → 64QAM)
- Dynamic subcarrier spacing adjustment
This improves robustness against fading and multipath.
3. Multi-Link Redundancy
Typical setup:
- 5.8 GHz video link + 2.4 GHz RC link
- 4G/5G as long-range backup
- Dual video transmission modules in high-end models
The flight controller seamlessly switches links to prevent disconnection.
4. Directional Antennas & RF Filtering
Key hardware measures:
- High-gain directional patch arrays
- Physical separation of RF modules
- RF filters and low-noise amplifiers (LNA)
Layer 3: Flight Control Anti-Interference
The flight controller provides the final safety boundary.
1. Faulty Data Rejection & Sensor Degradation Logic
The flight controller monitors:
- GNSS residual jumps
- IMU saturation
- Magnetometer noise offsets
- Sudden barometer altitude changes
It then downgrades to:
- Attitude hold
- Visual positioning hold
- Altitude hold
- Return-to-home
2. Redundant Flight Control Architecture
Industrial-grade UAVs employ:
- Dual flight controller hot-standby
- Triple-redundant IMUs
- Majority voting mechanisms for sensor data
3. Extreme-Condition Protection
Examples:
- Video link loss → RTH
- RTH heading anomaly → hover
- GNSS spoofing → transition to vision/INS navigation
- Large yaw deviation → limit roll/pitch to avoid runaway
Layer 4: Structural & Electromagnetic Design
Hardware layout has a significant impact on interference resistance.
1. Avionics Separation
Separate high-power components from sensitive modules:
- ESCs
- Power cables
- GNSS antennas
- RF transceivers
2. Shielding & Grounding
Engineering practices:
- RF modules with metal shielding
- Shielded power cables
- Unified system grounding
- PCB zoning (analog/digital/RF separation)
3. Antenna Installation Guidelines
- Keep GNSS antennas away from motors/ESCs
- Use ceramic filters or SAW filters
- Minimize phase-center deviation in multi-frequency antennas
Anti-Interference Strategies in Typical Scenarios
1. Power Grid Inspection (most severe EMI)
Solution:
- GNSS + RTK + VIO triple navigation
- Anti-magnetic disturbance heading estimation
- Optimized flight control degradation logic
- Antenna and arm isolation design
2. Urban Operations (multipath dominant)
Solution:
- Use L5-band navigation
- Multipath modeling and filtering
- Directional antennas
3. Security & Emergency Response (possible intentional interference)
Solution:
- GNSS anti-spoofing hardware
- Direction-finding systems
- Multi-link transmission + BeiDou short-message backup
Future Trends in UAV Anti-Interference
1. AI-Driven Sensor Fusion
Dynamic adjustment of sensor weights based on noise characteristics.
2. Digital Antenna Arrays & Beamforming
Suppress interference physically at the antenna level.
3. High-resilience GNSS Chipsets
Hardware-level spoofing recognition.
4. Cooperative Multi-UAV Navigation
Shared inertial and position data for networked robustness.
5. Full-scene Redundant Navigation
GNSS + VIO + UWB + INS hybrid navigation as the future standard.



