23 research outputs found

    Spurious suppression techniques for 3-D printed coaxial resonator bandpass filters

    Get PDF
    Design methods to enhance the passband-to-stopband bandwidth of coaxial bandpass filters (BPFs) are reported. Stopband enhancement is achieved by: 1) introducing a transmission zero (TZ) through mixed electromagnetic (EM) coupling and 2) by reducing the RF signal coupling to one of the spurious modes by varying the relative orientation of the RF posts. A low-cost additive manufacturing (AM) concept is proposed as the key-enabling integration scheme for these types of filters due to 1) easing the manufacturing of otherwise complex geometries and 2) allowing for monolithic integration. For proof-of-concept demonstration purposes a two-pole prototype and a four-pole prototype were designed at 3.5 and 3.6 GHz. They were manufactured using a low-cost stereolithography apparatus (SLA)-based 3-D printer. The BPFs exhibited low insertion loss (IL < 0.5 dB) and a 4.5 stopband-to-passband ratio with 35 dB rejection, which is the highest among the existing spurious-free coaxial cavity-based BPFs

    Theory, Design, and Fabrication of Frequency Agile Filtennas

    Get PDF
    With the development of modern wireless systems, the spectral environment has become increasingly crowded. This has spawned a strong interest in frequency, bandwidth, and pattern reconfigurable RF front ends, which can adaptively tune their response to reduce interference. A filtenna (`filter' and `antenna') is a device that combines an antenna and at least one other resonator together to achieve the same or better performance as an antenna and filter cascade in a smaller and lighter package. Most frequency reconfigurable filtennas tune by using microelectromechanical systems, pin diodes, or varactors. These tuning techniques are ill-suited for high power applications due to breakdown, non-linear effects, and/or high loss. These problems can be solved by the use of mechanical tuning. In this thesis, a piezoelectric actuator tuned, 2\textsuperscript{nd} order filtenna is presented. The design is based upon changing the capacitive loading of an antenna and an evanescent-mode cavity resonator, thereby altering the resonant frequency. Loading agility is achieved through physical displacement of a metal disk. A time domain based tuning method is applied to tune the filtenna, allowing highly accurate tuning with only access to {S11S_{11}}. The filtenna is simulated to have a 2\textsuperscript{nd} order response and tune across S-band (2-4 GHz, 2:1 ratio). Simulations also show a greater than 65\% radiation efficiency and greater than 3~dBi broadside gain throughout the entire tuning range. This filtenna demonstrates the feasibility of a widely tunable, highly linear, and compact front end for modern RF systems, as well as a design methodology to allow for future development of frequency agile filtennas

    UWB Technology

    Get PDF
    Ultra Wide Band (UWB) technology has attracted increasing interest and there is a growing demand for UWB for several applications and scenarios. The unlicensed use of the UWB spectrum has been regulated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) since the early 2000s. The main concern in designing UWB circuits is to consider the assigned bandwidth and the low power permitted for transmission. This makes UWB circuit design a challenging mission in today's community. Various circuit designs and system implementations are published in this book to give the reader a glimpse of the state-of-the-art examples in this field. The book starts at the circuit level design of major UWB elements such as filters, antennas, and amplifiers; and ends with the complete system implementation using such modules

    High-Q Multi-band Filters

    Get PDF
    Recent development of multifunctional communication systems capable of processing large amount of data has triggered the demand for novel payload configurations with advanced filtering functions. To increase the payload flexibility, a large number of multiplexer and filter networks with different frequency plans are usually employed for the transmitting downlink. Multi-band filters are the required function in many cases for minimizing integration complexity and reducing size and mass of space systems. The multi-band filters combine the frequency spectrums of non-contiguous channels before transmitting through antenna beams, and provide sufficient rejection to the frequency spectrums of the adjacent channels, thus maintaining a high signal-to-interference ratio especially in multi-beam frequency-reuse communication systems. Traditional approaches to realize multi-band filters do not offer advantages in terms of size and mass reduction. Multi-mode resonators have the advantage of size reduction; however they are not often used in multi-band applications due to the challenges of operating the multiple modes in prescribed passbands simultaneously. The main research objective of this thesis is to investigate the feasibility of designing multi-band filters based on high-Q multi-mode resonators. Various multi-mode waveguide and dielectric resonators are explored to realize multi-band filters. The proposed multi-band filters do not require junctions and can achieve an equivalent performance with fewer cavities, thus significantly reducing the footprint when compared to traditional approaches. Furthermore, tunable multi-band filters with a constant absolute bandwidth and minimum degradation during the tuning process is investigated and developed. A systematic design approach of designing multi-band filters based on multi-mode resonators is established in this work starting from the coupling-matrix synthesis of the multi-band network. Following that, dual-band filters based on elliptical and rectangular dual-mode resonators are proposed. The two passbands of the dual-band filter are carried by two independent cavity modes and realized by an inline direct-coupled configuration. The inline dual-band filter design can convert to a diplexer structure by modifying the output ports at the end-resonators. To improve near-band frequency selection of both channels, multiple configurations to realize quasi-elliptic dual-band filter functions are proposed. The first quasi-elliptic design is based on a combination of dual-mode and single-mode rectangular resonators resulting in multiple transmission zeros and improved spurious response. The second structure is a side-coupled design based on dual-quadruplet configuration featuring a pair of transmission zeros on each of the passband and a very compact layout. Limitations of the quasi-elliptic design are investigated and modified structures have been proposed with improved RF performances. Triple-band filters are realized by three types of high-Q cavity resonator structures. Each cavity resonator employs triple-modes with resonant frequencies associated with the three passbands. The first design was an elliptical waveguide triple-band filter with an in-line configuration. Each passband of the filter was controlled by a dedicated polarization and represented by an inline direct-coupled set of resonators. The second design was a rectangular-cavity triple-band filter with a folded configuration. The folded configuration overcomes a number of drawbacks from the elliptical in-line design including an improved tunability and ease of assembly. The last design was a triple-band filter design based on dielectric loaded cavity resonators. The unique dielectric resonator structure results in triple-band filters having a very compact size, high Q, and stable thermal response. Further adding tuning capability to the multi-band filter can provide an additional degree of flexibility for the communication payload. A tunable multi-band filter with a constant absolute bandwidth is developed based on combline resonator and requiring only a single tuning element. The performance is demonstrated with an in-house-developed tuning station. It achieves a constant selectivity over a tuning range of 170 MHz and an unloaded Q better than 3000. The novel filter configurations proposed in this thesis promise to be useful not only for satellite payload applications but also for a wide range of wireless base station applications

    Miniaturized High-Q Tunable RF Filters

    Get PDF
    This dissertation focuses on the investigation and development of novel efficient tuning techniques and the design of miniaturized high-Q tunable RF filters for high-performance reconfigurable systems and applications. First, a detailed survey of the available tuning concepts and state-of-art tunable filters is provided. Then, a novel so-called inset resonator configuration is presented for the applications of fixed and tunable coaxial filters. The design procedure of frequency tunable filters with constant absolute bandwidth (CABW) is described, and various tunable inset filters are implemented, offering many desirable merits, including the wide tuning range and stable high-Q with minimum variation. For wide octave frequency tuning ranges with CABW, a second novel concept is presented using so-called re-entrant caps tuners. Beside simplicity and compactness, this technique also features enhanced spurious performance and wider tuning capabilities than the conventional means. Also, in this dissertation, various miniaturized reconfigurable dual-band/dual-mode bandpass filters and diplexers are presented using compact dual-mode high-Q TM-mode dielectric resonators. Furthermore, a novel microfluidic-based ultra-wide frequency tuning technique for TM010-mode dielectric resonators and filters is introduced in this dissertation. In addition to the very wide tuning window, this mechanism has key advantages of low-cost, simplicity, and intrinsic switch-off. Lastly, the dissertation includes a novel bandwidth reconfiguration concept with multi-octave tuning using a single element for coaxial bandpass filters. This mechanism brings many features including the fast tuning, constant high-Q, intrinsic switch-off, and wide BW-reconfiguration

    Beam scanning by liquid-crystal biasing in a modified SIW structure

    Get PDF
    A fixed-frequency beam-scanning 1D antenna based on Liquid Crystals (LCs) is designed for application in 2D scanning with lateral alignment. The 2D array environment imposes full decoupling of adjacent 1D antennas, which often conflicts with the LC requirement of DC biasing: the proposed design accommodates both. The LC medium is placed inside a Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) modified to work as a Groove Gap Waveguide, with radiating slots etched on the upper broad wall, that radiates as a Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA). This allows effective application of the DC bias voltage needed for tuning the LCs. At the same time, the RF field remains laterally confined, enabling the possibility to lay several antennas in parallel and achieve 2D beam scanning. The design is validated by simulation employing the actual properties of a commercial LC medium

    1-D broadside-radiating leaky-wave antenna based on a numerically synthesized impedance surface

    Get PDF
    A newly-developed deterministic numerical technique for the automated design of metasurface antennas is applied here for the first time to the design of a 1-D printed Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA) for broadside radiation. The surface impedance synthesis process does not require any a priori knowledge on the impedance pattern, and starts from a mask constraint on the desired far-field and practical bounds on the unit cell impedance values. The designed reactance surface for broadside radiation exhibits a non conventional patterning; this highlights the merit of using an automated design process for a design well known to be challenging for analytical methods. The antenna is physically implemented with an array of metal strips with varying gap widths and simulation results show very good agreement with the predicted performance

    Antenna Designs for 5G/IoT and Space Applications

    Get PDF
    This book is intended to shed some light on recent advances in antenna design for these new emerging applications and identify further research areas in this exciting field of communications technologies. Considering the specificity of the operational environment, e.g., huge distance, moving support (satellite), huge temperature drift, small dimension with respect to the distance, etc, antennas, are the fundamental device allowing to maintain a constant interoperability between ground station and satellite, or different satellites. High gain, stable (in temperature, and time) performances, long lifecycle are some of the requirements that necessitates special attention with respect to standard designs. The chapters of this book discuss various aspects of the above-mentioned list presenting the view of the authors. Some of the contributors are working strictly in the field (space), so they have a very targeted view on the subjects, while others with a more academic background, proposes futuristic solutions. We hope that interested reader, will find a fertile source of information, that combined with their interest/background will allow efficiently exploiting the combination of these two perspectives

    Analysis and design of antennas and radiometers for radio astronomy applications in microwave, Mm-wave, and THz Bands

    Get PDF
    Mención Internacional en el título de doctorWe are living in interesting times for astronomy science, since the birth of the radio astronomy field in the 20th century by Karl Jansky, the availability of new and better radio astronomy receivers is in increasing demand to push the human understanding of the universe. In this thesis, various components (antennas, baluns, antenna-arrays, and radiometers) are proposed for radio astronomy receivers. The proposed designs are belonging to three receiver topologies (direct detection, down-conversion, and up-conversion) that operate at different frequency bands from MHz up to a few of THz. Also, to demonstrate that the same proposed design is capable of working efficiently at different operating frequencies, multiple adjusted designs are presented for several practical radio astronomy and space applications. Firstly, a receiver based on the direct detection of the Electromagnetic (EM) radiation through a radio telescope working on cryogenic cooling conditions. In this part, the focus is on designing conical log-spiral antennas and baluns (balanced to unbalanced transformers) to be used as feeds for VLBI Global Observing System (VGOS) ground-based radio telescopes. The feeds cover the Ultrawideband (UWB) from 2 GHz to 14 GHz with Circular Polarization (CP) radiation and stable radiation patterns. After integration of the feeds to the radio telescope, the whole system operates with high aperture efficiency and high System Equivalent Flux Density (SEFD) over the whole required wide range. The fabrication, assembly, and measurements for single-element and four-elements array are provided for achieving the requirements for single CP and dual CP operation. Also, in the same first part, the proposed single-element feed (antenna + balun) is readjusted for being used for CryoRad spaceborne Earth observations. This feed has a single CP over low-frequency UWB from 400MHz to 2 GHz with low weight and physical size compared to standard horn feeds. The second part of the thesis is dedicated to a THz source to be used as a local oscillator for heterodyne radio astronomy THz receivers in which the down-conversion of the THz radiation to a lower frequency occurs. The source is based on an array of self-complementary bow-tie antennas and photomixers that lies on a dielectric lens. The source can be scaled easily to cover different UWB ranges, three ranges are analyzed from 200 GHz to 2 THz, 100 GHz to 1 THz, and 50 GHz to 0.5 THz. Additionally, in this part, a complete study for the effects of metal losses on such THz planar antennas is performed which are not well-investigated in literature yet, the physical explanations behind such effects are also provided. Although these proposed THz sources themselves can work at room temperature, the receiver probably still needs the cooling for the other receiver components (such as the mixer) to work efficiently at such high frequencies. This is the motivation for the third part of this thesis which presents a different type of radio astronomy receiver that is completely able to work without cooling. The third receiver is based on the nonlinear up-converting of the microwave radiation into the optical domain using Whispering Gallery Mode (WGM) resonators which can work at room temperature efficiently. For such advantage and since this concept is naturally narrow-band, it can be a proper candidate for Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) spectroscopy and space applications. The system design and its performance are analyzed for Ku band at 12 GHz with proposing a novel microwave coupling scheme for enhancing the up-conversion photonic efficiency which is the main limitation for such upconversion systems. Likewise, several high gain 3D-printed Dielectric Resonator Antenna (DRA)s are proposed in both isolated and array configurations to have a direct coupling of the microwave radiation to the proposed scheme. Another practical application for such receiver is presented for CubeSat missions at the mm-wave band (183 GHz) for climate change forecasting. It is clear here that removing the cryogenic cooling conditions decreases satellite weight and cost, which in turn significantly increases its lifetime. Also, it is worth noting that besides the radio astronomy applications, the proposed receivers (and/or their antenna/components) can be used for many other applications. For example, the UWB antennas in the first part can be used as wideband scalable probes for EM compatibility testing or other wireless systems that require single or dual CP such as radar and military applications. This is because the solutions provide constant beam characteristics with good CP polarization purity and stable performance over the operating UWB. In the same way, the proposed THz source in the second part can be used in several THz applications such as very high-speed wireless communications, highresolution imaging for medical and security purposes. This is because of its key benefits as decade bandwidth, compact size, low noise, low power demand, high tunability, and the ability to work at room temperature. For the up-conversion scheme proposed in the third part, due to its high photonic efficiency, low noise level which enables it to work at room temperature, and its scalability from a few GHz up to several THz, it is suitable for low-cost and high sensitivity applications. Specifically, the ones that need to get rid of the hard cryogenic cooling conditions, or at least, relax them and allow the system to work efficiently at higher temperatures. For instance, portable mm-wave and THz systems for quality control, security, and biochemistry. Finally, in this part, the proposed DRA elements and arrays, due to their low cost, high gain, and low losses, can be used for sensing applications and 5G base station antennas.Programa de Doctorado en Multimedia y Comunicaciones por la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid y la Universidad Rey Juan CarlosPresidente: Raed Shubair.- Secretario: Adrián Amor Martín.- Vocal: José Manuel Fernández Gonzále

    Radio-Frequency Sensors for High Performance Liquid Chromatography Applications

    Get PDF
    As a fast-developing analytical technique for separation, purification, identification and quantification of components in a mixture, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) has been widely used in various fields including biology, food, environment, pharmacy and so on. As a critical part in the HPLC system, the detector with the feature of high sensitivity, universal detection and gradient-elution compatibility is highly desired. In this dissertation, two types of radio-frequency (RF) sensors for HPLC gradient applications are presented: a tunable interferometer (TIM) and a modified square ring loaded resonator (SRLR). For the TIM-based sensor, the sensitivity is evaluated by measuring a few common chemicals in DI water at multiple frequencies from 0.98 GHz to 7.09 GHz. Less than 84 ppm limit of detection (LOD) is demonstrated. An algorithm is provided and used to obtain sample dielectric permittivity at each frequency point. When connected to a commercial HPLC system and injected with a 10 μL aliquot of 10000 ppm caffeine DI-water solution, the sensor yields a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) up to 10 under isocratic and gradient elution operations. Furthermore, the sensor demonstrates a capability to quantify co-eluted vitamin E succinate (VES) and vitamin D3 (VD3). For the SRLR-based sensor, where a transmission line and a ring are electrically shorted with a center gap, the detection linearity is characterized by measuring water-caffeine samples from 0.77 ppm to 1000 ppm when connected to the HPLC system. A 0.231 ppm limit of detection (LOD) is achieved, revealing a comparable sensitivity with commercial ultraviolet (UV) detectors. The compatibility of the proposed sensor to gradient elution is also demonstrated. Besides, this work presents a method for the measurement of liquid permittivity without using liquid reference materials or calibration standards. The method uses a single transmission line and a single microfluidic channel which intercepts the line twice. As a result, two transmission line segments are formed with channel sections to measure liquid samples. By choosing a 2:1 ratio for the two line segment lengths, closed-form formulas are provided to calculate line propagation constants directly from measured S-parameters. Then, sample permittivity values are obtained. A coplanar waveguide is built and tested with de-ionized water, methanol, ethanol and 2-propanol from 0.1 GHz to 9 GHz. The obtained performance agrees with simulation results. The obtained sample permittivity values agree with commonly accepted values. Radiofrequency (RF) non-thermal (NT) bio-effects have been a subject of debate and attracted significant interests due to the potential health risks or beneficial applications. A miniature transverse electro-magnetic (TEM) device is designed for broadband investigation of RF NT effects on Saccharomyces cerevisiae growth, a common yeast species. The frequency-dependent yeast permittivity, obtained by measuring the difference between the medium and yeast in the medium, was used to select the applied RF frequencies, i.e., 1.0 MHz, 3.162 MHz, 10 MHz and 905 MHz. The results showed that the RF field at 3.162 MHz reduced yeast growth rates by 11.7%; however, the RF fields at 1.0 MHz and 10 MHz enhanced cell growth rates by 16.2% and 4.3%, respectively. In contrast, the RF field at 905 MHz had no effect on the growth rates
    corecore