4,192 research outputs found

    FMCW Signals for Radar Imaging and Channel Sounding

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    A linear / stepped frequency modulated continuous wave (FMCW) signal has for a long time been used in radar and channel sounding. A novel FMCW waveform known as “Gated FMCW” signal is proposed in this thesis for the suppression of strong undesired signals in microwave radar applications, such as: through-the-wall, ground penetrating, and medical imaging radar. In these applications the crosstalk signal between antennas and the reflections form the early interface (wall, ground surface, or skin respectively) are much stronger in magnitude compared to the backscattered signal from the target. Consequently, if not suppressed they overshadow the target’s return making detection a difficult task. Moreover, these strong unwanted reflections limit the radar’s dynamic range and might saturate or block the receiver causing the reflection from actual targets (especially targets with low radar cross section) to appear as noise. The effectiveness of the proposed waveform as a suppression technique was investigated in various radar scenarios, through numerical simulations and experiments. Comparisons of the radar images obtained for the radar system operating with the standard linear FMCW signal and with the proposed Gated FMCW waveform are also made. In addition to the radar work the application of FMCW signals to radio propagation measurements and channel characterisation in the 60 GHz and 2-6 GHz frequency bands in indoor and outdoor environments is described. The data are used to predict the bit error rate performance of the in-house built measurement based channel simulator and the results are compared with the theoretical multipath channel simulator available in Matlab

    UWB-Printed Rectangular-Based Monopole Antenna for Biological Tissue Analysis

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    This paper presents the design of a printed step-type monopole antenna for biological tissue analysis and medical imaging applications in the microwave frequency range. The design starts from a very simple and widely known rectangular monopole antenna, and different modifications to the antenna geometry are made in order to increase the bandwidth. The antenna dimensions are optimized by means of a parametric analysis of each dimension using a 3-D electromagnetic simulator based on the finite element method. The optimized antenna, with final dimensions of 40 36 mm2, is manufactured onto a low-cost FR4 (fiber glass epoxy) substrate. The characteristics of the antenna have been measured inside an anechoic chamber, obtaining an omnidirectional radiation pattern and a working frequency range between 2.7 GHz and 11.4 GHz, which covers the UWB frequencies and enables the use of the antenna in medical imaging applications. Finally, the behaviour of four of these antennas located around a realistic breast model, made with biocompatible materials, has been analysed with the electromagnetic simulator, obtaining good results and demonstrating the usefulness of the designed antenna in the proposed application

    Fundamental issues in antenna design for microwave medical imaging applications

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    This paper surveys the development of microwave medical imaging and the fundamental challenges associated with microwave antennas design for medical imaging applications. Different microwave antennas used in medical imaging applications such as monopoles, bow-tie, vivaldi and pyramidal horn antennas are discussed. The challenges faced when the latter used in medical imaging environment are detailed. The paper provides the possible solutions for the challenges at hand and also provides insight into the modelling work which will help the microwave engineering community to understand the behaviour of the microwave antennas in coupling media

    Microwave Imaging Approach for Breast Cancer Detection Using a Tapered Slot Antenna Loaded with Parasitic Components.

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    In this paper, a wideband antenna is proposed for ultra-wideband microwave imaging applications. The antenna is comprised of a tapered slot ground, a rectangular slotted patch and four star-shaped parasitic components. The added slotted patch is shown to be effective in improving the bandwidth and gain. The proposed antenna system provides a realized gain of 6 dBi, an efficiency of around 80% on the radiation bandwidth, and a wide impedance bandwidth (S11 < -10 dB) of 6.3 GHz (from 3.8 to 10.1 GHz). This supports a true wideband operation. Furthermore, the fidelity factor for face-to-face (FtF) direction is 91.6%, and for side by side (SbS) is 91.2%. This proves the excellent directionality and less signal distortion of the designed antenna. These high figures establish the potential use of the proposed antenna for imaging. A heterogeneous breast phantom with dielectric characteristics identical to actual breast tissue with the presence of tumors was constructed for experimental validation. An antenna array of the proposed antenna element was situated over an artificial breast to collect reflected and transmitted waves for tumor characterization. Finally, an imaging algorithm was used to process the retrieved data to recreate the image in order to detect the undesirable tumor object inside the breast phantom

    High-performance wireless interface for implant-to-air communications

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    Nous Ă©laborons une interface cerveau-machine (ICM) entiĂšrement sans fil afin de fournir un systĂšme de liaison directe entre le cerveau et les pĂ©riphĂ©riques externes, permettant l’enregistrement et la stimulation du cerveau pour une utilisation permanente. Au cours de cette thĂšse, nous explorons la modĂ©lisation de canal, les antennes implantĂ©es et portables en tant que propagateurs appropriĂ©s pour cette application, la conception du nouveau systĂšme d’un Ă©metteur-rĂ©cepteur UWB implantable, la conception niveau systĂšme du circuit et sa mise en oeuvre par un procĂ©dĂ© CMOS TSMC 0.18 um. En plus, en collaboration avec UniversitĂ© McGill, nous avons conçu un rĂ©seau de seize antennes pour une dĂ©tection du cancer du sein Ă  l’aide d’hyperfrĂ©quences. Notre premiĂšre contribution calcule la caractĂ©risation de canal de liaison sans fil UWB d’implant Ă  l’air, l’absorption spĂ©cifique moyennĂ©e (ASAR), et les lignes directrices de la FCC sur la densitĂ© spectrale de puissance UWB transmis. La connaissance du comportement du canal est nĂ©cessaire pour dĂ©terminer la puissance maximale permise Ă  1) respecter les lignes directrices ANSI pour Ă©viter des dommages aux tissus et 2) respecter les lignes directrices de la FCC sur les transmissions non autorisĂ©es. Nous avons recours Ă  un modĂšle rĂ©aliste du canal biologique afin de concevoir les antennes pour l’émetteur implantĂ© et le rĂ©cepteur externe. Le placement des antennes est examinĂ© avec deux scĂ©narios contrastĂ©s ayant des contraintĂ©s de puissance. La performance du systĂšme au sein des tissus biologiques est examinĂ©e par l’intermĂ©diaire des simulations et des expĂ©riences. Notre deuxiĂšme contribution est dĂ©diĂ©e Ă  la conception des antennes simples et Ă  double polarisation pour les systĂšmes d’enregistrement neural sans fil Ă  bande ultra-large en utilisant un modĂšle multicouches inhomogĂšne de la tĂȘte humaine. Les antennes fabriquĂ©es Ă  partir de matĂ©riaux flexibles sont plus facilement adaptĂ©es Ă  l’implantation ; nous Ă©tudions des matĂ©riaux Ă  la fois flexibles et rigides et examinons des compromis de performance. Les antennes proposĂ©es sont conçues pour fonctionner dans une plage de frĂ©quence de 2-11 GHz (ayant S11-dessous de -10 dB) couvrant Ă  la fois la bande 2.45 GHz (ISM) et la bande UWB 3.1-10.6 GHz. Des mesures confirment les rĂ©sultats de simulation et montrent que les antennes flexibles ont peu de dĂ©gradation des performances en raison des effets de flexion (en termes de correspondance d’impĂ©dance). Finalement, une comparaison est rĂ©alisĂ©e entre quatre antennes implantables, couvrant la gamme 2-11 GHz : 1) une rigide, Ă  la polarisation simple, 2) une rigide, Ă  double polarisation, 3) une flexible, Ă  simple polarisation et 4) une flexible, Ă  double polarisation. Dans tous les cas une antenne rigide est utilisĂ©e Ă  l’extĂ©rieur du corps, avec une polarisation appropriĂ©e. Plusieurs avantages ont Ă©tĂ© confirmĂ©s pour les antennes Ă  la polarisation double : 1) une taille plus petite, 2) la sensibilitĂ© plus faible aux dĂ©salignements angulaires, et 3) une plus grande fidĂ©litĂ©. Notre troisiĂšme contribution fournit la conception niveau systĂšme de l’architecture de communication sans fil pour les systĂšmes implantĂ©s qui stimulent simultanĂ©ment les neurones et enregistrent les rĂ©ponses de neurones. Cette architecture prend en charge un grand nombre d’électrodes (> 500), fournissant 100 Mb/s pour des signaux de stimulation de liaison descendante, et Gb/s pour les enregistrements de neurones de liaison montante. Nous proposons une architecture d’émetteur-rĂ©cepteur qui partage une antenne ultra large bande, un Ă©metteur-rĂ©cepteur simplifiĂ©, travaillant en duplex intĂ©gral sur les deux bandes, et un nouveau formeur d’impulsions pour la liaison montante du Gb/s soutenant plusieurs formats de modulation. Nous prĂ©sentons une dĂ©monstration expĂ©rimentale d’ex vivo de l’architecture en utilisant des composants discrets pour la rĂ©alisation les taux Gb/s en liaison montante. Une bonne performance de taux d’erreur de bit sur un canal biologique Ă  0,5, 1 et 2 Gb/s des dĂ©bits de donnĂ©es pour la tĂ©lĂ©mĂ©trie de liaison montante (UWB) et 100 Mb/s pour la tĂ©lĂ©mĂ©trie en liaison descendante (bande 2.45 GHz) est atteinte. Notre quatriĂšme contribution prĂ©sente la conception au niveau du circuit d’un dispositif d’émission en duplex total qui est prĂ©sentĂ©e dans notre troisiĂšme contribution. Ce dispositif d’émission en duplex total soutient les applications d’interfaçage neural multimodal et en haute densitĂ© (les canaux de stimulant et d’enregistrement) avec des dĂ©bits de donnĂ©es asymĂ©triques. L’émetteur (TX) et le rĂ©cepteur (RX) partagent une seule antenne pour rĂ©duire la taille de l’implant. Le TX utilise impulse radio ultra-wide band (IR-UWB) basĂ© sur une approche alliant des bords, et le RX utilise un nouveau 2.4 GHz rĂ©cepteur on-off keying (OOK).Une bonne isolation (> 20 dB) entre le trajet TX et RX est mis en oeuvre 1) par mise en forme des impulsions transmises pour tomber dans le spectre UWB non rĂ©glementĂ© (3.1-7 GHz), et 2) par un filtrage espace-efficace du spectre de liaison descendante OOK dans un amplificateur Ă  faible bruit RX. L’émetteur UWB 3.1-7 GHz peut utiliser soit OOK soit la modulation numĂ©rique binaire Ă  dĂ©placement de phase (BPSK). Le FDT proposĂ© offre une double bande avec un taux de donnĂ©es de liaison montante de 500 Mbps TX et un taux de donnĂ©es de liaison descendante de 100 Mb/s RX, et il est entiĂšrement en conformitĂ© avec les standards TSMC 0.18 um CMOS dans un volume total de 0,8 mm2. Ainsi, la mesure de consommation d’énergie totale en mode full duplex est de 10,4 mW (5 mW Ă  100 Mb/s pour RX, et de 5,4 mW Ă  500 Mb/s ou 10,8 PJ / bits pour TX). Notre cinquiĂšme contribution est une collaboration avec l’UniversitĂ© McGill dans laquelle nous concevons des antennes simples et Ă  double polarisation pour les systĂšmes de dĂ©tection du cancer du sein Ă  l’aide d’hyperfrĂ©quences sans fil en utilisant un modĂšle multi-couche et inhomogĂšne du sein humain. Les antennes fabriquĂ©es Ă  partir de matĂ©riaux flexibles sont plus facilement adaptĂ©es Ă  des applications portables. Les antennes flexibles miniaturisĂ©es monopĂŽles et spirales sur un 50 um Kapton polyimide sont conçus, en utilisant high frequency structure simulator (HFSS), Ă  ĂȘtre en contact avec des tissus biologiques du sein. Les antennes proposĂ©es sont conçues pour fonctionner dans une gamme de frĂ©quences de 2 Ă  4 GHz. Les mesures montrent que les antennes flexibles ont une bonne adaptation d’impĂ©dance dans les diffĂ©rentes positions sur le sein. De Plus, deux antennes Ă  bande ultralarge flexibles 4 × 4 (simple et Ă  double polarisation), dans un format similaire Ă  celui d’un soutien-gorge, ont Ă©tĂ© dĂ©veloppĂ©s pour un systĂšme de dĂ©tection du cancer du sein basĂ© sur le radar.We are working on a fully wireless brain-machine-interface to provide a communication link between the brain and external devices, enabling recording and stimulating the brain for permanent usage. In this thesis we explore channel modeling, implanted and wearable antennas as suitable propagators for this application, system level design of an implantable UWB transceiver, and circuit level design and implementing it by TSMC 0.18 um CMOS process. Also, in a collaboration project with McGill University, we designed a flexible sixteen antenna array for microwave breast cancer detection. Our first contribution calculates channel characteristics of implant-to-air UWB wireless link, average specific absorption rate (ASAR), and FCC guidelines on transmitted UWB power spectral density. Knowledge of channel behavior is required to determine the maximum allowable power to 1) respect ANSI guidelines for avoiding tissue damage and 2) respect FCC guidelines on unlicensed transmissions. We utilize a realistic model of the biological channel to inform the design of antennas for the implanted transmitter and the external receiver. Antennas placement is examined under two scenarios having contrasting power constraints. Performance of the system within the biological tissues is examined via simulations and experiments. Our second contribution deals with designing single and dual-polarization antennas for wireless ultra-wideband neural recording systems using an inhomogeneous multi-layer model of the human head. Antennas made from flexible materials are more easily adapted to implantation; we investigate both flexible and rigid materials and examine performance trade-offs. The proposed antennas are designed to operate in a frequency range of 2–11 GHz (having S11 below -10 dB) covering both the 2.45 GHz (ISM) band and the 3.1–10.6 GHz UWB band. Measurements confirm simulation results showing flexible antennas have little performance degradation due to bending effects (in terms of impedance matching). Finally, a comparison is made of four implantable antennas covering the 2-11 GHz range: 1) rigid, single polarization, 2) rigid, dual polarization, 3) flexible, single polarization and 4) flexible, dual polarization. In all cases a rigid antenna is used outside the body, with an appropriate polarization. Several advantages were confirmed for dual polarization antennas: 1) smaller size, 2) lower sensitivity to angular misalignments, and 3) higher fidelity. Our third contribution provides system level design of wireless communication architecture for implanted systems that simultaneously stimulate neurons and record neural responses. This architecture supports large numbers of electrodes (> 500), providing 100 Mb/s for the downlink of stimulation signals, and Gb/s for the uplink neural recordings. We propose a transceiver architecture that shares one ultra-wideband antenna, a streamlined transceiver working at full-duplex on both bands, and a novel pulse shaper for the Gb/s uplink supporting several modulation formats. We present an ex-vivo experimental demonstration of the architecture using discrete components achieving Gb/s uplink rates. Good bit error rate performance over a biological channel at 0.5, 1, and 2 Gbps data rates for uplink telemetry (UWB) and 100 Mbps for downlink telemetry (2.45 GHz band) is achieved. Our fourth contribution presents circuit level design of the novel full-duplex transceiver (FDT) which is presented in our third contribution. This full-duplex transceiver supports high-density and multimodal neural interfacing applications (high-channel count stimulating and recording) with asymmetric data rates. The transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) share a single antenna to reduce implant size. The TX uses impulse radio ultra-wide band (IR-UWB) based on an edge combining approach, and the RX uses a novel 2.4-GHz on-off keying (OOK) receiver. Proper isolation (> 20 dB) between the TX and RX path is implemented 1) by shaping the transmitted pulses to fall within the unregulated UWB spectrum (3.1-7 GHz), and 2) by spaceefficient filtering (avoiding a circulator or diplexer) of the downlink OOK spectrum in the RX low-noise amplifier. The UWB 3.1-7 GHz transmitter can use either OOK or binary phase shift keying (BPSK) modulation schemes. The proposed FDT provides dual band 500-Mbps TX uplink data rate and 100 Mbps RX downlink data rate, and it is fully integrated into standard TSMC 0.18 um CMOS within a total size of 0.8 mm2. The total measured power consumption is 10.4 mW in full duplex mode (5 mW at 100 Mbps for RX, and 5.4 mW at 500 Mbps or 10.8 pJ/bit for TX). Our fifth contribution is a collaboration project with McGill University which we design single and dual-polarization antennas for wireless ultra-wideband breast cancer detection systems using an inhomogeneous multi-layer model of the human breast. Antennas made from flexible materials are more easily adapted to wearable applications. Miniaturized flexible monopole and spiral antennas on a 50 um Kapton polyimide are designed, using a high frequency structure simulator (HFSS), to be in contact with biological breast tissues. The proposed antennas are designed to operate in a frequency range of 2–4 GHz (with reflection coefficient (S11) below -10 dB). Measurements show that the flexible antennas have good impedance matching while in different positions with different curvature around the breast. Furthermore, two flexible conformal 4×4 ultra-wideband antenna arrays (single and dual polarization), in a format similar to that of a bra, were developed for a radar-based breast cancer detection system

    A Novel Transparent UWB Antenna for Photovoltaic Solar Panel Integration and RF Energy Harvesting

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    A novel transparent ultra-wideband antenna for photovoltaic solar-panel integration and RF energy harvesting is proposed in this paper. Since the approval by the Federal Communications Committee (FCC) in 2002, much research has been undertaken on UWB technology, especially for wireless communications. However, in the last decade, UWB has also been proposed as a power harvester. In this paper, a transparent cone-top-tapered slot antenna covering the frequency range from 2.2 to 12.1 GHz is designed and fabricated to provide UWB communications whilst integrated onto solar panels as well as harvest electromagnetic waves from free space and convert them into electrical energy. The antenna when sandwiched between an a-Si solar panel and glass is able to demonstrate a quasi omni-directional pattern that is characteristic of a UWB. The antenna when connected to a 2.55-GHz rectifier is able to produce 18-mV dc in free space and 4.4-mV dc on glass for an input power of 10 dBm at a distance of 5 cm. Although the antenna presented in this paper is a UWB antenna, only an operating range of 2.49 to 2.58 GHz for power scavenging is possible due to the limitation of the narrowband rectifier used for the study
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