70 research outputs found

    Antennas for UWB Applications

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    “Antennas for UWB Applications” chapter deals with an overview of ultrawideband (UWB) antennas used for different applications. Some fundamental and widely used radiators, such as fat monopole, microstrip-fed and coplanar waveguide (CPW)-fed slot antennas, and tapered end-fire antennas are presented. Selected antenna designs are presented in relation to the UWB applications and their dictating radiation and operation principles. The demonstrated UWB antennas include antennas for handheld devices used for personal area network (PAN) communications; antennas for localization and positioning; UWB antennas for radio-frequency identifications (RFIDs); radar antennas for through-wall imaging, for ground-penetrating radar (GPR), and for breast tumor detection; and more generally, UWB antennas used for sensing. For some of the aforementioned applications, UWB antennas with special characteristics are needed, and they are presented and associated with the relevant applications. These include reconfigurable UWB antennas, metamaterial-loaded UWB antennas, and conformal UWB antennas. The usefulness of these special characteristics in comparison with the claimed advantages is critically evaluated. For the UWB applications presented in the chapter, one type or UWB antenna is recommended

    Voltage-Doubler RF-to-DC Rectifiers for Ambient RF Energy Harvesting and Wireless Power Transfer Systems

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    Wireless Power Transfer (WPT) is promoted as a key enabling technology (KET) for the widespread use of batteryless Internet of Things (IoT) devices and for 5G wireless networks. RF-to-DC rectifiers are essential components for the exploitation of either ambient RF power or wireless transmitted power from a dedicated source. There are several alternative rectifier topologies which can be selected depending on the desired wireless charging scenario and may include one or more diodes. For full rectification, a minimum of two diodes are needed. The current chapter discusses various implementations of voltage-doubler designs, which revolve around the basic topology of two diodes and two capacitors. Schottky diodes are usually used, in combination with lumped capacitors. Off-the-shelf diodes include both separate diodes and integrated voltage-doubler topologies in a single package. Rectifiers are inherently narrowband, non-linear devices, and the RF-to-DC efficiency, which is usually the figure of merit, depends non-linearly on both the termination load and the received RF power. The bandwidth of the rectifier depends on the preceding matching network

    Non-reciprocal balanced bandpass filters with quasi-elliptic response

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    This paper reports on the RF design and practical development of a non-reciprocal balanced bandpass filter (BPF) that exhibits a highly-selective quasi-elliptic response in the forward direction of propagation that is shaped by four transmission poles and two transmission zeros (TZs). By modulating some of the filterâ s resonators with phase-progressed AC signals, a non-reciprocal response is obtained in the differential mode. Its common-mode is also highly suppressed due to the incorporation of a balanced network that results in two additional TZs and resistive loss that are unique to the common-mode. The filter order can be increased by cascading additional resonators. For validation purposes, a microstrip prototype centered at 725 MHz was designed, manufactured, and measured. It showed a high isolation in the differential-mode reverse transmission of up to 62.1 dB. Moreover, the common-mode was suppressed by over 45 dB in a bandwidth greater than one octave

    Simultaneous wireless information and power transfer in modern communication systems

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    Energy harvesting for wireless communication networks is a new paradigm that allows terminals to recharge their batteries from external energy sources in the surrounding environment. A promising energy harvesting technology is wireless power transfer where terminals harvest energy from electromagnetic radiation. Thereby, the energy may be harvested opportunistically from ambient electromagnetic sources or from sources that intentionally transmit electromagnetic energy for energy harvesting purposes. A particularly interesting and challenging scenario arises when sources perform simultaneous wireless information and power transfer (SWIPT), as strong signals not only increase power transfer but also interference. This article provides an overview of SWIPT systems with a particular focus on the hardware realization of rectenna circuits and practical techniques that achieve SWIPT in the domains of time, power, antennas, and space. The article also discusses the benefits of a potential integration of SWIPT technologies in modern communication networks in the context of resource allocation and cooperative cognitive radio networks

    Novel selective feeding scheme integrated with SPDT switches for a reconfigurable bandpass-to-bandstop filter

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    This paper demonstrates a new technique for designing high performance reconfigurable bandpass-to-bandstop filters by employing a ring resonator and a selective feeding scheme integrated with single-pole double-throw switches (SPDT). The transformation from bandpass-to-bandstop mode and vice-versa is achieved by connecting or disconnecting two\lambda g/4 open-circuited stubs on the ring using PIN diodes. SPDT switches are employed for electronic switching between two different feeding line sections. In the bandpass state the resonator presents two transmission zeros near the edges of the passband and four attenuation poles inside the passband, enhancing the filter's performance, thus achieving excellent sharp rejection with high roll-off-rate (ROR20dB). On the other hand, high stopband rejection with wide bandwidth, good return loss and good skirt-band attenuation rates are achieved in the bandstop state. Even-and odd-mode analysis is adopted and closed-form expressions are derived to describe the filter's behaviour. To verify the validity of the proposed design, a prototype filter was fabricated and measured. In measurement, a 65% 3-dB bandwidth bandpass filter (BPF) with an insertion loss of 0.86 dB was switched to a 70% 20-dB bandwidth bandstop filter (BSF) with more than 40 dB stopband rejection

    Reconfigurable absorptive and polarization conversion metasurface consistent for wide angles of incidence

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    In this paper, a single-layer reconfigurable reflective metasurface is presented. The proposed metasurface operates at 5.4 GHz and can achieve either absorption or cross-polarization conversion corresponding at two different diode biasing states. The reflective metasurface acts as an absorber for an incident wave when the diodes are forward-biased. Similarly, it changes the polarization state of the reflected wave for a linearly polarized incident wave when the diodes are reverse-biased. The proposed structure maintains the aforementioned performance characteristics for oblique incidence, up to 60° compared to the perpendicular incidence. The proposed metasurface can achieve linear to linear polarization conversion with polarization conversion ratio (PCR) > 95% and absorption, with absorption ratio (AR) > 80% in the same frequency band just by reconfiguring the state of the PIN diodes

    Dynamically Reconfigurable SIR Filter Using Rectenna and Active Booster

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    Obrađeni su populacijski parametri čaglja (Cannis aureus L.) u proteklom desetogodišnjem razdoblju. Istraživanjem su se obuhvatila lovišta koja pripadaju širem području plavljenja rijeke Save. Rezultati ovog istraživanja pomažu boljem razumijevanju dinamike populacije čaglja i širenju areala ove vrste koja je već prisutna na čitavom prostoru Republike Hrvatske

    A multifunctional ultrathin flexible bianisotropic metasurface with miniaturized cell size

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    In this paper, a flexible bianisotropic metasurface possessing omega-type coupling is presented. The designed metasurface behaves differently when excited from either forward (port 1) or back (port 2) sides. It provides an absorption of 99.46% at 15.1 Gigahertz (GHz), when illuminated from port 1, whereas, on simultaneous illumination from port 2, it behaves like a partially reflective surface (PRS). Furthermore, the presented metasurface not only acts as an in-band absorptive surface (port 1) and partially reflective surface (port 2), but it also provides 97% out-of-band transmission at 7.8 GHz. The response of the presented metasurface remains the same for both transverse Electric (TE) and transverse magnetic (TM) polarized wave or any arbitrary linearly polarized wave. Additionally, the response of the metasurface is angularly stable for any oblique incidence up to 45º. The proposed ultrathin flexible metasurface with absorption, partial reflection and out-of-band transmission properties can be used in the Fabry Perrot cavity antenna for gain enhancement with radar cross-section (RCS) reduction both for passband and stop-band filtering, and conformal antenna applications

    A multiband circular polarization selective metasurface for microwave applications

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    In this research article, a multiband circular polarization selective (CPS) metasurface is presented. A reciprocal bi-layered metasurface is designed by introducing the chirality in the structure. The top layer of the proposed metasurface is composed of circular split-ring resonator with a cross shape structure inside it. The same structure is printed on the bottom side of the proposed metasurface by rotating it at an angle of 90° to achieve chirality in the structure. The proposed metasurface is able to add CPS surface capability between 5.18 and 5.23 GHz for y-polarized incident wave. For the frequency band of 5.18–5.23 GHz, the transmission goes up to − 4 dB, while the polarization extinction ratio (PER) reaches up to − 27.4 dB at 5.2 GHz. Similarly, for x-polarized incident wave, three strategic CPS operating bands are achieved within the frequency ranges of 10.64–10.82 GHz, 12.25–12.47 GHz, and 14.42–14.67 GHz. The maximum PER of 47.16 dB has been achieved for the 14.42–14.67 GHz frequency band at 14.53 GHz. Furthermore, the response of the metasurface does not vary against oblique incidences up to 45°. The simple structure, angular stability, multiband and miniaturized size make this metasurface an outstanding applicant for polarization conversion and biomedical applications

    Design and implementation of compact reconfigurable antennas for UWB and WLAN applications

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    The objective of this research is to realize compact and reconfigurable antennas for next generation Ultra Wide Band (UWB) and Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) applications. The contributions of this research are, a methodology for designing compact UWB antennas, a compact WLAN prototype antenna with reconfigurable characteristics in both radiation pattern and frequency of operation, and compact UWB antennas with reconfigurable WLAN band rejection characteristics. For the completion of this dissertation, five research projects have been studied. First, a double exponentially tapered slot antenna with conformal shape, high gain, and consistent radiation patterns is implemented. The radiation pattern consistency results in minimum distortion for any transmitted pulse. The second and third projects involve an elliptical slot with a tuning uneven U-shaped stub and two cactus-shaped monopoles. The elliptical slot demonstrates omni-directional radiation patterns and compact size. As an improved iteration of the elliptical slot antenna, two cactus-shaped monopoles are implemented. The two prototypes occupy only 60% and 40%, respectively, of the area that the original elliptical slot occupies resulting in a significant size reduction, while maintaining omni-directional radiation patterns. Through the cactus-shaped monopoles some general design methodologies for UWB antennas are introduced and successfully applied. The fourth research topic introduced, concerns the study of compact elliptical UWB monopoles. Several prototypes of different geometrical characteristics were designed and tested. Broadband matching techniques and the integration of reconfigurable features on the elliptical radiator are investigated. For the reconfigurable UWB antenna, resonating elements are used to create a rejection band in the frequency range that is occupied by WLAN applications. The performance of several of the introduced slot and monopole antennas are tested when the antennas under detection are mounted and operate on non-planar surfaces. Finally, a reconfigurable annular slot antenna operating at the wireless local area network (WLAN) band is implemented. The proposed antenna demonstrates reconfigurable characteristics in both radiation pattern and return loss. All of the UWB antennas are fabricated on liquid crystal polymer (LCP) and can be easily integrated with active components on the same module using system on package (SoP) technology.Ph.D.Committee Chair: Manos M. Tentzeris; Committee Co-Chair: John Papapolymerou; Committee Member: Andrew F. Peterson; Committee Member: Chang-Ho Lee; Committee Member: John D. Cressler; Committee Member: Joy Laska
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