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Keywords = RF and microwave power transmission

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13 pages, 5281 KiB  
Article
Flexible Receiver Antenna Prepared Based on Conformal Printing and Its Wearable System
by Qian Zhu, Wenjie Zhang, Wencheng Zhu, Chao Wu and Jianping Shi
Sensors 2025, 25(14), 4488; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25144488 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 424
Abstract
Microwave energy is ideal for wearable devices due to its stable wireless power transfer capabilities. However, rigid receiving antennas in conventional RF energy harvesters compromise wearability. This study presents a wearable system using a flexible dual-band antenna (915 MHz/2.45 GHz) fabricated via conformal [...] Read more.
Microwave energy is ideal for wearable devices due to its stable wireless power transfer capabilities. However, rigid receiving antennas in conventional RF energy harvesters compromise wearability. This study presents a wearable system using a flexible dual-band antenna (915 MHz/2.45 GHz) fabricated via conformal 3D printing on arm-mimicking curvatures, minimizing bending-induced performance loss. A hybrid microstrip–lumped element rectifier circuit enhances energy conversion efficiency. Tested with commercial 915 MHz transmitters and Wi-Fi routers, the system consistently delivers 3.27–3.31 V within an operational range, enabling continuous power supply for real-time physiological monitoring (e.g., pulse detection) and data transmission. This work demonstrates a practical solution for sustainable energy harvesting in flexible wearables. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Wearable Sensors in Medical Diagnostics and Rehabilitation)
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13 pages, 58268 KiB  
Article
A Negative Capacitance Field-Effect Transistor with High Rectification Efficiency for Weak-Energy 2.45 GHz Microwave Wireless Transmission
by Hualian Tang, Ailan Tang, Weifeng Liu, Jingxiang Huang, Jianjun Song and Wenjie Sun
Micromachines 2025, 16(1), 58; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi16010058 - 31 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1446
Abstract
This paper proposes and designs a silicon-based negative capacitance field effect transistor (NCFET) to replace conventional MOSFETs as the rectifying device in RF-DC circuits, aiming to enhance the rectification efficiency under low-power density conditions. By combining theoretical analysis with device simulations, the impacts [...] Read more.
This paper proposes and designs a silicon-based negative capacitance field effect transistor (NCFET) to replace conventional MOSFETs as the rectifying device in RF-DC circuits, aiming to enhance the rectification efficiency under low-power density conditions. By combining theoretical analysis with device simulations, the impacts of the ferroelectric material anisotropy, ferroelectric layer thickness, and active region doping concentration on the device performance were systematically optimized. The proposed NCFET structure is tailored for microwave wireless power transmission applications. Based on the optimized NCFET, a half-wave rectifier circuit employing a novel diode connection configuration was constructed and verified through transient simulations. The results show that at a microwave frequency of 2.45 GHz, the designed NCFET rectifier achieves rectification efficiencies of 16.1% and 29.75% at input power densities of −10 dBm and −6 dBm, respectively, which are 7.15 and 2.3 times higher than those of conventional silicon-based MOS devices. Furthermore, it significantly outperforms CMOS rectifiers reported in the literature. This study demonstrates the superior rectification performance of the proposed NCFET under low-power density conditions, offering an efficient device solution for microwave wireless power transmission systems. Full article
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13 pages, 3026 KiB  
Article
A Novel 10-Watt-Level High-Power Microwave Rectifier with an Inverse Class-F Harmonic Network for Microwave Power Transmission
by Jing Peng, Shouhao Wang, Xiaoning Li and Ke Wang
Electronics 2024, 13(18), 3705; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13183705 - 18 Sep 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1162
Abstract
A novel 10-Watt-Level high-power microwave rectifier with an inverse Class-F harmonic network for microwave power transmission (MPT) is presented in this paper. The high-power microwave rectifier circuit comprises four sub-rectifier circuits, a 1 × 4 power divider, and a parallel-series dc synthesis network. [...] Read more.
A novel 10-Watt-Level high-power microwave rectifier with an inverse Class-F harmonic network for microwave power transmission (MPT) is presented in this paper. The high-power microwave rectifier circuit comprises four sub-rectifier circuits, a 1 × 4 power divider, and a parallel-series dc synthesis network. The simple inverse Class-F harmonic control network serves dual roles: harmonic control and impedance matching. The 1 × 4 power divider increases the RF input power fourfold, reaching 40 dBm (10 W). The parallel-series dc synthesis network enhances the resistance to load variation. The high-power rectifier circuit is simulated, fabricated, and measured. The measurement results demonstrate that the rectifier circuit can reach a maximum RF input power of 10 W at 2.45 GHz, with a maximum rectifier efficiency of 61.1% and an output dc voltage of 23.9 V, which has a large application potential in MPT. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced RF/Microwave Circuits and System for New Applications)
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13 pages, 3615 KiB  
Article
Microstrip Quasi-Elliptic Absorptive Bandpass Filter with Ultra-Wide Reflectionless Range and Compact Size
by Awei Zhang, Jinping Xu, Zhiqiang Liu and Yuwei Zhang
Electronics 2024, 13(10), 1841; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13101841 - 9 May 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1817
Abstract
Absorptive bandpass filters (ABPFs) are highly attractive in modern microwave communication systems due to their ability to internally absorb the harmful stopband RF-power reflections. This paper reports an approach to designing quasi-elliptic ABPFs with ultra-wide reflectionless range, enhanced selectivity, and compact size. The [...] Read more.
Absorptive bandpass filters (ABPFs) are highly attractive in modern microwave communication systems due to their ability to internally absorb the harmful stopband RF-power reflections. This paper reports an approach to designing quasi-elliptic ABPFs with ultra-wide reflectionless range, enhanced selectivity, and compact size. The method is realized based on a fourth-order quasi-elliptic absorptive lowpass filter (ALPF) prototype with a simplified structure. This ALPF prototype exhibits both good impedance-matching over the whole normalized frequency domain and an adjustable transmission zero close to the passband. By applying an equivalent impedance transformer model, a coupled-line-based ABPF scheme is devised from the ALPF prototype, which eliminates conventional dispersive transmission line inverters, resulting in an ultra-wide reflectionless range and a compact size. Closed-form equations are derived to support the filter synthesis. A 2.45 GHz microstrip ABPF with 30% fractional bandwidth is designed for verification. The measured minimum in-band insertion loss is 0.83 dB and the reflectionless range of return loss better than 10 dB is from DC to 12.88 GHz. Both the upper and lower stopband suppression exceed 20 dB, with the upper stopband extending up to 6.80 GHz. The upper and lower out-of-band roll-off rates are 93.9 and 121.4 dB/GHz, respectively. The overall circuit size is 0.12 λg2. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microwave and Wireless Communications)
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13 pages, 4660 KiB  
Article
Modified Broadband Ruthroff-Type Transmission Line Transformer Balun for Isolation-Enhanced Passive Mixer Design
by Ding He, Zhentao Yu, Jie Chen, Kaiyuan Du, Zhiqiang Zhu, Pu Cheng and Cheng Tan
Micromachines 2024, 15(3), 332; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15030332 - 28 Feb 2024
Viewed by 2411
Abstract
Generalized broadband operation facilitates multifunction or multiband highly integrated applications, such as modern transceiver systems, where ultra-wideband bidirectional passive mixers are favored to avoid a complex up/down-conversion scheme. In this paper, a modified Ruthroff-type transmission line transformer (TLT) balun is presented to enhance [...] Read more.
Generalized broadband operation facilitates multifunction or multiband highly integrated applications, such as modern transceiver systems, where ultra-wideband bidirectional passive mixers are favored to avoid a complex up/down-conversion scheme. In this paper, a modified Ruthroff-type transmission line transformer (TLT) balun is presented to enhance the isolation of the mixer from the local oscillator (LO) to the radio frequency (RF). Compared to the conventional methods, the proposed Ruthroff-type architecture adopts a combination of shunt capacitors and parallel coupled lines to improve the return loss at the LO port, thus effectively avoiding the area consumption for the diode-to-balun impedance transformation while simultaneously providing a suitable point for IF extraction. In addition, a parallel compensation technique consisting of an inductor and resistor is applied to the RF balun to significantly improve the amplitude/phase balance performance over a wide bandwidth. Benefiting from the aforementioned operations, an isolation-enhanced 8–30 GHz passive double-balanced mixer is designed as a proof-of-principle demonstration via 0.15-micrometer GaAs p-HEMT technology. It exhibits ultra-broadband performance with 7 dB average conversion loss and 50 dB LO-to-RF isolation under 15 dBm LO power. The monolithic microwave integrated circuit area is 0.96 × 1.68 mm2 including all pads. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Microwave Components and Devices, 2nd Edition)
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13 pages, 3254 KiB  
Article
Microwave Metamaterial Absorber with Radio Frequency/Direct Current Converter for Electromagnetic Harvesting System
by Jerzy Mizeraczyk and Magdalena Budnarowska
Electronics 2024, 13(5), 833; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics13050833 - 21 Feb 2024
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 2107
Abstract
This article presents the analysis of the electromagnetic (EM) properties of a novel metamaterial (MM) array in the microwave frequency range. The background for this work is the rapid development of portable devices with low individual energy consumption for the so-called “Internet of [...] Read more.
This article presents the analysis of the electromagnetic (EM) properties of a novel metamaterial (MM) array in the microwave frequency range. The background for this work is the rapid development of portable devices with low individual energy consumption for the so-called “Internet of Things” (IoT) and the demand for energy harvesting from the environment on a micro scale through harvesters capable of powering billions of small receivers globally. The main goal of this work was to check the potential of the novel MM array structure for EM energy harvesting. The proposed MM array was analyzed in the CST Studio simulation environment. This resulted in the determination of the substitute average EM parameters (absorption, reflection, and transmission) of the MM array. Then, the MM array was manufactured, and the simulation results of the MM array parameters were experimentally validated in a microwave waveguide test system. Based on this conclusion, a prototype of the microwave MM absorber, together with an RF/DC converter, was designed and manufactured for harvesting EM energy from the environment. The system’s energy efficiency was evaluated, and its potential application in energy harvesting technology was appraised. Using a microwave horn antenna, the EM energy harvesting efficiency of the prototype was evaluated. It was about 50% at a microwave frequency of about 2.6 GHz. This may make the prototype attractive as an EM energy harvester or bolometric sensor. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Microwave Devices and Their Applications)
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12 pages, 34515 KiB  
Article
A Compact Broadband Power Combiner for High-Power, Continuous-Wave Applications
by Zihan Yang, Qiang Zhang, Kelin Zhou, Lishan Zhao and Jun Zhang
Micromachines 2024, 15(2), 207; https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15020207 - 30 Jan 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2308
Abstract
A compact broadband combiner with a high power capacity and a low insertion loss, which is especially useful for solid-state power sources where multi-way power synthesis is needed, was designed and experimentally investigated. The combiner could combine the microwave signals of sixteen terminals [...] Read more.
A compact broadband combiner with a high power capacity and a low insertion loss, which is especially useful for solid-state power sources where multi-way power synthesis is needed, was designed and experimentally investigated. The combiner could combine the microwave signals of sixteen terminals into a single one and was based on a radial-line waveguide whose circumferential symmetry benefited the amplitude and phase consistency of the combiner. Simulation and experimental results showed that the prototype device, designed for S-band applications, exhibited a reflection coefficient S1,1 < −20 dB in the range of 2.06–2.93 GHz, which corresponds to a relative bandwidth of approximately 34.6%. At 2.45 GHz, the phase imbalance was ±4.5° and the 16-way transmission coefficient was concentrated around −12.0~−12.3 dB. The insertion loss of the device at ambient and elevated temperatures was simulated and experimentally verified, which is of importance for the design of similar high-power microwave combiners. High-power tests proved that even without enforced wind or liquid cooling, the device can handle continuous power (CW) of at least 3.9 kW, which can be much enhanced by taking regular cooling measures. The combined features of the designed combiner suggest promising applications for power synthesis in high-power, solid-state RF sources. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Microwave Passive Components, 2nd Edition)
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18 pages, 7013 KiB  
Review
Microwave Devices for Wearable Sensors and IoT
by Alessandra Costanzo, Elisa Augello, Giulia Battistini, Francesca Benassi, Diego Masotti and Giacomo Paolini
Sensors 2023, 23(9), 4356; https://doi.org/10.3390/s23094356 - 28 Apr 2023
Cited by 16 | Viewed by 6664
Abstract
The Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm is currently highly demanded in multiple scenarios and in particular plays an important role in solving medical-related challenges. RF and microwave technologies, coupled with wireless energy transfer, are interesting candidates because of their inherent contactless spectrometric capabilities [...] Read more.
The Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm is currently highly demanded in multiple scenarios and in particular plays an important role in solving medical-related challenges. RF and microwave technologies, coupled with wireless energy transfer, are interesting candidates because of their inherent contactless spectrometric capabilities and for the wireless transmission of sensing data. This article reviews some recent achievements in the field of wearable sensors, highlighting the benefits that these solutions introduce in operative contexts, such as indoor localization and microwave sensing. Wireless power transfer is an essential requirement to be fulfilled to allow these sensors to be not only wearable but also compact and lightweight while avoiding bulky batteries. Flexible materials and 3D printing polymers, as well as daily garments, are widely exploited within the presented solutions, allowing comfort and wearability without renouncing the robustness and reliability of the built-in wearable sensor. Full article
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11 pages, 3705 KiB  
Article
Broadband Microwave Photonic Mixer with Flexibly Tunable Phase Shift and Supporting Dispersion-Induced Power-Fading-Free Fiber Transmission
by Mingxiu Yuan, Di Peng, Yuwen Qin, Jianping Li, Meng Xiang, Ou Xu and Songnian Fu
Photonics 2023, 10(4), 432; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics10040432 - 11 Apr 2023
Viewed by 2126
Abstract
A broadband microwave photonic mixer with tunable phase shift and supporting dispersion-induced power-fading-free fiber transmission is proposed and demonstrated based on a dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach–Zehnder modulator (DP-DPMZM). In this scheme, the intermediate-frequency (IF)/radiofrequency (RF) signal and the local oscillation (LO) signal are applied [...] Read more.
A broadband microwave photonic mixer with tunable phase shift and supporting dispersion-induced power-fading-free fiber transmission is proposed and demonstrated based on a dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach–Zehnder modulator (DP-DPMZM). In this scheme, the intermediate-frequency (IF)/radiofrequency (RF) signal and the local oscillation (LO) signal are applied to the four sub-MZMs biased at their minimum transmission points via a power splitter and a 90° hybrid coupler, respectively. Through mutual beating between the IF/RF and the LO modulation sidebands in a high-speed photodetector at the remote site, high-efficiency frequency conversion is achieved. The dispersion-induced power fading over long-distance fiber transmission is eliminated through setting the biased-induced phase difference between the parent-MZMs in the two sub-DPMZMs of the DP-DPMZM to be π/2. In addition, the phase shift of the frequency-converted signal can be continuously tuned over 360° through synchronously adjusting the bias voltages of the parent-MZMs in the two sub-DPMZMs. The proposed scheme is experimentally demonstrated, where a microwave photonic mixer with a 6-dB operation bandwidth of 40 GHz and supporting dispersion-induced power-fading-free transmission over 20 km SMF is realized. Meanwhile, a continuously tunable phase shift over 360° in the frequency range of 0.1 GHz to 29.9 GHz is achieved, where the power variation during phase tuning is smaller than 4 dB. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Microwave Photonic Techniques)
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25 pages, 20160 KiB  
Article
The Development of Copper Clad Laminate Horn Antennas for Drone Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar
by Anthony Carpenter, James A. Lawrence, Richard Ghail and Philippa J. Mason
Drones 2023, 7(3), 215; https://doi.org/10.3390/drones7030215 - 20 Mar 2023
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 5162
Abstract
Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) is an active remote sensing technique that typically utilises satellite data to quantify Earth surface and structural deformation. Drone InSAR should provide improved spatial-temporal data resolutions and operational flexibility. This necessitates the development of custom radar hardware for [...] Read more.
Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) is an active remote sensing technique that typically utilises satellite data to quantify Earth surface and structural deformation. Drone InSAR should provide improved spatial-temporal data resolutions and operational flexibility. This necessitates the development of custom radar hardware for drone deployment, including antennas for the transmission and reception of microwave electromagnetic signals. We present the design, simulation, fabrication, and testing of two lightweight and inexpensive copper clad laminate (CCL)/printed circuit board (PCB) horn antennas for C-band radar deployed on the DJI Matrice 600 Pro drone. This is the first demonstration of horn antennas fabricated from CCL, and the first complete overview of antenna development for drone radar applications. The dimensions are optimised for the desired gain and centre frequency of 19 dBi and 5.4 GHz, respectively. The S11, directivity/gain, and half power beam widths (HPBW) are simulated in MATLAB, with the antennas tested in a radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic anechoic chamber using a calibrated vector network analyser (VNA) for comparison. The antennas are highly directive with gains of 15.80 and 16.25 dBi, respectively. The reduction in gain compared to the simulated value is attributed to a resonant frequency shift caused by the brass input feed increasing the electrical dimensions. The measured S11 and azimuth HPBW either meet or exceed the simulated results. A slight performance disparity between the two antennas is attributed to minor artefacts of the manufacturing and testing processes. The incorporation of the antennas into the drone payload is presented. Overall, both antennas satisfy our performance criteria and highlight the potential for CCL/PCB/FR-4 as a lightweight and inexpensive material for custom antenna production in drone radar and other antenna applications. Full article
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6 pages, 1595 KiB  
Communication
High-Performance Microwave Photonic Transmission Enabled by an Adapter for Fundamental Mode in MMFs
by Yilan Wang, Linbo Yang, Zhiqun Yang, Yaping Liu, Zhanhua Huang and Lin Zhang
Appl. Sci. 2023, 13(3), 1794; https://doi.org/10.3390/app13031794 - 30 Jan 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1653
Abstract
Microwave photonic links (MPLs) have long been considered as an excellent way for radio frequency (RF) transmission due to their advantages such as light weight, high bandwidth, low cost and large spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR). However, the effective mode-field area (Aeff) [...] Read more.
Microwave photonic links (MPLs) have long been considered as an excellent way for radio frequency (RF) transmission due to their advantages such as light weight, high bandwidth, low cost and large spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR). However, the effective mode-field area (Aeff) of the single-mode fiber (SMF) used in the traditional MPL is not large, so the MPL based on SMF have relatively strong nonlinearity, which limits the processing power of SMFs to a level of few milliwatts. Few-mode fibers (FMFs) have been applied in MPL as an alternative due to the larger Aeff, and photonic lanterns are used simultaneously to excite the high-order mode of FMFs for RF signal transmission. However, the photonic lantern could bring additional insertion loss, and the production cost of FMFs is high, so we propose an MPL based on multimode fibers (MMFs) with mode field adapters (MFAs). Since MMFs have larger Aeff, the nonlinearity of the link can be greatly reduced. And matched MFAs realized by reverse tapering, to excite only the fundamental mode in MMFs to reduce the crosstalk, which are very stable. As a result, the stimulated Brillouin scattering threshold and SFDR are improved by 5 dB and 14.5 dB, respectively. Full article
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9 pages, 2100 KiB  
Communication
Photonic Generation of Background-Free Phase-Coded Microwave Pulses with Elimination of Power Fading
by Mengyuan Guan, Lu Wang, Fangping Li, Xiaoyu Chen, Ming Li, Ninghua Zhu and Wei Li
Photonics 2023, 10(1), 66; https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics10010066 - 7 Jan 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2026
Abstract
We report a novel photonic scheme to generate background-free phase-coded microwave pulses with elimination of power fading by cascading a dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach–Zehnder modulator (DP-DPMZM) and a polarization modulator (PolM). The DP-DPMZM is driven by a radio frequency (RF) signal to generate two [...] Read more.
We report a novel photonic scheme to generate background-free phase-coded microwave pulses with elimination of power fading by cascading a dual-polarization dual-parallel Mach–Zehnder modulator (DP-DPMZM) and a polarization modulator (PolM). The DP-DPMZM is driven by a radio frequency (RF) signal to generate two first-order optical sidebands with an orthogonal polarization state, while the PolM is driven by a three-level electrical coding signal. By properly adjusting the polarization state, a series of background-free frequency-doubled phase-coded microwave pulses can be generated after optical-to-electrical conversion. Benefiting from the carrier-suppressed single-sideband (CS-SSB) modulation, the proposed signal generator can suppress the chromatic-dispersion-induced power-fading effect, which has excellent potential for long-distance fiber transmission. In addition, the system can directly generate phase-coded microwave signals in pulse mode by truncating continuous wave (CW) microwave signals. Moreover, the microwave signal generator has wideband tunability since no optical filter is involved in our scheme. The proposed method was theoretically analyzed and experimentally verified. Phase-coded microwave pulses centered at 14 GHz and 19.2 GHz with a bit rate of 0.5 Gb/s were successfully generated. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Integrated Microwave Photonics)
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11 pages, 2084 KiB  
Article
Nonlinear Transmission Line Performance as a Combined Pulse Forming Line and High-Power Microwave Source as a Function of Line Impedance
by Travis D. Crawford and Allen L. Garner
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(20), 10305; https://doi.org/10.3390/app122010305 - 13 Oct 2022
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3345
Abstract
Nonlinear transmission lines (NLTLs) offer compact, low-cost, all solid-state high-power microwave (HPM) generation. This article experimentally investigates the RF output power for composite-based 10, 25, and 50 Ω NLTLs used as a combined pulse forming line and HPM source. We manufactured coaxial NLTLs [...] Read more.
Nonlinear transmission lines (NLTLs) offer compact, low-cost, all solid-state high-power microwave (HPM) generation. This article experimentally investigates the RF output power for composite-based 10, 25, and 50 Ω NLTLs used as a combined pulse forming line and HPM source. We manufactured coaxial NLTLs containing 10% barium strontium titanate and 15% nickel zinc ferrite encased in polydimethylsiloxane. The output voltage and power in the time and frequency domains, respectively, showed that the 10 Ω NLTL generated the greatest RF output. The 25 Ω NLTL generated greater output power from 500–1100 MHz than the 50 Ω NLTL. This occurs because reducing the NLTL impedance induces a larger transient current for a given charging voltage. This transient current corresponds to a stronger transient magnetic field, which facilitates magnetic moment alignment to allow for coherent magnetic moment rotation to occur. This setup eliminates the separate pulse forming network and magnetic field bias that typically occurs in other NLTL systems, which provides additional flexibility in tuning the NLTL impedance and reducing device footprint. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Solid-State Pulsed Power Applications)
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13 pages, 7461 KiB  
Article
Transmitter and Receiver Circuits for a High-Speed Polymer Fiber-Based PAM-4 Communication Link
by Frida Strömbeck, Mingquan Bao, Zhongxia Simon He and Herbert Zirath
Sensors 2022, 22(17), 6645; https://doi.org/10.3390/s22176645 - 2 Sep 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2178
Abstract
A high data rate RF-DAC and a power detector (PD) are designed and fabricated in a 250 nm indium phosphide (InP) double heterojunction bipolar transistor (DHBT) technology. A communication link using the Tx-Rx over polymer microwave fiber (PMF) is measured. The link consists [...] Read more.
A high data rate RF-DAC and a power detector (PD) are designed and fabricated in a 250 nm indium phosphide (InP) double heterojunction bipolar transistor (DHBT) technology. A communication link using the Tx-Rx over polymer microwave fiber (PMF) is measured. The link consists of a pulse amplitude modulation (PAM) modulator and a PD as a demodulator, as well as a one-meter-long dielectric waveguide. The working frequency range of the complete link is verified to be 110–150 GHz. The peak output power of the PAM modulator is 5 dBm, and it has a −3 dB bandwidth of 43 GHz. The PD consists of a parallel connected common emitter configured transistor and a common base configured transistor to suppress the odd-order harmonics at the PD’s output, as well as a stacked transistor to amplify the output signal. Tx and Rx chips, including pads, occupy a total area of only 0.83 mm2. The PMF link can support a PAM-4 signal with 22 Gbps data transmission, and a PAM-2 signal with 30 Gbps data transmission, with a bit error rate (BER) of <10−12, with demodulation performed in real time. Furthermore, the energy efficiency for the link (Tx + Rx) is 4.1 pJ/bit, using digital data input and receiving PAM-2 output (5.6 pJ/bit for PAM-4). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue mm Wave Integrated Circuits Based Sensing Systems and Applications)
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21 pages, 3553 KiB  
Review
A Review on SIW and Its Applications to Microwave Components
by Augustine O. Nwajana and Emenike Raymond Obi
Electronics 2022, 11(7), 1160; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics11071160 - 6 Apr 2022
Cited by 59 | Viewed by 16023
Abstract
Substrate-integrated waveguide (SIW) is a modern day (21st century) transmission line that has recently been developed. This technology has introduced new possibilities to the design of efficient circuits and components operating in the radio frequency (RF) and microwave frequency spectrum. Microstrip components are [...] Read more.
Substrate-integrated waveguide (SIW) is a modern day (21st century) transmission line that has recently been developed. This technology has introduced new possibilities to the design of efficient circuits and components operating in the radio frequency (RF) and microwave frequency spectrum. Microstrip components are very good for low frequency applications but are ineffective at extreme frequencies, and involve rigorous fabrication concessions in the implementation of RF, microwave, and millimeter-wave components. This is due to wavelengths being short at higher frequencies. Waveguide devices, on the other hand, are ideal for higher frequency systems, but are very costly, hard to fabricate, and challenging to integrate with planar components in the neighborhood. SIW connects the gap that existed between conventional air-filled rectangular waveguide and planar transmission line technologies including the microstrip. This study explores the current advancements and new opportunities in SIW implementation of RF and microwave devices including filters, multiplexers (diplexers and triplexers), power dividers/combiners, antennas, and sensors for modern communication systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microwave and Wireless Communications)
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