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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Frequency Selective Detection of Infrared Radiation in Uncooled Optical Nano-Antenna Array

Modak, Sushrut 01 January 2014 (has links)
Mid-infrared (mid-IR) detection and imaging over atmospheric transparent 3-5 μm and 8-12 μm bands are increasingly becoming important for various space, defense and civilian applications. Various kinds of microbolometers offer uncooled detection of IR radiation. However, broadband absorption of microbolometers makes them less sensitive to spectrally resolved detection of infrared radiation and the fabrication is also very tedious involving multiple complex lithography steps. In this study, we designed an optical nano-antenna array based detector with narrow frequency band of operation. The structure consists of a two-element antenna array comprised of a perforated metallic hole array coupled with an underneath disk array which trap incident radiation as dipole currents. The energy is dissipated as electron plasma loss on the hole-disk system inducing close to ~100% absorption of the incident radiation. This near perfect absorption originates from simultaneous zero crossing of real component of permittivity and permeability due to the geometrical arrangement of the two antenna elements which nullifies overall charge and current distributions, prohibiting existence of any propagating electromagnetic modes at resonance. Moreover, the continuous perforated film allows probing of the induced "micro-current" plasma loss on each nano hole-disk pair via a weak bias current. Such optical antenna design enables flexible scaling of detector response over the entire mid-infrared regime by change in the antenna dimensions. Furthermore, the development of simple nanoimprint lithography based large area optical antenna array fabrication technique facilitates formation of low cost frequency selective infrared detectors.
22

High-isolation antenna array using SIW and realized with a graphene layer for sub-terahertz wireless applications

Alibakhshikenari, M., Virdee, B.S., Salekzamankhani, S., Aïssa, S., Soin, N., Fishlock, S.J., Althuwayb, A.A., Abd-Alhameed, Raed, Huynen, I., McLaughlin, J.A., Falcone, F., Limiti, E. 02 November 2021 (has links)
Yes / This paper presents the results of a study on developing an effective technique to increase the performance characteristics of antenna arrays for sub-THz integrated circuit applications. This is essential to compensate the limited power available from sub-THz sources. Although conventional array structures can provide a solution to enhance the radiation-gain performance however in the case of small-sized array structures the radiation properties can be adversely affected by mutual coupling that exists between the radiating elements. It is demonstrated here the effectiveness of using SIW technology to suppress surface wave propagations and near field mutual coupling effects. Prototype of 2 × 3 antenna arrays were designed and constructed on a polyimide dielectric substrate with thickness of 125 μm for operation across 0.19-0.20 THz. The dimensions of the array were 20 × 13.5 × 0.125 mm3. Metallization of the antenna was coated with 500 nm layer of Graphene. With the proposed technique the isolation between the radiating elements was improved on average by 22.5 dB compared to a reference array antenna with no SIW isolation. The performance of the array was enhanced by transforming the patch to exhibit metamaterial characteristics. This was achieved by embedding the patch antennas in the array with sub-wavelength slots. Compared to the reference array the metamaterial inspired structure exhibits improvement in isolation, radiation gain and efficiency on average by 28 dB, 6.3 dBi, and 34%, respectively. These results show the viability of proposed approach in developing antenna arrays for application in sub-THz integrated circuits. / Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades, Gobierno de España (MCIU/AEI/FEDER, UE) under Grant RTI2018-095499-B-C31, in part by the Innovation Programme under Grant H2020-MSCA-ITN-2016 SECRET-722424, and in part by the U.K. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) under Grant EP/E022936/1.
23

Spatial and Polarization Domain-Based GNSS Processing for Multipath Mitigation usinga Dual-Polarized Antenna Array

Hahn, Eric M. January 2022 (has links)
No description available.
24

The Effect Upon Antenna Arrays of Variations of Element Orientation and Spacing in the Presence of Channel Noise, with an Application to Direction Finding

Abdelhafeid, Faraj 05 June 2018 (has links)
No description available.
25

DIGITAL DIRECTION FINDING SYSTEM DESIGN AND ANALYSIS

LIU, HUAZHOU 02 September 2003 (has links)
No description available.
26

Forward-Looking Lateral Wave Radar For Ied Detection And Classification

Sprungle, Raymond James 08 December 2008 (has links)
No description available.
27

Active Sensor for Microwave Tissue Imaging with Bias-Switched Arrays

Foroutan, Farzad 07 1900 (has links)
A prototype of a bias-switched active sensor is developed and measured to establish the achievable dynamic range in a new generation of active arrays for microwave tissue imaging. The sensor integrates a printed slot antenna, a low-noise amplifier (LNA) and an active mixer in a single unit, which enables inter-sensor separation distance as small as 12 mm. The sensor's input covers the bandwidth from 3 GHz to 7.5 GHz. Its output intermediate frequency (IF) is 30 MHz. The sensor is controlled by a simple bias-switching circuit, which switches ON and OFF the bias of the LNA and the mixer simultaneously. It is demonstrated experimentally that the dynamic range of the sensor, as determined by its ON and OFF states, is 109 dB and 118 dB at resolution bandwidths of 1 kHz and 100 Hz, respectively. The integration of an LNA on the same board with each antenna element is also studied. The LNA circuit dimensions have been reduced from 18.2 mm by 44.6 mm (the size of the evaluation board) to 6 mm by 8 mm in width and length, respectively. Simulations show promising results. Thus, fabrication and measurements can be carried out in the near future. / Thesis / Master of Applied Science (MASc)
28

Analysis of Highly Coupled Wideband Antenna Arrays Using Scattering Parameter Network Models

Takamizawa, Koichiro 23 January 2004 (has links)
Wideband phased arrays require very tight element spacing to permit wide angle scanning of the main beam over the wide bandwidth. The consequence of tight spacing is very high mutual coupling among the elements in the array. Previous efforts by Virginia Tech Antenna Group has shown that the strong coupling can be utilized in arrays to obtain broadband frequency response while maintaining a small element spacing. However, mutual coupling between elements in a tightly coupled array can sometimes dramatically change the operating frequency, bandwidth, and radiation pattern from that of the single isolated element. Thus, there are some fundamental questions that remain regarding the effective operation of highly coupled arrays for beam forming, beam scanning, and aperture reconfiguration. Existing antenna pattern analysis techniques including the active element pattern method are inadequate for the application in highly coupled arrays. This dissertation focuses on the development of a new antenna array analysis technique. The presented method is based on the scattering parameter network descriptions of the array elements, associated feed network and the active element patterns. The developed model is general. It can be applied to an array of any size and configuration. The model can be utilized to determine directivity, gain and realized gain of arrays as well as their radiation efficiency and impedance mismatch. Using the network model, the relationship between radiation pattern characteristics and the input impedance characteristics of the array antennas becomes clear. Three types of source impedance matching conditions for array antennas are investigated using the model. A numerically simulated array of strip dipole array is used to investigate the effects of various impedance matching methods on the radiation pattern and impedance bandwidth. An application of network analysis is presented on an experimental investigation of $3\times 3$ Foursquare array test bed to further verify the concepts. / Ph. D.
29

Overloaded Array Processing: System Analysis, Signal Extraction Techniques, and Time-delay Estimation

Bayram, Saffet 11 December 2000 (has links)
In airborne communication systems such as airborne cell-extender repeaters the receiver faces the challenge of demodulating the signal of interest (SOI) in the presence of excessive amounts of Co-Channel Interference (CCI) from a large number of sources. This results in the overloaded environment where the number of near-equal power co-channel interferers exceeds the number of antenna array elements. This thesis first analyzes the interference environment experienced by an airborne cellular repeater flying at high altitudes. Link budget analysis using a two-ray propagation model shows that the antenna array mounted on an airborne receiver has to recover the SOI out of hundreds of co-channel interfering signals. This necessitates use of complex overloaded array signal processing techniques. An extensive literature survey on narrowband signal extraction algorithms shows that joint detection schemes, coupled with antenna arrays, provide a solution for narrowband overloaded array problem where as traditional beamforming techniques fail. Simulation results in this thesis investigates three "promising" overloaded array processing algorithms, Multi-User Decision Feedback Equalizer (MU-DFE), Iterative Least Squares with Projection (ILSP), and Iterative Least Squares with Enumeration (ILSE). ILSE is a non-linear joint maximum-likelihood detector, is shown to demodulate many more signals than elements even when the users are closely spaced and the channel is blindly estimated. Multi-user time delay estimation is one of the most important aspects of channel estimation for overloaded array processing. The final chapter of the thesis proposes a low-complexity data-aided time-delay estimation structure for embedding in a Per Survivor Processing (PSP) trellis for overloaded array processing. An extensive analysis proves that the multi-user delay estimation is separable, which leads to the proposed multi-user algorithm that estimates the user delays with a bank of simple data-aided synchronization loops to reduce the complexity. This thesis shows simulation results for the single-user case where the low-complexity Delay Locked Loop (DLL) structure, working at a low oversampling rate of 2 samples per symbol, estimates and compensates for any integer or non-integer sample delay within ±Tsym(symbol period). Two extensions to this technique are proposed to provide efficient multi-user delay estimation. The first multi-user structure employs a bank of DLLs, which compensate for the timing offset of each user simultaneously. This multi-user algorithm is suitable for CDMA-type applications, where each user has a distinct PN-code with good auto- and cross-correlation properties. We show that for spreading gain of 31, the presence of an interpolator enables us to reduce the oversampling factor from 4 to 2 samples per chip. Thus, the requirements of the A/D converter are relaxed without sacrificing system performance. Furthermore, we show that the proposed scheme meets the requirements of multi-user interference cancellation techniques for residual worst-case timing errors, i.e., residual timing error < 0.2 Tc, as reported in [200]. Finally, the thesis recommends a similar multi-user structure for narrowband TDMA-type system, which is based on bank of DLLs with whitening pre-filters at the front end of each branch. / Master of Science
30

Overloaded Array Processing with Spatially Reduced Search Joint Detection

Hicks, James E. Jr. 22 August 2000 (has links)
An antenna array is overloaded when the number of cochannel signals in its operating environment exceeds the number of elements. Conventional space-time array processing for narrow-band signals fails in overloaded environments. Overloaded array processing (OAP) is most difficult when signals impinging on the array are near equal power, have tight excess bandwidth, and are of identical signal type. In this thesis, we first demonstrate how OAP is theoretically possible with the joint maximum likelihood (JML) receiver. However, for even a modest number of interfering signals, the JML receiverà ­s computational complexity quickly exceeds the real-time ability of any computer. This thesis proposes an iterative joint detection technique, Spatially Reduced Search Joint Detection, (SRSJD), which approximates the JML receiver while reducing its computational complexity by several orders of magnitude. This complexity reduction is achieved by first exploiting spatial separation between interfering signals with a linear pre-processing stage, and second, performing iterative joint detection with a (possibly) tail-biting and time"-varying trellis. The algorithm is sub-optimal but is demonstrated to well approximate the optimum receiver in modest signal to interference ratios. SRSJD is shown to demodulate over 2M zero excess bandwidth synchronous QPSK signals with an M element array. Also, this thesis investigates a temporal processing technique similar to SRSJD, Temporally Reduced Search Joint Detection (TRSJD), that separates co-channel, asynchronous, partial response signals. The technique is demonstrated to separate two near equal power QPSK signals with r= .35 root raised-cosine pulse shapes." / Master of Science

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