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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.
1

Design, Modeling, and Optimization of a Mechanically Reconfigurable Smart Reflector Antenna System

Yoon, Hwan-Sik 20 December 2002 (has links)
No description available.
2

Pattern reconfigurable printed antennas and time domain method of characteristic modes for antenna analysis and design

Surittikul, Nuttawit 21 September 2006 (has links)
No description available.
3

L-Band Coplanar Slot Loop Antenna for iNET Applications

Nithianandam, Jeyasingh 10 1900 (has links)
ITC/USA 2010 Conference Proceedings / The Forty-Sixth Annual International Telemetering Conference and Technical Exhibition / October 25-28, 2010 / Town and Country Resort & Convention Center, San Diego, California / In this article we present a design of an L-band slot loop antenna with a dielectric loaded conductor backed coplanar waveguide (CBCPW) feed. The coplanar slot loop antenna has a transmission line resonator in series. We used full wave electromagnetic simulations with Ansoft's high frequency structure simulator (HFSS) software in the design of the coplanar slot loop antenna. The series transmission line resonator helps to tune the coplanar slot loop antenna and reduce its size. We present here results on return loss and radiations patterns of coplanar slot loop antenna obtained from HFSS simulations.
4

Design and Verification of a LabVIEW Automated Antenna Radiation Pattern Measurement System

Bloom, Dylan C 01 June 2018 (has links)
In 2014, Toyon Research Corporation donated a 6’x6’x8’ anechoic chamber to the Cal Poly EE department to advance student education in the areas of antennas and wireless communications. An anechoic chamber is a room designed to suppress electromagnetic radiation reflections so that accurate measurement of radio frequency (RF) systems such as wireless radios and antennas can take place. Despite the fact that Cal Poly already has a larger anechoic chamber, primarily used for antenna characterization, it is the purpose of this project to design, code, and equip the new chamber so that it performs at least as good, or better than, the existing chamber. Radiation pattern is a key characteristic that describes the directionality or gain of an antenna, and it is important for quantifying and qualifying how an antenna will perform as part of a wireless communication system. Radiation pattern measurement can be time consuming because it requires measuring an antenna’s transmission or reception in in all directions. In both the old and new antenna measurement systems (AMS), a vector network analyzer (VNA) measures signals transmitted between the antenna under test (AUT) and an RF field probe within the antireflective environment of the anechoic chamber. The new system synchronizes VNA measurement with the rotation of the AUT using the automation software LabVIEW and a Sunol Sciences FS-121 antenna positioner. Then, Matlab plots the data collected by LabVIEW as well as calculates useful antenna metrics including half power beam width (HPBW) and directivity. LabVIEW also makes the AMS easy to operate because of its graphical user interface. The new anechoic chamber completes measurements faster than Cal Poly’s existing chamber, with good accuracy and ease of use. The new chamber works best with smaller antennas at frequencies up to 6 GHz and beyond. Radiation patterns have good SNR, and match with simulations and measurements done in the larger chamber. However, due to its smaller size the new AMS is not a replacement for the existing larger system when testing antennas larger than 1 m or at frequencies below 2 GHz.
5

Design and analysis of a simple UHF passive RFID tag for liquid level monitoring applications

Atojoko, Achimugu A., Abd-Alhameed, Raed, Rajamani, Haile S., McEwan, Neil J., See, Chan H., Excell, Peter S. January 2015 (has links)
No / Abstract: Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) systems has gained increasing popularity with multiple deployments to existing wireless sensors in a view to achieve energy and overall operational efficiency at a much lower cost. This paper presents the design and analysis of a UHF (860-868MHZ) passive tag using HFSS (High Frequency Structural Simulator) platform. It explores specific tag geometry characteristics that affect overall tag antenna performance and presents the optimised result. The simulation results and parametric analysis are compared. Further simulations on HFSS platform is carried out to theoretically demonstrate the reflections of the tag when deployed as sensors to multiple levels of a cistern.
6

Wideband Reconfigurable Vector Antenna for 3-D Direction Finding Application

Duplouy, Johan 14 January 2019 (has links) (PDF)
Direction finding plays a crucial role in various civilian and military applications, related to either radionavigation or radiolocation. Most of the direction finding antennas operate over a wide frequency band, but only a minority of them enable the direction of arrival estimation of an incoming electromagnetic field over a 3-D angular coverage (i.e., estimation of both azimuth and elevation angles). An original approach to obtain a 3-D angular coverage consists in measuring the six components of the incident electromagnetic field through a so-called vector antenna. The aim of this Ph.D. is to design a passive, compact and wideband vector antenna in order to cover a maximum of applications. Two vector antennas have been designed, manufactured and experimentally characterized. Unlike conventional topology, they enable the measurement of the components of an incoming electromagnetic field thanks to the radiation pattern reconfigurability of an original arrangement of Vivaldi antennas. The first prototype is mounted over a finite metallic support and enables the direction of arrival estimation of vertically-polarized electromagnetic fields over a 1.69:1 bandwidth while the second one can be used regardless of the polarization of the incoming electromagnetic fields over a 8:1 bandwidth. Moreover, the direction finding performances of these vector antennas have been improved in terms of estimation accuracy, sensitivity, robustness to angular ambiguity and polarization mismatch by synthesizing new radiation patterns in the estimation process. A method based on the Cramer-Rao lower bound has been proposed to select efficiently and rapidly the additional radiation patterns
7

Modeling the behavior of the Linearly Tapered Slot Antenna

Kelly, Thomas P. 12 1900 (has links)
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited / The Linearly Tapered Slot Antenna (LTSA) had been investigated and developed experimentally; its applications have primarily been based on empirical designs. An accurate theoretical model based on Moment Methods (MM) is developed here to study the radiation characteristics of the LTSA. Using the MM solutions to the reaction integral equation, this thesis presents an analysis to model and explain the LTSA behavior. The effects of variable design parameters on radiation patterns are studied. Discussion is augmented by relating predicted radiation patterns to calculated current distributions on the antenna surface. Conclusions are made regarding optimum designs for the LTSA. Relevant observations are made concerning the extensive computational tasks and the computer resources required for the MM model. / http://archive.org/details/modelingbehavior00kell / Major, United States Army
8

Investigation of a small-sized omnidirectional antenna

Goncharova, Iuliia January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this research is to find ways to create an omnidirectional antenna with high directivity in the vertical plane. The investigation is based on computer simulation using the program CST 2011. The objective is a narrow-band antenna that is omnidirectional in the horizontal plane and has maximum achievable directivity for a fixed size. Three of the most promising antenna designs are selected based on the current state of antenna technology. Their maximum directivities are estimated by means of well known relations in antenna theory. It is shown that the most suitable design is an omnidirectional antenna in the form of a cylindrical dipole antenna array with an active central dipole. For this antenna, excitation by means of a radial traveling wave, with a phase velocity smaller than speed of the light, is possible. It is found that for a certain value of a moderating factor it is possible to obtain a directivity that is 2.5 – 3 dB larger than that of a dipole or a linear antenna with uniform excitation. The antenna structures are modeled to determine the number of dipoles, their dimensions and the spacing between them that maximizes the directivity.
9

The Reliability Study of Optical Power and Radiation Pattern for High-Power Light-Emitting Diodes Modules in Aging Test

Tsai, Chun-chin 08 December 2009 (has links)
Light-emitting diodes (LED) illumination takes considerable applications in nowadays daily lives due to the improvement on efficiency of the LED modules. The connections between the reliability and the lifetime, power efficiency, optical spectrum, and structure design of the LED modules are the major research topics. In this study, high-power LED modules encapsulated with different lens shapes after a thermal-aging test were studied experimentally and numerically. The results showed that the LED modules encapsulated with a hemispherical-shaped plastic lens exhibited a better lifetime due to their better thermal dissipation than those with cylindrical- or elliptical-shaped plastic lenses. In the case of 80¢J aging test, the lifetime of hemispherical-shaped lens was 1.5 times better than the cylindrical- or elliptical-shaped lenses. Decay of radiation pattern and optical spectrum of high-power LED modules fabricated by different manufacturers after a thermal-aging test were investigated experimentally and numerically. The results showed that the radiation pattern of the LED modules at the two view angles of ¡Ó (15o~75o) decreased more than the other angles as aging time increased. Due to the degradation of lens material after thermal aging, the center wavelength of the LED spectrum shifted 5 nm. Furthermore, the radius curvature of plastic lens was observed 6-70 £gm contraction as aging times increased. Both experimental and simulated results clearly indicated that improving the lens structure and lens material is essential to extend the operating life of the high-power LED modules. High-power phosphor-converted white-light-emitting diodes (PC-LEDs) with selected concentration and thickness of Ce:YAG phosphor-doped silicones were investigated to study the thermal degradation effect of the Ce:YAG phosphor-silicone layer. The experimental results showed that the lumen loss, chromaticity (CIE shift), and spectrum intensity reduction increased as the concentration of Ce:YAG phosphor doped silicone increased. We showed that 94% lumen loss was attributed to 5.5 wt% Ce:YAG doping and only 6% of the lumen loss was due to a 1mm thickness of silicone degradation. From practical points of view, we found that a lower doping concentration of the Ce:YAG phosphor in thin silicone is a better choice in terms of having less thermal degradation for use in packaging of the high-power PC-LEDs modules and is essential to extend the operating lifetime of the phosphor-based white LED modules.
10

Instrument Design and Radiation Pattern Testing for Terahertz Astronomical Instruments

January 2018 (has links)
abstract: The Milky Way galaxy is a powerful dynamic system that is highly efficient at recycling material. Stars are born out of intergalactic gas and dust, fuse light elements into heavier elements in their cores, then upon stellar death spread material throughout the galaxy, either by diffusion of planetary nebula or by explosive events for high mass stars, and that gas must cool and condense to form stellar nurseries. Though the stellar lifecycle has been studied in detail, relatively little is known about the processes by which hot, diffuse gas ejected by dying stars cools and conglomerates in the interstellar medium (ISM). Much of this mystery arises because only recently have instruments with sufficient spatial and spectral resolution, sensitivity, and bandwidth become available in the terahertz (THz) frequency spectrum where these clouds peak in either thermal or line emission. In this dissertation, I will demonstrate technology advancement of instruments in this frequency regime with new characterization techniques, machining strategies, and scientific models of the spectral behavior of gas species targeted by these instruments. I begin this work with a description of radiation pattern measurements and their use in astronomical instrument characterization. I will introduce a novel technique to measure complex (phase-sensitive) field patterns using direct detectors. I successfully demonstrate the technique with a single pixel microwave inductance detectors (MKID) experiment. I expand that work by measuring the APEX MKID (A-MKID) focal plane array of 880 pixel detectors centered at 350 GHz. In both chapters I discuss the development of an analysis pipeline to take advantage of all information provided by complex field mapping. I then discuss the design, simulation, fabrication processes, and characterization of a circular-to-rectangular waveguide transformer module integrated into a circularly symmetric feedhorn block. I conclude with a summary of this work and how to advance these technologies for future ISM studies. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Exploration Systems Design 2018

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