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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

NOVEL EMC CHIP ANTENNAS FOR WLAN APPLICATIONS

Chang, Chih-Hua 01 June 2006 (has links)
Novel chip antennas having an attractive EMC¡]Electromagnetic Compatibility¡^property for WLAN¡]Wireless Local Area Network¡^operations are demonstrated in this thesis. With the EMC property, the proposed antennas are suitable to be applied as internal antennas in mobile communication devices, such as the smart phones or PDA¡]Personal Digital Assistant¡^phones. With the antenna ground portion functioning as a new ground structure, the EM fringing fields in the surrounding region of the proposed antennas are greatly reduced to be negligible. When the possible RF shielding metal case or other electronic components are placed close to the proposed antennas, the antenna performances are almost unaffected. In other words, the isolation distance between the antenna and the nearby components will be no long required. This can lead to a compact integration of the proposed antennas with the nearby components in mobile communication devices. Details of the measured and simulated results of the proposed EMC chip antennas are presented and discussed.
2

NOVEL ANTENNA DESIGNS FOR WLAN OPERATIONS FOR A PDA

Su, Saou-Wen 12 June 2003 (has links)
Novel antennas attractive to fit in the internal space of a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant) for WLAN (Wireless Local Area Network) operations are presented in this dissertation. The proposed antennas have in common good impedance bandwidth (defined by 10 dB return loss), covering the dual-band WLAN operation in the 2.4/5.2 GHz bands. Two novel designs of foam-base surface-mount antennas are proposed in Chapters 2 and 3. Surface-mountable antennas, compared with ceramic antennas, are generally low cost in fabrication and rigid in nature. Low-profile and good dual-band operation of the proposed surface-mountable antennas can be observed in Chapters 2 and 3, and in addition, a few present-day WLAN bands at 5 GHz are covered in the operating bandwidths of the proposed foam-base surface-mountable shorted monopole antenna, shown in Chapter 3. Finally, in Chapter 4, a novel planar helical antenna printed on both surfaces of a dielectric substrate is demonstrated. This patent-pending helical antenna is very suitable to print and integrate on a circuit board of a PDA device for 2.4/5.2 GHz WLAN operation.
3

DISTRIBUTED COOLING FOR DATA CENTERS: BENEFITS, PERFORMANCE EVALUATION AND PREDICTION TOOLS

Moazamigoodarzi, Hosein January 2019 (has links)
Improving the efficiency of conventional air-cooled solutions for Data Centers (DCs) is still a major thermal management challenge. Improvements can be made in two ways, through better (1) architectural design and (2) operation. There are three conventional DC cooling architectures: (a) room-based, (b) row-based, and (c) rack-based. Architectures (b) and (c) allows a modular DC design, where the ITE is within an enclosure containing a cooling unit. Due to scalability and ease of implementation, operational cost, and complexity, these modular systems have gained in popularity for many computing applications. However, the yet poor insight into their thermal management leads to limited strategies to scale the size of a DC facility for applications gaining in importance, e.g., edge and hyperscale. We improve the body of knowledge by comparing three cooling architecture’s power consumption. Energy efficiency during DC operation can be improved in two ways: (1) utilizing energy efficient control systems, (2) optimizing the arrangement of ITE. For both cases, a temperature prediction tool is required which can provide real-time information about the temperature distribution as a function of system parameters and the ITE arrangement. To construct such a prediction tool, we must develop a deeper understanding of the airflow, pressure and temperature distributions around the ITE and how these parameters change dynamically with IT load. As yet primitive tools have been developed, but only for architecture (a) listed above. These tools are not transferrable to other architectures due to significant differences in thermal-fluid transport. We examine the airflow and thermal transport within confined racks with separated cold and hot chambers that employ rack- or row-based cooling units, and then propose a parameter-free transient zonal model to obtain the real-time temperature distributions. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
4

Multiband Coupled-Fed Loop Antennas for Mobile Communication

Li, Wei-yu 20 May 2009 (has links)
In this dissertation, a variety of novel mutiband WWAN loop antennas are presented. By designing proper coupled-fed mechanisms for the proposed loop antennas, the impedance bandwidth of the loop antenna can be greatly enhanced to achieve two wide operating bandwidths at antenna¡¦s lower and upper bands to easily cover GSM850/900/1800/1900/UMTS operation. With two wider operating bandwidths obtained, the tolerance of frequency detuning and the capability of bandwidth tuning of the loop antennas can be improved for practical applications. In addition, in order to find methods to meet the SAR and HAC criterions, the proposed small-size chip loop antenna studied in this dissertation which is suitable for both bar-type and folder-type mobile phone applications are simulated and analyzed for SAR and HAC issues.

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