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Mobile Ad Hoc Molecular NanonetworksGuney, Aydin 01 June 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Recent developments in nanotechnology have enabled the fabrication of nanomachines with very limited sensing, computation, communication, and action capabilities. The network of communicating nanomachines is envisaged as nanonetworks that are designed to accomplish complex tasks such as drug delivery and health monitoring. For the realization of future nanonetworks, it is essential to develop novel and efficient communication and networking paradigms. In this thesis, the first step towards designing a mobile ad hoc molecular nanonetwork (MAMNET) with electrochemical communication is taken. MAMNET consists of mobile nanomachines and infostations that share nanoscale information using electrochemical communication whenever they have a physical contact with each other. In MAMNET, the intermittent connectivity introduced by the mobility of nanomachines and infostations is a critical issue to be addressed. In this thesis, an analytical framework that incorporates the effect of mobility into the performance of electrochemical communication among nanomachines is presented. Using the analytical model, numerical analysis for the performance evaluation of MAMNET is obtained. Results reveal that MAMNET achieves adequately high throughput performance to enable frontier nanonetwork applications with sufficiently low communication delay.
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Wideband Phase Shifter For 6-18 Ghz ApplicationsBoyacioglu, Gokhan 01 June 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Phase shifters are common microwave circuit devices, which are widely used in telecommunication and radar applications, microwave measurement systems, and
many other industrial applications. They are key circuits of T/R modules and are used to form the main beam of the electronically scanned phase array antennas. Wideband operating range is an important criterion for EW applications. Hence, wideband performance of the phase shifter is also important.
In this study, four wideband phase shifter circuits are designed, fabricated and measured for 6-18 GHz frequency range. Phase shifters are separately designed in order to get 11.25, 22.5, 45 and 90º / phase shifts with minimum phase error and low return losses. Phase shifter circuits are designed and fabricated in microstrip structure onto two different substrates as Rogers TMM10i and Alumina using printed circuit board and thin film production techniques, respectively. Also phase shifter circuits that include microstrip spiral inductors for DC biasing are designed and fabricated using thin film production technique. For each design the fabricated circuits are measured and results are compared with simulation results in the content of this
thesis. Circuit designs and EM simulations are performed by using ADS2008® / , Sonnet® / , and CST® / .
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Design And Realization Of Broadband Instantaneous Frequency DiscriminatorPamuk, Gokhan 01 June 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In this thesis, RF sections of a multi tier instantaneous frequency measurement (IFM) receiver which can operate in 2 &ndash / 18 GHz frequency band is designed, simulated and
partially realized. The designed structure uses one coarse tier, three medium tiers and one fine tier for frequency discrimination. A novel reflective phase shifting technique
is developed which enables the design of very wideband phase shifters using stepped cascaded transmission lines. Compared to the classical phase shifters using coupled
transmission lines, the new approach came out to be much easier to design and fabricate with much better responses. This phase shifting technique is used in coarse
and medium tiers. In fine frequency measurement tier, I/Q discriminator approach is used because reflective phase shifters would necessitate unacceptably long delay
lines. Two I/Q discriminators are designed and fabricated using Lange directional couplers that operate in 2-6 GHz and 6-18 GHz, resulting in satisfactory response. Additionally, 6 GHz HP and 6 GHz LP distributed filters are designed and fabricated to be used for these I/Q discriminators in fine tier. In order to eliminate possible
ambiguities in coarse tier, a distributed element LP-HP diplexer with 10 GHz crossover frequency is designed and fabricated successfully to be used for splitting the
frequency spectrum into 2-10 GHz and 10-18 GHz to ease the design and realization problems. Three power dividers operating in the ranges 2-18 GHz, 2-6 GHz and 6-18
GHz are designed for splitting incoming signals into different branches. All of these dividers are also fabricated with satisfactory response. The fabricated components
are all compact and highly reproducible. The designed IFM can tolerate 48 degrees phase margin for resolving ambiguity in the tiers while special precautions are taken
in fine tier to help ambiguity resolving process also. The resulting IFM provides a frequency resolution below 1 MHz in case of using an 8-bit sampler with a frequency
accuracy of 0.28 MHz rms for 0 dB input SNR and 20 MHz video bandwidth.
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Antenna Patterns For Detecting Slowly Moving Targets In Two Channel Gmti ProcessingYildirim, Gokhan 01 June 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Ground Moving Target Indicator (GMTI) is a well-known and widely used signal processing method in airborne and spaceborne radars. In airborne radar and GMTI literature, many radar designs and signal processing techniques have been developed to increase the detection and estimation performance under heavy interference conditions. The motion of the aircraft on which the radar is mounted, high altitudes and ranges, targets with low radar cross sections and slowly moving targets complicates the problem of localization and observation of moving targets on a huge area of interest. In order to overcome these problems, engineers developed more complex radar hardwares with many receiver channels and signal processing algorithms. Multi-channel receivers provide adaptive digital beam-forming and adaptive Doppler processing capabilities. However, designing a cost efficient and light multi-channel receiver and a signal processing unit, which can handle a huge amount of received data from multi channels, is a difficult task to accomplish. Therefore, this thesis aims to propose non-adaptive antenna beams to reduce the number of channels to two in GMTI processing. This reduction yields a simplification both in receiver structure and signal processing unit. The measure of excellence of these propositions will be the ability to detect slowly moving targets with nearly optimum performance.
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A Physical Channel Model And Analysis Of Nanoscale Neuro-spike CommunicationBalevi, Eren 01 August 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Nanoscale communication is appealing domain in nanotechnology. There are many
existing nanoscale communication methods. In addition to these, novel techniques
can be derived depending on the naturally existing phenomena such as molecular
communication. It uses molecules as an information carrier such as molecular motors,
pheromones and neurotransmitters for neuro-spike communication. Among them,
neuro-spike communication is a vastly unexplored area. The ultimate goal of this
thesis is to accurately investigate it by obtaining a realistic physical channel model.
This model can be exploited in different disciplines. Furthermore, the model can help
designing novel artificial nanoscale communication paradigms. The modeled channel
is analyzed regarding the error probability of detecting spikes depending on channel
parameters. Moreover, channel delay is characterized and information theoretical
analysis of packet release mechanism in the channel is performed.
The modeled channel is extended to multi-input single output terminal. In this case,
input neurons can simultaneously send information through the same synapse leading to interference. However, there is an interference repressing technique in these
synapses called automatic gain control. It decreases the interference level observed
on weaker signal. The first aim for this case is to define the interference channel at
synapse having automatic gain control. The second aim is to analyze the achievable
rate region of this channel. The analysis shows that gain control mechanism prevents
the decrease in achievable rate region because of the weaker signal. Moreover, power,
firing rate and number of stronger inputs do not affect the achievable rate region.
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Achievable Coding Rates For Awgn And Block Fading Channels In The Finite Blocklength RegimeVural, Mehmet 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In practice, a communication system works with finite blocklength codes because of the delay constraints and the information-theoretic bounds which are proposed for finite blocklength systems can be exploited to determine the performance of a designed system. In this thesis, achievable rates for given average error probabilities are considered for finite blocklength systems. Although classical bounds can be used to upper bound the error probability, these bounds require the optimization of auxiliary variables. In this work, a bound which is called the dependence testing (DT) bound that is free of any auxiliary variables is exploited. The DT bound is evaluated by introducing a normal approximation to the information density. Simulations carried out both for the Gaussian and discrete input alphabets show the proposed approximation enables very good prediction of the achievable rates. The proposed approximation is also used to calculate the average error probability for block fading channels. Simulations performed for Rayleigh block fading channels demonstrate that the total blocklength of the system in addition to the number of fading blocks should be accounted for especially when the number of fading blocks is large. A power allocation problem in block fading channels when the channel state information is available to the transmitting side is investigated in the final part of this work. The DT bound is optimized for a given channel state vector by allocating different power levels to each fading block by exploiting short-term power allocation. A simple power allocation algorithm is proposed which comes out with very similar results compared with the analytically computed values.
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Defected Ground Structure And Its Applications To Microwave Devices And Antenna Feed NetworksKilic, Ozgehan 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis reports the analysis of the rectangular shaped defected ground structure
(RS-DGS) and the application of the structure on some microwave devices. DGS is analyzed
in terms of its superior properties, which enables the designers to easily realize
many kind of microwave devices which are impossible to achieve with the standard applications.
Within the scope of this thesis, the focus is on the rectangular shaped DGS
and its characteristic properties. The basic slow wave and high impedance characteristics
are utilized in the design of some microwave devices. The design is carried on at the two
different frequency bands: X-band and Ka band, centering at 10 GHz and 35 GHz, respectively.
Finally, using the high impedance property and the coupling between the
defects, a wide band 1 : 4 beam forming network is designed and implemented at
10 GHz.
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Electronically Tunable Microwave Bandstop Filter Design And ImplementationOruc, Sacid 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
In modern broadband microwave applications, receivers are very sensitive to interference signals which can come from the system itself or from hostile emitters. Electronically tunable bandstop filters can be used to eliminate these interference signals with adaptation to changing frequency conditions. In this thesis, electronically tunable bandstop filter design techniques are investigated for microwave frequencies. The aim is to find filter topologies which allow narrowband bandstop or &lsquo / notch&rsquo / filter designs with low-Q resonators and with tuning capability. Tunability will be provided by the use of electronically tunable capacitors, specifically varactor diodes. For this purpose, firstly direct bandstop filter techniques are investigated and their performances are analyzed. Then phase cancellation approach, which enables high quality bandstop filter design with lossy circuit elements, is introduced and analyzed. Lastly, a novel notch filter design technique called as all-pass filter approach is introduced. This approach allows a systematic design method and enables to design very good tunable notch filter characteristics with low-Q resonators. Three filter topologies using this approach are given and their performances are analyzed. Also prototype tunable notch filters operating in X-Band are designed and implemented by using these three topologies.
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Design Of Series-fed Printed Slot Antenna Arrays Excited By Microstrip LinesMustafa, Incebacak 01 October 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Series-fed printed slot antenna arrays excited by microstrip lines are low profile, easy to manufacture, low cost structures that found use in applications that doesn&rsquo / t require high power levels with having advantage of easy integration with microwave front-end circuitry. In this thesis, design and analysis of microstrip line fed slot antenna arrays are investigated. First an equivalent circuit model that ignores mutual coupling effects between slots is studied. A 6-element array is designed by using this equivalent circuit model. From the measurement and electromagnetic simulation results of this array, it is concluded that mutual coupling effects should be considered in order to achieve a successful design that meets the design specifications related to the main beam direction and sidelobe levels of the antenna. Next, an improved equivalent circuit model proposed for stripline fed slot antenna arrays is studied. It is observed that, the mutual coupling effects are incorporated into the equivalent model through the utilization of active impedance concept. Finally, the design equations proposed in the improved equivalent circuit model are derived for the microstrip line fed slot antenna array structure. To demonstrate the validity and the accuracy of the derived design equations, results obtained by the proposed analysis method are compared with simulation and measurement results. It is concluded that the proposed method successfully predicts the radiation pattern of the array by including the mutual coupling effects.
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Dual Frequency Reconfigurable Reflectarray Antenna Of Split Ring Elements With Rf Mems SwitchesGuclu, Caner 01 September 2010 (has links) (PDF)
Dual band (K and Ka) electronically scanning reflectarray with RF MEMS switches
is designed, implemented and measured. Unit cell of the reflect array is composed of
conductor backed split-ring elements. In order to steer the beam, the phase of the
incident circularly polarized wave is controlled by RF MEMS switches that modify
the angular orientation of split-rings individually. Reflectarray is designed using unit
cell approach with periodic boundary conditions. The antenna is fabricated by using
surface micromachining process developed in METU MEMS Center. Radiation
patterns of the antenna are measured and compared with the simulations. It has been
shown that the reflectarray is capable of beam switching to 35° / in Ka band, 24° / in K
band.
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