In this paper, complementary metamaterial sensor is designed for nondestructive evaluation of dielectric substrates. The design concept is based on electromagnetic stored energy in the complementary circular spiral resonator (CCSR), which is concentrated in small volume near the host substrate at resonance. This energy can be employed to detect various electromagnetic properties of materials under test (MUT). Effective electric permittivity and magnetic permeability of the proposed sensor is extracted from scattering parameters. Sensitivity analysis is performed by varying the permittivity of MUT. After sensitivity analysis, a sensor is fabricated using standard PCB fabrication technique, and resonance frequency of the sensor due to interaction with different MUT is measured using vector network analyzer (AV3672series). The transcendental equation is derived for the fabricated sensor to calculate relative permittivity for unknown MUTs. This method is very simple and requires calculating only the resonant frequency, which reduces the cost and computation time.
The paper presents a highly efficient, low cost, ultra-wideband, microstrip monopole antenna for microwave imaging and wireless communications applications. A new structure (z-shape, ultra-wideband (UWB) monopole) is designed, which consists of stepped meander lines to achieve super-wide bandwidth and high efficiency. Three steps are used to design the proposed structure for the purpose to achieve high efficiency and wide bandwidth. The antenna bandwidth is enhanced by varying the length of meander line slots, optimization of the feeding line and with the miniaturization of the ground width. The simulated and measured frequency bands are 2.7–22.5 GHz and 2.8–22.7 GHz (156% fractional bandwidth), respectively. The dimensions of the antenna are 38 mm × 35 mm × 1.57 mm, and its corresponding electrical size is 2.41 λg × 2.22 λg × 0.09 λg, where guided wavelength λg is at the center frequency (12.75 GHz). This antenna achieved a high bandwidth ratio (8.33:1). The realized gain is varying from 1.6–6.4 dBi, while that of efficiency is 70% to 93% for the whole band. Radiation patterns are measured at four operating frequencies. It has an acceptable group delay, fidelity factor, and phase variation results that satisfy the limit of ultra-wideband in the form of the time domain.
In this paper, three dual notch microwave sensors are presented based on a microstrip transmission line and complementary metamaterial resonators. The main aim of this paper is to compare the constitutive parameters and sensitivity of all three dual notch sensors which are based on complementary symmetric split ring resonator (CS-SRR), complementary asymmetric split ring resonator (CAS-SRR) and complementary bisymmetric split ring resonator (CBS-SRR). The main motivation beyond the presented work is to use dual notches to estimate the relative permittivity of material under test (MUT). Electromagnetic simulation elucidates the origin of dual mode resonance of all the three resonators. Sensitivity analysis is performed on each sensor by using fifteen MUTs with relative permittivity ranges from 1.006 to 16.5 and constant dimensions 10 mm × 10 mm × 1 mm. To verify the concept, a sensor is fabricated and its response is measured using a vector network analyzer (AV3672). Using curve fitting technique the shift in the resonance frequencies of the fabricated sensor due to interaction with MUT is presented as a function of permittivity. Simulated, measured and formulated results are in good agreement with each other.
Satellite communication systems require dual-band circularly polarized (CP) waves to integrate receiving and transmit antennas into one dual-band terminal. Polarization converters play an important role in such a scenario to convert the incoming linearly polarized (LP) signal into the transmitted CP signal. Wide-band and wide-angle performance for the transmission based dual-band polarization converters has been a challenge. In this paper, a transmission-based linear polarization to circular polarization (LP-to-CP) converter is presented using a very simple and thin metasurface based structure. The proposed metasheet is uni-layered, patterned with a circular diagonal split ring enclosed in the square ring. The idea for dual-band polarization conversion is verified with an example in which x(y) polarization is converted into LHCP(RHCP) in Ku-band (15.25~18.9 GHz), and RHCP(LHCP) in Ka-band (29.7~36.7GHz). The converter performs polarization conversion for both bands over 21% of bandwidth which is very wide. Moreover, it maintains performance over wide-angled oblique incidences. Dual-band performance is analyzed theoretically, numerically, and experimentally. The equivalent circuit model is also presented for the unit cell. This metasheet has simple and low-cost design, wide polarization conversion bandwidths, polarization diversity, and wide-angle performance which are very promising for future communication systems.
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