907 resultados para Raymond Vigue
Resumo:
The spectral transmittance of a frequency selective surface (FSS), which consists of two free-standing arrays of short-circuited nested annular slots, is presented. The FSS was designed to provide a minimum of 20 dB isolation between the frequency bands 316.5-325.5 and 349.5-358.5 GHz when the filter operates in the TE and TM planes at 45 degrees incidence. Experimental results, which are in close agreement with the computed transmission coefficients, show that the maximum insertion loss is 0.9 dB, and the minimum cross-polar discrimination is at least 21 dB in the passbands. The FSS yields virtually identical spectral responses in the two polarisation planes over the frequency range 315-359 GHz.
Resumo:
A frequency selective surface (FSS) which exploits the dielectric anisotropy of liquid crystals to generate an electronically tunable bandpass filter response at D Band (110-170 GHz) is presented. The device consists of two printed arrays of slot elements which are separated by a 130-mu m thick layer of liquid crystals. A 3% shift in the filter passband occurs when the substrate permittivity is increased by applying a control signal of 10 V. Measured results show that the insertion loss increases from -3.7 dB to -10.4 dB at resonance (134 GHz), thus demonstrating the potential to create a FSS which can be switched between a transmitting and a reflecting structure.
Resumo:
The design of a quasi-optical single sideband filter, which provides more than 30 dB of isolation between the frequency bands 294-305.5 and 329.5-341.5 GHz in the TM plane at 45 degrees incidence, is described. The structure, which consists of three free-standing arrays of dipole slot elements, generates a bandpass spectral response with an insertion loss below 0.5 dB at resonance. Simulated and measured transmission coefficients in the range 250-400 GHz are shown to be in good agreement.
Resumo:
Numerical and measured results are employed at X-band to demonstrate that the electrical properties ofnematic state liquid crystal can be exploited to produce phase shifters for beam scanning printed reflectarray antennas with a tunable range greater than 180'.