Search results for "Microwave devices"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Graphene as a tunable resistor

2014

We present the design of a graphene-based electronically tuneable microstrip attenuator operating at a frequency of 5 GHz. The use of graphene as a variable resistor is discussed and the modelling of its electromagnetic properties at microwave frequencies is fully addressed. The design of the graphene-based attenuator is described. The structure integrates a patch of graphene, whose characteristics can range from being a fairly good conductor to a highly lossy material, depending on the applied voltage. By applying the proper voltage through two high-impedance bias lines, the surface resistivity of graphene can be modified, thereby changing the insertion loss of the microstrip attenuator.

Attenuator (electronics)Settore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli E Metodi MatematiciMaterials sciencebusiness.industryGraphenegrapheneElectrical engineeringMicrostriplaw.inventionConductorSettore ING-IND/22 - Scienza E Tecnologia Dei MaterialilawOptoelectronicsInsertion lossResistormicrostripbusinessnanoelectronicMicrowavetuneable microwave devicesSettore CHIM/02 - Chimica FisicaVoltage2014 International Semiconductor Conference (CAS)
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Noninvasive monitoring of polymer curing reactions by dielectrometry

2011

A microwave sensor system for the noninvasive monitoring of the curing process of a thermoset material placed inside a metallic mold is described. The microwave sensor is designed as an open-ended coaxial resonator with a curved surface adapted to the mold inner shape. The analysis of the microwave resonator comprises a recently developed method for deembedding the effect of coupling network in overcoupled resonators, so the range of permitted measurements encompass both low and high dielectric losses of polymeric materials. Results show that noninvasive, continuous monitoring of the microwave dielectric properties of the thermoset material can be performed in real time, allowing one to che…

PermittivityPolymeric materialMaterials scienceMicrowave sensorsPlasticityPolymersDe-embeddingInitial conditionsCoupling networkThermosetting polymerDielectricMicrowave devicesDielectric lossesMoldsDielectric materialsContinuous monitoringResonatorCoaxial resonatorsMetallic moldMicrowave dielectric propertiesTEORIA DE LA SEÑAL Y COMUNICACIONESCuringResonatorsElectrical and Electronic EngineeringMicrowavesInstrumentationCuring (chemistry)Cure processNon-invasive monitoringbusiness.industryDielectrometryCuring processCurved surfacesThermosetsMicrowave resonatorsReal timeElastomersThermoset materialsProcess monitoringCuring reactionsOptoelectronicsMaterials processingProcess controlDielectric lossCoaxialbusinessPlasticsMicrowave
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Operation of transition-edge sensors with excess thermal noise

2006

The superconducting transition-edge sensor (TES) is currently one of the most attractive choices for ultra-high resolution calorimetry in the keV x-ray band, and is being considered for future ESA and NASA missions. We have performed a study on the noise characteristics of Au/Ti bilayer TESs, at operating temperatures around ~100 mK, with the SQUID readout at 1.5 K. Experimental results indicate that without modifications the back-action noise from the SQUID chip degrades the noise characteristics significantly. We present a simple and effective solution to the problem: by installing an extra shunt resistor which absorbs the excess radiation from the SQUID input, we have reduced the excess …

PhysicsNoise powerSquidPhotonbiologybusiness.industryPhysics::Instrumentation and DetectorscalorimetersMetals and AlloysY-factorsuperconducting microwave devicesRadiationCondensed Matter PhysicsChipSQUIDNoise (electronics)biology.animalsuperconducting transistorsThermalMaterials ChemistryCeramics and Compositestransition edge sensorsOptoelectronicsElectrical and Electronic EngineeringbusinessSuperconductor Science and Technology
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Bimodal Approach for Noise Figures of Merit Evaluation in Quantum-Limited Josephson Traveling Wave Parametric Amplifiers

2022

The advent of ultra-low noise microwave amplifiers revolutionized several research fields demanding quantum-limited technologies. Exploiting a theoretical bimodal description of a linear phase-preserving amplifier, in this contribution we analyze some of the intrinsic properties of a model architecture (i.e., an rf-SQUID based Josephson Traveling Wave Parametric Amplifier) in terms of amplification and noise generation for key case study input states (Fock and coherents). Furthermore, we present an analysis of the output signals generated by the parametric amplification mechanism when thermal noise fluctuations feed the device.

Superconducting microwave devicesMicrowave photonicMicrowave amplifiersCondensed Matter - SuperconductivityPhysicsFOS: Physical sciencesMicrowave photonics Noise figure Superconducting microwave devices.Condensed Matter PhysicsNoise figureSettore ING-INF/01 - ElettronicaSuperconducting microwave deviceElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsSuperconductivity (cond-mat.supr-con)BandwidthMicrowave amplifierBandwidth; Gain; Microwave amplifiers; Microwave photonics; Noise figure; Physics; Superconducting microwave devicesMicrowave photonicsHardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITSPhysicGainElectrical and Electronic EngineeringPhysics Gain Microwave amplifiers Noise figure Superconducting microwave devices Microwave photonics Bandwidth Microwave photonics noise figure superconducting microwave devicesMicrowave photonics; Noise figure; Superconducting microwave devicesIEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity
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