The present invention relates to microstrip switching circuits, and particularly to a microstrip Fano resonator switch circuit having a varactor electrically connected between two symmetrical stubs disposed on a non-conductive substrate.
The importance of control over wave propagation and antenna radiation are becoming apparent as the RF technologies advance and the spectrum gets more dense. With the current trend of multi-standard wireless mode integration, high-speed RF signal selectability has become a core issue.
To meet the needs of the modern communication systems, various technologies have been exploited that realize novel designs of microwave switches and filters. A microstrip-based tunable switch has been designed using a thin film barium-strontium-titanate varactor. To dynamically reconfigure the antenna pattern, a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) switch has been exploited. For low loss applications, thermally pulsed chalcogenide phase change materials have been utilized. On the other hand, electro-optical tunability of THz waves has been realized by biasing of graphene metasurfaces. However, none of these devices have proven to be entirely satisfactory.
Thus, a microstrip Fano resonator switch solving the aforementioned problems is desired.
The microstrip Fano resonator, switch is a microstrip circuit having a varactor electrically connected between two identical quarter-wavelength open stubs formed from two elongate planar capacitive strip elements disposed on a substrate having a permittivity of approximately 2.94 and a thickness of approximately 0.76 mm, the circuit forming a Fano resonator switch that provides approximately 50 dB of isolation.
These and other features of the present invention will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings.
Similar reference characters denote corresponding features consistently throughout the attached drawings.
Referring to
The Fano lineshape can be constructed analytically from the modulation of the background resonance with the Fano asymmetric function. The symmetric background resonance is described by:
Here, parameters a, ωs, Δωs are the maximum amplitude of the background resonance, resonance frequency position, and the resonance bandwidth, respectively. The modulating asymmetric Fano function σa(ω) can be expressed as:
where the parameters ωa, Δωa, q, and b represent the resonance frequency position, and the spectral bandwidth, asymmetry parameter, and loss due to intrinsic losses, respectively. The reflectance R is given by the product of Rb and αa. Note that the asymmetric Fano function (σa) is a dark mode that could not exist independently. To obtain the bright resonance with the unique asymmetric line shape, it needs to be mixed together with the broadband background resonance.
Consider the coupled quarter-wavelength open-stub microstrip structure 10 in
The simulated transmission responses of the present microstrip structure 10 are depicted as plot 200 in
To obtain various Fano resonance parameters, the reflectance (IV) obtained from equations (1) and (2) is fitted to the simulated extinction spectrum (1−|S21|2) using the nonlinear Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm. The resulting parameters are summarized in Table 1. In particular, consider the ‘q’ parameter that describes the degree of asymmetry of the line shape and is the most relevant parameter in switching applications. The retrieved values exhibit an increase of ‘q’ from 0.1 to 0.135 as the capacitance is changed from 0 pF to 0.1 pF.
This increase in ‘q’ is necessary for the suppression of the transparency window.
A simple yet powerful double-stub microstrip resonator circuit was designed to achieve asymmetric Fano lineshape resonance at microwave frequencies. It was demonstrated experimentally that a slight tuning by placing a 0.2 pF capacitor between the open-stub ends can lead to an approximately 50 dB difference between the on-off states of the Fano resonance. The associated Fano asymmetry parameter q was analytically calculated. It was demonstrated that the resulting q guaranteed a close proximity of the resonant peak and dip with high contrast, thereby helping to switch the transparency window. It was experimentally established that such a tunable Fano resonator is suitable for real time switching and filtering applications. The present microstrip Fano resonator switch should prove useful in transceiver designs having a T/R (Transmit/Reflect) switch, in TDM systems in MIMO and phase array radars, and in numerous other switching and filter applications.
It is to be understood that the present invention is not limited to the embodiments described above, but encompasses any and all embodiments within the scope of the following claims.