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Dielectric Rod Waveguides Project for ELEC 590, UVIC, BC, Canada Session - September 2002 Directed Study Prepared by: Deepak Sarkar Student # 0124480 Dieletric Rod Waveguides • • • • • • • • • • • Objective Overview Of Dielectric Rod Waveguides Cutoff Conditions and Wave Numbers Spectrum Analysis Advantages of Dieletric Rod Waveguides Applications in Microwave Filters and Transformers Applications in Optical Fiber and Integrated Optics Other Applications Summary Conclusion References • Appendix Objective! Objectives of this directed study Find out the existing work and recent developments in Dielectric Rod Waveguides Determine the advantages, mode spectrum, cutoff conditions and wave numbers Identify applications to microwave filters & transformers, optical fibers and integrated optics. What Is Dielectric Considering electrical properties, there are three kinds of material . Conductor, conducts electricity with little or no resistance Semi-Conductor, conducts electricity half heartedly Insulator or Dielectric, inhibits flow of electricity A dielectric material is used as the insulation material in cable products. Typical dielectric materials are polyolefins (PE or PP) and teflons. PVC is normally not referred to as a dielectric material Dielectric Constant/Permitimitty • property of a material that determines the relative speed an electrical signal will travel in that material. • Signal speed is roughly inversely proportional to the square root of the dielectric constant. Typical Dielectric Constants • • • • • • • • • • • • • Hard Vacuum 1.0 Pure Teflon® 2.1 Type GY Teflon®-Glass 2.2 - 2.3 Type GX Teflon® Glass 2.55 Cyanate Ester/Glass 3.2 - 3.6 Cyanate Ester-Quartz 2.8 - 3.4 Polyimide-Quartz 3.5 - 3.8 Polyimide-Glass 4.0 - 4.6 Epoxy-Glass (FR-4) 4.4 - 5.2 Non-woven Aramid Epoxy 3.8 - 4.1 Woven Aramid Epoxy 3.8 - 4.1 Ceramic-Filled Teflon® 6.0 - 10.2 Water 70.0 Overview Of DRW The cylindrical dielectric waveguide[1] usually consists of a high permittivity (d) central core dielectric of radius ‘a’ surrounded by a lower dielectric cladding (which is usually air). It is assumed for simplicity that both mediums are perfect dielectrics with permeability equal to that of free space Overview (cont.) Such a structure can support an infinite number of modes. However, for a given set of permittivities and radius ‘a’ only a finite number of unattenuated waveguide modes exist with their fields localized in the central dielectric core. . Overview - Geometry r x z Direction of propagation y Maxwell’s Equations Assuming a linear, isotropic dielectric material having no currents and free charges , the equations take the form B XE t D XH t .D 0 .B 0 Where D=E and B=H. The parameter is the permittivity (or dielectric constant) and is the permeability of the medium Circular Dielectric Waveguides • E and H fields at the interface requires a linear combination of the TE(Transverse Electric) and TM(Transverse Magnetic) modes • In general neither TE nor TM mode can alone satisfy both Ez and E being continuous at the boundary • The general solution has both Hz and Ez component • Let us start with Maxwell’s equations expressed in terms of the longitudinal(Ez, Hz) and transverse(Et, Ht) field components ^ ^ ^ ^ a z t E z j z a z Et jH t ..................................(1) a z t H z j z a z H t jEt ...............................(2) • Solving for Et and Ht in terms of Ez and Hz, ^ ^ ^ ^ 2 2 2 0 jn ( ) a z t E z j z a z [a z H z j z a z H t n 0 H t 0 - and multiplying through by -j .....(3) - using n202=2 - =n20/0 • Expanding using the vector identity A X B X C = (A.C)B - (A.B)C ^ jn ( 0 / 0 ) a z t E z j z t H z (n 2 02 z2 ) H t ............(3) 2 ^ j 0 0 a z t H z j z t E z (n 2 02 z2 ) Et ............(4) where n 2 2 0 2 z • If Ez = 0, TE mode • If Hz = 0, TM mode 2 t Mode Spectrum Algorithm First, we chose a frequency and we start from z/0=1 Then we find pa and qa from Equation (20) Then we find J and K for pa and qa Then we plug in J and K in Equation (19) and evaluate if it is zero If zero, that is the solution; we save it and proceed with next frequency If NOT zero, we save the solution and decrement the value of z/0 and repeat from pa and qa until Equation (19) = 0 Once we got the solutions for all frequencies, we plot them to determine modes Eigen value method would be used in the actual evaluation process. Balanis Vs. Presentation (Notation) • 0 d • 0 • d • z • • • • d • P • q • 0 • z • pa • qa • za • n0 Cutoff Conditions V Mode 0 TE0m, TM0m J0(ua) = 0 1 HE1m, EH1m J1(ua) = 0 >= 2 EHm J(ua) = 0 HEm Cutoff Conditions n12 ua 2 1 J ( 1) (ua) J (ua) 1 n2 Cutoff Conditions Advantages Of DRW • The material is inexpensive and easy to maintain • in the lower frequency range (up to say 20 GHz) easy to manufacture due to rotational symmetry • easy to connect to circular waveguide equipment through conical section which fits into a standard conical waveguide horn Advantages of DRW - In the qusi-optic range (several hundred GHz) implementation as filters, transformers and gratings • Future applications might include incorporating gratings directly into the optical fiber Applications to Microwave Filters and Transformers Dielectric Rod Resonator [1] In order for the dielectric resonator to function as a resonant cavity the dielectric constant of the material must be very large >= 30 Applications To Optical Fiber and Integrated Optics An optical fiber is a dielectric waveguide, normally cylindrical in form, that operates at optical frequencies. Core Cladding Other Applications Microwave tuning devices, high frquency low loss tuning [9] Dielectric resonator antennas, possible candidate for adaptive antenna arrays [10] Mounting Radars with Rod Waveguides, dielectric rotor[7] .Dielectric Rod Leakywave Antennas [8] Summary • Dielectric Rod Waveguides are simple cylindrical symmetric structures made of high permittivity dielectric material capable of carrying high frequency electromagnetic wave with low loss capability. • Fields within and outside the waveguide are complicated in nature due to the angular variations which give rise to hybrid modes apart from usual TE or TM modes out of which HEM11 (HE11) is the dominant mode. Summary(cont.) • Applications go beyond fiber and integrated optics to Dielectric Rod Resonators, Filters, Antennas, and various interfaces and transformers among various microwave and millimeter wave components. • Its cost effective high frequency low noise low maintenance aspects and versatility might lead to enormous future research possibilities integrating electromagnetics and optics. Conclusion A single dominant HE11 mode can be maintained within the rod provided the normalized central core radius or numerical aperture V < 2.4049. This can be accomplished by making the radius ‘a’ of the central core small and/or choosing , between the central core and the cladding, a small dielectric constant r . References 1. Advanced Engineering Electromagnetics, Constantine A Balanis, Chapter 9 2. Optical Fiber Communications, Gerd Keiser, Chapter 2 3. Various Fiber Related Internet Sites including www.arlonmed.com/everything/material 4. A Technique For Designing Ring and Rod Dielectric Resonators in Cutoff Waveguides, Smain Amari, Jens Bornemann, and Rudlger Vahldeck 5. Analysis of Disk-on-Rod Surface Wave Element Inside a Corrugated Horn Using the Mode-Matching Technique, J.C. Chen 6. Propagation in a Circular Waveguide Periodically Loaded with Dielectric Disks, S. Amari, R Vahldieck, J. Bonemann and P. Leuchtmann 7. Mounting Radars with Rod Waveguides – http://www.ohmartvega.com/pdf/mounting/rod_waveguides_mounting.pdf. 8. Leakywave antennas, Dr. DeLisio's website, http://wwwee.eng.hawaii.edu/~chiao/leaky.htm 9. http://www.temex-components.com/temex/product/capacit/trimmer/mte.html 10. DIELECTRIC RESONATOR ANTENNA - POSSIBLE CANDIDATE FOR ADAPTIVE ANTENNA ARRAYS http://www.ee.olemiss.edu/darko/dra-pcfaaa.pdf