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Study & Design of Microstrip Cavity Resonator

The document discusses the design of a microstrip cavity resonator. It begins by explaining the limitations of using lumped elements or waveguide cavities for resonators. A microstrip cavity offers high Q factors and low impedance. The document then covers the fundamentals of resonator circuits and wave propagation in microstrip lines. It presents the structure of a rectangular microstrip disk resonator and describes the assumptions made in its design, including the dominant TM100 mode. Finally, a formula for the quality factor Q is given which depends on resonant frequency, dielectric properties, and dimensions of the resonator.

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Partha Banerjee
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
111 views8 pages

Study & Design of Microstrip Cavity Resonator

The document discusses the design of a microstrip cavity resonator. It begins by explaining the limitations of using lumped elements or waveguide cavities for resonators. A microstrip cavity offers high Q factors and low impedance. The document then covers the fundamentals of resonator circuits and wave propagation in microstrip lines. It presents the structure of a rectangular microstrip disk resonator and describes the assumptions made in its design, including the dominant TM100 mode. Finally, a formula for the quality factor Q is given which depends on resonant frequency, dielectric properties, and dimensions of the resonator.

Uploaded by

Partha Banerjee
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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STUDY & DESIGN OF MICROSTRIP

CAVITY RESONATOR
BY
BISWAJIT PAL
ROLL NO:91/RPE/081026
AND
ANIRBAN SAHA
ROLL NO:91/RPE/081013

UNDER THE GUIDENCE OF


PROF. P.K .GOSWAMI
INSTITUTE OF RADIO PHYSICS
&ELECTRONICS
UNIVERSITY OF CALCUTTA
OUTLINE

 WHY MICROSTRIP CAVITY RESONATOR?


 FUNDAMENTALS OF RESONATOR CIRCUITS
 WITH LUMPED ELEMENTS
 WITH WAVEGUIDE CAVITY
 WITH MICROSTRIP CAVITY
 DESIGN OF A MICROSTRIP CAVITY.
 ASSUMPTIONS
 CONSIDERATIONS
 DESIGN
 VARRIATION OF RESONANT FREQUENCY WITH DIMENSIONS
 FUTURE WORK
PROBLEMS WITH LUMPED ELEMENT
 LOW VALUE OF Q FACTOR
 TOO SMALL VALUE AT HIGH FREQ.

RESONATOR WITH WAVEGUIDE CAVITY


 HIGH Q FACTOR
 3D STRUCTURE UNCOMPATIBLE WITH MIC

WITH COOPLANAR WAVEGUIDE


 HIGH IMPEDENCE

MICROSTRIP CAVITY RESONATOR


 CHARACTERISTICS CONTROLED WIDTH & LENGTH
 LOW IMPEDENCE OFFERED
BASIC RESONATOR

 USED FOR STORING ENERGY


 AT RESONANCE WH = WE
WH =
WE =
Q=
 FR =
WAVEGUIDE CAVITY RESONATOR
TM MODE TE MODE
EZ = 0 HZ = 0
Fr = (u/2) √ [ (m/a) ²+ (n/b) ²+ (p/c) ² ] Fr = (u/2) √ [ (m/a) ²+ (n/b) ²+ (p/c) ² ]
m & n cant be 0 at the same time
DOMINANT MODE : TE101 DOMINANT MODE: TM100
MICROSTRIP LINES
 A TWO CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINE

 FRINGING FIELD EFFECT

 THIN DIELECTRIC MODIFIES MODE OF PROPAGATION

 SUPPORTS QUASI TEM MODE


STRUCTURE OF MICROSTRIP LINE
•  
 BOUNDARY CONDITION:
EXTAN AIR = E XTAN DIE

 MAXWELL’S EQUATION
( H)XTAN AIR = €r ( H)XTAN DIE

 EFFECTIVE PERMITIVITY
€reff= { ( €r+1)/2} + {( €r+1)/2}[1+12(h/w) ]1/2
RECTANGULAR MICROSTRIP DISK RESONATOR

  h

 HELMHOLTZ EQUATION FOR EZ

 BOUNDARY CONDITIONS:
Hx(y=0)=Hx(y=w)=0
Hy(x=0)=Hy(x=L)=0

 ELECTRIC FIELD IN THE Z DIRN

 MAGNETIC FIELD IN X & Y DIRECTION

 FOR L>W , DOMINANT MODE IS TM100

 Q= = ω(ω€´A102hWL/4) / [ (ωA102€r´´(ωLh/4 )+{Rs(πA10 (1/) )2 2(WL/2 )}]

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