yungui ma ( 马云贵 ) e-mail: [email protected]@zju.edu.cn office: room 209, east building...

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Yungui MA ( 马马马 ) E-mail: [email protected] Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Microwave Fundamentals Fundamentals

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Page 1: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Yungui MA ( 马云贵 )E-mail: [email protected]

Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus

Microwave Microwave FundamentalsFundamentals

Page 2: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Electromagnetic spectrum

Band P L S C X Ku K Ka

Freq (GHz)

0.23-1 1-2 2-4 4-8 8-12.5 12.5-18 18-26.5 26.5-40

300 MHz 3 GHz 30 GHz 300 GHz 3 THz 30 THz 300 THz

Photonic devices

Electronic devices

Microwaves THz gap visibleRadio waves UV

Microwave bands

Millimeter waves

Infrared

Page 3: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Microwave applicationsWireless communications (cell phones, WLAN,

…)Global positioning system (GPS)Computer engineering (bus systems, CPU, …)Microwave antennas (radar, communication,

remote sensing, …)Other applications (microwave heating, power

transfer, imaging, biological effect and safety)

Page 4: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

课件下载

Page 5: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

SyllabusChapter 1: Transmission line theory

Chapter 2: Transmission lines and waveguides

Chapter 3: Microwave network analysis

Chapter 4: Microwave resonators

Reference books : 1.David M. Pozar, Microwave Engineering, third edition (Wiley, 2005)2.Robert E. Collin, Foundations for microwave engineering, second edition (Wiley, 2007) 3.J. A. Kong , Electromagnetic theory (EMW, 2000)

Page 6: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Chapter 1: Transmission line theory 1.1 Why from lumped to distributed

theory?

1.2 Examples of transmission lines

1.3 Distributed network for a

transmission line

1.4 Field analysis of transmission lines

1.5 The terminated lossless

transmission line

1.6 Sourced and loaded transmission

lines

Page 7: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

1.1 Why from lumped to distributed theory?

Page 8: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

At low frequencies: Can simply use a wire to connect two components

f =50 HZ, wavelength = 6 x 106m;

At high frequencies: Cannot simply use a wire to connect two components

f =500 MHZ, wavelength = 0.6 m;

1.1 Why from lumped to distributed theory?

Page 9: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

1.1 Why from lumped to distributed theory?

E field

H field

Microwave component: electric size << the operating wavelength

Page 10: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

R = series resistance per unit length, for both conductors, in /m;L = series inductance per unit length, for both conductors, in H/m;G = parallel conductance per unit length, in S/m;C = parallel capacitance per unit length, in F/m.

Loss: R (due to the finite conductivity) + G (due to the dielectric loss)

Transmission line theory

Page 11: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Transmission line theory

Bridges the gap between field analysis and basic circuit theory

Extension from lumped to distributed theoryA specialization of Maxwell’s equationsSignificant importance in microwave network

analysis

The key difference between circuit theory and transmission line theory is electrical size. Circuit analysis assumes that the physical dimensions of a network are much smaller than the electrical wavelength, while transmission lines may be a considerable fraction of a wavelength, or many wavelengths, in size. Thus a transmission line is a distributed-parameter network, where voltages and currents can vary in magnitude and phase over its length.

Page 12: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

1.2 Examples of transmission lines

(2) Coaxial line

Magnetic field

(dashed lines)

Electric field

(solid lines)

(3) Microstrip line

(1)Two-wire line

Page 13: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Review: Kerchhoff’s law

1.3 Distributed network for a transmission line

KCL: 01

n

kki KVL: 0

1

n

kkv

Page 14: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

1.3 Distributed network for a transmission line

Page 15: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

1.3 Distributed network for a transmission line

Page 16: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Derivation of differential transmission line equation

KVL:

Page 17: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Derivation of differential transmission line equation

KCL:

Page 18: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Derivation of differential transmission line equation

Page 19: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Phasor form of sinusoid haromic wave

Time factor convention

Page 20: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Derivation of differential transmission line equation

Page 21: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

ki, Phase constant, rad/m

kr, attenuation constant, nep/m

Page 22: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Impedance, wavelength and phase velocity

Wavelength:

Phase velocity:

)cos()cos(),( 00 zktVzktVtzv ii

Voltage in the time domain:

ik/2

fk

vi

p

Characteristic impedance:

TL current:

Page 23: Yungui MA ( 马云贵 ) E-mail: yungui@zju.edu.cnyungui@zju.edu.cn Office: Room 209, East Building 5, Zijin’gang campus Microwave Fundamentals

Characteristic impedance:

Phase velocity:

Wavelength: (what happens if exchange L and C ?)

LC /2

LCvp /1

Propagation constant: