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Study And Design Of Array And Beamsteering Antennas For Millimeter Wave Band Application, Saeideh Shad
Study And Design Of Array And Beamsteering Antennas For Millimeter Wave Band Application, Saeideh Shad
Boise State University Theses and Dissertations
Millimeter wave (mmWave) communication systems have attracted significant interest regarding supporting high data rate of Gigabit/s communications for the new generation of wireless communication networks. MmWave communication systems have frequency ranges in between 30 and 300 GHz wherein an enormous amount of unused bandwidth is available. Although the available bandwidth of mmWave frequencies is promising for high data rate communications, the propagation characteristics of mmWave frequencies are significantly different from microwave frequency band in terms of path loss, diffraction and blockage, and atmospheric absorption. In general, the overall losses of mmWave signals are significantly larger than that of microwave signals …
Smart Adaptive Beam-Forming Antenna Design For Next Generation Communication Systems, Ahmed Umar Kausar
Smart Adaptive Beam-Forming Antenna Design For Next Generation Communication Systems, Ahmed Umar Kausar
Boise State University Theses and Dissertations
Adaptive beamforming antennas open a new venue for research to achieve high data rates. Such antennas are of interest at higher frequencies, especially at millimeter-waves. Millimeter-wave band ranges from 30 GHz - 300 GHz. There is an ample bandwidth available in this spectrum. However, due to the significant path loss at high frequencies, there is a need for better error correction schemes and adaptive beam-forming antennas for this frequency band.
The goal of our research is to design a novel adaptive beamforming smart antenna that is low cost, compact, power-efficient and less complex. Based on our recently awarded US patent, …
Modeling And Measuring The Characteristics Of An Inductively Coupled Plasma Antenna For A Micro-Propulsion System, Sonya Mary Christensen
Modeling And Measuring The Characteristics Of An Inductively Coupled Plasma Antenna For A Micro-Propulsion System, Sonya Mary Christensen
Boise State University Theses and Dissertations
An ion thruster for satellites on the order of 10-50 kg in mass is currently under development. The thruster uses an Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP) generated by a flat spiral antenna fabricated using the Low Temperature Co-Fired Ceramic (LTCC) materials system. The antenna operating frequency range (600 MHz to 1 GHz) in LTCC (εr=7.8) results in a wavelength on the same order of magnitude as the total length of conductor in the antenna. This condition provides some interesting antenna electric and magnetic field characteristics. The antenna has been modeled using COMSOL Multiphysics® Simulation Software. By changing the geometry …