Introduction EE 4FJ4/6FJ4 Fall 2015 (Prof. Natalia K. Nikolova) INTRODUCTION TO MICROWAVE ENGINEERING Room: ITB-A220 ext. 27141 E-mail: nikolova@ieee.org Lecture Main Topics Introduction: Overview of RF Systems Transmission Lines, Smith Chart Impedance Matching RF Connectors, Cables and Adapters Microwave Networks, Scattering Parameters Vector Network Analyzer, Calibration Power Dividers and Directional Couplers Waveguide Technology Filters (time allowing) ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 1 Texts Recommended text • Lecture notes available for download from Avenue to Learn AND http://www.ece.mcmaster.ca/faculty/nikolova/4FJ4_6FJ4.htm • Compilation of excerpts from optional texts – available for purchase at the bookstore Optional texts 1. D. M. Pozar, Microwave Engineering, 3rd or 4th ed., Wiley, 2005/2012. 2. M. Steer, Microwave and RF Design, Scitech, 2010. ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 2 Material on Reserve in Thode 1. M. Steer, Microwave and RF Design, Scitech, 2010. 2. Pozar, Microwave Engineering, 3rd ed., Wiley, 2005. ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 3 Grading 4FJ4 (B.Eng.) 50 % Final exam Midterm exam 20 % 10 % Assignments 15 % Laboratory 5% Practice • failure on the final exam means failure of the course • you will be able to view your marked exam paper (come to my office during office hours) • marking scheme flexible only if final-exam grade ≥ 89 % • deferred exams may be oral depending on the number of the examined students ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 4 Exams, cont. Exams are closed-book. HOWEVER 1 sheet, 2 pages (Letter size) of your own writing is allowed at midterm and final exams Cheating results in 0 grade and academic dishonesty charges Duration midterm: 2 hours final: 3 hours • midterm schedule: October 28 (Wednesday) from 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm in BSB-120 ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 5 Requests to Remark Final Exam Associate Dean Office rules on re-marking exam papers If the student wishes an exam to be re-marked, she/he needs to: - be aware that the grade could go either up or down; - go to the Associate Dean of Engineering's office (JHE-A214); - complete an "Examination Re-Read" form; - take it to the Registrar's Office; - pay $50; - return to the Associate Dean's office with the receipt; - Associate Dean's office then sends the request to ECE Dept., which has a couple of weeks to re-grade and respond; - if the grade increases by 3% or more, the $50 fee is refunded to the student. ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 6 Laboratory Objective: Complements and expands lecture material Duration: Five 3-hour sessions Location: ITB-155 Worth: 15% of your course mark Session Topics 1. The Gunn Oscillator (LabVolt) 2. PIN Diode (LabVolt) 3. Microwave Detection with a Crystal Detector (LabVolt) 4. Introduction to Scattering Parameters and Vector Network Analyzers (VNAs): Measurements of 1-Port Devices 5. Measurements of Multi-port Devices with a VNA • Lab Manuals and Instructions on course webpage in folder Laboratories • Download and read Module Instructions in advance! ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 7 Laboratory Timetable Every other week from 2:30 pm to 5:30 pm in ITB/155 L01 Mo (starts Mon Sep. 14) L02 Mo (starts Mon Sep. 21) L03 Tu (starts Tue Sep. 15) L04 Tu (starts Tue Sep. 22) L05 We (starts Wed Sep. 16) L06 We (starts Wed Sep. 23) L07 Th (starts Thu Sep. 17) L08 Th (starts Thu Sep. 24) L09 Fr (starts Fri Sep. 18) L10 Fr (starts Fri Sep. 25) ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 8 Assignments • Objectives: (i) Familiarity with professional design software (ii) Familiarity with regulations related to RF/microwave radiation safety (1 assignment) • Free access for McMaster students: AWR Microwave Office • Register and download software from https://awrcorp.com/register/customer.aspx?univ • 10 weekly assignments: 1st assignment due Mon Sep. 21 at 12 pm • submission through Avenue To Learn • instructions and time table available on course webpage in folder Assignments • worth 10% of your course mark ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 9 Assignment Timetable Assignment Title Submission Deadline #1 Radio Systems Sep. 21 Mon, 12 PM #2 Maxwell’s Equations Sep. 28 Mon, 12 PM #3 #4 TEM Waves and Polarization Canada Safety Code 6 Oct. 5, Mon, 12 PM Oct. 19, Mon, 12 PM #5 Reflection and Transmission Oct. 26, Mon, 12 PM #6 Quasi-TEM Transmission Lines (Microstrip Line) Nov. 2, Mon, 12 PM #7 Voltage and Current Waves in Quasi-TEM Transmission Lines Nov. 9, Mon, 12 PM #8 Impedance Transformation by a Transmission Line Nov. 16, Mon,12 PM #9 Impedance Matching by a Double-stub Tuner Nov. 23, Mon,12 PM #10 Scattering Parameters and Preparation for Practice Work ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION Nov. 30, Mon,12 PM slide 10 Practice Work • design a microwave device using AWR software (professional microwave design software) • fabricate the device • measure the device • submit Technical Report (6 pages max) • start Nov. 16 (Mon) • Tech. Report due on/before last day of classes (Dec. 8, 2015) • worth 5% of your course mark ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 11 The Subject – I • deals with wireless technology in the frequency range from about 300 MHz to about 300 GHz (IEEE: from 1 GHz) • wavelengths in vacuum – from 1 m down to 1 mm c 30 λ = ≈ [cm] RF bands: from 300 MHz to 3 GHz f f[GHz] microwave bands: from 3 GHz to 30 GHz (cm wavelengths) millimeter-wave bands: from 30 GHz to 300 GHz why are cm-waves called microwaves? energy μeV E= h ⋅ f ⇒ E[eV] = ⇒ E[eV] = ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova electron charge h in kg/s () × f[GHz] × 109 −1 19 − 1.602 × 10 6.6261 × 10−34 h Planck's constant 4.136127 × f[GHz] × 10−6 INTRODUCTION slide 12 The Subject – II • component size is comparable to the wavelength (distributedparameter networks) and circuit theory no longer applies • component size however is not much larger than the wavelength – optics does not apply either • we need Maxwell’s equations without approximations • microwave electronics has specific semi-conductor devices: PIN & Schottky diodes (passive), IMPATT, BARITT & Gunn diodes (oscillators) • microwave electronics still uses various vacuum devices, especially for high-power applications: magnetrons & klystrons (generators), travelling-wave tubes (amplifiers) • microwave engineering is electromagnetism in action ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 13 Applications of Microwaves – I personal services • cordless telephony • cellular telephony and data (voice, PCS, 3G and 4G) • wireless LANs (local area network), bluetooth • personal satellite communications (telephony, internet) • global navigation/positioning systems (GPS) infrastructure/medical/science/military • radars • microwave relay links, repeaters • satellite systems (TV, telephony, data, military) • radio astronomy • particle accelerators • biomedical engineering (imaging, hyperthermia), MRI • military: communications, surveillance, RCV & drones • wireless power transfer etc. video ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 14 Frequency Spectrum Designations Frequency band Wavelength Designation Services 3 to 30 kHz 100 to 10 km Very Low Frequency (VLF) Navigation, sonar, submarine 30 to 300 kHz 10 to 1 km Low Frequency (LF) Radio beacons, navigation 300 to 3000 kHz 1000 to 100 m Medium Frequency (MF) AM broadcast, maritime/coast-guard radio 3 to 30 MHz 100-10 m High Frequency (HF) Telephone, telegraph, fax; amateur radio, ship-to-coast and ship-toaircraft communication 30 to 300 MHz 10-1 m Very High Frequency (VHF)TV, FM broadcast, air traffic control, police, taxicab mobile radio 300 to 3000 MHz 100-10 cm Ultrahigh Frequency (UHF) TV, satellite, radiosonde, radar, bluetooth, PCS, wireless LAN 3 to 30 GHz 10-1 cm Super High Frequency (SHF) 30 to 300 GHz 10-1 mm Extremely High Frequency Radar, experimental, security systems (EHF) ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova Airborne & automotive radar, microwave relay, satellite, mobile communication, local wireless ntw INTRODUCTION slide 15 IEEE Microwave Band Designations IEEE Frequency 500-1000 MHz 1-2 GHz 2-3 GHz 3-4 GHz 4-6 GHz 6-8 GHz 8-10 GHz 10-12.4 GHz 12.4-18 GHz 18-20 GHz 20-26.5 GHz 26.5-40 GHz ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova Old VHF L S S C C X X Ku K K Ka INTRODUCTION New C D E F G H I J J J K K slide 16 Some Frequency Band Allocations: North America international and national regulatory bodies allocate frequency bands for commercial, government and personal use FCC (USA): Federal Communications Commission Industry Canada: Radiocommunications and Broadcasting Regulatory Branch AM broadcast 535 kHz to 1605 kHz FM broadcast 88 MHz to 108 MHz VHF TV (ch. 2 to 4) 54 MHz to 72 MHz VHF TV (ch. 5 to 6) 76 MHz to 88 MHz UHF TV (ch. 7 to 13) 174 MHz to 216 MHz UHF TV (ch. 14 to 83) 470 MHz to 890 MHz US cellular telephones 824 MHz to 849 MHz 869 MHz to 894 MHz Europe GSM 880 MHz to 915 MHz 925 MHz to 960 MHz GPS 1575.42 MHz / 1227.60 MHz ElecEng 4FJ4 Nikolova INTRODUCTION slide 17