Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices

As devices get more connected and communication increase in density, new challenges arise. The usual frequency bands used are getting crowded by the number of applications, and the relatively low working frequencies limit the available bandwidth and speed. Applications are now implemented in the GH...

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Main Author: Cometto, Mathieu
Other Authors: Tay Beng Kang
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/89434
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46256
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-894342023-07-04T16:34:14Z Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices Cometto, Mathieu Tay Beng Kang School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering CNRS International NTU THALES Research Alliance DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering As devices get more connected and communication increase in density, new challenges arise. The usual frequency bands used are getting crowded by the number of applications, and the relatively low working frequencies limit the available bandwidth and speed. Applications are now implemented in the GHz, but next generation devices shift towards higher frequencies into the millimetre band (30-300 GHz), seeking larger bandwidths, smaller devices and antenna size and improvement in spatial resolution. (High bitrate communications, Backhaul, radars, imaging, bio-sensors…) These emerging devices have a need for passive framework for feeding and supporting while keeping the efficiency high, the dimensions short and the bandwidth large. The problematic of this thesis is to devise an innovative way to answer those needs. Some solutions have of course emerged in the literature, and the plan here is to fork from those pre-existing results. Most solutions revolve around using vertically aligned micro/nano-structures to guide a wave or to reduce wave velocity. The idea is to introduce Vertically-Aligned Carbon Nanotube Forests (VA-CNT) into those designs, for they display inherently conductive anisotropy while improving from the previous solutions in terms of density and equivalent conductivity and ease of fabrication. As passive devices cover a broad range of devices, the focus will be on some of the simplest devices, to pave the way for this technology. In a first step a simple slow-wave micro-strip transmission line using VA-CNTs is considered, which showcases the possibility to reduce significantly wave velocity propagation in the line, thus reducing the dimensions without the use of high-k dielectrics. Work on the topic demonstrate significant size reduction of devices at a given frequency. In a second step, another type of transmission line is considered: Substrate integrated waveguides (SIW) and slow-wave SIW (SW-SIW). Waveguides large viii dimensions’ stop being a collateral at higher frequencies -with dimensions going bellow the millimetre- while exhibiting relatively better parameters per unit length than other propagation solutions. The feasibility of a SIW using VA-CNT forests is demonstrated through theoretical simulation and fabrication. A solution including a similar setup to the micro-strip line is investigated to assert the effects and possibility of slow-wave in waveguides using only bottom-up processes. Finally, as an extension of the problematic, some diverse and more complex topologies are considered such as filters, antenna arrays feedings or interposers. Doctor of Philosophy 2018-10-08T09:08:54Z 2019-12-06T17:25:25Z 2018-10-08T09:08:54Z 2019-12-06T17:25:25Z 2018 Thesis Cometto, M. (2018). Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/89434 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46256 10.32657/10220/46256 en 159 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Cometto, Mathieu
Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
description As devices get more connected and communication increase in density, new challenges arise. The usual frequency bands used are getting crowded by the number of applications, and the relatively low working frequencies limit the available bandwidth and speed. Applications are now implemented in the GHz, but next generation devices shift towards higher frequencies into the millimetre band (30-300 GHz), seeking larger bandwidths, smaller devices and antenna size and improvement in spatial resolution. (High bitrate communications, Backhaul, radars, imaging, bio-sensors…) These emerging devices have a need for passive framework for feeding and supporting while keeping the efficiency high, the dimensions short and the bandwidth large. The problematic of this thesis is to devise an innovative way to answer those needs. Some solutions have of course emerged in the literature, and the plan here is to fork from those pre-existing results. Most solutions revolve around using vertically aligned micro/nano-structures to guide a wave or to reduce wave velocity. The idea is to introduce Vertically-Aligned Carbon Nanotube Forests (VA-CNT) into those designs, for they display inherently conductive anisotropy while improving from the previous solutions in terms of density and equivalent conductivity and ease of fabrication. As passive devices cover a broad range of devices, the focus will be on some of the simplest devices, to pave the way for this technology. In a first step a simple slow-wave micro-strip transmission line using VA-CNTs is considered, which showcases the possibility to reduce significantly wave velocity propagation in the line, thus reducing the dimensions without the use of high-k dielectrics. Work on the topic demonstrate significant size reduction of devices at a given frequency. In a second step, another type of transmission line is considered: Substrate integrated waveguides (SIW) and slow-wave SIW (SW-SIW). Waveguides large viii dimensions’ stop being a collateral at higher frequencies -with dimensions going bellow the millimetre- while exhibiting relatively better parameters per unit length than other propagation solutions. The feasibility of a SIW using VA-CNT forests is demonstrated through theoretical simulation and fabrication. A solution including a similar setup to the micro-strip line is investigated to assert the effects and possibility of slow-wave in waveguides using only bottom-up processes. Finally, as an extension of the problematic, some diverse and more complex topologies are considered such as filters, antenna arrays feedings or interposers.
author2 Tay Beng Kang
author_facet Tay Beng Kang
Cometto, Mathieu
format Theses and Dissertations
author Cometto, Mathieu
author_sort Cometto, Mathieu
title Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
title_short Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
title_full Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
title_fullStr Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
title_full_unstemmed Use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
title_sort use of carbon nanotubes for passive radio-frequency devices
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/89434
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/46256
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