Ultraviolet (UV) sensors are a key component in growing applications such as water quality treatment and environmental monitoring, with considerable interest in their miniaturization and enhanced operation. This work presents a passive gold coplanar waveguide split ring resonator integrated with anodic self-organized TiO nanotube (TNT) membranes with a thickness of 20 μm to provide real-time UV detection. The resonator operated as a one-port device to capture the reflection coefficient () signal, with a center frequency of 16 GHz and a notch amplitude of -88 dB. It was experimentally analyzed for its UV sensing capability in the range of 36.5-463 μW/cm. The high-frequency resonator was improved through design choices including the addition of a tapered input transmission line, wire bonding for practical device design, and an interdigitated capacitive ring gap. The high frequency also helped mitigate noise due to water vapor or environmental contaminants. amplitude variation was found through both experiments and modeling to follow a linear trend with UV illumination intensity. The resonator exhibited over 45 ± 2 dB shift in the resonant amplitude under the highest UV illumination conditions, with a sensitivity of 0.084 dB/μW cm and the potential to sense UV intensity as low as 2.7 μW/cm. The presented device enabled a repeatable and accurate microwave response under UV illumination with very high sensitivity, entirely through the use of passive circuit elements.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.1c21741 | DOI Listing |
Rev Sci Instrum
January 2025
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala 695551, India.
Quantum technology exploits fragile quantum electronic phenomena whose energy scales demand ultra-low electron temperature operation. The lack of electron-phonon coupling at cryogenic temperatures makes cooling the electrons down to a few tens of millikelvin a non-trivial task, requiring extensive efforts on thermalization and filtering high-frequency noise. Existing techniques employ bulky and heavy cryogenic metal-powder filters, which prove ineffective at sub-GHz frequency regimes and unsuitable for high-density quantum circuits such as spin qubits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeliyon
December 2024
School of Microelectronics, Shandong University, Jinan, 250100, China.
In this paper, a new wideband coplanar waveguide (CPW) rhomboid slot antenna by using conductor-backed coplanar waveguide (CBCPW) feeding, which works at 4.6 GHz with a relative impedance bandwidth of about 55.6 %, and a gain of more than 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethodsX
December 2024
Department of Electrical Engineering, College of Engineering Al-Hussein Bin Talal, University, Ma'an 71111, Jordan.
Coplanar waveguide (CPW) transmission lines are valued for their planar design, low radiation, and minimized signal loss, but controlling their characteristic impedance remains a challenge. This study employs the Taguchi method, a statistical approach, to optimize the characteristic impedance by adjusting eight control factors: track width, track thickness, gap width, dielectric height, backplane thickness, conductor material conductivity, dielectric conductivity, and operational frequency. The analysis evaluates these factors across three levels to find optimal conditions, with dielectric height and track width identified as most influential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Phys Lett
January 2024
Communications Technology Laboratory, National Institute of Standards and Technology, 325 Broadway, Boulder, Colorado 80305, USA.
Fused silica has become an interesting alternative to silicon for millimeter-wave (mmWave) applications. Unfortunately, there are a few reports on the measurement of fused silica's permittivity above 110 GHz that use electrical rather than optical methods. Given that mmWave applications use electrical circuits, additional electrical data would be useful to industry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
December 2024
Department of Interdisciplinary Courses in Engineering, Chitkara University Institute of Engineering and Technology, Chitkara University, Punjab, India.
Two two-element slotted patch multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) antenna with coplanar waveguide (CPW) feed is proposed for deployment in implantable medical devices. Implantable devices are compact and demand high-gain antennae with unidirectional radiation patterns. Regarding compactness, the antenna has a size of 16 × 6×0.
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