A Multi-Band Transformer for Two Arbitrary Complex Frequency-Dependent Impedances

2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (3) ◽  
pp. 981-991 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Chen
2009 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 792-794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongle Wu ◽  
Yuanan Liu ◽  
Shulan Li ◽  
Cuiping Yu ◽  
Xin Liu

Author(s):  
Wayne Woods ◽  
Hanyi Ding ◽  
Guoan Wang ◽  
Pinping Sun ◽  
Jay Rascoe ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Shung H. Sung ◽  
Donald J. Nefske

This paper presents the acoustic finite element method and the modal solution method for coupling sound absorbing materials with an air cavity to predict the sound pressure frequency response. The sound absorbing materials are represented with complex, frequency-dependent, effective mass-density and bulk-modulus properties obtained from the acoustic impedance of material samples. To couple the sound absorber cavity and air cavity, the boundary conditions at the interface between the cavities requires equality of pressure and equality of acoustic volume flow. Two modal solution methods are developed to compute the frequency response of the coupled system with frequency dependent material properties: the component mode method and the coupled mode method. The finite element and modal solution methodology is developed in a form readily adaptable for implementation in commercially available codes. The accuracy of the modal solution methodology is assessed for modeling a one-dimensional air tube terminated with absorbent material and the seats in an automobile passenger compartment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrei A. Muller ◽  
Alin Moldoveanu ◽  
Victor Asavei ◽  
Riyaz A. Khadar ◽  
Esther Sanabria-Codesal ◽  
...  

AbstractRecently, the field of Metal-Insulator-Transition (MIT) materials has emerged as an unconventional solution for novel energy efficient electronic functions, such as steep slope subthermionic switches, neuromorphic hardware, reconfigurable radiofrequency functions, new types of sensors, terahertz and optoelectronic devices. Employing radiofrequency (RF) electronic circuits with a MIT material like vanadium Dioxide, VO2, requires appropriate characterization tools and fabrication processes. In this work, we develop and use 3D Smith charts for devices and circuits having complex frequency dependences, like the ones resulting using MIT materials. The novel foundation of a 3D Smith chart involves here the geometrical fundamental notions of oriented curvature and variable homothety in order to clarify first theoretical inconsistencies in Foster and Non Foster circuits, where the driving point impedances exhibit mixed clockwise and counter-clockwise frequency dependent (oriented) paths on the Smith chart as frequency increases. We show here the unique visualization capability of a 3D Smith chart, which allows to quantify orientation over variable frequency. The new 3D Smith chart is applied as a joint complex-scalar 3D multi-parameter modelling and characterization environment for reconfigurable RF design exploiting Metal-Insulator-Transition (MIT) materials. We report fabricated inductors with record quality factors using VO2 phase transition to program multiple tuning states, operating in the range 4 GHz to 10 GHz.


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