scholarly journals Technique to eliminate RF signal amplitude dependence in AOA measurement

2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 243-244
Author(s):  
H. Chen ◽  
E.H.W. Chan
2021 ◽  
pp. 24-35
Author(s):  
V. Yu. Titov

The article is devoted to possibilities of regular focusing of Omniscan device on phased arrays. Questions are raised about evaluation of testing results when using linear and sector scan-ning with different focus parameters. The question of size near-field for phased arrays and asso-ciated choice of focus mode is discussed. The article is based on experiments conducted on samples with artificial reflectors at the same size, but different in type: a non-directional reflector (a side-drill hole) and a directional reflector (a flat-bottomed reflector), located at the same depth. The study was conducted for transducers with different frequencies. Families of curves of the signal amplitude dependence are obtained: on depth reflector, on focus depth setting, and on type reflector. The results emphasize need for precise focusing with-in the near-field of the transducer for small thicknesses or shallow depth of occurrence of discontinuities, and large variability in choice of focusing for depths in far-field. The study notes a significant difference in values of depth reflector at different focusses at a fixed position of transducer. In this article, in addition to considering possibility of focusing a flaw detector with phased arrays, the focus is on interpretation of results and reliability of testing in the analysis and comparison data. An integral part of the technological testing protocol for phased array is the depth of focus and the type of scanning. The obtained data do not depend on the frequency of transducer, which means that conclusions are applicable to general range of flaw detectors on phased arrays.


1993 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 89-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ignacio Céspedes ◽  
Jonathan Ophir

Elastography is a method for imaging the elastic properties of compliant tissues which produces gray scale elasticity images called elastograms. The elastograms of phantoms with homogeneous elastic properties exhibit a noisy appearance. We demonstrate that this noisy appearance of the elastograms is due to the nonstationary relationship between the pre- and postcompression signals that results in an artifactual modulation of the strain estimates by the amplitude variations of the envelope of the rf signal. We have identified two methods to reduce the strain modulation artifact. The first method consists of reducing the signal amplitude swings within the observation windows by logarithmically or otherwise compressing the rf signal. The sensitivity of this method to amplitude compression strength and the ability to reduce the noise in the elastograms without affecting the spatial resolution are investigated through simulations. The second method to reduce the strain modulation artifact consists of temporal stretching of the signal obtained after physical compression to approximate the shape of the signal obtained before compression. In this paper, we discuss the first method. The results show that significant improvement in image noise can be obtained with logarithmic amplitude compression. This improvement is obtained in conjunction with improved spatial resolution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 837
Author(s):  
Yunjae Park ◽  
Hyunseok Oh ◽  
Seungwoo Yoo ◽  
Taehyun Kim ◽  
Dongil “Dan” Cho

For high-fidelity quantum operations in ion traps, it is important to maintain the secular frequency of the trapped ions at a constant value. The radial secular frequency is proportional to the amplitude of the radio frequency (RF) signal applied to ion traps. Owing to the changes in the ambient temperature of a helical resonator and the minute vibration of the optical table, the amplitude can vary. Recently, a method for reducing the fluctuation in the RF signal amplitude, using a commercial universal proportional-plus-integral (PI) controller, has been introduced, which, in turn, reduces the secular frequency drift of the trapped ions. The method improves the capability to maintain the secular frequency at a constant value. However, the structure of the controller is fixed; thus, the control method cannot be changed to suit different experimental conditions, and the different feedback configuration cannot be implemented to increase the resolution. In this paper, we develop a field-programmable gate array (FPGA)-based feedback controller that allows the implementation of various automatic control methods and feedback configurations. In our experiments, the fluctuation in the amplitude of the RF signal was 1.806% using a commercial universal PI controller. The fluctuation was reduced to 0.099% using the developed FPGA-based PI controller, and to 0.102% using the developed FPGA-based lag compensator. By employing the developed FPGA control method, many other automating control methods can be applied to achieve a stable and high-performance control of the secular frequency.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (16) ◽  
pp. 3559
Author(s):  
Carsten Steiner ◽  
Vladimir Malashchuk ◽  
David Kubinski ◽  
Gunter Hagen ◽  
Ralf Moos

Recently, radio frequency (RF) technology was introduced as a tool to determine the oxygen storage level of a three-way catalyst (TWC) for gasoline vehicles. Previous studies on the investigation of commercial catalysts mostly use only the resonant frequency to describe the correlation of oxygen storage level and RF signal. For the first time this study presents a comparison under defined laboratory conditions considering both, resonance frequency and also the quality factor as measurands. Furthermore, various advantages over the sole use of the resonant frequency in the technical application are discussed. Experiments with Ø4.66’’ catalysts and Ø1.66’’ catalyst cores with alternating (rich/lean) gas compositions showed that the relative change in signal amplitude due to a change in oxygen storage is about 100 times higher for the inverse quality factor compared to the resonant frequency. In addition, the quality factor reacts more sensitively to the onset of the oxygen-storage ability, and delivers precise information about the necessary temperature, which is not possible when evaluating the resonant frequency due to the low signal amplitude. As investigations on aged catalysts confirm, the quality factor also provides a new approach to determine operando the ageing state of a TWC.


Author(s):  
М.M. Халиллоев ◽  
Б.О. Жаббарова ◽  
А.А. Насиров

In this work it is simulated the random telegraph noise signal amplitude dependence on gate voltage overdrive for silicon on insulator junctionless FinFET transistor with fin cross section in rectangle and trapeze form. It is shown in subthreshold region the noise signal amplitude is lower in case of trapeze cross section of the fin. Besides it approximately at the same condition the noise signal amplitude is essentially lower in junctionless fin field effect transistor than in bulk, fully depleted silicon on insulator and ordinary fin field effect transistors.


1969 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 199-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Nelson ◽  
Frank M. Lassman ◽  
Richard L. Hoel

Averaged auditory evoked responses to 1000-Hz 20-msec tone bursts were obtained from normal-hearing adults under two different intersignal interval schedules: (1) a fixed-interval schedule with 2-sec intersignal intervals, and (2) a variable-interval schedule of intersignal intervals ranging randomly from 1.0 sec to 4.5 sec with a mean of 2 sec. Peak-to-peak amplitudes (N 1 — P 2 ) as well as latencies of components P 1 , N 1 , P 2 , and N 2 were compared under the two different conditions of intersignal interval. No consistent or significant differences between variable- and fixed-interval schedules were found in the averaged responses to signals of either 20 dB SL or 50 dB SL. Neither were there significant schedule differences when 35 or 70 epochs were averaged per response. There were, however, significant effects due to signal amplitude and to the number of epochs averaged per response. Response amplitude increased and response latency decreased with sensation level of the tone burst.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 1060
Author(s):  
Frank Zoko Ble ◽  
Matti Lehtonen ◽  
Ari Sihvola ◽  
Charles Kim

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