| Literature DB >> 31766646 |
Ju Gao1, Yiming Zhang1, Yang Sun1, Qiang Wu1.
Abstract
Polarization has always been an important issue in modern communication systems, especially in sensitive measurements. Conventional polarization converters show limited applications due to their large size and narrow bandwidth. In this paper, we demonstrate an ultra-wide band, multifunctional, and highly efficient metamaterial-based polarization converter that is capable of converting a linearly polarized wave into its cross-polarized wave and circularly polarized wave over different frequency bands. The design principle is based on the field transformation theory and the anisotropic plate is made with high/low permittivity strip metamaterials. The simulation results show that the metamaterial-based polarization converter is able to achieve linear-to-linear conversion over 11.5-12.6 GHz, and linear-to-circular conversion over two frequency bands, 3.0-11.5 GHz and 12.6-17.0 GHz, with an average polarization conversion efficiency over 90%. The polarization converter proposed in this paper provides an important stepping stone for future communication systems' polarization control and can also be extended to higher frequency bands.Entities:
Keywords: high efficiency; metamaterial; polarization conversion; ultra-wide band
Year: 2019 PMID: 31766646 PMCID: PMC6926738 DOI: 10.3390/ma12233857
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the multifunctional polarization converter. (b) Construction of the polarization converter.
Figure 2The transmitted PCR excited by a TE polarized wave. (a) Co-polarized (TE) and cross-polarized (TM) polarized component in the transmitted wave. (b) TE to circular polarization conversion ratio in the transmitted wave.
Figure 3(a) Orthogonal decomposition of the incident wave. (b) Schematic of polarization conversion in the transmitted wave component.
Figure 4Simulated results of the model in Figure 3a. (a) The amplitude in the transmitted wave excited by two orthogonal decomposed waves. (b) The phase in the transmitted wave excited by two orthogonal decomposed waves.
Figure 5The schematic of linear polarization conversion around 12 GHz.
Comparison with other published wide band polarization converters.
| Works | Operation Mode | Efficiency (Measurement) | Absolute Bandwidth | Relative Bandwidth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Our work | Transmitted both quarter- and half-wave plates | 95.9% | 3.0–11.5 (GHz) | 117% |
| [ | Reflective half-wave plate | 93% | 6.67–17.1 (GHz) | 87.7% |
| [ | Reflective both quarter- and half-wave plates | 90% | 3.9–7.9 (GHz) | 66.8% |
| [ | Reflective half-wave plate | 90% | 17.3–42.2 (GHz) | 87.47% |
| [ | Reflective half-wave plate | 80% | 12.4–27.96 (GHz) | 77% |
| [ | Transmitted half-wave plate | 27.5% | 4.68–4.92 (GHz) | 5% |
| [ | Transmitted quarter-wave plate | 90% | 2.2–2.6 (GHz) | 8% |
| [ | Reflective half-wave plate | 98.4% | 14–16.5 (GHz) | 16% |
Figure 6Axial ratio of the polarization converter over the operating band.
Figure 7Experiment set-up of the polarization converter. (a) Fabricated polarization converter sample. (b) Experiment polarization converter.
Figure 8Experimental and simulated polarization conversion results.