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Best European Microwave Integrated Circuits paper award to Nutapong Somjit from MST

Nutapong Somjit showing the prize plaque
Nutapong Somjit showing the prize plaque
Published Oct 06, 2009

Nutapong Somjit from MST won the BEST PAPER AWARD at the IEEE EuMIC European Microwave Integrated Circuits Conference for his work on millimetre-wave MEMS phase-shifters.

The paper reports on phase error and nonlinearity of a novel binary-coded 7-stage millimetre-wave MEMS reconfigurable dielectric-block phase shifter optimized for the 75–110-GHz W-band.

Stages of 15°, 30°and 45° are put into a coded configuration of a 7-stage phase shifter to create a binary-coded 7-stage phase shifter with a total phase shift of 270° in 19x15° steps.

The measurement results show that the binary-coded phase shifter gives a linear phase shift from 10 to 110 GHz. The maximum phase error is 6° (for 240°).

In contrast to conventional MEMS phase shifters employing metallic bridges which limit the current handling and show fatigue at elevated temperatures, this novel dielectric phase-shifter is only limited by the power handling of the transmission line itself.

Paper abstract

N. Somjit, G. Stemme, J. Oberhammer, “Phase Error and Nonlinearity Investigation of Millimeter-Wave MEMS 7-Stage Dielectric-Block Phase Shifters”, Proceedings of the 39th European Microwave Conference, 29 Sept. – 1 Oct. 2009, Rome, Italy, pp. 1872–1875

This paper reports on phase error and nonlinearity investigation of a novel binary-coded 7-stage millimeter-wave MEMS reconfigurable dielectric-block phase shifter with best performance optimized for 75-110-GHz W-band. The binary coded 7-stage phase shifter is constructed on top of a 3D micromachined coplanar waveguide transmission line by placing lambda/2-long high-resistivity silicon dielectric blocks which can be displaced vertically by MEMS electrostatic actuators. The dielectric constant of each block is artificially tailor-made by etching a periodic pattern into the structure. Stages of 15°, 30° and 45° are optimized for 75 GHz and put into a coded configuration of a 7-stage phase shifter to create a binary-coded 15°+30°+5x45° 7-stage phase shifter with a total phase shift of 270° in 19x15° steps. The binary-coded phase shifter shows a return loss better than -17 dB and an insertion loss less than -3.5 dB at the nominal frequency of 75 GHz, and a return loss of -12 dB and insertion loss of -4 dB at 110 GHz. The measurement results also show that the binary-coded phase shifter performs a very linear phase shift from 10-110 GHz. The absolute phase error at 75 GHz from its nominal value has an average of 2.61° at a standard deviation of 1.58° for all possible combinations, and the maximum error is 6° (for 240°). For frequencies from 10-110 GHz, all possible combinations have a relative phase error of less than 3% of the maximum phase shift at the specific frequencies. The 7-stage binary-coded phase shifter performs 71.1°/dB and 490.02°/cm at 75 GHz, and 98.3°/dB and 715.6°/cm at 110 GHz. From the measured self-modulation behavior the third-order intermodulation (IM) products level are derived to -82.35 dBc at a total input power of 40 dBm with the third-order IM intercept point (IIP3) of 49.15 dBm, employing a mechanical spring constant of 40 N/m. In contrast to conventional MEMS phase shifters which employ thin metallic bridges which limit the current handling and show fatigue even at slightly elevated temperatures, this novel phase-shifter concept is only limited by the power handling of the transmission line itself, which is proven by temperature measurements at 40 dBm at 3 GHz and skin effect adapted extrapolation

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Belongs to: Micro and Nanosystems
Last changed: Oct 06, 2009