Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal

Using an alloy of non-toxic liquid metal (Galinstan) is proposed to implement multi-reconfiguration in reflectarray elements. Reflectarray antennas are an interesting technology for dynamically controlling, simultaneously or individually, different properties of the antenna (beam shape and pointing...

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Main Authors: Eduardo Carrasco, Juan Gomez-Cruz, Mario Serrano-Berrueco, Carlos E. Saavedra, Carlos Escobedo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2022-01-01
Series:IEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9754704/
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author Eduardo Carrasco
Juan Gomez-Cruz
Mario Serrano-Berrueco
Carlos E. Saavedra
Carlos Escobedo
author_facet Eduardo Carrasco
Juan Gomez-Cruz
Mario Serrano-Berrueco
Carlos E. Saavedra
Carlos Escobedo
author_sort Eduardo Carrasco
collection DOAJ
description Using an alloy of non-toxic liquid metal (Galinstan) is proposed to implement multi-reconfiguration in reflectarray elements. Reflectarray antennas are an interesting technology for dynamically controlling, simultaneously or individually, different properties of the antenna (beam shape and pointing direction, field polarization, and frequency of operation) according to the system’s demand. The use of liquid metal, which can potentially be used to re-shape the topology of the unit cell, along with advances in the micro-and nanofluidics field, provides more flexibility for efficiently implementing such multi-reconfiguration. A frequency-reconfigurable reflectarray element is based on the well-known aperture-coupled cell, and a phase-reconfigurable cell based on single-and multi-resonance dipoles is proposed at 28 GHz. One advantage of microfluidics is that the concept can easily be extended to much higher frequencies, where other devices start to be expensive, inefficient, or limited in terms of multi-reconfiguration. The microfluidic technology required to implement the dipole-based element is demonstrated using a microfluidic burst-valve chip. Additionally, a simplified RF proof-of-concept is presented using the well-known waveguide simulator technique from 15 GHz to 22 GHz (WR51). The results obtained constitute an important first step toward the implementation of multi-reconfigurable reflectarray antennas.
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spelling doaj.art-a34d2fb380514bbfb2c381650c4b0b932022-12-22T02:56:03ZengIEEEIEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation2637-64312022-01-01342543410.1109/OJAP.2022.31662329754704Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid MetalEduardo Carrasco0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4473-4095Juan Gomez-Cruz1Mario Serrano-Berrueco2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1283-6166Carlos E. Saavedra3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1469-9735Carlos Escobedo4https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7832-166XInformation Processing and Telecommunications Center, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid, SpainDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Queen’s University, Kingston, CanadaInformation Processing and Telecommunications Center, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid, SpainDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Queen’s University, Kingston, CanadaDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Queen’s University, Kingston, CanadaUsing an alloy of non-toxic liquid metal (Galinstan) is proposed to implement multi-reconfiguration in reflectarray elements. Reflectarray antennas are an interesting technology for dynamically controlling, simultaneously or individually, different properties of the antenna (beam shape and pointing direction, field polarization, and frequency of operation) according to the system’s demand. The use of liquid metal, which can potentially be used to re-shape the topology of the unit cell, along with advances in the micro-and nanofluidics field, provides more flexibility for efficiently implementing such multi-reconfiguration. A frequency-reconfigurable reflectarray element is based on the well-known aperture-coupled cell, and a phase-reconfigurable cell based on single-and multi-resonance dipoles is proposed at 28 GHz. One advantage of microfluidics is that the concept can easily be extended to much higher frequencies, where other devices start to be expensive, inefficient, or limited in terms of multi-reconfiguration. The microfluidic technology required to implement the dipole-based element is demonstrated using a microfluidic burst-valve chip. Additionally, a simplified RF proof-of-concept is presented using the well-known waveguide simulator technique from 15 GHz to 22 GHz (WR51). The results obtained constitute an important first step toward the implementation of multi-reconfigurable reflectarray antennas.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9754704/Antennasreflectarrayreconfigurationmicrofluidicsliquid metalPDMS
spellingShingle Eduardo Carrasco
Juan Gomez-Cruz
Mario Serrano-Berrueco
Carlos E. Saavedra
Carlos Escobedo
Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal
IEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation
Antennas
reflectarray
reconfiguration
microfluidics
liquid metal
PDMS
title Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal
title_full Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal
title_fullStr Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal
title_full_unstemmed Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal
title_short Design of Microfluidic Reflectarray Elements for Multi-Reconfiguration Using Liquid Metal
title_sort design of microfluidic reflectarray elements for multi reconfiguration using liquid metal
topic Antennas
reflectarray
reconfiguration
microfluidics
liquid metal
PDMS
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9754704/
work_keys_str_mv AT eduardocarrasco designofmicrofluidicreflectarrayelementsformultireconfigurationusingliquidmetal
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AT marioserranoberrueco designofmicrofluidicreflectarrayelementsformultireconfigurationusingliquidmetal
AT carlosesaavedra designofmicrofluidicreflectarrayelementsformultireconfigurationusingliquidmetal
AT carlosescobedo designofmicrofluidicreflectarrayelementsformultireconfigurationusingliquidmetal