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ECE 480 Wireless Systems Lecture 3 Propagation and Modulation of RF Waves

ECE 480 Wireless Systems Lecture 3 Propagation and Modulation of RF Waves. Circular Polarization. Magnitudes of the x – and y – components of are equal Phase difference is. Left – Hand Circular (LHC) Polarization. Right – Hand Circular (RHC) Polarization.

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ECE 480 Wireless Systems Lecture 3 Propagation and Modulation of RF Waves

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  1. ECE 480 Wireless Systems Lecture 3 Propagation and Modulation of RF Waves

  2. Circular Polarization Magnitudes of the x – and y – components of are equal Phase difference is Left – Hand Circular (LHC) Polarization Right – Hand Circular (RHC) Polarization

  3. Left – Hand Circular (LHC) Polarization

  4. Convert to polar form

  5. Linear polarization = f (z, t)  f (z, t) Circular polarization  f (z, t) = f (z, t)

  6. Back to LHC Polarization Consider the LHC wave at z = 0 Inclination angle decreases with time

  7. Right – Hand Circular (RHC) Polarization

  8. The direction of polarization is defined in terms of the rotation of as a function of time in a fixed plane orthogonal to the direction of propagation

  9. Example RHC Polarized Wave An RHC polarized plane wave with electric field modulus of 3 mV/m is traveling in the + y direction in a dielectric medium with f = 100 MHz Obtain expressions for

  10. Solution The wave is traveling in the + y direction. Therefore, the field components are in the x and z directions. direction of propagation

  11. Assign a phase angle of 0 o to the z component of (arbitrary) The x component of will have a phase shift Both components have a magnitude of a = 3

  12. Converting back to the time domain

  13. Elliptical Polarization Most general case The tip of traces an ellipse in the x – y plane Can be left – handed or right - handed Major axis: Minor axis: Rotation Angle Ellipticity Angle

  14. Rotation angle The shape and rotation are defined by the ellipticity angle R = 1 Circular R =  Linear axial ratio

  15. Circular Linear

  16. Polarization States for Various Combinations of  and 

  17. How is the type of polarization determined? Positive values of corresponding to sin  > 0 define left – handed rotation Negative values of corresponding to sin  < 0 define right – handed rotation a x and a y are, by definition, > 0 Two possible values of in this range

  18. Example: Polarization State Determine the polarization of a plane wave with an electric field given by Solution Convert the sin term to a cos term by subtracting 90 o Convert the – cos term to a + cos term by adding 180 o

  19. Convert to phasor form

  20. There are two possible solutions for  since the tan function is positive in both the first and third quadrants Which is correct?

  21. By a similar analysis,  The wave is elliptically polarized and the rotation is left - handed

  22. Plane – Wave Propagation in Lossy Media  can be written as  = attenuation constant  = phase constant

  23. Equate the real and imaginary parts Solve for  and 

  24. For a uniform plane wave traveling in the + z direction with an electric field the wave equation becomes The solution is

  25. The magnitude of is Decreases exponentially with e -  z also decreases exponentially with e -  z Define: Skin Depth,  s Distance that a wave must travel before it is attenuated by

  26. In a perfect dielectric In a perfect conductor

  27. Expressions are valid for any linear, isotropic, homogeneous medium Low – Loss Dielectric Quasi – Conductor (Semiconductor) Good Conductor

  28. Low – Loss Dielectric Consider For Divide into real and imaginary parts  - Same as for lossless medium

  29. Same as for the lossless case

  30. Good Conductor

  31. Semiconductors – Must use exact solution

  32. Example – Plane Wave in Seawater A uniform plane wave is traveling downward in the + z direction in seawater, with the x – y plane denoting the sea surface and z = 0 denoting a point just below the surface. The constitutive parameters of seawater are: The magnetic field intensity at z = 0 is given by • Determine expressions for • The depth at which the amplitude of E is 1% of its value at z = 0

  33. Solution a. The general expressions for the phasor fields are  Seawater is a good conductor at 1 KHz

  34. The general expression for E x0 is

  35. at z = 0: Compare with original expression

  36. Note that they are no longer in phase. The electric field always leads the magnetic field by 45 o. b. Set the amplitude to 0.01

  37. Electromagnetic Power Density Define: Poynting Vector Direction of S is in the direction of propagation, k unit vector normal to the surface Power through a surface, A

  38. Plane Wave in a Lossless Medium Consider a plane wave traveling in the + z direction Want to find the power density vector, S

  39. Time – Domain Approach

  40. Time average of

  41. Phasor – Domain Approach is valid for any media

  42. Plane Wave in a Lossy Medium

  43. Note that the average power decays with

  44. Homework The electric field of a plane wave is given by Identify the polarization state, determine the polarization angles (, ), and sketch the locus of E (0, t) for each of the following cases

  45. Homework In a medium characterized by Determine the phase angle by which the magnetic field leads the electric field

  46. Radiation and Antennas • An antenna may be considered as a transducer that converts a guided EM wave to a transmitted wave or an incident wave to a guided EM wave • Antenna dimensions are generally referred to in wavelength units

  47. Reciprocity • Antenna radiation pattern: The directional function that characterizes the distribution pattern radiated by an antenna • Isotropic antenna: A hypothetical antenna that radiates equally in all directions • Used as a reference radiator to compare antennas • Reciprocal antennas: Antennas that have the same radiation patterns for transmission as for reception

  48. Two aspects of antenna performance • 1. Radiation Properties • Direction of the radiation pattern • Polarization state of the radiated wave in the TX mode (Antenna Polarization) • In the RX mode, the antenna can extract only that component of the wave whose E – field is parallel to that of the antennas polarization direction • 2. Antenna Impedance • Pertains to the impedance match between the antenna and the generator

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