Takaharu OHYAMA Yuji AKAHORI Masahiro YANAGISAWA Hideki TSUNETSUGU Shinji MINO
Optoelectronic hybrid integration is a promising technology for realizing the optical components needed in optical transmission, switching, and interconnection systems that use wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) and time division multiplexing (TDM). We have already developed versatile optical hybrid integrated modules using a silica-based planar lightwave circuit (PLC) platform. However, these modules consist solely of the optoelectronic semiconductor devices such as laser diodes (LDs) and photo diodes (PDs) and monolithic optoelectronic integrated circuits (OEICs). To carry out high-speed and versatile electric signal processing functions in future network systems, it is necessary to install semiconductor electrical integrated circuits (ICs) on a PLC platform. In this paper, we describe novel technologies for high-speed PLC platforms which make it possible to assemble both ICs and optoelectronic devices. Using these technologies, we fabricated a two-channel hybrid integrated optical transmitter module which is hybrid integrated with an LD array chip and an LD driver IC. On this PLC platform, we use microstrip lines (MSLs) to drive the LD driver IC. We also considered the effect of heat interference on the LD array chip caused by the LD driver IC when designing the layout of the chip assembly region. The LD array chip and the LD driver IC were flip-chip bonded with solder bumps of a different material to avoid any deterioration in the coupling efficiency of the LD array chip. The optical transmitter module we fabricated operated successfully at 9 Gbit/s non-return-zero (NRZ) signal. This approach using a PLC platform for the hybrid integration of an LD array chip and an LD driver IC will carry forward the development of high-speed optoelectronic modules with both optical and electrical signal processing functions.
Masashi HOTTA Yongxi QIAN Tatsuo ITOH
Resonant coupling type microstrip line interconnects using a bonding ribbon and dielectric pad have been designed and fabricated. The basic concept of this interconnect is the LC serial resonance of the pad capacitor and ribbon inductor. Both numerical simulation and experiment reveal low return loss and high efficiency connection at the predicted resonant frequency region, which can be readily shifted to higher frequencies by tuning the structural parameters. Improvement in bandwidth of the interconnect is demonstrated by using a pad with higher dielectric constant. Furthermore, it is also shown that a slight modification allows DC connection in addition to efficient coupling at the resonant frequency.
In this paper, we present an analysis of the microstrip lines whose strip conductors are of various cross-sections, such as rectangular cross-section, triangle cross-section, and half-cycle cross-section. The method employed is the boundary integral equation method (BIEM). Numerical results for these microstrip lines demonstrate various shape effects of the strip conductor on the characteristics of lines. The processing technique on the convergence of the Green's function is also described.
Toshiaki KITAMURA Masahiro GESHIRO Toshio ISHIZAKI Tomoya MAEKAWA Shinnosuke SAWA
The influence of loaded capacitance on the resonant frequency of a triplate-type strip resonator is investigated through numerical simulations by means of the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method. This type of resonator is one of the basic components of very small high-dielectric stripline filters, named laminated planar filters. Numerical results of resonant frequencies are compared with experimental results and found to be in excellent agreement, which circumstance ensures that the FDTD method can be applied to the characterization of a wide range of laminated planar microwave devices including resonators and filters. It is also found that the resonant frequency is directly related to the square root of its line capacitance when the resonator is regarded equivalently as a series LC circuit.
Resonant properties of resistively shunted tunnel junctions dominate the high-frequency performance of Josephson array oscillators. To improve the operating frequency, we have developed resistively shunted Nb/AlOx/Nb tunnel junctions with a small parasitic inductance. The inductance was minimized by reducing the inductive length between the tunnel junction and the contact hole to be about 1µm. By fitting the measured I-V characteristics of the shunted tunnel junction to the simulated characteristics, we estimated the inductance to be about 105 fH. The analysis of resonant properties showed that the shunted tunnel junctions with the small parasitic inductance have a high-frequency performance up to the Nb gap frequency. Josephson array oscillators using 11 such junctions were designed and fabricated to operate at 650 GHz and 1 THz. Shapiro steps induced by Josephson oscillation were clearly observed up to 1 THz. By fitting the step heights to the simulated results, we estimated the output power of the Josephson oscillator delivered to the load resistor to be about 10 µW at 625 GHz and 50 nW at 1 THz.
Jean-Fu KIANG Chung-I G. HSU Ching-Her LEE
A combined mode-matching and moment method is proposed to calculate the capacitance matrix of wedge-supported cylindrical microstrip lines with an indented ground. Each indent is modeled as a multilayered medium in which the potential distribution is systematically derived by defining reflection matrices. An integral equation is derived in terms of the charge distribution on the strip surfaces. Galerkin's method is then applied to solve the integral equation for the charge distribution. The effects of strip width, strip separation, indent depth, and indent shape are analyzed.
The results of experiments on the effect of the height and diameter of the cup on cup microstrip antennas are presented. The results show that the optimum height of the cup for the narrowest beamwidth and the highest gain is about 1/3 λ, and that the beamwidth decreases and the gain increases as the diameter of the cup increases.
Ning GUAN Ken'ichiro YASHIRO Sumio OHKAWA
The integral kernel expansion method is applied to an analysis of scattering of magnetostatic forward volume waves (MSFVWs) by an array with any number of metal strips. In this method, first the integral kernel of the Fourier integral is expanded in terms of orthogonal polynomials to obtain moment equations. Then a system of algebraic equations is derived by applying the Galerkin's method. In the process, interaction between strips is naturally taken into account and real current distributions on the strips are determined such that boundary conditions are satisfied. Calculus confirmation through the energy conservation principle shows that numerical results are quite satisfactory. A comparison shows that theoretical results are in good agreement with experimental ones except the vicinity of lower and upper limits of the MSFVW band. It is shown that an infinite number of propagation modes is excited even if a wave of single mode is incident. Dependence of the scattering on dimension of arrays and on frequency and mode of an incident wave is obtained.
Chi H.CHAN Chien Min LIN Leung TSANG Yiu Fung LEUNG
In this paper, we illustrate the analysis of microstrip structures with a large number of unknowns using the sparse-matrix/canonical grid method. This fast Fourier thansform (FFT) based iterative method reduces both CPU time and computer storage memory requirements. We employ the Mixed-Potential Integral Equation (MPIE) formulation in conjunction with the RWG triangular discretization. The required spatial-domain Green's functions are obtained efficiently and accurately using the Complex Image Method (CIM). The impedance matrix is decomposed into a sparse matrix which corresponds to near interactions and its complementary matrix which corresponds to far interactions among the subsectional current elements on the microstrip structures. During the iterative process, the near-interaction portion of the matrix -vector multiplication is computed directly as the conventional MPIE formulation. The far-interaction portion of the matrix-vector multiplication is computed indirectly using fast Fourier transforms (FFTs). This is achieved by a Taylor series expansion of the Green's function about the grid points of a uniformly-spaced canonical grid overlaying the triangular discretization.
Nobumitsu AIBARA Akira SHISHIDO Yoshiaki YANAI Akihiro KAMADA Masaru TOGAWA
The CROMACLEAR color display tube has been developed as a display that offers attractive icon quality and highly legible characters. The color display tube is composed of a striped superfine pitch phosphor screen with slot-type shadow mask. We explain the character legibility by Fourier transform. Moreover, the electron beam shape is improved. As a result, the CROMACLEAR color display tube has achieved higher legibility and lower moire phenomenon. This CROMACLEAR color display tube is already mounted in new monitor series.
Hiroyuki OHMINE Hitoshi MIZUTAMARI Yonehiko SUNAHARA
A new configuration of high gain circularly polarized microstrip antenna with a diagonal short and its analysis using boundary element method with a radiation load are presented. The center of a radiating patch is shorted with a 45-degree diagonal offset for not only obtaining a high gain but exciting a circular polarization. This configuration leads to achieving high gain with keeping a very low profile configuration. Boundary element method with radiation load which takes into account the effect of radiation loss is employed to analyze this complicated configuration. The radiation load, which is very important when boundary element method is applied to antenna analyses, can be obtained from radiation admittance using recurring technique, so that the accuracy of the antenna characteristic calculations can be improved. This antenna was designed and tested in the L-band and good characteristics, axial ratios and radiation patterns, have been verified.
Kiyotoshi YASUMOTO Mayumi MATSUNAGA
The dispersion characteristics of two nonidentical coupled microstrip lines and N identical coupled microstrip lines are analyzed using the coupled-mode theory combined with Galerkin's moment method in spectral domain. In this approach, the solutions to the original coupled microstrips are approximated by a linear combination of eigenmode solutions associated with the isolated single microstrip, and the reciprocity relation is used to derive the coupled-mode equations. The coupling coefficients are given by the simple overlap integrals in spectral domain between the eigenmode fields and currents of the individual microstrips. It is shown that the numerical results are in very good agreement with those obtained by the direct Galerkin's moment method over a broad range of weak to moderately strong coupling.
Shuguang CHEN Yoshio SATO Masayuki OODO Makoto ANDO
This paper verifies the accuracy of PO as applied to the scattering of dipole waves by a finite size reflector which is composed of strips on a grounded dielectric slab. By using the closed form expressions of reflected waves from the surface, PO calculation can be conducted straightforwardly. The calculated results are compared with the experimental ones for vertical and horizontal dipoles over a circular reflector.
In this paper, we present an analysis of microstrip line with a trapezoidal dielectric ridge in multilayered media. The method employed in this characterization is called partial-boundary element method (p-BEM) which provides an efficient technique to the analysis of the structures with multilayered media. To improve the convergence of the Green's function used in the analysis with the P-BEM, we employ a technique based on a combination of the Fourier series expansion and the method of images. Treatment on convergence for the boundary integrals is also described. After this treatment, it requires typically one tenth or one hundredth of Fourier terms to obtain the same accuracy compared with the original Green's function. Numerical results are presented for two microstrip lines that have a trapezoidal dielectric ridge placed on a one-layered substrate and a two-layered substrate. These numerical results demonstrate the effects on the characteristics of the microstrip line due to the existence of the dielectric ridge as well as the second layer between the ridge and the fundamental substrate.
Hiroyuki OHMINE Yonehiko SUNAHARA Makoto MATSUNAGA
This paper presents a configuration of circularly polarized annular-ring microstrip antenna (ARMSA) and its design method to obtain high gain and low axial ratio including the analysis of finite ground plane effect using G.T.D. for personal satellite communication use. The ARMSA excited at TM21 mode through co-planar branch-line hybrid coupler for circular polarization produces a conical pattern which has high gain in low elevation angle. The relation of gain and axial ratio versus the dielectric constant of substrate are shown and the existence of the dielectric constant which satisfies two requirements, that is, high gain and low axial ratio are clarified. For car-top application, experimental results in the L-band showed satisfactory characteristics for vehicle antenna.
Resonant properties of resistance shunted tunnel junctions have been investigated using the RLCSJ model. We found that an increase in dc current resulted from an increase in impedance of the shunted tunnel junctions. The static and dynamic properties of the shunted tunnel junctions were described in detail by numerical simulations and experiments. The simulated and measured results showed good agreement in I-V characteristics. A Josephson array oscillator has been proposed using the resonant properties for increasing oscillator output impedance. We designed and fabricated the oscillator with 20 shunted tunnel junctions. The output power of the oscillator delivered to the load resistor was estimated to be about 0.5µW at 312 GHz.
There is a growing demand for high reliability beyond what current RAID can provide and there are various levels of user demand for data reliability. An efficient data placement scheme called RM2 has been proposed in [10], which makes a disk array system resistant to double disk failures. In this paper, we consider how to choose an optimal striping unit for RM2 particularly when no workload information is available except read/write ratio. For experimental purposes, we develop a disk array simulator incorporating RM2 as one of the data placement schemes including other schemes of RAID levels. In the case of disk read operations, it is shown that RM2 has an optimal striping unit of 4/3T for large requests and 8/3T for small requests, where T represents the size of a single track. We have also shown that, if any disk write operations are involved, an optimal striping unit becomes 1/3T for large requests and 8/3T for small requests.
Daniel THOUROUDE Mohamed HIMDI Jean Pierre DANIEL
A cavity model well suited for computed-aided design is developed to synthesize the dimensions of patches for a given resonant frequency, an input resistance and a substrate. The antennas which have been investigated are rectangular patches fed with either a microstripline or a coaxial probe.
Sevtap SAPMAZ Kazuya KOBAYASHI Alinur BUYUKAKSOY Gokhan UZGOREN
The E-polarized plane wave diffraction by a perfectly conducting strip located at the plane interface between two different media is analyzed by the Wiener-Hopf technique. Applying the boundary conditions to the integral representations for the unknown scattered field, the problem is formulated in terms of the modified Wiener-Hopf equation(MWHE), which is reduced to a pair of simultaneous integral equations via the factorization and decomposition procedure. The integral equations are solved asymptotically for large strip width via the method of successive approximations leading to the first, second and third order solutions, which are valid at high frequencies. The scattered far field expression is derived by taking the inverse Fourier transform and applying the saddle point method. It is shown that the high-frequency scattered far field comprises the geometrical optics field, the singly, doubly and triply diffracted fields and the lateral waves. Numerical examples of the radar cross section(RCS) and the lateral waves are presented, and the far field scattering characteristics discussed in detail.
We propose a new algorithm for minimizing the number of vertices of an approximate curve by keeping the error within a given bound (min-# problem) with the parallel-strip error criterion. The best existing algorithm which solves this problem has O (n2 log n) time complexity. Our algorithm which uses the Cone Intersection Method does not have an improved time complexity, but does have a high efficiency. In particular, for practical data such as those which represent the boundaries or the skeletons of an object, the new algorithm can solve the min-# problem in nearly O(n2) time.