Tunable RF Filters Based on Liquid Crystal for Space Applications
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The lifetime of a geostationary communications satellite is typically fifteen years, and a new technology will only be considered if sufficient confidence has been gained that it will remain functional over this period of time.
- The application on a satellite is in a harsh environment with respect to, for example, mechanical robustness, thermal environment, radiation, or electromagnetic compatibility, which further strengthens the need for thorough design and testing phases beforehand.
- In order to operate a tunable filter, some kind of control electronics is needed. This control electronics draws power from the satellite power supply and translates received telecommands into signals that set the tunable filter to the desired state. Although such kind of electronics is routinely used for various applications on the satellite and its design therefore does not present fundamental hurdles, it considerably adds complexity to the switchable filter system in terms of reliability, power consumption, thermal design, and telemetry/telecommand transfer to and from an earth-based operator
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Liquid Crystal
2.2. Thermomechanics of the Liquid Crystal Container
- The variation of the volume of the liquid crystal over temperature is compensated by movement of the bellow. The bellow acts as a spring, with a force increasing with movement of the bellow. This force corresponds to a pressure increase in the liquid crystal volume. Pressures encountered in this application are significant (exceeding 5 bar). Also, thermal stress in the associated container and bellow materials build up.
- The container material is rexolite, while the bellow is metallic. Hence, the connection between rexolite and bellow is not between similar partners, and therefore it is challenging by nature due to the difference in thermal expansion presenting stress to the connecting mechanism.
2.3. Configuration of Biasing Circuit
- The electrodes necessarily consist of conducting material, and they are exposed to the RF electromagnetic field. The field induces RF current on the electrodes, which is subject to Ohmic losses, which in turn increases the resonator loss. To limit this undesired effect, the electrodes must be designed as small as possible, having a surface with low Ohmic losses (low surface roughness, plated with a good conductor such as silver, thickness exceeding skin depth). The RF losses can be further lowered by using a well-chosen glue in the right amount for the mounting of the electrodes.
- The electrodes will exhibit RF eigenmodes for themselves. In order not to disturb the resonator or filter function, these eigenmodes must be shifted sufficiently away from the filter passband. In the current filter design, the eigenmodes are more than 5 GHz away from the filter passband.
- The electrodes, and especially where they penetrate into the RF cavity of the resonator, are a potential source of EMC leakage. RF energy fed into the filter will to some amount leak to the outside via the biasing electrodes—this amount must be minimized. On the other hand, the environment on a satellite can comprise stray electromagnetic fields within a broad frequency range from 0 to 30 GHz. The amount of those signals that penetrate into the filter via the electrodes and couple into the RF path must also be minimized. The DC harness that delivers the biasing voltage to the electrodes can act as an antenna and enhance these undesired effects. In order to meet the requirement, the following measures have been taken:
- Where the electrode penetrates the RF cavity wall, a capacitor to ground is introduced, acting as a lowpass filter,
- Those wires of the harness belonging to opposite electrodes (hence carrying signal with opposite voltage) are twisted,
- There is shielding around the harness which is connected to the housing wall.
2.4. Filter Design
2.5. Filter Tuning and Temperature Compensation
2.6. Control Electronics
2.7. Test Vehicle for Qualification Test
3. Qualification Tests and Results
3.1. Qualification Test Sequence
3.2. Test Results
3.2.1. RF Performance Measurements over Test Phases
3.2.2. Power Handling Test
4. Discussion
- The stability of the RF response curve in Figure 9 over the qualification test sequence was good. Especially, here, the in-orbit verification will provide valuable further test data gained over longer periods of time.
- The result of the power handling test in Figure 10 was good. The application of overdrive power of 20 dBm is a failure condition and limited in time, and it is allowed that the filter response shows some graceful degradation under this condition. When limiting power again to a maximum nominal value of 0 dBm, the filter response drifts back to the original performance after some time, as it should. Given the timescale, the degradation is most likely a thermal effect caused by dissipation of RF power in the liquid crystal.
- While the filter presented in this article can be shifted in center frequency with bandwidth remaining constant, it would be a valuable extension to enlarge the filter design to include variable bandwidths.
- For the two extreme tuning states, a difference in insertion loss at center frequency of 1.9 dB was observed (Section 2.5). This can be mitigated by including tunable couplings in the filter and artificial increase of insertion loss for filter states with initial lower insertion loss [12].
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
RF | Radio frequency |
mmW | millimeter wave |
EMC | Electromagnetic compatibility |
DC | Direct current |
TM | Transverse magnetic |
IL | Insertion loss (IL = −|S21|) |
Fwd. Trans | Forward transmission. Identical to insertion loss, but preferably used for devices with non-reciprocal performance. This is the case in the power handling test, where isolators are inserted in test setup. |
References
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Item | Parameter | Measured Value |
---|---|---|
Clearing Point | 119.7 °C | |
Microwave Properties at 19 GHz | 3.21 2.43 0.0034 0.0111 | |
Dielectric Anisotropy at 1 kHz | 7.4 3.1 4.3 | |
Rotational Viscosity | γ1 | 726 mPas |
Elastic Constants | K1 K3 V0 | 13.9 pN 24.5 pN 1.91 V |
Test Step | Test Parameter, Test Load | Label for RF Measurement |
Initial functional test | Measurement of RF performance at ambient temperature to establish baseline performance | IFT |
Mechanical vibration test | Load applied in x- and y-axis (parallel to mounting plate in Figure 8): per axis 9.0 g for 180 s Load applied in z-axis: 16.9 g for 180 s | - |
Post vibration test | Measurement of RF performance at ambient temperature to verify integrity of the filter | PVT |
Mechanical shock test | Load applied: 3 shocks in each axis up to 1600 g at 10 kHz | - |
Post shock test | Measurement of RF performance at ambient temperature to verify integrity of the filter | PST |
Thermal-vacuum test | In vacuum 3 thermal cycles −35/+75 °C 8 thermal cycles −10/+65 °C Plateaus for RF measurements at 23 °C (beginning and end), and at –10 °C and +65 °C (last cycle) | TT0: 23 °C (before first cycle) TV2, 3, 4: +65 °C, −10 °C, 23 °C (on last cycle) |
Power handling test | In vacuum at +65 °C: Permanent application of nominal RF power to the filter of 0 dBm, RF performance measurement immediately and after 60 min Permanent application of overdrive RF power of 20 dBm, RF performance measurement immediately and after 60 min Permanent application of RF power to the filter of 0 dBm, RF performance measurement immediately and after 60 min | PHT A, B: begin, end of first application of 0 dBm C, D: begin, end of application of 20 dBm E, F: begin, end of second application of 0 dBm |
Final functional test | Measurement of Rf performance at ambient temperature to verify integrity of the filter | FFT |
EMC, ESD | Listed in this table for completeness, details beyond this article | - |
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Kaesser, T.; Fritzsch, C.; Franz, M. Tunable RF Filters Based on Liquid Crystal for Space Applications. Crystals 2020, 10, 455. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst10060455
Kaesser T, Fritzsch C, Franz M. Tunable RF Filters Based on Liquid Crystal for Space Applications. Crystals. 2020; 10(6):455. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst10060455
Chicago/Turabian StyleKaesser, Tobias, Carsten Fritzsch, and Michael Franz. 2020. "Tunable RF Filters Based on Liquid Crystal for Space Applications" Crystals 10, no. 6: 455. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst10060455
APA StyleKaesser, T., Fritzsch, C., & Franz, M. (2020). Tunable RF Filters Based on Liquid Crystal for Space Applications. Crystals, 10(6), 455. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst10060455