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High‐precision dielectric sensor system based on balanced CSRR‐SIW resonators
Author(s) -
Jiang Hao,
Qi Xiaokang,
Wang Quan,
Xu Kuiwen,
Chen Shichang,
Wu Liang,
Zhu Fang,
Zhao WenSheng,
Dong Linxi,
Ran Lixin,
Wang Gaofeng
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of rf and microwave computer‐aided engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.335
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1099-047X
pISSN - 1096-4290
DOI - 10.1002/mmce.22696
Subject(s) - resonator , microwave , dielectric , optoelectronics , detector , sensitivity (control systems) , system of measurement , materials science , electronic engineering , physics , optics , computer science , engineering , telecommunications , astronomy
A high‐precision differential microwave dielectric sensor system based on a pair of CSRR‐SIW resonators is introduced. The proposed method consists of four parts: the frequency‐sweeping signal source, the balanced sensor based on CSRR‐SIW, the RMS power detector, and the data acquisition system. Without a vector network analyzer (VNA) and other instruments, the electromagnetic properties of materials can be measured conveniently with the proposed method. In this work, two CSRR resonators inside SIW cavities are used as the balanced RF sensing components, one for measurement and the other for reference. In virtue of the electric field concentration effect of the CSRR and the high Q factor of SIW cavity, the proposed sensor achieves high sensitivity to material under test (MUT), with high isolation between the balanced resonators and strong capability of suppressing the electromagnetic interferences from the external environment. The resonating frequency of the balanced microwave resonator under no‐load condition is 1.587 GHz. With balanced sensor configuration, interferences from the external environment and fabrication errors for the single‐resonator‐based system can be filtered out and compensated automatically, and thus high precision of the dielectric constant measurement can be achieved. The experiment results of proposed differential dielectric sensor system validate that the measurement accuracy of the dielectric constant can reach an excellent level with a relative measurement error below 0.1%.