Symmetry (Jun 2024)
Symmetry Implications of a 60 GHz Inverted Microstrip Line Phase Shifter with Nematic Liquid Crystals in Diverse Packaging Boundary Conditions
Abstract
This work demystifies the role that packaging boundary conditions (both physically and electromagnetically) can play in a nematic liquid crystal (NLC)-based inverted microstrip (IMS) phase shifter device operating at the 60 GHz band (from 54 GHz to 66 GHz). Most notably, the air box radiating boundary and perfect electric conductor (PEC) enclosing boundary are numerically examined and compared statistically for convergence, scattering parameters, and phase-shift-to-insertion-loss ratio, i.e., figure-of-merit (FoM). Notably, the simulated phase tunability of the radiating air box boundary structure is 8.26°/cm higher than that of the encased (enclosed) PEC boundary structure at 60 GHz. However, the maximum insertion loss of the encased PEC structure is 0.47 dB smaller compared to that of the radiant air box boundary structure. This results in an FoM increase of 29.26°/dB at the enclosed PEC limit (relative to the less-than-optimal airbox radiation limit). Arguably, the NLC-filled IMS phase shifter device packaging with metals fully enclosed (in addition to the default ground plane) enhances the symmetry of the structure, both in the geometry and the materials system. In electromagnetic parlance, it contributes to a more homogenously distributed electric field and a more stable monomodal transmission environment with mitigated radiation and noise. Practically, the addition of the enclosure to the well-established NLC-IMS planar fabrication techniques provides a feasible manufacturing (assembling) solution to acquire the reasonably comparable performance advantage exhibited by non-planar structures, e.g., a fully enclosed strip line and rectangular coaxial line, which are technically demanding to manufacture with NLC.
Keywords