Communications Engineering (Sep 2024)

A wireless W-band 3D-printed temperature sensor based on a three-dimensional photonic crystal operating beyond 1000 ∘C

  • Jesús Sánchez-Pastor,
  • Petr Kadĕra,
  • Masoud Sakaki,
  • Rolf Jakoby,
  • Jaroslav Lacik,
  • Niels Benson,
  • Alejandro Jiménez-Sáez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s44172-024-00282-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract In addressing sensing in harsh and dynamic environments, there are no available millimeter-wave chipless and wireless sensors capable of continuous operation at extremely high temperatures. Here we present a fully dielectric wireless temperature sensor capable of operating beyond 1000 ∘C. The sensor uses high-Q cavities embedded within a three-dimensional photonic crystal resonating at 83.5 GHz and 85.5 GHz, and a flattened Luneburg lens enhances its readout range. The sensor is additively manufactured using Lithography-based Ceramic Manufacturing in Alumina (Al2O3). Despite the clutter, its frequency-coded response remains detectable from outside the furnace at 50 cm and at temperatures up to 1200 ∘C. It is observed that the resonance frequencies shift with temperature. This shift is linked to a change in the dielectric properties of Al2O3, which are estimated up to 1200 ∘C and show good agreement with literature values. The sensor is thus highly suitable for millimeter-wave applications in dynamic, cluttered, and high-temperature environments.