Feasibility study: Ultra-High Q-factor Aperiodic Reflector Resonators

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Materials

Abstract

Resonators with high Q-factor are important components in low-phase noise oscillators for emerging millimetre systems such as automotive radar (72 GHz), point-to-point communications, satellite mobile broadband (20 GHz - 30 GHz) and wireless communications. Temperature stable, high Q resonators are also critical components within frequency standards which can be used to benchmark atomic and optical reference sources. Recent applications of high-Q resonators are in extremely accurate positioning systems for gravitational wave detectors.The term Q is the Quality Factor of the resonator and is a measure of the sharpness of the frequency response. A good analogy is a tuning fork which has a sharp resonance at a fixed frequency - it has a high Q. In a microwave resonance the situation is similar except that we are striking the resonator with microwaves. We would like the resonance to be sharp with a high Q as this enables devices such as oscillators to be constructed. The quality factor Q of a resonator is determined by the loss tangent in the material and the losses in the metallic enclosure which surrounds the resonator. There is a quantity called the geometric factor G and this is related to the ratio of the total magnetic field to the tangential magnetic field at the surface of the enclosure. It turns out that this geometry factor needs to be maximised. There is another quantity called the filling factor and this has a value between near zero and 1. The filling factor is a measure of the amount of electromagnetic energy contained in the dielectric and usually microwave engineers aim to increase the filling factor towards unity. In this proposal however, we take the opposite approach.There are two main strategies for increasing the Q factor. The first and by far the most common is to aim for a high filling factor (as is the case in the usual TE01d or whispering gallery modes). The second approach is to aim for a very low filling factor but maximise the geometry factor. In this proposal we attempt the latter with filling factors approaching zero, but where we still try to maximise G. This will be attempted using a Bragg reflector which can confine the electromagnetic energy. By confining the mode energy within a dielectric Bragg reflecting structure, the filling factor of the dielectric can be reduced due to the fact that air/vacuum contains the mode energy. The geometric factors are still very high due to energy confinement.The Novelty in the proposal: Aperiodic Reflector Resonators.Our initial modelling has revealed a very surprising result. This is a very large enhancement in the Q factor if the layers of the reflector are NOT the same thickness or are aperiodic. The modelled Q of an sapphire 5 shell aperiodic reflector resonator is 1.7 million at 30GHz (Qxf of 50 THz. A periodic Bragg reflector saturates at a Q of 0.46 million and there is no further increase in the Q on adding layers. We intend to use sapphire for this proof of principle.

Publications

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Breeze J (2009) Do Grain Boundaries Affect Microwave Dielectric Loss in Oxides? in Journal of the American Ceramic Society

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Breeze J (2009) Temperature-stable and high Q-factor TiO2 Bragg reflector resonator in Applied Physics Letters

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Pullar R (2009) Dielectric loss caused by oxygen vacancies in titania ceramics in Journal of the European Ceramic Society

 
Description This was an exceptionally productive feasibility study. The Grain Boundary Issue and Quality factors beyond the dielectric limit

The work on microwave dielectric materials resulted in a re-examination of an old problem - do grain boundaries influence loss? It has always been assumed that grain boundaries have a profoundly deleterious effect on loss. Alford obtained spherical MgO bicrystals with and without a single grain boundary and was able to rotate the sphere in a microwave cavity to interrogate the effect of the microwave field on the orientation of the grain boundary. In fact, the experiments carried out on MgO bicrystals indicated that there was no influence whatever of the grain boundary on the loss with only a very slight anomaly observed at around 50K . The most recent work on high Q structures were developed by Alford based on Bragg reflector principles . This has led to an interesting discovery. In a conventional Bragg reflector the Q factor of the resonator structure saturates after two or three periods. In a sapphire resonator a conventional reflector achieves a Q of around 190,000 at 30GHz. If the periods i.e the shells or plates of the reflector are now aperiodic in thickness then a very surprising result is obtained - the Q factor no longer saturates at Q=19,000 but increases quadratically achieving, in the experiment, Q=600,000 at 30GHz .
Exploitation Route In microwave communications and in low noise amplifiers. This work ultimately posed the question - if we can achieve such high Q factor would it be possible to construct a maser working at room temperature and in earth's field/. The answer was that we could and is the subject of a new proposal.
Sectors Aerospace/ Defence and Marine,Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Electronics

URL http://www3.imperial.ac.uk/people/n.alford
 
Description National Physical Laboratory NPL 
Organisation National Physical Laboratory
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
Start Year 2008
 
Description University of York 
Organisation University of York
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
Start Year 2008