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This Creative Project was carried out in coordination with the capstone project, Around the Corner Imaging with Terahertz Waves. This capstone project deals with a system designed to implement Around the Corner, or Non Line-of-Sight (NLoS) Imaging. This document discusses the creation of a GUI using MATLAB to control the

This Creative Project was carried out in coordination with the capstone project, Around the Corner Imaging with Terahertz Waves. This capstone project deals with a system designed to implement Around the Corner, or Non Line-of-Sight (NLoS) Imaging. This document discusses the creation of a GUI using MATLAB to control the Terahertz Imaging system. The GUI was developed in response to a need for synchronization, ease of operation, easy parameter modification, and data management. Along the way, many design decisions were made ranging from choosing a software platform to determining how variables should be passed. These decisions and considerations are discussed in this document. The resulting GUI has measured up to the design criteria and will be able to be used by anyone wishing to use the Terahertz Imaging System for further research in the field of Around the Corner or NLoS Imaging.
ContributorsWood, Jacob Cannon (Author) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Thesis director) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Electrical Engineering Program (Contributor) / School of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2019-05
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Description
The recent trends in wireless communication, fueled by the demand for lower latency and higher bandwidth, have caused the migration of users from lower frequencies to higher frequencies, i.e., from 2.5GHz to millimeter wave. However, the migration to higher frequencies has its challenges. The sensitivity to blockages is a key

The recent trends in wireless communication, fueled by the demand for lower latency and higher bandwidth, have caused the migration of users from lower frequencies to higher frequencies, i.e., from 2.5GHz to millimeter wave. However, the migration to higher frequencies has its challenges. The sensitivity to blockages is a key challenge for millimeter wave and terahertz networks in 5G and beyond. Since these networks mainly rely on line-of-sight (LOS) links, sudden link blockages highly threaten the reliability of such networks. Further, when the LOS link is blocked, the network typically needs to hand off the user to another LOS basestation, which may incur critical time latency, especially if a search over a large codebook of narrow beams is needed. A promising way to tackle the reliability and latency challenges lies in enabling proaction in wireless networks. Proaction allows the network to anticipate future blockages, especially dynamic blockages, and initiate user hand-off beforehand. This thesis presents a complete machine learning framework for enabling proaction in wireless networks relying on the multi-modal 3D LiDAR(Light Detection and Ranging) point cloud and position data. In particular, the paper proposes a sensing-aided wireless communication solution that utilizes bimodal machine learning to predict the user link status. This is mainly achieved via a deep learning algorithm that learns from LiDAR point-cloud and position data to distinguish between LOS and NLOS(non line-of-sight) links. The algorithm is evaluated on the multi-modal wireless Communication Dataset DeepSense6G dataset. It is a time-synchronized collection of data from various sensors such as millimeter wave power, position, camera, radar, and LiDAR. Experimental results indicate that the algorithm can accurately predict link status with 87% accuracy. This highlights a promising direction for enabling high reliability and low latency in future wireless networks.
ContributorsSrinivas, Tirumalai Vinjamoor Nikhil (Author) / Alkhateeb, Ahmed (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Myhajlenko, Stefan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs) offer highly sensitive solutions for millimeter and submillimeter wave astronomy. KIDs are superconducting detectors capable of measuring photon energy and arrival time. KIDs use the change in surface impedance of the superconductor when an incident photon is absorbed and breaks Cooper pairs in the superconducting

Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs) offer highly sensitive solutions for millimeter and submillimeter wave astronomy. KIDs are superconducting detectors capable of measuring photon energy and arrival time. KIDs use the change in surface impedance of the superconductor when an incident photon is absorbed and breaks Cooper pairs in the superconducting material. This occurs when KIDs use a superconducting resonator: when a photon is incident on the inductor, the photon is absorbed and inductance increases and the resonant frequency decreases. The resonator is weakly coupled to a transmission line which naturally allows for multiplexing to allow up to thousands of detectors to be read out on one transmission line. In this thesis a KID is presented to be used at submillimeter wavelengths. I optimized a polarization-sensitive aluminum absorber for future Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) missions. BLAST is designed to investigate polarized interstellar dust and the role of magnetic fields on star formation. As part of the effort to develop aluminum KIDs for BLAST, I investigated the optical coupling method including different feedhorn structures and a hybrid design. I present a suite of simulations calculating the absorption efficiency of the absorber. The optimized KID is a feedhorn/waveguide coupled front-illuminated detector that achieves 70% absorption over the frequency band centered at 250um.
ContributorsChamberlin, Kathryn (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Zeinolabedinzadeh, Saeed (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Impedance is one of the fundamental properties of electrical components, materials, and waves. Therefore, impedance measurement and monitoring have a wide range of applications. The multi-port technique is a natural candidate for impedance measurement and monitoring due to its low overhead and ease of implementation for Built-in Self-Test (BIST) applications.

Impedance is one of the fundamental properties of electrical components, materials, and waves. Therefore, impedance measurement and monitoring have a wide range of applications. The multi-port technique is a natural candidate for impedance measurement and monitoring due to its low overhead and ease of implementation for Built-in Self-Test (BIST) applications. The multi-port technique can measure complex reflection coefficients, thus impedance, by using scalar measurements provided by the power detectors. These power detectors are strategically placed on different points (ports) of a passive network to produce unique solution. Impedance measurement and monitoring is readily deployed on mobile phone radio-frequency (RF) front ends, and are combined with antenna tuners to boost the signal reception capabilities of phones. These sensors also can be used in self-healing circuits to improve their yield and performance under process, voltage, and temperature variations. Even though, this work is preliminary interested in low-overhead impedance measurement for RF circuit applications, the proposed methods can be used in a wide variety of metrology applications where impedance measurements are already used. Some examples of these applications include determining material properties, plasma generation, and moisture detection. Additionally, multi-port applications extend beyond the impedance measurement. There are applications where multi-ports are used as receivers for communication systems, RADARs, and remote sensing applications. The multi-port technique generally requires a careful design of the testing structure to produce a unique solution from power detector measurements. It also requires the use of nonlinear solvers during calibration, and depending on calibration procedure, measurement. The use of nonlinear solvers generates issues for convergence, computational complexity, and resources needed for carrying out calibrations and measurements in a timely manner. In this work, using periodic structures, a structure where a circuit block repeats itself, for multi-port measurements is proposed. The periodic structures introduce a new constraint that simplifies the multi-port theory and leads to an explicit calibration and measurement procedure. Unlike the existing calibration procedures which require at least five loads and various constraints on the load for explicit solution, the proposed method can use three loads for calibration. Multi-ports built with periodic structures will always produce a unique measurement result. This leads to increased bandwidth of operation and simplifies design procedure. The efficacy of the method demonstrated in two embodiments. In the first embodiment, a multi-port is directly embedded into a matching network to measure impedance of the load. In the second embodiment, periodic structures are used to compare two loads without requiring any calibration.
ContributorsAvci, Muslum Emir (Author) / Ozev, Sule (Thesis advisor) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Kitchen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Magnetic Resonance Imaging has become an increasingly reliable source of medical imaging to obtain high quality detailed images of the human anatomy. Application specific coil or an array of coils when placed closely to the anatomy produces high quality image due to the improved spatial signal to noise ratio. Elastic

Magnetic Resonance Imaging has become an increasingly reliable source of medical imaging to obtain high quality detailed images of the human anatomy. Application specific coil or an array of coils when placed closely to the anatomy produces high quality image due to the improved spatial signal to noise ratio. Elastic RF coils have been shown to conform to the shape of the patient’s body and drastically reduce the gap between coil and anatomy. First, a major challenge faced by these elastic RF coils is the changing impedance condition as the coil takes a different shape for every individual. Next, an area that could benefit from the improved image quality and patient comfort that comes from flexible RF coil design is endorectal prostate imaging. Demonstrated in the first part of this dissertation is a modular solution to compensate the impedance mismatch. Standalone Wireless Impedance Matching (SWIM) system is an automatic impedance mismatch compensation system that can function independently of the MR scanner. The matching network consists of a capacitor array with RF switches to electronically cycle through different input impedance conditions. The SWIM system can automatically calibrate an RF coil in 3s with a reflection coefficient of less than -15dB resulting in improved Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the sample image by 12% - 24%, based on sample size, when compared to a loaded coil without retuning. For the second part, we propose a novel elastic and inflatable RF coil integrated with the SWIM system for endorectal prostate imaging at 9.4T. A silicone polymer substrate filled with liquid metal alloy is designed and fabricated with a cavity to create ii inflation. This inflatable RF coil is combined with the SWIM system to automatically tune and match after inflating the RF coil for individual levels of inflation. The imaging results have shown a ~10%, ~19%, and ~25 % increase in SNR due to inflation of RF coil at different ROIs in the acquired image. Overall, the methods proposed and discussed in this thesis are a step towards a new generation of RF coil systems for both existing applications and upcoming ones.
ContributorsKandala, Sri Kirthi (Author) / Sohn, Sung-Min (Thesis advisor) / Kdibagkar, Vikram (Committee member) / Sadleir, Rosalind J (Committee member) / Beeman, Scott (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
In 1946 Felix Bloch first demonstrated the phenomenon of nuclear magnetic resonance using continuous-wave signal generation and acquisition. Shortly after in 1966, Richard R. Ernst demonstrated the breakthrough that nuclear magnetic resonance needed to develop into magnetic resonance imaging: the application of Fourier transforms for sensitive pulsed imaging. Upon this

In 1946 Felix Bloch first demonstrated the phenomenon of nuclear magnetic resonance using continuous-wave signal generation and acquisition. Shortly after in 1966, Richard R. Ernst demonstrated the breakthrough that nuclear magnetic resonance needed to develop into magnetic resonance imaging: the application of Fourier transforms for sensitive pulsed imaging. Upon this discovery, the world of research began to develop high power radio amplifiers and fast radio switches for pulsed experimentation. Consequently, continuous-wave imaging placed on the backburner.Although high power pulses are dominant in clinical imaging, there are unique advantages to low power, continuous-wave pulse sequences that transmit and receive signals simultaneously. Primarily, tissues or materials with short T2 time constants can be imaged and the peak radio power required is drastically reduced. The fundamental problem with this lies in its nature; the transmitter leaks a strong leakage signal into the receiver, thus saturating the receiver and the intended nuclear magnetic resonance signal is lost noise. Demonstrated in this dissertation is a multichannel standalone simultaneous transmit and receive (STAR) system with remote user-control that enables continuous- wave full-duplex imaging. STAR calibrates cancellation signals through vector modulators that match the leakage signal of each receiver in amplitude but opposite in phase, therefore destructively interfering the leakage signals. STAR does not require specific imaging coils or console inputs for calibration. It was designed to be general- purpose, therefore integrating into any imaging system. To begin, the user uses an Android tablet to tune STAR to match the Larmor frequency in the bore. Then, the user tells STAR to begin calibration. After self-calibrating, the user may fine-tune the calibration state of the system before enabling a low-power mode for system electronics and imaging may commence. STAR was demonstrated to isolate two receiver coils upwards of 70 dB from the transmit coil and is readily upgradable to enable the use of four receive coils. Some primary concerns of STAR are the removal of transceivers for multichannel operation, digital circuit noise, external noise, calibration speed, upgradability, and the isolation introduced; all of which are addressed in the proceeding thesis.
ContributorsColwell, Zachary Allen (Author) / Sohn, Sung-Min (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Sadleir, Rosalind (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Modern communication systems call for state-of-the-art links that offer almost idealistic performance. This requirement had pushed the technological world to pursue communication in frequency bands that were almost incomprehensible back when the first series of cordless cellphones were invented. These requirements have impacted everything from civilian requirements, space, medical diagnostics

Modern communication systems call for state-of-the-art links that offer almost idealistic performance. This requirement had pushed the technological world to pursue communication in frequency bands that were almost incomprehensible back when the first series of cordless cellphones were invented. These requirements have impacted everything from civilian requirements, space, medical diagnostics to defense technologies and have ushered in a new era of advancements. This work presents a new and novel approach towards improving the conventional phased array systems. The Intelligent Phase Shifter (IPS) offers phase tracking and discrimination solutions that currently plague High-Frequency wireless systems. The proposed system is implemented on (CMOS) process node to better scalability and reduce the overall power dissipated. A tracking system can discern Radio Frequency (RF) Signals’ phase characteristics using a double-balanced mixer. A locally generated reference signal is then matched to the phase of the incoming receiver using a fully modular yet continuous complete 360ᵒ phase shifter that alters the phase of the local reference and matches the phase with that of an incoming RF reference. The tracking is generally two control voltages that carry In-phase and Quadrature-phase information. These control signals offer the capability of controlling similar devices when placed in an array and eliminating any ambiguity that might occur due to in-band interference.
ContributorsLakshminarasimhaiah Rajendra, Yashas (Author) / Zeinolabedinzadeh, Saeed (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
In this dissertation, enhanced coherent detection of terahertz (THz) radiation is presented for Silicon integrated circuits (ICs). In general THz receivers implemented in silicon technologies face a challenge due to the high noise figure (NF) of the low noise amplifier (LNA) and low conversion gain of the radio frequency (RF)

In this dissertation, enhanced coherent detection of terahertz (THz) radiation is presented for Silicon integrated circuits (ICs). In general THz receivers implemented in silicon technologies face a challenge due to the high noise figure (NF) of the low noise amplifier (LNA) and low conversion gain of the radio frequency (RF) mixers. Moreover, issues with implementing local oscillators (LOs) further compound these challenges, including power driving mixes, distribution networks, and overall power consumption, particularly for large-scale arrays. To address these inherent obstacles, two notable cases of enhancing THz receiver performance are presented. In the Sideband Separation Receiver (SSR) for space-borne applications is introduced. Implemented in SiGe BiCMOS technology this broadband SSR boasts a high Image Rejection Ratio (IRR) exceeding 20 dB across 220 – 320 GHz. Employing a modified Weaver architecture, optimized for simultaneous spectral line observation, it utilizes an I/Q double down-conversion, pushing the technological boundaries of silicon and enabling large-scale focal plane array (FPA) deployment in space. Notably, the use of a sub-harmonic down-conversion mixer (SHM) significantly reduces LO power generation challenges, enhancing scalability while maintaining minimal NF. In the 4x4 FPA active THz imager, a dual-polarized patch antenna operating at 420 GHz utilizes orthogonal polarization for RF and LO signals, coupled with a coherent homodyne power detector. Realized in 0.13µm SiGe HBT technology, the power detector is co-designing with the antenna to ensure minimal crosstalk and achieving -30dB cross-polarization isolation. Illumination of the LO enhances power detector performance without on-chip routing complexities, enabling scalability to 1K pixel THz imagers. Each pixel achieves a Noise-Equivalent Power (NEP) of 1 pW/√Hz at 420 GHz, and integration with a readout and digital filter ensures high dynamic range. Furthermore, this study explores radiation hardening techniques to mitigate single-event effects (SEEs) in high-frequency receivers operating in space. Leveraging a W-band receiver in 90 nm SiGe BiCMOS technology, matching considerations and diverse modes of operation are employed to reduce SEE susceptibility. Transient current pulse modeling, validated through TCAD simulations, demonstrates the effectiveness of proposed techniques in substantially mitigating SETs within the proposed radiation-hardened-by-design (RHBD) receiver front-end.
ContributorsAl Seragi, Ebrahim (Author) / Zeinolabedinzadeh, Saeed (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Kitchen, Jennifer (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
This dissertation presents a comprehensive study on the advancement of astrophysical radio, microwave, and terahertz instrumentation/simulations with three pivotal components.First, theoretical simulations of high metallicity galaxies are conducted using the supercomputing resources of Purdue University and NASA. These simulations model the evolution of a gaseous cloud akin to a nascent galaxy,

This dissertation presents a comprehensive study on the advancement of astrophysical radio, microwave, and terahertz instrumentation/simulations with three pivotal components.First, theoretical simulations of high metallicity galaxies are conducted using the supercomputing resources of Purdue University and NASA. These simulations model the evolution of a gaseous cloud akin to a nascent galaxy, incorporating variables such as kinetic energy, mass, radiation fields, magnetic fields, and turbulence. The objective is to scrutinize the spatial distribution of various isotopic elements in galaxies with unusually high metallicities and measure the effects of magnetic fields on their structural distribution. Next, I proceed with an investigation of the technology used for reading out Microwave Kinetic Inductance Detectors (MKIDs) and their dynamic range limitations tied to the current method of FPGA-based readout firmware. In response, I introduce an innovative algorithm that employs PID controllers and phase-locked loops for tracking the natural frequencies of resonator pixels, thereby eliminating the need for costly mid-observation frequency recalibrations which currently hinder the widespread use of MKID arrays. Finally, I unveil the novel Spectroscopic Lock-in Firmware (SpLiF) algorithm designed to address the pernicious low-frequency noise plaguing emergent quantum-limited detection technologies. The SpLiF algorithm harmonizes the mathematical principles of lock-in amplification with the capabilities of a Fast Fourier Transform to protect spectral information from pink noise and other low-frequency noise contributors inherent to most detection systems. The efficacy of the SpLiF algorithm is substantiated through rigorous mathematical formulation, software simulations, firmware simulations, and benchtop lab results.
ContributorsHoh, Jonathan (Author) / Groppi, Christopher E (Thesis advisor) / Jamison-Hooks, Tracee (Committee member) / Buie II, Edward (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Scannapieco, Evan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2024
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Description
I present a trade-study of methods for a 1-port vacuum cryogenic in-situ calibration of a vector network analyzer. The three main methods I investigated in this work were: calibration using a commercial off the shelf latching electro-mechanical six way switch, a custom switch board, and a flexible multi channel stripline

I present a trade-study of methods for a 1-port vacuum cryogenic in-situ calibration of a vector network analyzer. The three main methods I investigated in this work were: calibration using a commercial off the shelf latching electro-mechanical six way switch, a custom switch board, and a flexible multi channel stripline based printed circuit board. The test procedure was developed for use in a ground based closed-cycle cryogenic test bench to measure the reflection coefficient of a single port connectorized device under test. The device was installed in the cryogenic system alongside calibration standards. The goal of the trade study was to find which method could be used to accomplish calibration and device measurement in a single thermal cycle. Four cycles were required for industry standard open-short-load device calibration. Room temperature measurements were done with all three calibration schemes but ultimately only the single pole six throw switch proved effective enough for further testing. The cryogenic testing was carried out on an arbitrary device at ∼ 3K temperature, over a 6 GHz bandwidth. The final objective was to develop a setup and procedure for measuring the frequency and temperature dependent complex impedance of superconducting devices such as hot electron bolometer mixers, which are used for down converting the signal in the IF chain of astronomy instruments. Characterization of superconducting devices while they are at their operating temperature is challenging using traditional calibration methods. This commercial alternative is less expensive and more efficient in terms of thermal cycles and set up because it can be installed in a wide variety of cyrogenic systems.
ContributorsNeric, Marko (Author) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Groppi, Chris (Committee member) / Aberle, James (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023