Abstract A series of ultra-small planar broad-band phase shifters with wide range of phase shift are designed and tested in this investigation. To achieve this performance a series of microstrip… Click to show full abstract
Abstract A series of ultra-small planar broad-band phase shifters with wide range of phase shift are designed and tested in this investigation. To achieve this performance a series of microstrip transmission lines with Iron (Fe) films of various thicknesses (from 100 to 800 nm) were designed, fabricated and tested. The basic principle of operation of these phase shifters are based on ferromagnetic resonance (FMR). The influence of the thickness of the magnetic layer was studied for two frequency regions: below and above the ferromagnetic resonance. This is because for a real-device the insertion loss should be less than −3 dB (or as low as possible). In the high frequency region, the optimal frequency (corresponding to the highest change in phase shift) increased significantly with the increase of the Fe film thickness (from 27 GHz for the structure with 100 nm of Fe to 43 GHz for the structure with 800 nm of Fe film). In the low frequency region, however, the optimal frequency varied little with the Fe layer thickness. The highest change in phase shift (~90 deg/cm) corresponded to the structure with the thinnest Fe layer for the low frequency region and with the thickest Fe layer for the high frequency region. In the high frequency region the Figure-of-Merit was about 20 deg/dB at low magnetic fields (
               
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