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Title: Carbon Nanotube Antennas for Wireless Communications


1
Carbon Nanotube Antennas for Wireless
Communications
Jack Winters Jack Winters Communications,
LLC jack_at_jackwinters.com www.jackwinters.com
NJ Coast Section Meeting Sponsored by the
ElectroMagnetic Compatibility/Vehicular
Technology/Antennas Propagation Chapter March
18, 2010
2
Outline
  • Overview of Wireless Trends
  • Carbon Nanotube Antennas
  • Applications to Wireless Communications
  • Conclusions

3
Overview
  • Goal Wireless communications, anywhere, in any
    form
  • Means Standard-based heterogeneous networks,
    since no one wireless network is best in all
    cases
  • Centralized networks cellular/LTE, WiMax
  • Decentralized systems WLANs, Bluetooth, sensor
    networks RFID
  • Multi-mode terminals
  • Small, ubiquitous devices (RFID, smart dust)

4
Wireless System Evolution
  • Cellular
  • 2G GPRS 56-114 kbps
  • 2.5G - EDGE up to 400 kbps (Evolved EDGE 1
    Mbps)
  • 3G
  • HSPA 7.2 Mbps (ATT completed 2009)
  • HSPA 21/42 Mbps
  • LTE/WiMAX/IMT-Advanced 100 Mbps and higher
  • LTE 50 Mbps UL, 100 Mbps DL (deployment in 2012
    by ATT)

(From IEEE Comm. Mag. 1/10)
5
Wireless System Evolution
  • WLAN
  • 802.11n
  • gt100 Mbps in MAC
  • gt3 bits/sec/Hz
  • 802.11ac (lt 6GHz) and 802.11ad (60 GHZ)
  • gt500 Mbps link throughput
  • gt1 Gbps multiuser access point throughput
  • gt7.5 bits/sec/Hz
  • (Network throughput is not addressed)
  • RFID
  • Active and passive tags
  • Read ranges with omni-directional antennas
  • Active tags (433 MHz) - 300 feet
  • Passive tags (900 MHz) - 9 feet

6
Techniques for Higher Performance
  • Smart Antennas (keeping within standards)
  • Range increase
  • Interference suppression
  • Capacity increase
  • Data rate increase using multiple
    transmit/receive antennas (MIMO)
  • Radio resource management techniques
  • Dynamic channel/packet assignment
  • Adaptive modulation/coding/platform (software
    defined radio)
  • Cognitive radio (wideband sensing)

7
Smart Antennas
Adaptive Antenna Array
Switched Multibeam Antenna
SIGNAL OUTPUT
Smart antenna is a multibeam or adaptive antenna
array that tracks the wireless environment to
significantly improve the performance of wireless
systems. Switched Multibeam versus Adaptive Array
Antenna Simple beam tracking, but limited
interference suppression and diversity gain,
particularly in multipath environments Adaptive
arrays are generally needed for devices and when
used for MIMO
8
Key to Higher Data RatesMultiple-Input
Multiple-Output (MIMO) Radio
  • With M transmit and M receive antennas, can
    provide M independent channels, to increase data
    rate M-fold with no increase in total transmit
    power (with sufficient multipath) only an
    increase in DSP. Peak link throughput increase
  • Indoors up to 150-fold in theory
  • Outdoors 8-12-fold typical

9
MIMO
  • LTE/WiMAX/802.11n 2X2, 4X2, 4X4 MIMO
  • 802.11ad (60 GHz)
  • 10 to 100 antennas
  • Phased array
  • On chip
  • 802.11ac (lt6 GHz)
  • 8X4 or 16X2 MIMO gt multiple access
    point/terminal antennas
  • 80-100 MHz bandwidth gt cognitive radio (large
    networks)

10
RFID Adaptive Arrays for Readers and Tags
  • Active and passive tags
  • Read ranges with omni-directional antennas
  • Active tags (433 MHz) - 300 feet
  • Passive tags (900 MHz) - 9 feet
  • Reader can use scanning beam to transmit,
    adaptive array to receive
  • Tag can use adaptive array to receive, then use
    same weights to transmit

11
Issues
  • Large arrays at access point/base
    station/terminal
  • Diversity (for MIMO) in small size
  • 700 MHz
  • Low cost/power signal processing
  • 802.11n up to 4 on card/computer, but only 1 or
    2 at handset
  • Multiplatform (MIMO) terminals, and the need for
    multi-band/conformal/embedded antennas, increase
    the problem
  • Cognitive radio cross-layer with
  • MIMO
  • Wide bandwidth

12
Adaptive Arrays for RFID Tags
  • Tags can be very small devices (single chip),
    making multiple antenna placement an issue
  • At 900 MHz, half-wavelength spacing is 6 inches.

13
Diversity Types
Spatial Separation only ¼ wavelength needed at
terminal (but cant do at 700 MHz) Polarization
Dual polarization (doubles number of antennas in
one location Pattern Allows even closer than ¼
wavelength gt 16 or more on a handset
14
Multiplatform Devices with Smart Antennas
  • Most systems consider only 2 antennas on devices
    (4 antennas in future) because of costly A/Ds and
    size of antennas.

15
Signal Processing Analog/Switching (RF) or
Digital
  • Analog Advantages
  • Digital requires M complete RF chains, including
    M A/D and D/A's, versus 1 A/D and D/A for analog,
    plus substantial digital signal processing
  • The cost is much lower than digital (see, e.g.,
    R. Eickhoff, et al, Developing Energy-Efficient
    MIMO Radios, IEEE VT magazine, March 2009)
  • Switched antennas have even lower cost
  • Digital Advantages
  • Slightly higher gain in Rayleigh fading (as more
    accurate weights can be generated)
  • Temporal processing can be added to each antenna
    branch much easier than with analog, for higher
    gain with delay spread
  • Needed for spatial processing with MIMO
  • gt Use RF combining where possible, minimizing
    digital combining (limit to number of spatial
    streams)

16
Combination of Switching, RF, and Digital
Combining (Hybrid)
Capacity and Complexity Trade-offs in MIMO
AnalogDigital Combining Systems, Xin Zhou, Jack
Winters, Patrick Eggers, and Persefoni Kyritsi,
Wireless Personal Communications, July 24, 2009.
RF combining in addition to digital combining
provides added gain for higher data rates over
larger area with reduced cost
17
Closely-Spaced Antennas - Solutions
  • Metamaterials
  • Closer spacing with low mutual coupling but good
    diversity (pattern) and smaller size with
    directivity (active antennas)
  • Ex Rayspan MetarrayTM
  • 1/6 wavelength spacing
  • 1/10 wavelength antenna length
  • http//www.rayspan.com/pdfs/Metarray_n_data_sheet_
    032607.pdf
  • Netgear has implemented metamaterial antennas in
    their WLANs

40 x 15mm 4 dBi
18
Closely-Spaced Antennas - Solutions
  • Metamaterials (cont.)
  • 1/50th of a wavelength demonstrated
    (http//www.physorg.com/news183753164.html)

19
Closely-Spaced Antennas (cont.)
2) Active antennas Use of MEMs with
metamaterial antennas and carbon nanotube
antennas on graphene substrates Frequency
agility, reducing the number of
antennas Bandwidth/polarization/beampattern
adaptation Low cost, small size/form factor
solution
http//wireless.ece.drexel.edu/publications/pdfs/P
iazza_ElecLtr06.pdf
20
Closely-Spaced Antennas (cont.)
3) Superconductivity Can pull transmitted
power to receiver (requires large currents)
21
4) Carbon Nanotube Antennas
  • Basic features
  • Wave velocity is 1 of free space
  • 1.7 mm (vs. 17 cm) half-wavelength spacing at
    900 MHz
  • 10,000 antennas in same area (106 antennas in
    same volume) as standard antenna
  • gt Very low antenna efficiency but have pattern
    diversity
  • gt Much stronger than steel for given weight
  • Can be integrated with graphene circuitry for
    adaptive arrays
  • One-atom-thick graphite rolled up into cylinder

22
Carbon Forms (1 D. Mast Antenna Systems
Conference 2009)
23
Carbon Nano-Forms 1
24
SWCNT 1
  • Length to width of 108
  • Current density gt metal (3 orders of magnitude
    greater than copper)
  • Strength gt Steel (2 orders of magnitude stronger
    by weight)
  • Thermal Conductivity gt Diamond (1 order of
    magnitude greater than copper)

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileKohlenstoffnanor
oehre_Animation.gif
25
SWCNT Issues 1
  • Small diameter (usually no larger than 2 nm)
  • Short length (usually less than 100 microns)
  • 1/3 metallic and 2/3 semiconductor (without
    control of which kind)
  • Full scale, low cost production
  • Electrical contact to electronics (graphene
    electronics)

26
Structure of SWCNTs 1
27
Implementation
SWCNT pillars connect with array
electronics http//www.ou.edu/engineering/nanotube
/
28
Arrays
  • Graphene electronics
  • 2 orders of magnitude higher electron mobility
    than silicon
  • gt30 GHz transistors demonstrated
  • http//arstechnica.com/science/2010/02/graphene-f
    ets-promise-100-ghz-operation.ars

Antenna Weights
29
SWCNT Radio 1
30
Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes 1
Array on silicon
1.5 mm array
Scanning electron microscope image
One MWCNT antenna 24 nm outer, 10 nm inner
diameter (transmission electron microscope image)
31
Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes Threads 1

32
MWCNT Thread in Radio 1
33
Non-Aligned Carbon Nanotube Antennas
High conductivity and flexibility (2 Zhou,
Bayram, Volakis, APS2009)
  • Non-aligned CNT sheet 3
  • Sheet resistivity

34
Polymer-CNT Patch Antenna Performance 2
  • CNT patch 0.9 Ohm/square
  • Patch antenna 5.6 dB gain (compared to 6.4 dB
    of PEC patch)
  • Radiation efficiency 83

Return loss
Gain
35
Summary and Conclusions
  • Communication systems increasingly need
    electrically small, active antennas
    multiplatform devices with MIMO, small RFIDs
  • Carbon nanotube antennas have unique properties
    including strength, current density, wave
    velocity, and thermal conductivity.
  • They can be connected directly to graphene
    electronics (with high electron mobility) for
    dense adaptive arrays of SWCNT.
  • Many issues to be resolved, but substantial
    innovation opportunity (examples including MWCNT
    threads and non-aligned SWCNT sheets).
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