Title: Indirect optical control of microwave circuits and antennas
1Indirect optical control of microwave circuits
and antennas
- Amit S. Nagra
- ECE Dept.
- University of California Santa Barbara
2Acknowledgements
Ph.D. Committee Professor Robert
York Professor Nadir Dagli Professor Umesh
Mishra ECE Dept. UCSB Dr. Michael
VanBlaricum Toyon Research Corporation Goleta,
CA
MBE material Prashant Chavarkar ECE Dept.
UCSB
AlGaAs Oxidation Jeff Yen Primit Parikh
Varactor loaded lines Professor Rodwell ECE
Dept. UCSB
3Motivation for Optical Control
- Advantages
- Low loss distribution of control signals over
optical fibers - Optical fibers and optical sources have high
bandwidths ? optical control attractive where
high speed is required - Optical fibers are light and compact ? weight and
volume savings crucial for airborne and space
applications - Optical fibers are immune to EMI ? attractive for
secure control (military applications) - Extremely high isolation between microwave
circuit and control circuit - Optical fibers are non-invasive (do not
significantly perturb fields in the vicinity of
radiating structures) ? ideal for control of
antennas - Optical fiber links have been deployed in several
antennas for distribution of the microwave signal
(information to be radiated) ? control signal can
be distributed over same link
4Applications of Optical Control
- Functions / Applications
- Optical control of amplifiers, switches, phase
shifters, filters ? remote control of microwave
antennas and circuits - Optical reference signal distribution, optical
injection locking of microwave oscillators ? beam
scanning arrays, power combining arrays - Optical control of antennas ? reconfigurable and
frequency agile antennas
- Photoconductive antennas
- Illumination of bulk substrates
- Photogenerated plasma acts as radiating surface
- Very versatile
- High optical power requirement
5Applications of Optical Control
- Optically reconfigurable synaptic antenna
- Conductive grid with optically controlled
synaptic elements (switches/reactive loads) - Current path / current amplitude phase on
sections of grid can be varied optically - Efficient use of optical power
- Elements must not require DC bias
6Introduction to Optical Control Schemes
- Desirable properties in an optical control scheme
for microwave circuits and antennas - Low optical power consumption
- Bias free operation for antenna applications
- Sensitive to light in the 600 nm to 700 nm range
where cheap sources are available - Ease of coupling light into device being
controlled - No RF performance penalties for using optical
control
7Direct Optical Control Schemes
Direct control of bulk semiconductor devices
Direct control of junction devices
8Indirect Optical Control Schemes
Indirect control using biased detectors
Indirect control using photovoltaic detectors
9Comparison of Optical Control Schemes
- Photovoltaic control is a bias free technique
that requires low optical power - Most suitable for optical control of microwave
circuits and antennas
10Photovoltaic Control using the OVC
- Key features of the Optically Variable Capacitor
(OVC) - PV array controls reverse bias voltage across a
varactor diode - Varactor junction capacitance can be controlled
optically - No external bias required
- RF block resistor keeps PV array out of microwave
signal path - DC load resistor improves transient response and
enables better voltage control
11Photovoltaic Control using the OVC
- Advantages of the OVC
- Reverse biased varactor dissipates very little
power ? optical power required for control is
small - Optical and microwave functions performed in
separate devices that can be independently
optimized - Varactor diode designed to produce desired
capacitance swing with lowest possible RF
insertion loss - PV array designed to generate desired output
voltage range using the smallest optical power
- Hybrid OVC
- Commercially available PV arrays used to control
discrete varactor diode - Hybrid version of OVC demonstrated in tunable
loop antenna at 800 MHz - Large PV array requires beam shape/ expanding
optics - Transient speed limited by PV array junction
capacitance
12Monolithic OVC
- Motivation for the monolithic OVC
- Small size OVC required for high frequency
circuits/antennas - Miniature PV array matched to fiber spot size for
ease of optical coupling - Small connection parasitics extends the range
of usable frequencies and capacitance values - Monolithic OVC has faster transient response due
to smaller PV array capacitance
- Components for the monolithic OVC
- High Q-factor varactor diode with a minimum 21
capacitance tuning range - Miniature PV array capable of generating greater
than 7 V - RF blocking resistor gt 1 K? to act as broadband
open circuit
13Key Design issues for the Monolithic OVC
- Choice of material system
- GaAs has several desirable properties for the
monolithic OVC - semi-insulating substrate, high-Q varactors,
compatible with MMICs, well developed
photovoltaic technology
- Choice of device technology and integration
techniques - Schottky diodes on n-type GaAs as varactors
- high cut-off frequency, planar design, easily
integrated with circuits - GaAs PN homojunction diodes for PV array
- high open circuit voltages, efficient optical
absorption in band of interest, good conversion
efficiency - Airbridge interconnection scheme
- low connection parasitics, can be used with small
features
14Key Challenges for the Miniature PV arrays
Incompatibility of conventional GaAs PV cell and
Schottky varactor
Failure of mesa isolation under illumination
15Solutions
Developed planar PV cell that shares epitaxial
layers with Schottky varactor
Lateral oxidation of buried AlGaAs layer for
isolation
16Combined Epitaxial Structure
Oxidized sample
Control sample
- Layout of the miniature PV array
- Circular array with pie shaped cells for
effective optical absorption - Contacts on periphery to minimize blockage
- Fabricated using oxidized and control epitaxial
layers shown above
17Fabrication of the Monolithic OVC
(a) Mesa etch and lateral oxidation
(b) Expose top of Schottky mesa
(c) Self aligned N-ohmic contacts
18Fabrication of the Monolithic OVC
(d) Schottky contact
(e) P-ohmic contacts
(f) AR coating and NiCr resistors
19Fabrication of the Monolithic OVC
(g) CPW metal and resistor pads
(h) Air bridge interconnections
20Monolithic OVC Fabricated at UCSB
- Salient features
- 10 cell GaAs PV-array, Schottky varactor diode,
RF blocking resistor, CPW pads integrated on same
wafer - DC load provided by measurement setup or wire
bonded using chip resistor
21Measurement Setup
- Light from 670 nm semiconductor laser diode
coupled into 200 ?m core diameter multi-mode
fiber - Fiber positioned over OVC with fiber probe
mounted on XYZ stage - DC I-V measurements on a semiconductor parameter
analyzer - RF measurements using CPW on wafer probes
attached to a vector network analyzer
22Measured PV array Performance
Control
Oxidized
23Measured PV Array Performance
- Summary
- Substrate leakage reduces output voltage, fill
factor and efficiency of array - Buried oxide effective in eliminating substrate
leakage - Array with oxide has higher open circuit voltage,
fill factor, efficiency and can drive load
impedances more effectively - DC load helps linearize the array response
24Microwave Characterization of the Monolithic OVC
- S-parameter data recorded for different
illumination intensities - Converted to equivalent capacitance by fitting to
series R-C model - Capacitance tuning from 0.85 pF to 0.38 pF
- Only 200 ?W of optical power required for full
tuning range (under 1 M ? external DC load)
25Optically Tunable Band Reject Filter
- Circuit schematic
- Single shunt resonator loaded with the monolithic
OVC for tuning - At resonance, circuit presents short circuit
circuit causing signal to be reflected - By varying the capacitive loading, resonant
frequency can be adjusted
Picture of monolithically fabricated circuit
26Optically Tunable Band Reject Filter
Simulated
Measured
- Rejection frequency tunable from 3.8 GHz to 5.2
GHz (31 tuning range) - No external bias required
- Maximum optical power of 450 ?W for full tuning
range (lowest reported) - Greater than 15 dB of rejection- better rejection
possible by using multiple resonator sections
27Optically Controlled X-band Analog Phase Shifter
Circuit Schematic
- Basic Principle
- Varactor loaded line behaves like synthetic
transmission line with modified capacitance per
unit length - Phase velocity on the synthetic line is a
function of varactor capacitance - By varying the bias, phase delay for a given
length of line can be varied
28Optically Controlled X-band Analog Phase Shifter
Optically controlled phase shifter fabricated at
UCSB
- CPW line periodically loaded with shunt varactor
diodes connected in parallel to preserve circuit
symmetry - All the varactors require identical bias
- Single PV array controls several varactor diodes
simultaneously
29Phase Shift as a Function of Optical Power
Measured
Simulated
- Differential phase shift increases linearly with
frequency (attractive for wide band radar) - Maximum differential phase shift of 175 degrees
at 12 GHz using just 450 ?W of optical power
30Insertion Loss and Return Loss as a Function of
Optical Power
Measured
Simulated
Insertion Loss
Return Loss
31Optically Controlled X-band Analog Phase Shifter
- Summary of phase shifter performance
- Bias free control
- Only 450 ?W of optical power needed (lowest
reported) - Maximum differential phase shift of 175 degrees
at 12 GHz with insertion loss less than 2.5 dB - Return loss lower than -12 dB over all phase
states - Best loss performance for an optically controlled
phase shifter - Loss performance comparable to the state of the
art electronic phase shifters - Demonstrates potential of varactor loaded
transmission lines for linear applications - Further work needs to be done to study ways to
improve the design of varactor loaded lines for
even better performance
32Optical Impedance Tuning of a Folded Slot Antenna
Optically tunable antenna fabricated at UCSB
- Resonant folded slot antenna on GaAs (half
wavelength long at 18 GHz) - Resonant frequency shifted down to 14.5 GHz due
to capacitive loading (OVC) - Tuning of match frequency from 14.5 to 16 GHz
using just 450 ?W of optical power - Lowest reported power requirement for bias free
optical control of antennas
33Characterization of the Transient Response of the
Monolithic OVC
- Intensity modulated light (square wave) used as
input to the OVC - Rise and fall times of optical signal 200 ns
(limited by driver circuit) - OVC output voltage used as measure of response
speed - OVC voltage measured using active probes (1
MegaOhm, 0.1 pF) to prevent loading
34Characterization of the Transient Response of the
Monolithic OVC
Measured data
Simplified models
Rise time
Fall time
35Characterization of the Transient Response of the
Monolithic OVC
- Summary of transient response characterization
- Rise time limited primarily by measurement setup
- unable to verify scaling laws - circuit
response faster than 300 ns - Fall time scales with DC load and total OVC
capacitance - Miniature PV array with small junction
capacitance responsible for improved switching
response compared to hybrid OVC - Possible to obtain switching times faster than 1
microsecond
36Conclusions
- Monolithic OVC effort
- Identified suitable technology for the bias free
control of microwave circuits and antennas - Developed components for the monolithic OVC and
successfully integrated them on wafer - Incorporated the monolithic OVC in microwave
circuits and antennas - Demonstrated bias free optical control using
lowest reported optical power