Fundamentals of Microwave Communication PDF
Fundamentals of Microwave Communication PDF
Fundamentals of Microwave Communication PDF
FUNDAMENTALS OF MICROWAVE
COMMUNICATION SYSTEM AND RADAR SYSTEMS
• What is microwave?
• Microwave generation & transmission
• Microwave antenna & propagation
• Typical Microwave communication link
• Advantages & disadvantages of microwave
• Microwave applications
• Introduction to RADAR
• Basic Principle and Operation Of RADAR
• Types of RADAR
• Basic requirements of RADAR
• Applications of RADAR
WHAT IS MICROWAVE?
• Microwaves behaves more like rays of light than ordinary radio waves. Due
to this unique behaviour, microwaves frequencies are classified separately
from radio waves.
WHAT IS MICROWAVE?(CONTINUE)
MICROWAVE GENERATION
• The operation of conventional vacuum tubes and solid state devices is
limited by transit time , Inter-electrode capacitance and lead inductance
effects.
• Thus, the development of new devices was essential to exploit the microwave
frequency region.
• Fortunately, numbers of new principle of operations, such as , velocity
modulation, interaction of electrons with electromagnetic fields,
transferred electron techniques etc have enabled the generation of
microwaves.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
Microwave
Generation
Microwave
Tubes
Travelling
Klystron Magnetrons Wave Tube
(TWT)
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
MICROWAVE TUBES
• Tubes generate and amplify high levels of microwave power more cheaply
than solid state devices.
1. KLYSTRON TUBE : -
• Types
Working :
• Used as an oscillator or high-power amplifiers.
• It makes use of velocity modulation and electron transit time.
• Electron beam moves down tube past several cavities.
• Input cavity is the buncher, output cavity is the catcher.
• Buncher modulates the velocity of the electron beam.
• Electric field from microwaves at buncher alternately speeds and slows electron
beam
• This causes electrons to bunch up
• Electron bunches at catcher induce microwaves with more energy.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
1. KLYSTRON TUBE : -
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
MICROWAVE TUBES
2. MAGNETRONS: -
• High-power oscillator
• Common in radar and microwave ovens.
• Working :
• Cathode in center, anode around outside
• Strong dc magnetic field around tube causes electrons from cathode to
spiral as they move toward anode
• Current of electrons generates microwaves in cavities around outside.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
2. MAGNETRONS: -
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
2. MAGNETRONS: -
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
MICROWAVE TUBES
3. Travelling wave tube (TWT): -
• Generates frequency in the range of 0.5 GHz to 95 GHz.
• It has high gain, high power, larger bandwidth & low noise.
• Used as low noise amplifier in microwave receivers, repeater, communication
satellites, RADAR (airborne, shipborne & ground based).
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
MICROWAVE TRANSMISSION -
• Two wire transmission line used in conventional circuits is inefficient at
microwave frequencies.
• The most common transmission lines are coaxial cable, micro strip lines,
waveguides.
1.Co-axial cable:
• Consists of inner conducting wire made of copper, over this conducting wire
the coating of polyethylene or Teflon material is carried out.
• Then it is enclosed in the braded wire in the shape of mesh. The outer
surface of this wire is enclosed in a plastic jacket.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
• Merits
The possibility of external interference is minimized & output at the load end
will be less noised.
It is used for high frequency transmission.
The conductor is protected from dust, rust etc due to proper insulation.
• Demerits
Costly than two wire line.
Complex design
Handles low power transmissions.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
MICROWAVE TRANSMISSION -
2. Micro strip line:
• A micro strip line is simply a copper track running on a side of the PCB while
the other side is the ground plane.
• There is thick coat of insulating material over the copper plate which is made of
fiber glass or polystyrene. This insulator works as a dielectric in micro strip line.
• At the top of the insulated plate one or more than one strip of the best
conducting material are plated which is made of gold, aluminium etc.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
Merits
Very high frequency.
Small size
Low weight
Losses are minimum.
Used in IC’s where the distance between source and load is very short.
Demerits
Costly than co-axial.
Cannot be used when the distance
between source and load is long.
Cannot be used in twisty path.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
3. Waveguides:
• A Hollow metallic tube of uniform cross section for transmitting electromagnetic
waves by successive reflections from the inner conducting layered walls of the
tube is called waveguide.
• At microwave frequencies (above 1GHz to 100 GHz) the losses in the two line
transmission system will be very high and hence it cannot be used at those
frequencies. Hence microwave signals are propagated through the waveguides
in order to minimize the losses.
MICROWAVE GENERATION & TRANSMISSION (CONT…)
3. Waveguides:
• They are generally of two types: a) Rectangular & b) Circular waveguide
Merits
• Large surface area
• Low losses
• Better power handling capability
Demerits
• Size
• Difficult to install because of its rigid structure.
• costly
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
• MICROWAVE ANTENNA:
• The antenna is a passive device that radiate or receive the modulated signal. It
is fed by direct connect of the RF unit, coaxial cable, or waveguides at higher
frequencies.
• In two-way communication, the same antenna can be used for transmission and
reception.
• Types:
1. Horn Antenna 2.Parabolic Dish Antenna 3. Slot Antenna
4. Micro-strip patch or Printed Antenna
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
• Slot Antenna
• MICROWAVE PROPAGATION:
• Since microwave is used for point-to-point communication, it follows Line-of-
Sight (LOS) propagation.
• Fresnel zone –elliptical area around the LOS between a sender and receiver;
microwaves spread into this area once are generated by an antenna; this area
should be free of any obstacles:
T O R
F1
P
d1 d2
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
• MICROWAVE PROPAGATION:
• The first Fresnel zone is the region where the microwave transmission energy is
the most concentrated.
• With the increase of the Fresnel zone serial numbers, the field strength of the
receiving point reduces as per arithmetic series.
• Formula of the first Fresnel zone radius:
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
• MICROWAVE PROPAGATION:
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
• MICROWAVE PROPAGATION:
1.Tropospheric scatter propagation
• For frequencies above 500 MHz, less delay, 20 Mbps data rate for 100 Km
link.
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
• MICROWAVE PROPAGATION:
• Ionospheric
Propagation:
MICROWAVE ANTENNA & PROPAGATION
Repeater
Repeater
Transmitter
Receiver
ADVANTAGES & DISADVANTAGES OF MICROWAVE
Advantages:
• Increased bandwidth availability
• Improved directive properties
• Fading effect and reliability
• Low power requirements
• Transparency property of microwaves.
• Less interference from nearby applications.
• Fast speed for digital system signal processing and data transmission.
• Difficulty in jamming (military applications).
•
ADVANTAGES & DISADVANTAGES OF MICROWAVE
• Disadvantages:
• More expensive components.
• Reliance on GaAs instead of Si technology.
• Higher component losses and lower output power from active devices.
• Less accurate design tools and less matured technology.
• Line-of-sight will be disrupted if any obstacle, such as new buildings, are in the
way
• Signal absorption by the atmosphere. Microwaves suffer from attenuation due
to atmospheric conditions.
MICROWAVE APPLICATIONS
• The term RADAR was coined in 1940 by the United States Navy as
an acronym for RAdio Detection And Ranging.
• Radar is an object-detection system that uses radio waves to determine the
range, altitude, direction, or speed of objects. It can be used detect aircraft
,ships , missiles, weather formation, and terrain.
• Radar was secretly developed by several nations before and during World
War II.
BASIC PRINCIPLE AND OPERATION OF RADAR
• A radar system has a transmitter that emits radio waves called radar signals in
predetermined directions.
• When these come into contact with an object they are usually reflected or
scattered in many directions.
• Radar signals are reflected especially well by materials of
considerable electrical conductivity
• The Time Delay Between The Transmitted Pulse And The Received Echo Can Be
Used To Determine The Distance To The Target .
R = Ct/2 meters.
BASIC PRINCIPLE AND OPERATION OF RADAR
TYPES OF RADAR
2. Pulse Radar:
• The PULSE radar is the more conventional radar, which transmits a burst of
radar energy and then waits for the energy (or echo) to be reflected back to
the antenna.
• Since radar waves travel at the speed of light, range from the return can be
calculated.
TYPES OF RADAR
2. Pulse Radar:
Comparison