Seminar Announcement
These events are organized by various sub-sets of the IEEE Toronto Section.
The contact person listed below is the volunteer who has arranged this event.
Please use the e-mail link provided if you have any questions, suggestions,
or concerns.
| Title
|
Reconfigurable Multifunctional Antennas
An IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society Distinguished Lecture |
| Speaker
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Prof. Christos G. Christodoulou
ECE Department
University of New Mexico
|
| Day and Time
|
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
at 3:00 pm
|
| Location
|
Room BA 1180
Bahen Centre
for Information Technology
University of Toronto - St. George Campus
40 St. George Street map - code BA |
| Organizer
|
IEEE Electromagnetics and Radiation Joint Chapter |
| Contact
|
Costas D. Sarris, E-mail:
|
| Abstract
|
The requirements for increased functionality, such as direction finding,
radar, control and command, within a confined volume, place a greater
burden in today’s transmitting and receiving systems. A solution to this
problem is the re-configurable antenna. Antennas that can be used for
multiple purposes, that function over several frequency bands and that
can be integrated on a package for mass-production are the ultimate
goals of commercial and defense investigators. Furthermore, applications
of such systems in personal and satellite communications impose the
requirement for elements miniaturized in size and weight.
Key-elements to obtain reconfigurability in many RF circuits are the
Radio-Frequency MicroElectroMechanical Systems (RF-MEMS). Even though
RF-MEMS have been used in the past to reconfigure filters,
phase-shifters, capacitors and inductors, their integration in an
antenna system has been limited as it faces a plethora of issues that
need to be resolved. The absence of reconfigurable RF-MEMS antenna
system and the recent advances in fractal - and especially Sierpinski
gasket- antennas combined with the availability of series cantilever
RF-MEMS switches, sparked the pioneering idea to design a
multiple-frequency antenna that will radiate on-demand the same
radiation pattern at various frequencies. Such a system was designed and
successfully implemented, as the first functional, fully integrated
RF-MEMS reconfigurable self-similar antenna.
In this talk, several reconfigurable antennas are presented and
discussed. The antennas to be presented cover a wide range of designs
such as fractal antennas, triangular antennas, dipoles and monopoles
with variable sleeves. All these antennas make use of MEMS switches, to
make them reconfigurable. Some of the challenges that the designer has
to face in biasing and integrating these switches with the antenna has
are also presented and discussed. |
| Biography
|
Christos G. Christodoulou received his Ph.D. degree in Electrical
Engineering from North Carolina State University in 1985. He served as a
faculty member in the University of Central Florida, Orlando, from 1985
to 1998. In 1999, he joined the faculty of the Electrical and Computer
Engineering Department of the University of New Mexico, where he served
as the Chair of the Department from 1999 to 2005. He is a Fellow member
of IEEE and a member of Commission B of USNC/URSI, Eta Kappa Nu and the
Electromagnetics Academy. He served as the general Chair of the IEEE
Antennas and Propagation Society/URSI 1999 Symposium in Orlando,
Florida, as the co-chair of the IEEE 2000 Symposium on Antennas and
Propagation for wireless communications, in Waltham, MA, and the
co-technical chair for the IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society/URSI
2006 Symposium in Albuquerque.
Currently, he is an associate editor for the AWPL, the International
Journal of RF and Microwave Computer-aided Engineering, and the IEEE
Antennas and Propagation Magazine. He was appointed as an IEEE AP-S
Distinguished Lecturer (2007-2009) and elected as the Vice-Chair for the
Albuquerque IEEE AP/MTT Chapter. He served as a guest editor for a
special issue on “Applications of Neural Networks in Electromagnetics”
in the Applied Computational Electromagnetics Society(ACES) journal, and
as the co-editor of a the IEEE Antennas and Propagation Special issue on
“Synthesis and Optimization Techniques in Electromagnetics and Antenna
System Design” (March 2007). He has published over 290 papers in
journals, conferences, has 11 book chapters and has co-authored 4 books.
His research interests are in the areas of modeling of electromagnetic
systems, reconfigurable systems, machine learning applications in
electromagnetics, and smart antennas.
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