Sebastian Mann
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Sebastian Mann.
IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques | 2013
Gabor Vinci; Stefan Lindner; Francesco Barbon; Sebastian Mann; M. Hofmann; Alexander Duda; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
A novel remote respiration and heartbeat monitoring sensor is presented. The device is a monostatic radar based on a six-port interferometer operating a continuous-wave signal at 24 GHz and a radiated power of less than 3
Sensors | 2016
Alexander Koelpin; Fabian Lurz; Sarah Linz; Sebastian Mann; Christoph Will; Stefan Lindner
\mu\hbox{W}
international microwave symposium | 2013
Stefan Lindner; Francesco Barbon; Sebastian Mann; Gabor Vinci; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
. Minor mechanical movements of the patients body caused by the respiration as well as hearbeat can be tracked by analyzing the phase modulation of the backscattered signal by means of microwave interferometry with the six-port network. High-distance measurement accuracy in the micrometer scale as well as low system complexity are the benefits of the six-port receiver. To verify the performance of the system, different body areas have been observed by the six-port radar. The proposed system has been tested and validated by measurement results.
Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering | 2013
Sarah Linz; Gabor Vinci; Sebastian Mann; Stefan Lindner; Francesco Barbon; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
Microwave technology plays a more important role in modern industrial sensing applications. Pushed by the significant progress in monolithic microwave integrated circuit technology over the past decades, complex sensing systems operating in the microwave and even millimeter-wave range are available for reasonable costs combined with exquisite performance. In the context of industrial sensing, this stimulates new approaches for metrology based on microwave technology. An old measurement principle nearly forgotten over the years has recently gained more and more attention in both academia and industry: the six-port interferometer. This paper reviews the basic concept, investigates promising applications in remote, as well as contact-based sensing and compares the system with state-of-the-art metrology. The significant advantages will be discussed just as the limitations of the six-port architecture. Particular attention will be paid to impairment effects and non-ideal behavior, as well as compensation and linearization concepts. It will be shown that in application fields, like remote distance sensing, precise alignment measurements, as well as interferometrically-evaluated mechanical strain analysis, the six-port architecture delivers extraordinary measurement results combined with high measurement data update rates for reasonable system costs. This makes the six-port architecture a promising candidate for industrial metrology.
international microwave symposium | 2014
Sebastian Mann; Stefan Lindner; Fabian Lurz; Francesco Barbon; Sarah Linz; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
This publication shows an approach for absolute, unambiguous distance measurements with a Six-Port radar at 24 GHz. Such an interferometric radar has the drawback of ambiguity problem concerning phase, limiting the measuring distance to half of the used wavelength. This can be solved with the presented dual tone system using the resulting beat frequency between two tones to determine an absolute position within even several wavelengths. In the following, this system will be presented along with simulations and measurements proving the concept.
instrumentation and measurement technology conference | 2016
Fabian Lurz; Stefan Lindner; Sebastian Mann; Sarah Linz; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
The Six-port receiver has been intensively investigated in the last decade to be implemented as an alternative radar architecture. Plenty of current scientific publications demonstrate the effectiveness and versatility of the Six-port radar for special industrial, automotive, and medical applications, ranging from accurate contactless vibration analysis, through automotive radar calibration, to remote breath and heartbeat monitoring. Its highlights, such as excellent phase discrimination, trivial signal processing, low circuit complexity, and cost, have lately drawn the attention of companies working with radar technology. A joint project involving the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg and InnoSenT GmbH (Innovative Sensor Technology) led to the development of a highly accurate, compact, and versatile Six-port radarmodule aiming at a reliable high-integration of all subcomponents such as antenna, Six-port front-end, baseband circuitry, and digital signal processing in one single package. Innovative aspects in the RF front-end design as well as in the integration strategy are hereby presented, together with a system overview and measurement results.
international microwave symposium | 2015
Sarah Linz; Fabian Lurz; Michael Sporer; Stefan Lindner; Sebastian Mann; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
Position measurement plays an important role in industrial process technology. Hereby, a waveguide based position sensor system for industrial applications is described. The proposed system features a Phase Locked Loop controlled 24 GHz signal source, an interferometric Six-Port receiver structure, a radar coupler, and a terminated quasi-TEM parallel plate waveguide structure. Furthermore, the system concept comprises a target, which can be applied both touching and contactless in the waveguides fringing field, reflecting a part of the transmitted wave. To obtain the targets position information, the reflected wave is compared to a reference signal with respect to the relative phase difference. Hence, this phase shift is directly related to the position information.
topical conference on antennas and propagation in wireless communications | 2013
Sebastian Mann; Gabor Vinci; Stefan Lindner; Sarah Linz; Francesco Barbon; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
Surface acoustic wave (SAW) resonators are used for a broad range of wireless sensing applications, some of them having high demands on the resolution as well as the measurement update rate. This paper presents a new interrogation method for precise and fast frequency determination of passive SAW resonators based on instantaneous frequency measurement (IFM) by a low-cost Six-Port interferometer. By using a delay line, the frequency measurement is reduced to a phase measurement that can be instantaneously evaluated by the Six-Port network. No complex signal processing is necessary providing high update rates and low hardware costs. A demonstrator in the 2.4 GHz frequency band shows the feasibility and the precision of the concept with measurement times of only a few microseconds.
topical conference on wireless sensors and sensor networks | 2016
Kamil Staszek; Sarah Linz; Fabian Lurz; Sebastian Mann; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
This work introduces a precise measurement setup for displacement analysis in the near field of a tapered slot-line antenna from 0mm up to 20mm distance. Enhanced accuracy is achieved by a dedicated spiral reconstruction algorithm accounting for the near field effects. Moreover, the precision of the system in the micrometer range is guaranteed by four synchronous 24 bit analog-to-digital converters and a decimation factor of 10, leading to an overall update rate of 1 kHz.
topical conference on wireless sensors and sensor networks | 2015
Stefan Lindner; Francesco Barbon; Sarah Linz; Fabian Lurz; Sebastian Mann; Robert Weigel; Alexander Koelpin
Range detection is an challenging task, especially if high accuracy has to be reached. The hereby proposed 61 GHz continuous wave radar system is based on a phase detector using Six-Port technique. For accuracy enhancement an improved isolation radar coupler has been introduced for broadband frequency modulated continuous wave radar as well as narrow band radar techniques. Furthermore, a Six-Port network based on four hybrid couplers is presented. Finally, the most important system sub-components have been validated by measurements.