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Dive into the research topics where Vincent Fusco is active.

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Featured researches published by Vincent Fusco.


IEEE Transactions on Education | 2003

Understanding and measuring circular polarization

Bee Yen Toh; Robert Cahill; Vincent Fusco

Many modern satellite and terrestrial point-to-point communications systems use circular polarization (CP) wave propagation in order to maximize the polarization efficiency component of the link budget. Therefore, in an undergraduate electromagnetics syllabus, an introduction to the topic of circular polarization is necessary to promote an understanding of the propagation aspects of modern communications system design. Students new to the antennas and propagation discipline often have difficulty in grasping the concept of CP; therefore, in this paper, the essential aspects of this topic are reinforced by a tutorial description of CP in terms of wave propagation, antenna properties, and measurement techniques. A simple laboratory-based project is described that requires the design, fabrication, and measurement of a crossed dipole antenna. The measured input impedance and radiation patterns are correlated with theory to highlight the conditions necessary to support CP wave propagation. By combining basic electromagnetic concepts with a series of simple intuitive laboratory experiments, the students can more easily visualize, and hence understand, CP wave propagation and its use in communications systems design.


IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | 2008

Design and Measurement of Reconfigurable Millimeter Wave Reflectarray Cells With Nematic Liquid Crystal

W. Hu; Robert Cahill; José A. Encinar; Raymond Dickie; Harold Gamble; Vincent Fusco; N. Grant

Numerical simulations are used to study the electromagnetic scattering from phase agile microstrip reflectarray cells which exploit the voltage controlled dielectric anisotropy property of nematic state liquid crystals (LCs). In the computer model two arrays of equal size elements constructed on a 15 mum thick tuneable LC layer were designed to operate at center frequencies of 102 GHz and 130 GHz. Micromachining processes based on the metallization of quartz/silicon wafers and an industry compatible LCD packaging technique were employed to fabricate the grounded periodic structures. The loss and the phase of the reflected signals were measured using a quasi-optical test bench with the reflectarray inserted at the beam waist of the imaged Gaussian beam, thus eliminating some of the major problems associated with traditional free-space characterization at these frequencies. By applying a low frequency AC bias voltage of 10 V, a 165deg phase shift with a loss 4.5-6.4 dB at 102 GHz and 130deg phase shift with a loss variation between 4.3-7 dB at 130 GHz was obtained. The experimental results are shown to be in close agreement with the computer model.


IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | 2010

325 GHz Single Layer Sub-Millimeter Wave FSS Based Split Slot Ring Linear to Circular Polarization Convertor

M. Euler; Vincent Fusco; Robert Cahill; Raymond Dickie

A single layer, frequency selective surface based, sub-millimeter wave transmission polarizer is presented that converts incident slant linear 45° polarization into circular polarization upon transmission. The polarization convertor consists of a 30 mm diameter 10 thick silicon reinforced metalized screen containing 2700 resonator cells and perforated with nested split ring slot apertures. The screen was designed and optimized using CST Microwave Studio and predictions were validated experimentally by transmission measurements over the 250-365 GHz frequency range. This frequency range is used for remote environmental monitoring and 325 GHz represents a molecular emission line for H2O. The results obtained show good agreement between measured and modeled predictions. The measured 3 dB axial ratio bandwidth was 11.75%, measured minimum Axial Ratio was 0.19 dB and the measured insertion loss of the single layer screen was 3.38 dB.


IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters | 2007

Liquid Crystal Tunable mm Wave Frequency Selective Surface

W. Hu; Raymond Dickie; Robert Cahill; Harold Gamble; Yusof Ismail; Vincent Fusco; David Linton; N. Grant; S.P. Rea

A frequency selective surface (FSS) which exploits the dielectric anisotropy of liquid crystals to generate an electronically tunable bandpass filter response at D Band (110-170 GHz) is presented. The device consists of two printed arrays of slot elements which are separated by a 130-mum thick layer of liquid crystals. A 3% shift in the filter passband occurs when the substrate permittivity is increased by applying a control signal of 10 V. Measured results show that the insertion loss increases from -3.7 dB to -10.4 dB at resonance (134 GHz), thus demonstrating the potential to create a FSS which can be switched between a transmitting and a reflecting structure.


IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | 2009

94 GHz Dual-Reflector Antenna With Reflectarray Subreflector

W. Hu; Manuel Arrebola; Robert Cahill; José A. Encinar; Vincent Fusco; Harold Gamble; Yuri Alvarez; Fernando Las-Heras

The design, construction and measured performance is described of an offset parabolic reflector antenna which employs a reflectarray subreflector to tilt the focused beam from the boresight direction at 94 GHz. An analysis technique based on the method of moments (MoM) is used to design the dual-reflector antenna. Numerical simulations were employed to demonstrate that the high gain pattern of the antenna can be tilted to a predetermined angle by introducing a progressive phase shift across the aperture of the reflectarray. Experimental validation of the approach was made by constructing a 28 times 28 element patch reflectarray which was designed to deflect the beam 5deg from the boresight direction in the azimuth plane. The array was printed on a 115 mum thick metal backed quartz wafer and the radiation patterns of the dual reflector antenna were measured from 92.6-95.5 GHz. The experimental results are used to validate the analysis technique by comparing the radiation patterns and the reduction in the peak gain due to beam deflection from the boresight direction. Moreover the results demonstrate that this design concept can be developed further to create an electronically scanned dual reflector antenna by using a tunable reflectarray subreflector.


IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | 2012

Anisotropic Impedance Surfaces for Linear to Circular Polarization Conversion

Efstratios Doumanis; George Goussetis; José Luis Gómez-Tornero; Robert Cahill; Vincent Fusco

Anisotropic impedance surfaces are employed as low-profile and broadband reflectors that convert orthogonal linear to right- and left-handed circular polarization respectively. By virtue of anisotropy, it is possible to independently control the reflection characteristics of two orthogonal linearly polarized incident plane waves and therefore achieve linear to circular polarization conversion. Equivalent circuits for anisotropic impedance surfaces with arbitrarily shaped elements are employed to demonstrate the operating principle and a design procedure is proposed. The proposed design procedure is demonstrated by means of an example involving a dipole array. A prototype is designed and its performance characteristics are evaluated. The 3-dB relative axial ratio bandwidth exceeds 60%, while low loss and angular stability are also reported. Numerical and experimental results on a fabricated prototype are presented to validate the synthesis and the performance.


IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | 2009

A Novel Quad-Polarization Agile Patch Antenna

Fabien Ferrero; Cyril Luxey; Robert Staraj; Gilles Jacquemod; Matthew J. Yedlin; Vincent Fusco

In this communication we present a novel polarization-agile microstrip antenna design. To dynamically change the polarization state, the radiating patch is fed by a tunable quasi-lumped coupler. The whole structure can be dynamically altered to radiate electromagnetic waves with vertical linear, horizontal linear, right-handed circular or left-handed circular polarization simply by changing the operating mode of the quasi-lumped coupler. Due to its topology the coupler is simply reconfigured by switching the bias of two varactor diodes via a very simple DC bias circuitry: no additional capacitors or inductors are required. A prototype is fabricated with a 0.762-mm-thick upper layer substrate for the radiating element and a 0.130-mm-thick layer substrate for the coupler circuit, both with the same dielectric material relative permittivity of 2.22. The simulated and measured scattering parameters, the axial ratio in circular radiation-mode and the cross-polarization level in linear mode, the gain and the radiation patterns are presented. The agile polarization capabilities of this new antenna, as demonstrated in this communication, underscore its suitability for modern wireless communications in a multi-path propagation environment.


IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology | 2011

THz Frequency Selective Surface Filters for Earth Observation Remote Sensing Instruments

Raymond Dickie; Robert Cahill; Vincent Fusco; Harold Gamble; Neil Mitchell

The purpose of this paper is to review recent developments in the design and fabrication of Frequency Selective Surfaces (FSS) which operate above 300 GHz. These structures act as free space electromagnetic filters and as such provide passive remote sensing instruments with multispectral capability by separating the scene radiation into separate frequency channels. Significant advances in computational electromagnetics, precision micromachining technology and metrology have been employed to create state of the art FSS which enable high sensitivity receivers to detect weak molecular emissions at THz wavelengths. This new class of quasi-optical filter exhibits an insertion loss <;0.3 dB at 700 GHz and can be designed to operate independently of the polarization of the incident signals at oblique incidence. The paper concludes with a brief overview of two major technical advances which will greatly extend the potential applications of THz FSS.


IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems | 2007

Inverse Class-E Amplifier With Transmission-Line Harmonic Suppression

T. Mury; Vincent Fusco

This paper reports on the design methodology and experimental characterization of the inverse class-E power amplifier. A demonstration amplifier with excellent second and third harmonic-suppression levels has been designed, constructed, and measured. The circuit fabricated using a 1.2-mm gate-width GaAs MESFET is shown to be able to deliver 22-dBm output power at 2.3 GHz. The amplifier achieve a peak power-added efficiency of 64% and drain efficiency of 69%, and exhibits 11.6 dB power gain when operated from a 3-V supply voltage. Comparisons of simulated and measured results are given with good agreement between them being obtained. Experimental results are presented for the amplifiers response to Gaussian minimum shift keying modulation, where a peak error vector modulation value of 0.6% is measured.


IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation | 2005

Spatial demultiplexing in the submillimeter wave band using multilayer free-standing frequency selective surfaces

Raymond Dickie; Robert Cahill; Harold Gamble; Vincent Fusco; Alexander Schuchinsky; N. Grant

In this paper, we show that a multilayer freestanding slot array can be designed to give an insertion loss which is significantly lower than the value obtainable from a conventional dielectric backed printed frequency selective surface (FSS). This increase in filter efficiency is highlighted by comparing the performance of two structures designed to provide frequency selective beamsplitting in the quasioptical feed train of a submillimeter wave space borne radiometer. A two layer substrateless FSS providing more than 20 dB of isolation between the bands 316.5-325.5 GHz and 349.5-358.5 GHz, gives an insertion loss of 0.6 dB when the filter is orientated at 45/spl deg/ incidence in the TM plane, whereas the loss exhibited by a conventional printed FSS is in excess of 2 dB. A similar frequency response can be obtained in the TE plane, but here a triple screen structure is required and the conductor loss is shown to be comparable to the absorption loss of a dielectric backed FSS. Experimental devices have been fabricated using a precision micromachining technique. Transmission measurements performed in the range 250-360 GHz are in good agreement with the simulated spectral performance of the individual periodic screens and the two multilayer freestanding FSS structures.

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Dive into the Vincent Fusco's collaboration.

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Robert Cahill

Queen's University Belfast

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Neil Buchanan

Queen's University Belfast

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Raymond Dickie

Queen's University Belfast

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Harold Gamble

Queen's University Belfast

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Dmitry Zelenchuk

Queen's University Belfast

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Yuan Ding

Queen's University Belfast

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Mury Thian

Queen's University Belfast

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N. Grant

Queen's University Belfast

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