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Theoretical and Experimental Investigation on the Probe Design of a Ridge-loaded Slot Type for Near-Field Scanning Microwave Microscope

  • Son, Hyeok-Woo (School of Electronics Engineering, Kyungpook National University) ;
  • Kim, Byung-Mun (Division of IT Cooperative Systems, Gyeongbuk Provincial College) ;
  • Hong, Jae-Pyo (Department of Electronics Engineering, Kyungil University) ;
  • Cho, Young-Ki (School of Electronics Engineering, Kyungpook National University)
  • Received : 2015.03.10
  • Accepted : 2015.05.07
  • Published : 2015.09.01

Abstract

In this paper, a rectangular waveguide probe with a ridge-loaded straight slot (RLSS) is presented for a near-field scanning microwave microscope (NSMM). The RLSS is located laterally at the end wall of the cavity and is loaded on double ridges in a narrow straight slot to improve the spatial resolution compared with a straight slot. The probe consists of a rectangular cavity with an RLSS and a feed section of a WR-90 rectangular waveguide. When the proposed NSMM is located at distance of 0.1mm in front of a substrate without patches or strips, the simulated full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the probe improve by approximately 31.5 % compared with that of a straight slot without ridges. One dimensional scanning of the E-plane on a sample under test was conducted, and the reflection coefficient of the near-field scanning probe is presented.

Keywords

1. Introduction

Microwave scanning probes for near-field scanning microwave microscopes (NSMMs) and for nondestructive evaluation have recently attracted much interest [1-8]. However, the resolution of a microwave imaging system is limited by the wavelength because of the diffraction characteristic of waves. NSMM can resolve objects much smaller than the wavelength of the excited wave using the characteristic of an evanescent electromagnetic wave [1]. In the reactive near-field region of an antenna, the field is non-radiated and is localized near the radiator, which is also called an evanescent wave region. The power density can be seen to be totally reactive (purely imaginary). The energies of the magnetic and electric fields are stored. Therefore, this method can be used to generate evanescent waves and to implement a microwave microscopic imaging system. The distance between the sample under test (SUT) and the probe should be as near as possible to ensure that the SUT is in the reactive near-field region, and the size of the probe should be small to achieve higher resolution.

Microwave near-field probes are either broadband or resonant. Broadband probes typically use electromagnetic waveguides, whereas resonant probes normally employ a resonant cavity that is coupled through a sub-wavelength-sized probe. Resonant probes, which employ resonant types of slots [9], are more sensitive because the signal-tonoise ratio in a resonator increases with the resonator quality factor (Q). Thus, they are very efficient in the narrow frequency band for which they are designed. This increase in sensitivity and field strength is accompanied by a narrower frequency band, where the drop in the amplitude depends on Q, which results from the shift in the resonant frequency under different SUT environments [10]. Four independent research groups have designed different resonant probes and have published their works in close succession to one another since 1993 [3-7]. In the present study, a rectangular waveguide probe with a straight slot is designed for a microwave microscope [11, 12]. To improve the spatial resolution for a straight slot, a ridge-loaded straight slot (RLSS) at the end-side wall of a waveguide is presented as a near-field scanning probe. The proposed probe consists of a rectangular waveguide cavity with a RLSS and a feed section of a WR-90 rectangular waveguide. If the length of the cavity and the window-width of the inductive iris are properly adjusted to realize a matching method, the cavity is critically coupled to the slot of the probe while pointing at the substrate of a printed circuit board (PCB). Thus additional screw tuner does not need to be used for fine tunning [11].

The characteristics of the probe, such as the spatial resolution i.e., full width at half maximum (FWHM) and reflection coefficient, are examined using a commercial electromagnetic simulator Ansoft HFSS and compared with those of a straight slot without ridges, which has been conventionally used in waveguide probes [11, 12]. Using a reactive near-field generated by the slot, this probe is located near the SUT and measures the reflection coefficient using a vector network analyzer (VNA) when the location of the probe is varied. In this study, one-dimensional scanning is performed, and the measurement results of a near-field scanning waveguide probe for a PCB with seven 0.5 mm wide metallic strips and three metallic patches with a gap 0.5 mm gap are presented.

 

2. Electric Field Characteristics for an RLSS

In the developed NSMM, a rectangular waveguide probe is designed as a near-field scanning probe. Fig. 1 (a) shows the block diagram of the conventional rectangular waveguide cavity probe with screw tuner for near-field scanning and Fig. 1 (b) shows the block diagram of the proposed rectangular waveguide cavity probe without screw tuner. The proposed probe consists of a rectangular waveguide cavity with a narrow RLSS and a rectangular waveguide feed section. The cavity is coupled through an inductive iris for probe matching. By adjusting the window-width win of the inductive iris at Fig. 2, this probe can excite a specific resonant mode in the RLSS of the cavity. The resonant length lc of the cavity for the dominant mode TE101 is influenced by the admittance of the slot and the inductive iris, and is slightly smaller than 0.5 λg (guided wavelength). If the slot is located at the center of the end-side wall and the direction of the slot is along the x-axis direction, the slot can block the current on the surface of the end-side wall. Near-field enhancement can be observed in the ridge gap area of the proposed straight slot with double ridges. The currents induced on the double ridges of the slot are guided toward the terminals. Charges accumulate at the terminals, which leads to a displacement current across the gap because the terminals are open circuited. This displacement current radiates similar to a Hertzian dipole with length wr [8]. The field distribution in the ridge gap area strongly depends on the width and gap of the ridges. The field at the E-plane edges of the RLSS is enhanced compared with that in the center. This edge enhancement is more pronounced in wider slots, although it occurs only very close to the slot and decays rapidly with the distance. This enhancement originates from the electric field concentration at the sharp conducting edges of the slot [12, 13]. Therefore, when the SUT is in the vicinity of the slot, its evanescent near field is also quite different due to the SUT environment.

Fig. 1.Block diagram of the rectangular cavity probes for NSMM

Fig. 2.Structure diagram of the proposed probe for NSMM

 

3. Design of a Rectangular Waveguide Probe

When the proposed probe is located in front of the SUT as shown in Fig. 3, the normalized input admittance, yin (z = −d) would be those shown in Fig. 4. The distance, ds between the probe and the SUT is 0.1 mm. Table 1 lists the NSMM parameters. The used waveguide is a WR-90 waveguide (width a = 22.86 mm; height b =10.16 mm) and FR-4 ( εr = 4.3, thickness = 1.57 mm) is used as the SUT.

Fig. 3.Waveguide probe and substrate SUT

Fig. 4.SUT Normalized input admittance of the probe in front of the substrate, ds = 0.1 mm.

Table 1.Dimensions of the proposed probe

The normalized input admittance, yin at desired frequency f0 (10.40 GHz) is 2.1843 + j9.6284. At Fig. 5(a), DP1 on Smith chart is the first data point of yin . When the length of the rectangular waveguide (the cavity : WR 90) is properly adjusted, the real part of the normalized input admittance Re[yin (z =−(d+lc)] is approximately “1” like as TP2 on Smith chart. The yin is 0.9844+j6.5125 when the length of the waveguide lc is 0.492 λg (18.27 mm). To realize a matching condition, which means canceling out the capacitive component at the location cl of the proposed probe, a shunt inductive iris ( win = 8.50 mm, d = 1.0 mm) is placed at z =−(d+lc in the rectangular waveguide, as shown in Fig. 2. In Fig. 5(b), the schematic diagram displays the network on Smith chart for the impedance matching of the proposed probe.

Fig. 5.Impedance matching for the normalized input admittance of the probe: (a) Impedance transformation in Smith chart; (b) Schematic diagram which displayed for the network on Smith chart.

Fig. 6 shows the normalized susceptance bind and conductance gind according to window-width win in the WR-90 waveguide. At window-width win< 10 mm and thickness of the iris d = 1.0 mm, the iris operates as a transformer because the normalized conductance gind is not “1” under this condition. Thus, the resonance frequency of the input admittance of the NSMM is shifted near 10.32 GHz. Further window-width win is adjusted to 7.90 mm to realize a matching condition. The reflection coefficients of the proposed probe with RLSS are compared with those of the probe with a straight slot, as shown in Fig. 7. The distance between the probes and the substrate without obstacles is 0.1 mm. The resonant frequency of the probe with a straight slot is 10.25 GHz, and the length of the waveguide cavity lc is 18.27 mm. This length is designed to be the same as that of the proposed probe with RLSS. The inductive iris window-width win should be 9.09 mm.

Fig. 6.Normalized admittance of the inductive iris for the variation of window-width

Fig. 7.Measured reflection coefficient S11 of the probes pointing at the substrate

Fig. 8 shows that the electric field intensity on the SUT has a peak value around the E-plane edge of the straight slot where the incident power is 1 W and ds = 0.1 mm. We note that the electric field intensity of the RLSS is strongly concentrated on the surface of the SUT compared with that in the straight slot. The FWHM of the H-plane is approximately 6.89 mm in both cases. In the E-plane case, the FWHM of the straight slot is 1.5545 mm, whereas that of the RLSS is 1.0627 mm. The spatial resolution of the RLSS has improved to approximately 31.51 %.

Fig. 8.Electric field intensity distribution on the SUT surface. (ds = 0.1 mm)

 

4. Experimental results

Fig. 9 shows the experimental arrangement of the NSMM. In this study, the SUTs are made of a PCB with different patterns of metallic strips and patches. The moving controller of the experimental system is a cross roller stage (MAU XY 8030-C-N), Toptek with the movement accuracy of ±30 μm. An Agilent E8364B VNA is used to measure the reflection coefficient of the probe. The first sample is a PCB with seven 0.5 mm wide metallic strips as shown in Fig. 10. After positioning the probe with gap ds = 0.1 mm between the PCB and the probe when the probe points at the substrate portion of the PCB without strip, the measured frequency responses of the probe are in resonant modes at 10.261 GHz (straight slot case) and 10.330 GHz ( ridge-loaded slot case).

Fig. 9.Experimental equipment arrangement

Fig. 10.Layout of the PCB with seven wide strips

Fig. 11 shows the measured reflection coefficients at the two resonant frequencies (Straight slot : 10.261 and RLSS :10.330 GHz) while the probe is moving in y-axis direction. From these measurement results, we can find that the probe with the RLSS can resolve the two lines at Nos. 3 and 4 in which the gap between these two strips is only 0.5 mm and the dimension of the gap is almost the same as that of the ridged slot. When the probe is located over the strip, the measured reflection coefficient achieves a peak, and Fig. 10 shows that it has seven peaks at the locations of 2.0, 4.0, 5.5, 6.5, 8.0, 10.0, and 12.0 mm, which agree with the locations of the strips. Fig. 11 shows that the other probe with a straight slot has a difficulty resolving these two strips at Nos. 3 and 4 because the slot width ( ws = 1.0 mm) is wider than the gap between these two strips. The second sample is a PCB with three metallic patches with a 0.5 mm gap, as shown in Fig. 12. The areas of the three patches are 0.5 × 0.5 mm2 , 1.0 × 1.0 mm2 , and 1.5 × 1.5 mm2 . The measured frequency responses of the proposed probe are in a resonant mode at 10.330 GHz.

Fig. 11.Measurement results for the SUT in Fig. 10 at resonant frequencies of conventional and proposed probe. : Straight slot : 10.261 and RLSS :10.330 GHz.

Fig. 12.Layout of the PCB with three metallic patches (0.5 mm gap)

Fig. 13 shows that the locations of the three peaks 1.0, 2.0, and 4.0 mm agree with those of the patches. However, the first patch is quite difficult to distinguish because the patch height is small. In the present ridged aperture, the desired spatial confinement of the electromagnetic energy for better resolution can be achieved by reducing the transverse length (along x-axis) of the ridged aperture. This length reduction along x-axis is the decisive role in improving the H-plane resolving power of the probe [14].

Fig. 13.Measurement results for the SUT in Fig. 12 at resonant frequency of 10.330 GHz

 

5. Conclusion

In this study, a microwave microscope system that uses a rectangular waveguide cavity probe has been developed. A RLSS at the end-side wall of a cavity is implemented to enhance the spatial resolution as a near-field scanning probe. To eliminate additional tuners such as a screw tuner, we can select the width of the inductive iris and the length of the cavity for the best resolution to measure the geometric characteristics of the SUT while pointing at the substrate of the PCB. From the measurement results, the geometric structures of the SUT can be identified from the measured reflection coefficient. This method can potentially image the geometric structures of the metallic patterns as a contactless and non-destructive testing tool. Further research in this area will be performed to improve the H-plane spatial resolution of a metallic patch with a small area; therefore, studies on the ridge structure of straight slots will be needed.

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