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Theses and Dissertations

Antenna reconfiguration using electrically actuated liquid-metal pixels


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Date:  Fri, December 01, 2017
Time:  10:30am -
Location:  Holmes Hall 389
Speaker:  Kent Sarabia, candidate for MS, advisor: Dr. Wayne Shiroma

Reconfigurable antennas provide a versatile solution to current demands in wireless communications, where multiple frequency bands are in use. Such antennas can change their properties, such as operational frequency, in response to a dynamic environment. This allows for cost-effective wireless communications systems which would otherwise require a dedicated antenna for every operational frequency band. This thesis presents a technique to realize a frequency-reconfigurable antenna using discrete amounts of electrically actuated liquid metal. The liquid metal functions as a pixel which, when made in an array, can create discrete conductive 2-D structures to use as an antenna.


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