Planar-Goubau-line components for terahertz applications

Abstract: Terahertz-wave technology has a broad range of applications, including radio astronomy, telecommunications, security, medical applications, pharmaceutical quality control, and biological sensing. However, the sources, detectors, and components are less efficient at this frequency band due to parasitic effects and increased total losses, which hinder the performance of terahertz systems. A common platform for terahertz systems is planar technology, which offers good integration, ease of fabrication, and low cost. However, it also suffers from high losses, which must be minimised to keep the system's performance. A pivotal choice to reduce losses is using power-efficient waveguides, and single-conductor waveguides have shown promisingly high power efficiencies compared to multi-conductor planar waveguides. The planar Goubau line (PGL) is a planar single-conductor waveguide consisting of a metal strip on top of a dielectric substrate which propagates a quasi-transverse magnetic surface wave, similarly to Sommerfeld's wire and the Goubau line, a conducting wire coated with a dielectric layer. Some limitations of the PGL, which complicate the design of components, are the lack of a ground plane and the weak dependence of impedance with the metal strip width of the line. This thesis presents the development of PGL technology and components for terahertz frequencies. It developed design strategies to maximise the power efficiency, using electrically-thin substrates, which drastically drop radiation losses compared to thick substrates. The first PGL calibration standards were developed, which de-embeds the transition needed to excite the propagation mode and sets the calibration plane along the line, allowing the direct characterisation of PGL components. This work also presents several PGL components with a straightforward design procedure, including a stopband filter based on capacitively-coupled λ/2 resonators, an impedance-matched load based on an exponentially-tapered corrugated line, and a power divider based on capacitive-gap coupled lines to a standing wave in the input port. Finally, the PGL was integrated with a microfluidic channel to measure changes in the complex refractive index of a high-loss aqueous sample (water/isopropyl alcohol) as the first step toward a biological sensor.

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