학술논문

A Programmable Cryogenic Waveguide Calibration Load With Exceptional Temporal Response and Linearity
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology IEEE Trans. THz Sci. Technol. Terahertz Science and Technology, IEEE Transactions on. 8(4):434-445 Jul, 2018
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Blades
Heating systems
Calibration
Thermal conductivity
Attenuators
Cryogenics
Blackbody
cryogenics
Dicke switched radiometer
fast switching
forced response
linearity
low-noise amplifier (LNA)
material properties
natural decay
programmable
steady-state
thermodynamics
vane attenuator
z-cut crystal quartz
Language
ISSN
2156-342X
2156-3446
Abstract
We have developed a programmable, fast switching, accurate, and miniaturized calibration load for use in millimeter and submillimeter low-noise amplifier characterization, and Earth/planetary science radiometers. The proposed solution uses a thermally conductive waveguide vane attenuator with low thermal mass, integrated heater, and silicon thermometer. In the present design, we utilize a 125-$\mu$ m-thick z-cut crystal quartz vane due to its low dielectric constant (relative to silicon), high cryogenic thermal conductivity, chemical robustness, and small thermal contraction. To provide adequate attenuation, the bottom side of the quartz fabrication wafer has an nm thick resistive Ti metal layer deposited. On the top of the quartz wafer, a pattern of Au is deposited to allow adhesion of the heater resistor, thermometer, and internal heat strap. The z-cut quartz vane is mounted on three low thermally conductive Torlon posts, centered on the maximum E-field, and positioned across the waveguide. With this approach the quartz vane, protruding all the way into the waveguide, approximates a blackbody with a physical temperature T . The design uniqueness lies in the choice of cryogenically suitable materials coupled with detailed thermal analyses and proper miniaturization. When operated in a proportional$-$integral $-$derivative loop, these properties combine to facilitate a programmable calibration load with a switching speed of $\lesssim$10 s. It will be shown that the W-band design operates overmoded to $\sim$230 GHz and that the concept is in principle scalable to terahertz frequencies.