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Waveguides and transitions provide efficient, low-loss microwave transmission across a target frequency band for space communications and radar. However, traditional waveguide transitions suffer from impedance mismatch, higher-order mode excitation, field distortion, and complex-geometry fabrication constraints. This study addresses these issues by developing a Ku-band low-cost coaxial-to-circular waveguide transition prototype, fabricated by Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF), followed by electroless-metallization. We present a novel coaxial-to-rectangular-to-elliptical-to-circular transition topology with an integrated septum for a split-waveguide structure. The entirely conductive PLA filament-based 3D-printed structure with subsequent silver-epoxy metallization features an E-plane cut halves, employing optimized 3D-printing and geometric design parameters. The hybrid design simplifies manufacturing, streamlines metallization, and enhances RF performance through suppressing higher-order modes by 25 dB, improving return loss to better than - 15 dB, reducing attenuation to as low as 0.145dB/m, minimizing electromagnetic discontinuities, and increasing polarization isolation by 30dB for linearly-polarized applications while ensuring smooth field propagation. The lightweight, cost-effective design enables early testing and highlights future implementation with space-grade materials like PEEK/Ultem that could enable rugged, low-mass alternatives to conventional waveguides. These findings empower a sustainable approach to custom small-scale LEO small-satellite RF systems by using additive manufacturing to reduce costs, material waste, conserve resources, and lower launch mass and energy requirements.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12297325 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-11467-z | DOI Listing |
Nano Lett
September 2025
School of Physics, Hubei Key Laboratory of Gravitation and Quantum Physics, Institute for Quantum Science and Engineering, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, 430074 Wuhan, China.
Dipolar coupling between closely spaced magnetic waveguides enables magnonic directional couplers serving as signal combiners, power splitters, demultiplexers, and more. The wavelength-dependent coupling, combined with the weak nonlinear variation of spin-wave wavelength at constant frequency, introduces power-dependent characteristics of directional couplers. This property has been utilized in magnonic logic elements and other applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Sens
August 2025
Engineering Research Center for Nanophotonics and Advanced Instrument of Ministry of Education; Key Laboratory of Polar Materials and Devices (Ministry of Education); Department of Materials, School of Physics and Electronic Science, East China Normal University, 500 Dongchuan Road, Shanghai 200241,
Acetonitrile is widely used in pharmaceutical and industrial processes, but it is a volatile, flammable, and toxic gas. The rapid detection of trace acetonitrile gas is crucial for industrial production, environmental monitoring, and public safety. This study presents a novel high-performance acetonitrile terahertz (THz) gas sensing system based on a flexible, low-loss Ag/PP THz hollow waveguide (HWG).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTopological photonic crystals are known for their topologically protected edge states, enabling robust and low-loss transmission even in the presence of structural defects or sharp bends. In this study, what we believe to be a novel valley photonic crystal is fabricated and the transition structure interconnecting it with the traditional coplanar waveguide is meticulously designed, successfully realizing efficient coupling between the two. Then, based on the characteristics of topological photonic crystals, a topological power divider is designed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpt Express
March 2025
A compact and scalable mode (de)multiplexer stands as a pivotal component in on-chip mode division multiplexing systems. Subwavelength gratings can flexibly adjust the waveguide refractive index at the subwavelength scale, while inverse design emerges as a promising methodology for optimizing extensive and intricate parameter sets. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate a compact mode (de)multiplexer using inverse-designed subwavelength grating structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSubwavelength gratings serve as a pivotal tool in optical devices, enabling the flexible modulation of the effective refractive index of waveguide modes and modulating the guided mode through intense optical scattering at subwavelength intervals. Nevertheless, the modulation space remains limited. Incorporating phase change materials (PCMs) can achieve significantly higher modulation efficiency.
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