Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator

Microstrip ring resonator (MRR) is known for dielectric constant determination and many studies used Teflon as a standard sample. However, there are many other materials available which able to perform better or equivalence as the Teflon in calibrating certain dielectric constant measurement. This p...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Low, Pek Jin, Esa, Fahmiruddin, You, Kok Yeow, Abbas, Zulkifly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTHM Publisher 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/4737/1/AJ%202017%20%28604%29.pdf
http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/4737/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.uthm.eprints.4737
record_format eprints
spelling my.uthm.eprints.47372021-12-16T02:33:55Z http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/4737/ Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator Low, Pek Jin Esa, Fahmiruddin You, Kok Yeow Abbas, Zulkifly QC Physics TK5101-6720 Telecommunication. Including telegraphy, telephone, radio, radar, television TP1080-1185 Polymers and polymer manufacture Microstrip ring resonator (MRR) is known for dielectric constant determination and many studies used Teflon as a standard sample. However, there are many other materials available which able to perform better or equivalence as the Teflon in calibrating certain dielectric constant measurement. This paper presents simulation of the MRR to investigate frequency shift of materials for dielectric constant estimation using the CST STUDIO SUITE 2016 software. The MRR was designed on RT/Duroid®5880 substrate (εr = 2.2, tanδ = 0.0004) with 50 Ω matching impedance where microstrip width, substrate thickness and ring mean radius were 4.893, 1.575 and 14 mm, respectively to resonate at 2.65340 GHz. Teflon, Polyimide, Isola FR408, Arlon AD250, Arlon AD270 and Gil GML1032 were alternately selected to be placed on top of the MRR as a standard sample to obtain the frequency shift. The frequency shifts for the above materials were 2.56932, 2.46149, 2.44680, 2.53748, 2.52007 and 2.48608 GHz, correspondingly. The differences in frequency shift were used in NetBeans IDE 8.1 algorithm of Java for dielectric constant calculation. The results indicated that Polyimide and Arlon AD250 had the lowest and highest mean percentage error of 0.83536 and 1.76505 %, respectively. Hence, Polyimide might as well be the most suitable candidate as a standard sample in MRR technique for dielectric constant measurement. UTHM Publisher 2017 Article PeerReviewed text en http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/4737/1/AJ%202017%20%28604%29.pdf Low, Pek Jin and Esa, Fahmiruddin and You, Kok Yeow and Abbas, Zulkifly (2017) Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator. Journal of Science and Technology, 9 (3). pp. 55-59. ISSN 2229-8460
institution Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia
building UTHM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia
content_source UTHM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/
language English
topic QC Physics
TK5101-6720 Telecommunication. Including telegraphy, telephone, radio, radar, television
TP1080-1185 Polymers and polymer manufacture
spellingShingle QC Physics
TK5101-6720 Telecommunication. Including telegraphy, telephone, radio, radar, television
TP1080-1185 Polymers and polymer manufacture
Low, Pek Jin
Esa, Fahmiruddin
You, Kok Yeow
Abbas, Zulkifly
Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
description Microstrip ring resonator (MRR) is known for dielectric constant determination and many studies used Teflon as a standard sample. However, there are many other materials available which able to perform better or equivalence as the Teflon in calibrating certain dielectric constant measurement. This paper presents simulation of the MRR to investigate frequency shift of materials for dielectric constant estimation using the CST STUDIO SUITE 2016 software. The MRR was designed on RT/Duroid®5880 substrate (εr = 2.2, tanδ = 0.0004) with 50 Ω matching impedance where microstrip width, substrate thickness and ring mean radius were 4.893, 1.575 and 14 mm, respectively to resonate at 2.65340 GHz. Teflon, Polyimide, Isola FR408, Arlon AD250, Arlon AD270 and Gil GML1032 were alternately selected to be placed on top of the MRR as a standard sample to obtain the frequency shift. The frequency shifts for the above materials were 2.56932, 2.46149, 2.44680, 2.53748, 2.52007 and 2.48608 GHz, correspondingly. The differences in frequency shift were used in NetBeans IDE 8.1 algorithm of Java for dielectric constant calculation. The results indicated that Polyimide and Arlon AD250 had the lowest and highest mean percentage error of 0.83536 and 1.76505 %, respectively. Hence, Polyimide might as well be the most suitable candidate as a standard sample in MRR technique for dielectric constant measurement.
format Article
author Low, Pek Jin
Esa, Fahmiruddin
You, Kok Yeow
Abbas, Zulkifly
author_facet Low, Pek Jin
Esa, Fahmiruddin
You, Kok Yeow
Abbas, Zulkifly
author_sort Low, Pek Jin
title Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
title_short Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
title_full Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
title_fullStr Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
title_sort estimation of dielectric constant for various standard materials using microstrip ring resonator
publisher UTHM Publisher
publishDate 2017
url http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/4737/1/AJ%202017%20%28604%29.pdf
http://eprints.uthm.edu.my/4737/
_version_ 1738581292268650496
score 13.211869