Frequency-Temperature sensitivity reduction with optimized microwave Bragg resonators
Abstract
Dielectric resonators are employed to build state-of-the-art low-noise and high- stability oscillators operating at room and cryogenic temperatures. A resonator temperature coefficient of frequency is one criterion of performance. This paper reports on predictions and measurements of this temperature coefficient of frequency for three types of cylindrically-symmetric Bragg resonators operated at microwave frequencies. At room temperature, microwave Bragg resonators have the best potential to reach extremely high Q-factors. Research has been conducted over the last decade on modeling, optimizing and realizing such high Q-factor devices for applications such as filtering, sensing, and frequency metrology. We present an optimized design, which has a temperature sensitivity 2 to 4 times less than current whispering gallery mode resonators without using temperature compensating techniques and about 30% less than other existing Bragg resonators. Also, the performance of a new generation single-layered Bragg resonators, based on a hybrid-Bragg-mode, is reported with a sensitivity of about -12ppm/K at 295K. For a single reflector resonator, it achieves a similar level of performance as a double-Bragg-reflector resonator but with a more compact structure and performs six times better than whispering-gallery-mode resonators. The hybrid resonator promises to deliver a new generation of high-sensitivity sensors and high-stability room-temperature oscillators.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1701.01600,
title = {Frequency-Temperature sensitivity reduction with optimized microwave Bragg resonators},
author = {Jean-Michel Le Floch and Christopher Murphy and John Gideon Hartnett and Valerie Madrangeas and Jerzy Krupka and Dominique Cros and Michael Edmund Tobar},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1701.01600},
year = {2017}
}
Comments
24 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, journal article