English

Self-Shielded Topological Receiver Protectors

Applied Physics 2020-04-07 v2

Abstract

Receiver protectors (RPs) shield sensitive electronics from high-power incoming signals that might damage them. Typical RP schemes range from simple fusing and PIN diodes, to superconducting circuits and plasma cells - each having a variety of drawbacks ranging from unacceptable system downtime and self-destruction to significant insertion losses and power consumption. Here, we theoretically propose and experimentally demonstrate a unique self-shielding RP based on a coupled-resonator-microwave-waveguide (CRMW) with a topological defect being inductively coupled to a diode. This RP utilizes a charge-conjugation (C) symmetric resonant defect mode that is robust against disorder and demonstrates high transmittance at low incident powers. When incident power exceeds a critical value, a self-induced resonant trapping effect occurs leading to a dramatic suppression of transmittance and a simultaneous increase of the reflectance close to unity. The proposed RP device is self-protected from overheating and electrical breakdown and can be utilized in radars, reflection altimeters, and a broad range of communication systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1910.04684,
  title  = {Self-Shielded Topological Receiver Protectors},
  author = {Mattis Reisner and Do Hyeok Jeon and Carsten Schindler and Henning Schomerus and Fabrice Mortessagne and Ulrich Kuhl and Tsampikos Kottos},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1910.04684},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

9 pages, 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:40:00.403Z