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ASU Researchers Develop New Filter Technology
12/20/2012
Arizona State University
announced New research could offer
better cell reception at lower cost. The secret is a ceramic
filter material developed by Nathan Newman and graduate student Lingtao Liu at
ASU's Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering that can maintain frequency
stability without special cooling. This makes them easier to use in cellphone
base stations.
“They need a very precise
filter to listen to each particular channel in a very busy network,” Newman
said.”The better the quality of those filters, the more cellphones a tower can
support. The number of dropped calls also declines as quality goes up.”
Filters are typically made
from oxide ceramics, but the oxide ceramics currently used in filters do not
have angular rigidity. Newman compared them to a room full of bowling balls.
“If you stood on them, you’d
fall right through because the bowling balls slide right past each other,” he
said. “As microwaves pass through the filter, atoms in the filter material
vibrate against each other and the signal loses energy. But if certain
chemicals are substituted, the material becomes stronger. No one knew why until
now.”
Newman and Liu found that the
special bond acted like Tinker Toys rather than bowling balls.
“Some of the electrons in the
inner shells, those that typically do not take part in bonding, transfer from
one atom to the other to form rigid structures,” said Newman. “This is called
directional d-electroni bonding, similar to the covalent bonds that make
diamonds so hard. This finding allowed Newman and Liu to chose the appropriate
starting material for the filter and investigate additives to keep the filter
on frequency even with temperature changes. Chemicals containing electrons with
a magnetic component made the best additive.”
He explained that some of the
electrons in the inner shells which do not typically take part in the bonding
process can transfer from one atom to the other to create rigid structures. He
noted that when this happens, “filter performance jumps to record high levels.”
While the obvious use is in
cellphone base stations, as spectrum becomes more congested, better filters are
needed in other RF applications, such as defense. “We’ve already started to
give them to defense contractors who are going to try and use them for
listening beyond our borders,” Newman said. “Right now, the enemy thinks we can
only hear so far away, but not if we use super high-performance materials.”
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