Nano Explorations: Towards High-Angular-Resolution Radar Imaging at Sub-THz—Oct. 11

Towards High-Angular-Resolution Radar Imaging at Sub-THz

Tuesday, October 11, 2022
11 a.m. – 11:45 a.m. EDT
>>Register for this Zoom webinar.

Xibi Chen, PhD candidate
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science

Ultra-sharp beam forming in high-angular-resolution imaging poses overwhelming challenges to conventional radar hardware schemes. To achieve 1-degree response in both azimuth and elevation directions, the aperture size required at 77GHz is as large as hundreds of cm². Data conversion and processing also need to apply to over 100 signal channels in commonly adopted MIMO operations. The formed angular response also often has high sidelobe floors, making the radar susceptible to false detection.

In this talk, Chen will discuss a technology path utilizing sub-THz carrier frequencies. Through tiled 22nm CMOS reflectarray chips at 265GHz, 98×98 electrically-controlled antennas are densely implemented within ~5×5cm² area. Through under-antenna memory, the hardware enables 2D steering of a 1-degree-wide beam with < -30dB sidelobe floor (or < -60dB if used for both TX and RX).

A high-angular-resolution imaging demo based on the reflectarray will be shared. Chen will present challenges and solutions for the sub-THz transceiver that drives the above reflectarray, especially regarding the TX-RX antenna co-location requirement to avoid TX and RX beam misalignment. To that end, a monostatic transceiver prototype that is free of the normal 6dB directional will be discussed.

Attendees can join and participate in the series via Zoom. 

>>See the upcoming schedule and watch past talks.