Cavity perturbation theory

Cavity perturbation theory describes methods for derivation of perturbation formulae for performance changes of a cavity resonator. These performance changes are assumed to be caused by either introduction of a small foreign object into the cavity or a small deformation of its boundary.

General theory

When a resonant cavity is perturbed, i.e. when a foreign object with distinct material properties is introduced into the cavity or when a general shape of the cavity is changed, electromagnetic fields inside the cavity change accordingly. The underlying assumption of cavity perturbation theory is that electromagnetic fields inside the cavity after the change differ by a very small amount from the fields before the change. Then Maxwell's equations for original and perturbed cavities can be used to derive expressions for resulting resonant frequency shifts.

Cavity perturbation theory generally relies on formulae involving stored energy considerations. The following sections of this wikipedia pages are based on these formulae. The latter appear intuitive since the common sense dictates that the maximum change in resonant frequency is achieved when the small perturbation is placed at the intensity maximum of the cavity mode. This intuition is valid for high-Q cavities only and when predicting the spectral shift of the resonance frequency. However, the shift is always accompanied by a broadening of the resonance width, i.e. an increase of Q, and it is important to predict it also. The classical formulae based on energy considerations, i.e. on |E.E| products, cannot predict the broadening. For low-Q cavities, such as plasmonic resonators, they cannot predict neither the shift, nor the broadening. Correct formulae that are accurate for high- and low-Q resonators and for the shift and the brodening, have been established in 2015, see Nano Lett. 15 (5), pp 3439–3444 (2015). They are as simple, but use E.E products instead of |E.E| products. Importantly, the phase of the resonant mode is preserved in the new formulae.

Material perturbation

Cavity material perturbation

When a material within a cavity is changed (permittivity and/or permeability), a corresponding change in resonant frequency can be approximated as:[1]

 

 

 

 

(1)

where is the angular resonant frequency of the perturbed cavity, is the resonant frequency of the original cavity, and represent original electric and magnetic field respectively, and are original permeability and permittivity respectively, while and are changes in original permeability and permittivity introduced by material change.

Expression (1) can be rewritten in terms of stored energies as:[2]

 

 

 

 

(2)

where W is the total energy stored in the original cavity and and are electric and magnetic energy densities respectively.

Shape perturbation

Cavity shape perturbation

When a general shape of a resonant cavity is changed, a corresponding change in resonant frequency can be approximated as:[3]

 

 

 

 

(3)

Expression (3) for change in resonant frequency can additionally be written in terms of time-average stored energies as:[4]

 

 

 

 

(4)

where and represent time-average electric and magnetic energies contained in .

This expression can also be written in terms of energy densities [5] as:

 

 

 

 

(5)

Applications

Microwave measurement techniques based on cavity perturbation theory are generally used to determine the dielectric and magnetic parameters of materials and various circuit components such as dielectric resonators. Since ex-ante knowledge of the resonant frequency, resonant frequency shift and electromagnetic fields is necessary in order to extrapolate material properties, these measurement techniques generally make use of standard resonant cavities where resonant frequencies and electromagnetic fields are well known. Two examples of such standard resonant cavities are rectangular and circular waveguide cavities and coaxial cables resonators . Cavity perturbation measurement techniques for material characterization are used in many fields ranging from physics and material science to medicine and biology.[6][7][8][9][10][11]

Examples

rectangular waveguide cavity

A rectangular waveguide cavity with material sample.
Material sample introduced into rectangular waveguide cavity.

For rectangular waveguide cavity, field distribution of dominant mode is well known. Ideally, the material to be measured is introduced into the cavity at the position of maximum electric or magnetic field. When the material is introduced at the position of maximum electric field, then the contribution of magnetic field to perturbed frequency shift is very small and can be ignored. In this case, we can use perturbation theory to derive expressions for real and imaginary components of complex material permittivity as:[12]

 

 

 

 

(6)

 

 

 

 

(7)

where and represent resonant frequencies of original cavity and perturbed cavity respectively, and represent volumes of original cavity and material sample respectively, and represent quality factors of original and perturbed cavities respectively.

Once the complex permittivity of the material is known, we can easily calculate its effective conductivity and dielectric loss tangent as:[13]

 

 

 

 

(7)

 

 

 

 

(8)

where f is the frequency of interest and is the free space permittivity.

Similarly, if the material is introduced into the cavity at the position of maximum magnetic field, then the contribution of electric field to perturbed frequency shift is very small and can be ignored. In this case, we can use perturbation theory to derive expressions for complex material permeability as:[14]

 

 

 

 

(9)

 

 

 

 

(10)

where is the guide wavelength (calculated as ).

Notes

  1. David Pozar, Microwave Engineering, 2nd edition, Wiley, New York, NY, 1998.
  2. Mathew, K. T. 2005. Perturbation Theory. Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering
  3. David Pozar, Microwave Engineering, 2nd edition, Wiley, New York, NY, 1998.
  4. David Pozar, Microwave Engineering, 2nd edition, Wiley, New York, NY, 1998.
  5. Mathew, K. T. 2005. Perturbation Theory. Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering
  6. Vyas, A.D.; Rana, V.A.; Gadani, D.H.; Prajapati, A.N.; , "Cavity perturbation technique for complex permittivity measurement of dielectric materials at X-band microwave frequency," Recent Advances in Microwave Theory and Applications, 2008. MICROWAVE 2008. International Conference on , vol., no., pp.836–838, 21–24 Nov. 2008
  7. Wenquan Che; Zhanxian Wang; Yumei Chang; Russer, P.; , "Permittivity Measurement of Biological Materials with Improved Microwave Cavity Perturbation Technique," Microwave Conference, 2008. EuMC 2008. 38th European , vol., no., pp.905–908, 27–31 Oct. 2008
  8. Qing Wang; Xiaoguang Deng; Min Yang; Yun Fan; Weilian Wang; , "Measuring glucose concentration by microwave cavity perturbation and DSP technology," Biomedical Engineering and Informatics (BMEI), 2010 3rd International Conference on , vol.3, no., pp.943–946, 16–18 Oct. 2010
  9. A. Sklyuyev; M. Ciureanu; C. Akyel; P. Ciureanu; D. Menard; A. Yelon; , "Measurement of Complex Permeability of Ferromagnetic Nanowires using Cavity Perturbation Techniques," Electrical and Computer Engineering, 2006. CCECE '06. Canadian Conference on , vol., no., pp.1486–1489, May 2006
  10. Wang, Z.H.; Javadi, H.H.S.; Epstein, A.J.; , "Application of microwave cavity perturbation techniques in conducting polymers," Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference, 1991. IMTC-91. Conference Record., 8th IEEE , vol., no., pp.79–82, 14–16 May 1991
  11. Ogunlade, O.; Yifan Chen; Kosmas, P.; , "Measurement of the complex permittivity of microbubbles using a cavity perturbation technique for contrast enhanced ultra-wideband breast cancer detection," Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2010 Annual International Conference of the IEEE , vol., no., pp.6733–6736, Aug. 31 2010-Sept. 4 2010
  12. Mathew, K. T. 2005. Perturbation Theory. Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering
  13. Mathew, K. T. 2005. Perturbation Theory. Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering
  14. Mathew, K. T. 2005. Perturbation Theory. Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering

References

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