Percorrer por autor "Georgiadis, Apostolos"
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- 5.8 GHz Microstrip antennas and array for microwave power transferPublication . Carvalho, António; Carvalho, Nuno; Pinho, Pedro; Georgiadis, Apostolos; Constanzo, AlessandraWireless power transmission presents itself as being a solution to some common problems of the extensive use of electronic devices such as the removal of parasitic components present in feeding pads and the constant charge of electronic devices without the need of wires. This solution becomes attractive, for example, as a means of increasing the flight time of battery dependent unmanned aerial vehicles. Microstrip antenna due to their ease of manufacturing, low fabrication cost, support of different polarizations and conformability to irregular surfaces and different substrates, seem very advantageous in being used for microwave power transmission. This paper presents a linearly polarized 16-element antenna array with uniform amplitude and phase excitation proposed for power transmission while both a linearly and circularly polarized single element patch are proposed for reception.
- RFID-based wireless passive sensors utilizing cork materialsPublication . Gonçalves, Ricardo; Rima, Sergi; Magueta, Roberto; Pinho, Pedro; Collado, Ana; Georgiadis, Apostolos; Hester, Jimmy; Carvalho, Nuno Borges; Tentzeris, Manos M.This paper presents the design of low-cost, conformal UHF antennas and RFID tags on two types of cork substrates: 1) natural cork and 2) agglomerate cork. Such RFID tags find an application in wine bottle and barrel identification, and in addition, they are suitable for numerous antenna-based sensing applications. This paper includes the high-frequency characterization of the selected cork substrates considering the anisotropic behavior of such materials. In addition, the variation of their permittivity values as a function of the humidity is also verified. As a proof-of-concept demonstration, three conformal RFID tags have been implemented on cork, and their performance has been evaluated using both a commercial Alien ALR8800 reader and an in-house measurement setup. The reading of all tags has been checked, and a satisfactory performance has been verified, with reading ranges spanning from 0.3 to 6 m. In addition, this paper discusses how inkjet printing can be applied to cork surfaces, and an RFID tag printed on cork is used as a humidity sensor. Its performance is tested under different humidity conditions, and a good range in excess of 3 m has been achieved, allied to a good sensitivity obtained with a shift of >5 dB in threshold power of the tag for different humid conditions.
