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Participant

Join Date: Nov 2014
Posts: 1

Dielectric Resonator

11/08/2014 4:50 AM

Hi,

recently there was an article in one scientific journal where they claimed that when microwaves are shined on a mixture of dielectric solid (powdered or crystalline) of high dielectric constant, with some liquid, the EM field is much higher, both in the solid and in the liquid, as compared to the case of the same pure liquid. They also did some simulations (see the screenshot attached) where this is visible.

They give some explainations of the effect (microwave scattering, better penetration) but I'm not fully convinced. I have the impression that this is logically conceivable and explicable in terms of basic physics, especially for people who deal with microwaves. Have you ever seen an effect like this? Can you think of any analogy, a situation where this was previously applied? The microwave frequency was ~260 GHz here but I don't think that matters so much. Why does mixing two dielectrics with different dielectric constant will affect the one with lower dielectric constant in a way that it will "contain" more microwave field?

Thanks a lot for any ideas!

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Guru

Join Date: Oct 2008
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#1

Re: dielectric resonator

11/08/2014 10:39 AM

The dielectric constant of a material alters the frequency and character of the microwave energy.

The frequency matters a lot. The higher frequencies are much more sensitive to εr.

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Guru

Join Date: Feb 2008
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#2

Re: Dielectric Resonator

11/14/2014 12:12 PM

Perhaps some form of this could be applied to "stealth" technology?

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