Название | Magnetic Resonance Microscopy |
---|---|
Автор произведения | Группа авторов |
Жанр | Химия |
Серия | |
Издательство | Химия |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9783527827251 |
Figure 2.1 TE01δ mode of a cylindrical resonator: field-line schematic and notations.
2.3.1 Dielectric Cylindrical Resonator Modes
Describing the eigenmodes of dielectric structures relies on a similar methodology as for metallic cavities. Here we focus on resonators with circular cross sections, therefore all the equations will be expressed in a cylindrical coordinates system (ρ, θ, y) with ρ the radius, θ the azimuth, and y the altitude. ρ and θ relate to the Cartesian coordinates system (x, y, z) according to
We start with the Helmholtz equation, in a source-free, linear, homogeneous, and isotropic medium, verified by the electric E and magnetic H fields denoted indifferently U [20, p. 16]. ω is the angular frequency, μ the medium permeability,
Assuming that the longitudinal component Uy can be written as the product of three functions, one for each space coordinate (in a cylindrical coordinates system in this case), the method of separation of variables allows the partial differential equation to be transformed into three independent ordinary differential equations [18]. The boundary conditions of the cavity, imposing the continuity of the tangential field components at interfaces, are then used to solve these new equations. The contributions of the axial components Uy are then separated from the transverse ones UT. The last equation for which Uy is the solution can then be solved independently in Ey, Hy, ky, and kρ. The expressions for the other field components are deduced by applying the Maxwell equations, with the resulting expressions in Equation 2.2.
Here we add another simplification and consider only TE modes, meaning that the axial electric field component, Ey, is equal to zero everywhere. In this case, the mode field distribution is deduced from the solution Hy of Equation 2.1.
As an example, let us consider the TE modes of a disk resonator with radius r, height L, and its symmetry axis corresponding to the y-axis. Solving the above-mentioned problem leads to a solution inside the resonator of the form described in Equation 2.3 (magnetic field axial component inside the disk resonator for the TE modes) with A the amplitude coefficient, n an integer describing the azimuthal mode order, ϕ and ψ constant phase shifts deduced from the boundary conditions, and Jn the Bessel function of the first kind and order n.
If the resonant structure has metallic borders, boundary conditions impose the field cancellation at the interfaces:
In ρ = r, the tangential components of the magnetic field vanish, for example Hy, which quantifies the radial wavenumber: (2.4)with xnm the m-th zeros of the n-th order Bessel function. This boundary condition gives the radial variation order m, which is an integer.
In the magnetic field tangential components vanish, for example Hρ, which quantifies the axial wavenumber:
with p an integer defining the axial variation order.
For a metallic cavity, the mode variations are quantified by three integers, n, m, and p, and is therefore named TEnmp.