Search

Materials and Coatings
An artist illustration depicting the I-MIM mission concept. Low and to the left, an orbiter passes above the Martian surface, detecting buried water ice through a radar instrument and large reflector antenna. Credit: NASA
Waveguide-based Dielectric and Magnetic Property Measurement
This NASA invention utilizes a simple waveguide-based measurement system to determine the complex dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability of arbitrary-shaped planetary rock samples. The system operates at L-band frequencies (~1 GHz) and can be extended to P- and S-bands for broader applications. The approach involves placing an arbitrarily-shaped sample inside an open-ended waveguide excited by a coaxial probe, measuring the scattering parameters, and extracting dielectric and magnetic properties through computational modeling and optimization techniques. A key aspect of this system is its ability to handle non-uniform and irregularly shaped rock samples, enabling the measurement of real-world planetary materials without requiring extensive sample preparation. The methodology includes calibration in an anechoic chamber, computational modeling, and iterative refinement of measured vs. simulated scattering parameters to extract the material properties. Future advancements will involve expanding measurements to different frequency bands, refining computational models using artificial intelligence, and automatically rotating samples within the waveguide to obtain multiple directional measurements (enhancing precision while reducing test time). This NASA innovation has been successfully applied to two Martian meteorite samples, yielding values of dielectric permittivity and permeability relevant for Mars radar applications. The system will further be leveraged to build an expansive database of the dielectric properties of planetary soils and rocks to improve radar-based mapping (e.g., subsurface mapping) missions. The invention could also be applied for the non-destructive screening of a variety of samples using radio waves, including biological samples for medical purposes, additive manufacturing feedstock or finished parts, and mining-related rock samples to test for impurities or resources of interest. This NASA invention is at technology readiness level (TRL) 5 (component and/or breadboard validation in relevant environment) and is available for patent licensing.
Stay up to date, follow NASA's Technology Transfer Program on:
facebook twitter linkedin youtube
Facebook Logo X Logo Linkedin Logo Youtube Logo