1,194 research outputs found
A Reconfigurable Radiation Pattern Annular Slot Antenna
This paper contemplate a theoretical analysis of a pattern reconfigurable antenna using annular slot antenna
operating in low frequency. A shorting pin is inserted to allow the annular slot antenna to have an omnidirectional radiation pattern like a monopole antenna. The reconfigurable antenna consists of numerous metal cylinders arranged around the annular slot antenna. By controlling pin diodes associated with the metal
cylinders, the antenna is capable of working up in different directions with a maximum working beam angle of 11.25° at a frequency of 1.05 GHz
Reconfigurable microstrip antennas with tunable radiation pattern characteristics
Reconfigurable beam antenna systems are capable of changing their radiation characteristics in real time, such as beam direction, beam shape, beamwidth, etc. Such antenna system is desired for various wireless applications because of many reasons among them; it helps to enhance signal strength received from an intended target, mitigates interference, and accommodates sudden changes in traffic demand of wireless networks. It might also help to reduce the deployment cost of wireless networks infrastructures. In this dissertation, designs for reconfigurable beam microstrip antennas with tunable radiation characteristics have been proposed. The method to achieve these designs is the reconfigurable parasitic element (s) of tunable electrical size, placed in close proximity to the driven patch. A tuning mechanism with the aid of Varactor diodes is introduced for the parasitic patch that effectively allows for controlling its electrical size. This (these) reconfigurable parasitic patch (es) is (are) then applied in different fashions to devise several antenna designs with dynamic electronic control over certain radiation specifications. The accomplished antenna designs in the dissertation are: * Circularly polarized (CP) beam scanning antenna, where two elements microstrip Yagi-Uda antenna is used. The first element is a square patch driven with two probe feeds of quadrature phase for CP excitation. The second element is a parasitic square patch with narrow square-shaped slot carved on its surface. The parasitic patch is adjacent to the driven patch with a small separation distance. Four varactor diodes are placed on the middle of each side of the square slot to facilitate tuning of its electrical size. The parasitic patch electrical size is alloto be effectively tuned by varying the applied reverse biasing DC voltage to the varactors (capacitance value). The CP beam direction is scanned from -36° to 32° with gain variation from 5.7 to 8.2 dBic, and efficiency from 54% to 75.58% along the scanning range. * Two-dimensional beam scanning antenna, where two orthogonal crossed Yagi-Uda antenna configuration is utilized. The driven element is a square patch excited with a probe coaxial feed. The other two parasitic patches are closely placed along the E & H planes of the driven patch. Each parasitic patch has a narrow rectangular slit at its center, where a varactor diode is placed to allow for tuning its electrical size. The beam direction is permitted to be scanned in both the elevation and azimuth planes. The achieved scan range in the elevation plane is from 0° to 32°, whereas in azimuth plan is from 0° to 90°. Along the scanning range, the attained gain changes from 8.1 to 8.9 dBi, and efficiency changes from 86% to 93%. * Tunable beamwidth antenna, with a dynamic control over the radiation beam focusing is proposed. The antenna consists of a square patch excited by a coaxial probe feed, and other two square parasitic patches placed on both sides of the driven along its H-plane. Each parasitic patch has a narrow slit at its center loaded with lumped varactor diode to tune its electrical size. Upon changing the parasitic patches size, the antenna effective aperture is altered, and hence the beamwidth in the H-plane is controlled. The achieved beamwidth tuning range is from 52° to 108°, whereas the gain changes from 6.5 to 8.1 dBi. Throughout the dissertation, 2.45 GHz is chosen, as an example, to be the target frequency. All the designs are validated through experimental measurements for fabricated prototypes, and good agreement is observed between the predicted and measured results
MAC-Oriented Programmable Terahertz PHY via Graphene-based Yagi-Uda Antennas
Graphene is enabling a plethora of applications in a wide range of fields due
to its unique electrical, mechanical, and optical properties. In the realm of
wireless communications, graphene shows great promise for the implementation of
miniaturized and tunable antennas in the terahertz band. These unique
advantages open the door to new reconfigurable antenna structures which, in
turn, enable novel communication protocols at different levels of the stack.
This paper explores both aspects by, first, presenting a terahertz
Yagi-Uda-like antenna concept that achieves reconfiguration both in frequency
and beam direction simultaneously. Then, a programmable antenna controller
design is proposed to expose the reconfigurability to the PHY and MAC layers,
and several examples of its applicability are given. The performance and cost
of the proposed scheme is evaluated through full-wave simulations and
comparative analysis, demonstrating reconfigurability at nanosecond granularity
with overheads below 0.02 mm and 0.2 mW.Comment: Accepted for presentation in IEEE WCNC '1
Analysis of dual-reflector antennas with a reflectarray as subreflector
In this paper, a modular technique is described for the analysis of dual-reflector antennas using a reflectarray as a subreflector. An antenna configuration based on a sub-reflectarray and a parabolic main reflector provides better bandwidth than a single reflectarray, and has a number of advantages compared with a conventional dual-reflector antenna. Examples include the possibility of beam shaping by adjusting the phase on the sub-reflectarray, and potential capabilities to scan or reconfigure the beam. The modular technique implemented for the antenna analysis combines different methods for the analysis of each part of the antenna. First, the real field generated by the horn is considered as the incident field on each reflectarray element. Second, the reflectarray is analyzed with the same technique as for a single reflectarray, i.e., considering local periodicity and the real angle of incidence of the wave coming from the feed for each periodic cell. Third, the main reflector is analyzed using the Physical Optics (PO) technique, where the current on the reflector surface is calculated by summing the radiation from all the reflectarray elements. Finally, the field is calculated on a rectangular periodic mesh at a projected aperture, and then a time-efficient fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithm is used to compute the radiation pattern of the antenna. The last step significantly improves the computational efficiency. However, it introduces a phase error, which reduces the accuracy of the radiation patterns for radiation angles far away from the antenna's axis. The phase errors have been evaluated for two integration apertures. It has been demonstrated that accurate patterns are obtained in an angular range of plusmn6deg, which is sufficient for large reflectors. The method of analysis has been validated by comparing the results with simulations obtained from GRASP8. Finally, the theoretical beam-scanning performance of the antenna is analyzed
Deterministic Design of Metasurface Antennas
L'abstract è presente nell'allegato / the abstract is in the attachmen
2008 Index IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology Vol. 16
This index covers all technical items - papers, correspondence, reviews, etc. - that appeared in this periodical during the year, and items from previous years that were commented upon or corrected in this year. Departments and other items may also be covered if they have been judged to have archival value. The Author Index contains the primary entry for each item, listed under the first author\u27s name. The primary entry includes the coauthors\u27 names, the title of the paper or other item, and its location, specified by the publication abbreviation, year, month, and inclusive pagination. The Subject Index contains entries describing the item under all appropriate subject headings, plus the first author\u27s name, the publication abbreviation, month, and year, and inclusive pages. Note that the item title is found only under the primary entry in the Author Index
2009 Index IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters Vol. 8
This index covers all technical items - papers, correspondence, reviews, etc. - that appeared in this periodical during the year, and items from previous years that were commented upon or corrected in this year. Departments and other items may also be covered if they have been judged to have archival value. The Author Index contains the primary entry for each item, listed under the first author\u27s name. The primary entry includes the coauthors\u27 names, the title of the paper or other item, and its location, specified by the publication abbreviation, year, month, and inclusive pagination. The Subject Index contains entries describing the item under all appropriate subject headings, plus the first author\u27s name, the publication abbreviation, month, and year, and inclusive pages. Note that the item title is found only under the primary entry in the Author Index
Multiple Slot Fractal Structured Antenna for Wi-Fi and Radio Altimeter for uncertain Applications
A multiple slot fractal antenna design has been determined communication efficiency and its multi-function activities. High-speed small communication devices have been required for future smart chip applications, so that researchers have been employed new and creative antenna design. Antennas are key part in communication systems, those are used to improve communication parameters like gain, efficiency, and bandwidth. Consistently, modern antennas design with high bandwidth and gain balancing is very difficult, therefore an adaptive antenna array chip design is required. In this research work a coaxial fed antenna with fractal geometry design has been implemented for Wi-Fi and Radio altimeter application. The fractal geometry has been taken with multiple numbers of slots in the radiating structure for uncertain applications. The coaxial feeding location has been selected based on the good impedance matching condition (50 Ohms). The overall dimension mentioned for antenna are approximately 50X50X1.6 mm on FR4 substrate and performance characteristic analysis is performed with change in substrate material presented in this work. Dual-band resonant frequency is being emitted by the antenna with resonance at 3.1 and 4.3 GHz for FR4 substrate material and change in the resonant bands is obtained with change in substrate. The proposed Antenna is prototyped on Anritsu VNA tool and presented the comparative analysis like VSWR 12%, reflection coefficient 9.4%,3D-Gain 6.2% and surface current 9.3% had been improved
Electronically Switchable Frequency and Pattern Reconfigurable Segmented Patch Antenna for Internet of Vehicles
This work presents a novel, low-cost frequency and pattern reconfigurable antenna for Internet of Vehicles (IoV) applications. The proposed design addresses the issue of using multiple antennas for different frequency bands to enable vehicles to communicate over several channels. Also, it relieves the need for a sophisticated beamforming network. The proposed radiating system comprises a simple segmented patch antenna (SPA) integrated with a few electronic switches to achieve frequency and pattern reconfiguration. The SPA consists of a radiating patch with two incorporated slots and two slits. Three p-i-n diodes are integrated into both slots to vary the shape of the patch to enable frequency reconfiguration at 4.1, 4.7, 5.0, and 5.7 GHz. Adopting the Yagi-Uda principle, two parasitic elements, functioning as either a reflector or a director, are positioned on both sides of the patch, facilitating the pattern reconfiguration. This novel SPA can scan its beam in 12 directions (0, ±38°, ±50°, ±63°, ±90°, ±143°, and 180°) with a measured peak gain and efficiency of 4.2 dB and 92%, respectively. The proposed antenna is experimentally tested to validate the concept. Employing only five p-i-n diodes, this inexpensive antenna can radiate 12 distinguishable switchable beams, including broadside and end-fire radiation over four frequencies with acceptable gain, matching bandwidth, and efficiency. This makes the proposed antenna an excellent candidate for IoV applications.</p
A Wideband Reconfigurable Antenna with 360° Beam Steering for 802.11ac WLAN Applications
© 1963-2012 IEEE. A novel 360° beam steering patch antenna with parasitic elements is presented in this paper. The designed antenna consists of a radiating patch and six parasitic elements, each of which is connected through a group of shorting vias controlled by p-i-n diode switches. By switching on the desired groups of the shorting vias, the electric field distribution inside substrate cavity appears at the desired beam direction. Rotationally switching on the groups of the shorting vias, the performance of 360° beam scanning is realized. To further understand operating mechanism, the antenna is modeled with equivalent circuit in terms of the on and off status of a sector of the antenna, which can be used as a design guide for shorting-vias-controlled reconfigurable microstrip patch antennas. The fabricated antenna achieves a bandwidth of 14.5%, a peak gain of 10 dBi, and the efficiency of 80.5%. The achieved beamwidths are 42° and 97° in azimuth and elevation planes, respectively. With an ability of being steered around zenith axis at six directions, the scanned beam range covers the entire 360°. The physical dimension is only 2.5 λg for the size and 0.5λg for the profile. This antenna operates from 5.1 to 5.9 GHz and has significant meaning in the IEEE 802.11ac wireless local area network applications due to its capabilities of generating 360° steered beams
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