130 research outputs found

    Review on the Design of the Isolation Techniques for UWB-MIMO Antennas

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    Ultra wide band - Multiple Input Multiple Output antenna technology provides higher data rates and the combination of the ultra wide band (UWB) and the multiple input multiple output (MIMO) technologies provides a solution for the demand of still higher data rates i.e. in excess of 3 Gb/sec in the future.  As the antenna technologies are improving, the size of the MIMO antenna is growing smaller and smaller. Placing the antenna elements in such close proximity increases the coupling between them. Various isolation techniques have to be introduced between the antenna elements to decrease the coupling and to improve the isolation. A study of the various isolation enhancement techniques have been made in this review. It analyses the various isolation enhancement methods such as using orthogonal polarization, parasitic elements, varied decoupling structures, defected ground structures (DGS), neutralization line (NL) and finally by using metamaterials. Metamaterials is a technology to perk up the isolation between the antenna elements. Split ring resonator (SRR) behaves as a metamaterial and it is used as an isolation mechanism in this study. The antennas are simulated and the results are compared. The method using parasitic elements gives the highest isolation of 35 dB and it is 5 dB better than the methods using orthogonal polarization and using the decoupling structure. The performance of all the antennas satisfies the conditions for minimum isolation. The envelope correlation coefficient is nearly zero in all the antennas and it implies good diversity performance. The diversity gain is also calculated for the various antennas and it satisfies good diversity performance. The bandwidth of the antennas is in the UWB frequency range and they have a fractional bandwidth above the required value of 1.09. The capacity loss for all the antennas is very low and the antennas using defected ground structure and the decoupling structure gives very low capacity loss

    Recent Advances in Antenna Design for 5G Heterogeneous Networks

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    The aim of this book is to highlight up to date exploited technologies and approaches in terms of antenna designs and requirements. In this regard, this book targets a broad range of subjects, including the microstrip antenna and the dipole and printed monopole antenna. The varieties of antenna designs, along with several different approaches to improve their overall performance, have given this book a great value, in which makes this book is deemed as a good reference for practicing engineers and under/postgraduate students working in this field. The key technology trends in antenna design as part of the mobile communication evolution have mainly focused on multiband, wideband, and MIMO antennas, and all have been clearly presented, studied and implemented within this book. The forthcoming 5G systems consider a truly mobile multimedia platform that constitutes a converged networking arena that not only includes legacy heterogeneous mobile networks but advanced radio interfaces and the possibility to operate at mm wave frequencies to capitalize on the large swathes of available bandwidth. This provides the impetus for a new breed of antenna design that, in principle, should be multimode in nature, energy efficient, and, above all, able to operate at the mm wave band, placing new design drivers on the antenna design. Thus, this book proposes to investigate advanced 5G antennas for heterogeneous applications that can operate in the range of 5G spectrums and to meet the essential requirements of 5G systems such as low latency, large bandwidth, and high gains and efficiencies

    A four element stringray-shaped MIMO antenna system for UWB applications

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    This paper presents a CoPlanar-Waveguide (CPW)-fed stingray-shaped Ultra-WideBand (UWB) Multiple-Input–Multiple-Output (MIMO) antenna system designed for microwave imaging applications. Featuring a diagonal square with four inner lines and a vertical line at the center from toe to tip with a CPW feed line, the unit antenna element looks like a stingray fish skeleton and is, therefore, named as a stingray-shaped antenna. It offers a bandwidth spanning from 3.8 to 12.7 GHz. Fabricated on a 31mil RO5880 RF teflon substrate with a relative permittivity of 2.2, the proposed antenna has dimensions of 26 × 29 × 0.787 mm (Formula presented.). The maximum realized gain achieved is 3.5 dBi with stable omnidirectional radiation patterns. The antenna element is used in a four-antenna MIMO configuration with an isolation-improving structure at the center. The MIMO system has dimensions of 58 × 58 × 0.787 mm (Formula presented.) with a maximum realized gain of 5.3 dBi. The antenna’s performance in terms of MIMO parameters like Envelope Correlation Coefficient (ECC) and Diversity Gain (DG) is within satisfactory limits for medical imaging applications. Time domain analysis also yields positive results, allowing its integration into a breast phantom tumor detection simulation. The simulation and measurement results demonstrate excellent agreement, making this antenna a promising candidate for microwave imaging and biomedical applications

    Quadruplex Slot Antenna for Dual-standard Operation with Small Frequency Ratio

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    In this communication, a novel four-port slot antenna designed for both 5G New Radio (NR) and WiFi operations is introduced. Wideband NR antennas are achieved using a hybrid mode concept. Then, two NR slot antennas are co-designed as a radiative bandstop structure. By moving the resonance frequencies of the hybrid modes close to the band-reject points of this bandstop filter, a wideband decoupled dual-antenna structure is achieved. To enhance functionality, two additional ports are incorporated into the dummy slot area between these two NR ports, resulting in a quadruplex antenna. In this final configuration, two of the antennas are optimized for 5G NR applications, covering the 5G N77, N78, and N79 bands (3.3 GHz-5.0 GHz), while the remaining two antennas serve the WiFi band (5.15 GHz-5.8 GHz). Compared to other presented works, the simulation and experimental results demonstrate that this work not only, for the first time, achieves simultaneously wideband in-band and small frequency ratio (1.05) out-of-band duplex in one single module, but also has the advantages of high isolation, compact size, and low cost

    Antenna Designs for 5G/IoT and Space Applications

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    This book is intended to shed some light on recent advances in antenna design for these new emerging applications and identify further research areas in this exciting field of communications technologies. Considering the specificity of the operational environment, e.g., huge distance, moving support (satellite), huge temperature drift, small dimension with respect to the distance, etc, antennas, are the fundamental device allowing to maintain a constant interoperability between ground station and satellite, or different satellites. High gain, stable (in temperature, and time) performances, long lifecycle are some of the requirements that necessitates special attention with respect to standard designs. The chapters of this book discuss various aspects of the above-mentioned list presenting the view of the authors. Some of the contributors are working strictly in the field (space), so they have a very targeted view on the subjects, while others with a more academic background, proposes futuristic solutions. We hope that interested reader, will find a fertile source of information, that combined with their interest/background will allow efficiently exploiting the combination of these two perspectives

    Reconfigurable Antennas

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    In this new book, we present a collection of the advanced developments in reconfigurable antennas and metasurfaces. It begins with a review of reconfigurability technologies, and proceeds to the presentation of a series of reconfigurable antennas, UWB MIMO antennas and reconfigurable arrays. Then, reconfigurable metasurfaces are introduced and the latest advances are presented and discussed

    Reconfigurable Antennas and their Applications

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    One of the biggest challenge in modern communication systems is to provide a single antenna for different applications. Existing antenna systems are limited to some applications. So it is important to design a single reconfigurable antenna for multiple applications. Five different reconfigurable printed antennas for different applications are designed during the study of this thesis. In the first design an antenna for frequency reconfigurable applications is designed. The electrical length of the conductor is changed using PIN diodes and the resonance of antenna is shifted from 4.27 GHz to 3.56 GHz. Good agreement between simulated and measured results is observed. In the second and third designs, Ultra wideband (UWB) Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO) antennas with on-demand Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) rejection are designed. The second design consists of two elements UWB-MIMO antenna and stubs are connected to the ground plane using PIN diodes. These stubs act as a stop-band filter and reject the band at 5.5 GHz center frequency. This design has a compact size of 23 x 39.8 mm2. The third design has almost same features as of second design but it has four elements. These elements are placed orthogonally to each other. The total size of this proposed design is 50 x 39.8 mm2. The ground plane is common and a band-stop design is placed between the ground planes. This band-stop design is connected with the ground plane using PIN diodes. When diodes are biased, the current is travelled to the nearly placed band-stop design and a notch is obtained around 5.5 GHz. In fourth design a reconfigurable array with a sensing circuit is designed. The array consists of four individual reconfigurable patches which are attached to the different conformal surfaces. These patches are reconfigured from 3.15 GHz to 2.43 GHz using PIN diodes. The correct phase at each element is provided using phase shifters. The sensing circuit is designed in such a way that only input voltage is changed to provide the correct phase on the switching frequency. The patterns of the array are recovered on both switching frequencies when array is attached to wedge or cylindrical surface. In the last design a series-fed array is designed. Composite Right/Left Handed Transmission Line (CRLH-TLs) are used instead of traditional meanderline microstrip lines to connect the array elements. These CRLH-TLs provided the zero phase at each connecting element, which resulted in broad side radiation patterns. To reconfigure the antenna to another frequency a small patch and second CRLH-TL is connected between array element

    A comprehensive survey on 'circular polarized antennas' for existing and emerging wireless communication technologies

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    Circular polarized (CP) antennas are well suited for long-distance transmission attainment. In order to be adaptable for beyond 5G communication, a detailed and systematic investigation of their important conventional features is required for expected enhancements. The existing designs employing millimeter wave, microwave, and ultra-wideband (UWB) frequencies form the elementary platform for future studies. The 3.4-3.8 GHz frequency band has been identified as a worthy candidate for 5G communications because of spectrum availability. This band comes under UWB frequencies (3.1-10.6 GHz). In this survey, a review of CP antennas in the selected areas to improve the understanding of early-stage researchers specially experienced antenna designers has presented for the first time as best of our knowledge. Design implementations involving size, axial ratio, efficiency, and gain improvements are covered in detail. Besides that, various design approaches to realize CP antennas including (a) printed CP antennas based on parasitic or slotted elements, (b) dielectric resonator CP antennas, (c) reconfigurable CP antennas, (d) substrate integrated waveguide CP antennas, (e) fractal CP antennas, (f) hybrid techniques CP antennas, and (g) 3D printing CP antennas with single and multiple feeding structures have investigated and analyzed. The aim of this work is to provide necessary guidance for the selection of CP antenna geometries in terms of the required dimensions, available bandwidth, gain, and useful materials for the integration and realization in future communication systems
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