51 research outputs found

    New feeding networks and planar antenna designs for leaky-wave systems and communication applications

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    The fast development in modern communication systems such as radars, medical imaging, sensors or satellites demands efficient and compact antenna designs that can satisfy the high data throughput and beam scanning requirements. This is commonly achieved by different means including electromechanical or mechanical steering, which sometimes are not the best option as additional cost, size or losses may be introduced. However, low-cost and compact structures can be obtained by using planar leaky-wave antennas, whose inherent high directivity and electrical beam steering capabilities have been realised to be a solution for the issues encoun tered by these systems. Nevertheless, there are several limitations that these antennas still need to overcome. One clear example is the lack of efficient and simple feeding networks for certain types of leaky-wave antennas that can reduce their performance and compactness. In turn, there are modern indoor applications, such as WiFi or radio frequency identification (RFID), where selective distributed communications are required but current leaky-wave antennas cannot efficiently provide or their use implies cost and weight constraints. In this thesis, planar configurations are presented to provide efficient and low profile solutions for leaky-wave antennas using concepts such as partial reflective surfaces or simple technologies as parallel-plate waveguides. It is also demonstrated that novel systems for two-dimensional (2D) or wideband beam scanning can also be obtained by the use of simple feeders including vertical electric dipoles. In addition, a broad-beam alternative to a non-selective and expensive beam scanning performance inside airplanes for RFID systems is introduced easing weight restrictions. These configurations represent an advancement for the state-of-the-art and are interesting alternatives to their non-planar counterparts. To support these designs, theoretical analysis, full-wave simulations and measurements are provided

    Electromagnetic Propagation Prediction Inside Aircraft Cabins

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    Electromagnetic propagation models for signal strength prediction within aircraft cabins are essential for evaluating and designing a wireless communication system to be implemented onboard aircraft. There are many commercially available software packages for predicting wireless system performance in conventional indoor environments. It is of interest to examine the available software to determine if the aircraft\u27s electromagnetic environment (EME) can be modeled successfully without developing an aircraft specific prediction tool. EnterprisePlanner ®, a registered product of Wireless Valley Communications, Incorporated, was selected for the present effort. The performance of the prediction model was evaluated through a comparison with field measurements taken on the aircraft. It was concluded that the prediction model can accurately predict power propagation throughout the cabin. This prediction tool can enhance researchers\u27 understanding of power propagation within aircraft cabins and will aid in future research

    1-D broadside-radiating leaky-wave antenna based on a numerically synthesized impedance surface

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    A newly-developed deterministic numerical technique for the automated design of metasurface antennas is applied here for the first time to the design of a 1-D printed Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA) for broadside radiation. The surface impedance synthesis process does not require any a priori knowledge on the impedance pattern, and starts from a mask constraint on the desired far-field and practical bounds on the unit cell impedance values. The designed reactance surface for broadside radiation exhibits a non conventional patterning; this highlights the merit of using an automated design process for a design well known to be challenging for analytical methods. The antenna is physically implemented with an array of metal strips with varying gap widths and simulation results show very good agreement with the predicted performance

    Enhancing wireless communication system performance through modified indoor environments

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    This thesis reports the methods, the deployment strategies and the resulting system performance improvement of in-building environmental modification. With the increasing use of mobile computing devices such as PDAs, laptops, and the expansion of wireless local area networks (WLANs), there is growing interest in increasing productivity and efficiency through enhancing received signal power. This thesis proposes the deployment of waveguides consisting of frequency selective surfaces (FSSs) in indoor wireless environments and investigates their effect on radio wave propagation. The received power of the obstructed (OBS) path is attenuated significantly as compared with that of the line of sight (LOS) path, thereby requiring an additional link budget margin as well as increased battery power drain. In this thesis, the use of an innovative model is also presented to selectively enhance radio propagation in indoor areas under OBS conditions by reflecting the channel radio signals into areas of interest in order to avoid significant propagation loss. An FSS is a surface which exhibits reflection and/or transmission properties as a function of frequency. An FSS with a pass band frequency response was applied to an ordinary or modified wall as a wallpaper to transform the wall into a frequency selective (FS) wall (FS-WALL) or frequency selective modified wall (FS-MWALL). Measurements have shown that the innovative model prototype can enhance 2.4GHz (IEEE 802.11b/g/n) transmissions in addition to the unmodified wall, whereas other radio services, such as cellular telephony at 1.8GHz, have other routes to penetrate or escape. The FSS performance has been examined intensely by both equivalent circuit modelling, simulation, and practical measurements. Factors that influence FSS performance such as the FSS element dimensions, element conductivities, dielectric substrates adjacent to the FSS, and signal incident angles, were investigated. By keeping the elements small and densely packed, a largely angle-insensitive FSS was developed as a promising prototype for FSS wallpaper. Accordingly, the resultant can be modelled by cascading the effects of the FSS wallpaper and the ordinary wall (FSWALL) or modified wall (FS-MWALL). Good agreement between the modelled, simulated, and the measured results was observed. Finally, a small-scale indoor environment has been constructed and measured in a half-wave chamber and free space measurements in order to practically verify this approach and through the usage of the deterministic ray tracing technique. An initial investigation showing that the use of an innovative model can increase capacity in MIMO systems. This can be explained by the presence of strong multipath components which give rise to a low correlated Rayleigh Channel. This research work has linked the fields of antenna design, communication systems, and building architecture

    Beam scanning by liquid-crystal biasing in a modified SIW structure

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    A fixed-frequency beam-scanning 1D antenna based on Liquid Crystals (LCs) is designed for application in 2D scanning with lateral alignment. The 2D array environment imposes full decoupling of adjacent 1D antennas, which often conflicts with the LC requirement of DC biasing: the proposed design accommodates both. The LC medium is placed inside a Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) modified to work as a Groove Gap Waveguide, with radiating slots etched on the upper broad wall, that radiates as a Leaky-Wave Antenna (LWA). This allows effective application of the DC bias voltage needed for tuning the LCs. At the same time, the RF field remains laterally confined, enabling the possibility to lay several antennas in parallel and achieve 2D beam scanning. The design is validated by simulation employing the actual properties of a commercial LC medium

    Antennas and Propagation

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    This Special Issue gathers topics of utmost interest in the field of antennas and propagation, such as: new directions and challenges in antenna design and propagation; innovative antenna technologies for space applications; metamaterial, metasurface and other periodic structures; antennas for 5G; electromagnetic field measurements and remote sensing applications

    Cognitive Radio Connectivity for Railway Transportation Networks

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    Reliable wireless networks for high speed trains require a significant amount of data communications for enabling safety features such as train collision avoidance and railway management. Cognitive radio integrates heterogeneous wireless networks that will be deployed in order to achieve intelligent communications in future railway systems. One of the primary technical challenges in achieving reliable communications for railways is the handling of high mobility environments involving trains, which includes significant Doppler shifts in the transmission as well as severe fading scenarios that makes it difficult to estimate wireless spectrum utilization. This thesis has two primary contributions: (1) The creation of a Heterogeneous Cooperative Spectrum Sensing (CSS) prototype system, and (2) the derivation of a Long Term Evolution for Railways (LTE-R) system performance analysis. The Heterogeneous CSS prototype system was implemented using Software-Defined Radios (SDRs) possessing different radio configurations. Both soft and hard-data fusion schemes were used in order to compare the signal source detection performance in real-time fading scenarios. For future smart railways, one proposed solution for enabling greater connectivity is to access underutilized spectrum as a secondary user via the dynamic spectrum access (DSA) paradigm. Since it will be challenging to obtain an accurate estimate of incumbent users via a single-sensor system within a real-world fading environment, the proposed cooperative spectrum sensing approach is employed instead since it can mitigate the effects of multipath and shadowing by utilizing the spatial and temporal diversity of a multiple radio network. Regarding the LTE-R contribution of this thesis, the performance analysis of high speed trains (HSTs) in tunnel environments would provide valuable insights with respect to the smart railway systems operating in high mobility scenarios in drastically impaired channels

    A Full Wave Electromagnetic Framework for Optimization and Uncertainty Quantification of Communication Systems in Underground Mine Environments

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    Wireless communication, sensing, and tracking systems in mine environments are essential for protecting miners’ safety and daily operations. The design, deployment, and post-event reconfiguration of such systems greatly benefits from electromagnetic (EM) frameworks that can statistically analyze and optimize the wireless systems in realistic mine environments. This thesis proposes such a framework by developing two fast and efficient full-wave EM simulators and coupling them with a modern optimization algorithm and an efficient uncertainty quantification (UQ) method to synthesize system configurations and produce statistical insights. The first simulator is a fast multipole method – fast Fourier transform (FMM-FFT) accelerated surface integral equation (SIE) simulator. It relies on Muller and combined fields SIEs to account for scattering from mine walls and conductors, respectively. During the iterative solution of the SIE system, the computational and memory costs are reduced by using the FMM-FFT scheme. The memory costs are further reduced by compressing large data structures via singular value and Tucker decomposition. The second simulator is a domain decomposition (DD)-based SIE simulator. It first divides the physical domain of a mine tunnel or gallery into subdomains and then characterizes EM wave propagation in each subdomain separately. Finally, the DD-based SIE simulator assembles the solutions of subdomains and solves an inter-domain system using an efficient subdomain-combining scheme. While the DD-based SIE simulator is faster and more memory-efficient than the FMM-FFT accelerated SIE simulator when characterizing EM wave propagation in electrically large mine environments, it does not apply to certain scenarios that the FMM-FFT accelerated SIE simulators can handle. The optimization algorithm and UQ method that are coupled with the EM simulators are the dividing rectangles (DIRECT) algorithm and the high dimensional model representation (HDMR)-enhanced multi-element probabilistic collocation (ME-PC) method, respectively. The DIRECT algorithm is a Lipschitzian optimization method but does not require the knowledge of the Lipschitz constant. It performs a series of moves that explore the behavior of the objective function at a set of points in the carefully picked sub-regions of the search space. The HDMR-enhanced ME-PC method permits the accurate and efficient construction of surrogate models for EM observables in high dimensions. The HDMR expansion expresses the observable as finite sums of component functions that represent independent and combined contributions of random variables to the observable and hence reduces the complexity of UQ by including only the most significant component functions to minimize the computational cost of building the surrogate model. This research numerically validated and verified the two EM simulators and demonstrated the efficiency and applicability of the EM framework via its application to optimization and UQ problems in large and realistic mine environments.PHDElectrical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146028/1/wtsheng_1.pd

    Advanced Radio Frequency Antennas for Modern Communication and Medical Systems

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    The main objective of this book is to present novel radio frequency (RF) antennas for 5G, IOT, and medical applications. The book is divided into four sections that present the main topics of radio frequency antennas. The rapid growth in development of cellular wireless communication systems over the last twenty years has resulted in most of world population owning smartphones, smart watches, I-pads, and other RF communication devices. Efficient compact wideband antennas are crucial in RF communication devices. This book presents information on planar antennas, cavity antennas, Vivaldi antennas, phased arrays, MIMO antennas, beamforming phased array reconfigurable Pabry-Perot cavity antennas, and time modulated linear array

    Distributed antenna system study

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