Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime

Origami technology is promising for the development of antennas operating in the microwave and terahertz regime. This study summarizes recent advances in origami antennas and their construction regarding frequency, patterns, and polarization switching capabilities for the microwave frequency band. H...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Syed Imran Hussain Shah, Sungjoon Lim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Materials & Design
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127520308819
id doaj-9e5fd1050005437fb9dd39abd1a27a5a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9e5fd1050005437fb9dd39abd1a27a5a2021-01-02T05:06:40ZengElsevierMaterials & Design0264-12752021-01-01198109345Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regimeSyed Imran Hussain Shah0Sungjoon Lim1School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Chung-Ang University, 221 Heukseok-Dong, Dongjak-Gu, Seoul 06974, Republic of KoreaCorresponding author.; School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Chung-Ang University, 221 Heukseok-Dong, Dongjak-Gu, Seoul 06974, Republic of KoreaOrigami technology is promising for the development of antennas operating in the microwave and terahertz regime. This study summarizes recent advances in origami antennas and their construction regarding frequency, patterns, and polarization switching capabilities for the microwave frequency band. However, there are some challenges of origami antennas related to stability, robustness, and self-deployment, which should be addressed to design more practical deployable origami antennas in the microwave frequency band. In this review, we explained the design principle of various reconfigurable origami antenna. The dielectric and conductive materials of previous origami antennas are discussed and provided the promission materials to satisfy both easy transformation and high robustness for origami antennas. In addition, various actuators are discussed to pave the way for the practical application. Origami technology has also been employed for nanoscale antennas working in the terahertz and optical regime for several applications, including single molecule detection and artificial light harvesting. Although DNA molecules provide a scaffold for the origami antennas at nanoscale size, various issues require attention for development of more advanced nanoscale origami antennas in the terahertz regime. The most pressing issues are the high cost of DNA and the probability of high error rates in self-assembly fabrication.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127520308819Origami antennasDeployable antennas, nanoscale antennasSelf-assembly
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Syed Imran Hussain Shah
Sungjoon Lim
spellingShingle Syed Imran Hussain Shah
Sungjoon Lim
Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
Materials & Design
Origami antennas
Deployable antennas, nanoscale antennas
Self-assembly
author_facet Syed Imran Hussain Shah
Sungjoon Lim
author_sort Syed Imran Hussain Shah
title Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
title_short Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
title_full Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
title_fullStr Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
title_full_unstemmed Review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
title_sort review on recent origami inspired antennas from microwave to terahertz regime
publisher Elsevier
series Materials & Design
issn 0264-1275
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Origami technology is promising for the development of antennas operating in the microwave and terahertz regime. This study summarizes recent advances in origami antennas and their construction regarding frequency, patterns, and polarization switching capabilities for the microwave frequency band. However, there are some challenges of origami antennas related to stability, robustness, and self-deployment, which should be addressed to design more practical deployable origami antennas in the microwave frequency band. In this review, we explained the design principle of various reconfigurable origami antenna. The dielectric and conductive materials of previous origami antennas are discussed and provided the promission materials to satisfy both easy transformation and high robustness for origami antennas. In addition, various actuators are discussed to pave the way for the practical application. Origami technology has also been employed for nanoscale antennas working in the terahertz and optical regime for several applications, including single molecule detection and artificial light harvesting. Although DNA molecules provide a scaffold for the origami antennas at nanoscale size, various issues require attention for development of more advanced nanoscale origami antennas in the terahertz regime. The most pressing issues are the high cost of DNA and the probability of high error rates in self-assembly fabrication.
topic Origami antennas
Deployable antennas, nanoscale antennas
Self-assembly
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127520308819
work_keys_str_mv AT syedimranhussainshah reviewonrecentorigamiinspiredantennasfrommicrowavetoterahertzregime
AT sungjoonlim reviewonrecentorigamiinspiredantennasfrommicrowavetoterahertzregime
_version_ 1724359881618620416