Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments
Bandwidth enhancement of low-profile omnidirectional, electrically-small antennas has evolved from the design and construction of AM transmitter towers eighty years ago to current market demand for battery-powered personal communication devices. Electrically-small antenna theory developed with well-...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-495542020-10-09T06:09:05Z Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments Hearn, Christian Windsor Electrical and Computer Engineering Davis, William A. Kohler, Werner E. Stutzman, Warren L. Pratt, Timothy J. Manteghi, Majid Multi-resonant small antenna spherical mode decomposition Bandwidth enhancement of low-profile omnidirectional, electrically-small antennas has evolved from the design and construction of AM transmitter towers eighty years ago to current market demand for battery-powered personal communication devices. Electrically-small antenna theory developed with well-known approximations for characterizing radiation properties of antenna structures that are fractions of the radiansphere. Current state-of-the-art wideband small antennas near kaH1 have achieved multiple-octave impedance bandwidths when utilizing volume-efficient designs. <br />Significant advances in both the power and miniaturization of microelectronics have created a second possible approach to enhance bandwidth. Frequency agility, via switch tuning of reconfigurable structures, offers the possibility of the direct integration of high-speed electronics to the antenna structure. The potential result would provide a means to translate a narrow instantaneous bandwidth across a wider operating bandwidth. <br />One objective of the research was to create a direct comparison of the passive- multi-resonant and active-reconfigurable approaches to enhance bandwidth. Typically, volume-efficient, wideband antennas are unattractive candidates for low-profile applications and conversely, active electronics integrated directly antenna elements continue to introduce problematic loss mechanisms at the proof-of-concept level.<br />The dissertation presents an analysis method for wide bandwidth self-resonant antennas that exist in the 0.5dkad1.0 range. The combined approach utilizes the quality factor extracted directly from impedance response data in addition to near-and-far field modal analyses. Examples from several classes of antennas investigated are presented with practical boundary conditions. The resultant radiation properties of these antenna-finite ground plane systems are characterized by an appreciable percentage of radiated power outside the lowest-order mode. <br />Volume-efficient structures and non-omnidirectional radiation characteristics are generally not viable for portable devices. Several examples of passive structures, representing different antenna classes are investigated. A PIN diode, switch-tuned low-profile antenna prototype was also developed for the comparison which demonstrated excessive loss in the physical prototype. <br />Lastly, a passive, low-profile multi-resonant antenna element with monopole radiation is introduced. The structure is an extension of the planar inverted-F antenna with the addition of a capacitance-coupled parasitic to enhance reliable operation in unknown environments. <br /> <br /> Ph. D. 2014-07-16T23:05:13Z 2014-07-16T23:05:13Z 2012-12-13 Dissertation vt_gsexam:166 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49554 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Multi-resonant small antenna spherical mode decomposition Hearn, Christian Windsor Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments |
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Bandwidth enhancement of low-profile omnidirectional, electrically-small antennas has evolved from the design and construction of AM transmitter towers eighty years ago to current market demand for battery-powered personal communication devices. Electrically-small antenna theory developed with well-known approximations for characterizing radiation properties of antenna structures that are fractions of the radiansphere. Current state-of-the-art wideband small antennas near kaH1 have achieved multiple-octave impedance bandwidths when utilizing volume-efficient designs. <br />Significant advances in both the power and miniaturization of microelectronics have created a second possible approach to enhance bandwidth. Frequency agility, via switch tuning of reconfigurable structures, offers the possibility of the direct integration of high-speed electronics to the antenna structure. The potential result would provide a means to translate a narrow instantaneous bandwidth across a wider operating bandwidth. <br />One objective of the research was to create a direct comparison of the passive- multi-resonant and active-reconfigurable approaches to enhance bandwidth. Typically, volume-efficient, wideband antennas are unattractive candidates for low-profile applications and conversely, active electronics integrated directly antenna elements continue to introduce problematic loss mechanisms at the proof-of-concept level.<br />The dissertation presents an analysis method for wide bandwidth self-resonant antennas that exist in the 0.5dkad1.0 range. The combined approach utilizes the quality factor extracted directly from impedance response data in addition to near-and-far field modal analyses. Examples from several classes of antennas investigated are presented with practical boundary conditions. The resultant radiation properties of these antenna-finite ground plane systems are characterized by an appreciable percentage of radiated power outside the lowest-order mode. <br />Volume-efficient structures and non-omnidirectional radiation characteristics are generally not viable for portable devices. Several examples of passive structures, representing different antenna classes are investigated. A PIN diode, switch-tuned low-profile antenna prototype was also developed for the comparison which demonstrated excessive loss in the physical prototype. <br />Lastly, a passive, low-profile multi-resonant antenna element with monopole radiation is introduced. The structure is an extension of the planar inverted-F antenna with the addition of a capacitance-coupled parasitic to enhance reliable operation in unknown environments. <br /> <br /> === Ph. D. |
author2 |
Electrical and Computer Engineering |
author_facet |
Electrical and Computer Engineering Hearn, Christian Windsor |
author |
Hearn, Christian Windsor |
author_sort |
Hearn, Christian Windsor |
title |
Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments |
title_short |
Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments |
title_full |
Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments |
title_fullStr |
Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments |
title_full_unstemmed |
Electrically-Small Antenna Performance Enhancement for Near-Field Detuning Environments |
title_sort |
electrically-small antenna performance enhancement for near-field detuning environments |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/49554 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT hearnchristianwindsor electricallysmallantennaperformanceenhancementfornearfielddetuningenvironments |
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1719351407497183232 |