Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna

This thesis presents the analysis, design, and fabrication of a spherical inverted-F antenna (SIFA). The SIFA consists of a spherically conformal rectangular patch antenna recessed into a quarter section of a metallic sphere. The sphere acts as a ground plane, and a metal strip shorts the patch to t...

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Main Author: McDonald, Jacob J.
Other Authors: Huff, Gregory H.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-527
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-05-5272013-01-08T10:41:07ZAnalysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F AntennaMcDonald, Jacob J.antennaplanar inverted-F antennainverted-Fwireless sensorbiomedical implantspherical antennaThis thesis presents the analysis, design, and fabrication of a spherical inverted-F antenna (SIFA). The SIFA consists of a spherically conformal rectangular patch antenna recessed into a quarter section of a metallic sphere. The sphere acts as a ground plane, and a metal strip shorts the patch to the metallic sphere. The SIFA incorporates planar microstrip design into a conformal spherical geometry to better meet the design constraints for integrated wireless sensors. The SIFA extends a well-established technology into a new application space, including microsatellites, mobile sensor networks, and wireless biomedical implants. The complete SIFA design depends on several parameters, several of which parallel planar design variables. A modified transmission line model determines the antenna input impedance based on the sphere's inner and outer radii, the patch length and width, short length and width, and feed position. The SIFA can be tuned to the desired frequency band by choosing the proper outer radius, after which the antenna can be matched by tuning the short characteristics, patch dimensions, and feed position. The fabricated design was chosen to operate at the MICS band (402-405 MHz), a popular band for biomedically implanted devices. An initial design was constructed with Styrofoam (epsilon r approximately equal to 1) and copper tape. Simulation in HFSS corroborates that SIFA operation incorporates the MICS band, with resonant frequency of 404 MHz and 32 MHz (7.9%) bandwidth. The fabricated prototype performs similarly, with a resonant frequency of 407 MHz and 19 (4.7%) MHz bandwidth. Following fabrication, several modifications were implemented to miniaturize the SIFA and introduce additional functionality. Slot loading and dielectric coating were implemented to achieve SIFA miniaturization. Multiple elements were also introduced to achieve dual band operation and beam steering. A miniaturized SIFA was investigated in several biological media, and a lossy coating implemented to maintain impedance match in several different media, with the goal of retaining a matched impedance bandwidth in the MICS band.Huff, Gregory H.2010-07-15T00:12:28Z2010-07-23T21:43:56Z2010-07-15T00:12:28Z2010-07-23T21:43:56Z2009-052010-07-14May 2009BookThesisElectronic Thesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-527eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic antenna
planar inverted-F antenna
inverted-F
wireless sensor
biomedical implant
spherical antenna
spellingShingle antenna
planar inverted-F antenna
inverted-F
wireless sensor
biomedical implant
spherical antenna
McDonald, Jacob J.
Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna
description This thesis presents the analysis, design, and fabrication of a spherical inverted-F antenna (SIFA). The SIFA consists of a spherically conformal rectangular patch antenna recessed into a quarter section of a metallic sphere. The sphere acts as a ground plane, and a metal strip shorts the patch to the metallic sphere. The SIFA incorporates planar microstrip design into a conformal spherical geometry to better meet the design constraints for integrated wireless sensors. The SIFA extends a well-established technology into a new application space, including microsatellites, mobile sensor networks, and wireless biomedical implants. The complete SIFA design depends on several parameters, several of which parallel planar design variables. A modified transmission line model determines the antenna input impedance based on the sphere's inner and outer radii, the patch length and width, short length and width, and feed position. The SIFA can be tuned to the desired frequency band by choosing the proper outer radius, after which the antenna can be matched by tuning the short characteristics, patch dimensions, and feed position. The fabricated design was chosen to operate at the MICS band (402-405 MHz), a popular band for biomedically implanted devices. An initial design was constructed with Styrofoam (epsilon r approximately equal to 1) and copper tape. Simulation in HFSS corroborates that SIFA operation incorporates the MICS band, with resonant frequency of 404 MHz and 32 MHz (7.9%) bandwidth. The fabricated prototype performs similarly, with a resonant frequency of 407 MHz and 19 (4.7%) MHz bandwidth. Following fabrication, several modifications were implemented to miniaturize the SIFA and introduce additional functionality. Slot loading and dielectric coating were implemented to achieve SIFA miniaturization. Multiple elements were also introduced to achieve dual band operation and beam steering. A miniaturized SIFA was investigated in several biological media, and a lossy coating implemented to maintain impedance match in several different media, with the goal of retaining a matched impedance bandwidth in the MICS band.
author2 Huff, Gregory H.
author_facet Huff, Gregory H.
McDonald, Jacob J.
author McDonald, Jacob J.
author_sort McDonald, Jacob J.
title Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna
title_short Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna
title_full Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna
title_fullStr Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna
title_full_unstemmed Analysis, Design, and Operation of a Spherical Inverted-F Antenna
title_sort analysis, design, and operation of a spherical inverted-f antenna
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-05-527
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