Miniature Convoluted FSS for Gain Enhancement of a Multiband Antenna
Autor: | Aliya A. Dewani, Hugo G. Espinosa, Steven Gregory O'keefe, Garth D. Catton |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Frequency response
General Computer Science Reflector (antenna) 02 engineering and technology Grating law.invention Optics law Angular stability 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering General Materials Science Dipole antenna frequency selective surface (FSS) Physics dual band business.industry Parabolic reflector Attenuation 020208 electrical & electronic engineering General Engineering 020206 networking & telecommunications convoluted element miniaturisation Multi-band device lcsh:Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering Antenna (radio) flexible business lcsh:TK1-9971 |
Zdroj: | IEEE Access, Vol 9, Pp 36898-36907 (2021) |
ISSN: | 2169-3536 |
Popis: | Convoluted elements on a frequency selective surface (FSS) allow for low frequency elements to be contained in physically smaller unit cells. Smaller unit cells give the FSS greater angular stability, especially where a curved FSS is required, and so unwanted grating effects are avoided. A convoluted element FSS with a frequency rejection band centred at 2 GHz and unit cell area of 15 mm by 15 mm ( $0.10\,\,\lambda \times 0.10\,\,\lambda$ ) has been developed. To test its usefulness, the full structure FSS is used as a parabolic reflector in a dual band FSS reflector antenna operating at 1 GHz and 2 GHz. Simulated and measured results are close at both bands. The reflector antenna has high gain at 2 GHz of 12.7 dBi (simulated) and 11.7 dBi (measured). To observe the angular stability of the FSS and therefore its effectiveness as a reflector, it was compared with a copper test reflector at both bands. Simulation of the reflector antenna with test reflector produced a 2 GHz gain of 13.3 dBi which is very close to that with the FSS reflector. The simulated 2 GHz gain plot of the reflector antenna with FSS reflector is very similar to that with the test reflector indicating that the FSS has good angular stability. The gain at 1 GHz is also high with 9.3 dBi (simulated) and 8.7 dBi (measured). Simulation of the reflector antenna with no FSS and only a rear test reflector produced a 1 GHz gain of 10 dBi which is very close to that with the FSS reflector in place indicating that the FSS causes no significant attenuation at that frequency. The convoluted element FSS would be useful as a curved reflector in the creation of high gain, multiband, conformal antennas. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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