4.7 Article

An Octave-Bandwidth Half Maxwell Fish-Eye Lens Antenna Using Three-Dimensional Gradient-Index Fractal Metamaterials

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ANTENNAS AND PROPAGATION
Volume 62, Issue 9, Pages 4823-4828

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TAP.2014.2330615

Keywords

Broadband; compact; fractals; gradient-refractive-index metamaterial; half Maxwell fisheye lens

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61372034]
  2. Excellent Doctoral Dissertation of Air Force Engineering University [KGD080913001]
  3. Innovation Foundation for Postgraduate's Dissertation of Air Force Engineering University [DY12101]

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The design and performance of a novel octave-bandwidth highly-directive half Maxwell fish-eye (HMFE) lens antenna are presented in superextended C band. The three-dimensional (3D) HMFE lens is implemented by gradient-refractive-index (GRIN) metamaterials and launched by an omnidirectional planar microstrip trapezoid printed monopole from the perspective of high integration, light weight and low profile. A new approach is proposed to design the GRIN metamaterial element in terms of a deep subwavelength feature by incorporating fractal geometry. Numerical and experimental results coincide well, showing that the lens enables a considerable gain enhancement of the monopole near 10 dB across a frequency range of 3 to 7.5 GHz while without significantly affecting the cross-polarization patterns and impedance matching. The near-field free-space measurement is also performed in an octave to afford a physical insight into the high gain, which is attributable to the accurate conversion of quasi-spherical waves to plane waves. Moreover, the truncation and homogenization effects of the lens on the antenna directivity are investigated to illustrate the fundamental mechanisms and afford the design guidelines.

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