4.3 Article

A low-profile circularly polarized dielectric patch antenna with bandwidth expansion

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mmce.22526

Keywords

bandwidth expansion; circularly polarized antenna; dielectric patch antenna; low profile

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu [BK20201438]
  2. Natural Science Research Project of Jiangsu Provincial Institutions of Higher Education [20KJA510002, 20KJB510010]
  3. Postgraduate Research and Practice Innovation Program of Government of Jiangsu Province [KYCX20_2825]

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A new technology is proposed to expand the axial ratio (AR) bandwidth of a circularly polarized (CP) dielectric patch (DP) antenna while maintaining a low-profile characteristic. By carefully controlling the position and size of air holes introduced in the DP, the technology effectively broadens the AR bandwidth by merging degenerate modes. Experimental results show good agreement between simulated and measured outcomes.
A new technology for expanding the axial ratio (AR) bandwidth of the circularly polarized (CP) dielectric patch (DP) antenna while maintaining the low-profile characteristic is proposed for the first time. By making full use of the multimode characteristic of the DP resonator, two pairs of degenerate modes (ie, TM101 and TM011, TM121 and TM211) are selected for the broadband design. The key to the proposed technology is that according to the EM field distribution of the two pairs of degenerate modes, four air holes are introduced in the DP and their position and size are elaborately designed to discriminately control the frequency of the two pairs of degenerate modes. Then, these modes become close and are merged to effectively expanding the AR bandwidth of the low-profile CP DP antenna. For demonstration, a prototype centered at about 10 GHz is designed, fabricated, and measured. The measured results exhibit that the proposed CP DP antenna with a low profile of 0.07 lambda(0) owns a 3 dB AR bandwidth of 9.7% and a peak gain of 7.66 dBic. Good agreement is observed between simulated and measured results.

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