4.6 Article

Octave-Band Four-Beam Antenna Arrays with Stable Beam Direction Fed by Broadband 4 x 4 Butler Matrix

Journal

ELECTRONICS
Volume 10, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/electronics10212712

Keywords

antenna feeds; beam steering; Butler matrix; microstrip antennas; scalability

Funding

  1. National Science Centre [2018/31/B/ST7/01718]

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A novel concept of four-beam antenna arrays operating in a one-octave frequency range is proposed, allowing stable beam directions and widths. The study shows that appropriate radiation patterns can be achieved by properly spaced radiating elements and fed by a broadband Butler matrix.
A novel concept of four-beam antenna arrays operating in a one-octave frequency range that allows stable beam directions and beamwidths to be achieved is proposed. As shown, such radiation patterns can be obtained when radiating elements are appropriately spaced and fed by a broadband 4 x 4 Butler matrix with directional filters connected to its outputs. In this solution, broadband radiating elements are arranged in such a way that, for the lower and upper frequencies, two separate subarrays can be distinguished, each one consisting of identically arranged radiating elements. The subarrays are fed by a broadband Butler matrix at the output to which an appropriate feeding network based on directional filters is connected. These filters ensure smooth signal switching across the operational bandwidth between elements utilized at lower and higher frequency bands. Therefore, as shown, it is possible to control both beamwidths and beam directions of the resulting multi-beam antenna arrays. Moreover, two different concepts of the feeding network connected in between the Butler matrix and radiating elements for lowering the sidelobes are discussed. The theoretical analyses of the proposed antenna arrays are shown and confirmed by measurements of the developed two-antenna arrays consisting of eight and twelve radiating elements, operating in a 2-4 GHz frequency range.

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