4.7 Article

Steering the Beam of Medium-to-High Gain Antennas Using Near-Field Phase Transformation

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ANTENNAS AND PROPAGATION
Volume 65, Issue 4, Pages 1680-1690

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TAP.2017.2670612

Keywords

Aperture field; beam steering; cavity resonator; directivity enhancement; electromagnetic bandgap resonator antenna; Fabry-Perot resonator; frequency selective surface (FSS); high gain; patch antennas; phase correction; phase transformation; phase-shifting surface; reconfigurable antenna; resonant cavity antenna (RCA)

Funding

  1. Australian Government under the Australia-India Strategic Research Fund
  2. International Macquarie University Research Excellence Scholarship Scheme

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A method to steer the beam of aperture-type antennas is presented in this paper. Beam steering is achieved by transforming phase of the antenna near field using a pair of totally passive metasurfaces, which are located just above and parallel to the antenna. They are rotated independently or synchronously around the antenna axis. A prototype, with a peak gain of 19.4 dBi, demonstrated experimentally that the beam of a resonant cavity antenna can be steered to any direction within a large conical region (with an apex angle of 102 degrees), with less than 3-dB gain variation, by simply turning the two metasurfaces without moving the antenna at all. Measured gain variation within a 92 degrees cone is only 1.9 dBi. Contrary to conventional mechanical steering methods, such as moving reflector antennas with multiaxis rotary joints, the 3-D volume occupied by this antenna system does not change during beam steering. This advantage, together with its low profile, makes it a strong contender for space-limited applications where beam steering with active devices is not desirable due to cost, nonlinear distortion, limited power handling, sensitivity to temperature variations, radio frequency losses, or associated heating. This beam steering method using near-field phase transformation can also be applied to other aperture-type antennas and arrays with medium-to-high gains.

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