Lecture 01
Lecture 01
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
Lecture 1: OUTLINE
Introduction to the Course Introduction to the Antenna Technology Research Directions in the Field of Antenna Design g Review of EM Theory (Maxwells Equations and BCs) Radiation Mechanism EM Wave Scattering and Propagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Recommended Texts: Antenna Theory: Analysis and Design, By C.A. Balanis,Published by Wiley, 1982. Radio Wave Propagation and Antennas: An Introduction, By John Griffiths, Prentice-Hall, 1987. , y , , Tentative Grading Policy: Mid-Term Exam: Homeworks: Final-Exam: Final Exam: -
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
General Instructions
Submit your homeworks within specified time Plagiarized home work will get zero marks. You can use software of your choice to solve assigned homeworks (Matlab, Mathcad etc). Any software can be used for the analysis of antenna structures (CST, HFSS, NEC etc)
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Antenna Technology
Antenna Definition
Part of a transmitting or receiving system that is designed Part to radiate or to receive electromagnetic waves. Antenna i a structure th t provides transition between A t is t t that id t iti b t guided and free-space waves.
50 50
377
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
HertzAntenna H t A t MarconiAntenna
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
Antenna Technology
Classification of Antennas
Geometry: Wire Antennas Aperture Antennas Printed Antennas P i t dA t Beam Shape: Omni-directional Pencil beam Fan beam Shaped beam Applications: Radars Communications Satellites Electronic Warfare EMI/EMC Antenna Test Facilities RFID Biomedical GPR Radio Astronomy
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
Locatedawayfromcivilizationstoavoidnoisefromthetransmitters. Located away from civilizations to avoid noise from the transmitters
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
200MHzto1GHz 200 MH t 1 GH
30MHzto3GHz 30 MH t 3 GH
9kHzto30MHz
700MHzto18GHz 26MHzto6GHz
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Antenna Technology:
Standard Gain Quad-Ridge Dual Polarized Antenna
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
Localizer Band 2 Fwd Array UHF Coms Band 3 Fwd Az Array Band 4 Fwd Az Array Band 4 Fwd El Array
Band 4 Fwd El Array Band 4 Fwd Az Array Antennas on lower VHF Coms UHFBand 3 Fwd Az Array Coms side (not shown) -Lower L-band Band 2 Fwd Array Band 4 Aft Array -ACMI -Glide Slope Band 3 Aft Array Localizer -Marker Beacon -S-band EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation DR.RASHIDAHMADBHATTI
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Cellularband(over5bands)
GSM4band+WCDMA3band CDMA/PCSdiversity Speaker or mechanic integrated Speakerormechanicintegrated Hand/Head/SAR/HACreq.
LowfrequencyMultimedia
TDMB/ISDBT/CMMB DVBH ( ) FM(Activeantennasolution) LTE(LongTermEvolution)
HighfrequencyNonCell.band
GPS Bluetooth WiBro MobileWiMAX
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Successfuldevelopmentofsmallmobileterminalgreatlydependson theantennatechnology. Degradedantennaperformancescannotbecompensatedbyrestof Degraded antenna performances can not be compensated by rest of theelectronicsinamobileterminal
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Antenna Technology:
Reconfigurable/TunableAntennas UWBAntennas ConformalAntennas MIMOAntennas ReflectArrayAntennas Nano Antennas FractalAntennas AdaptivePhasedArrayAntennas PatternReconfigurableAntennas CompactMultibandAntennas LFAntennasforPortableDevices
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
r r B E = t r r D H = +J t r D = r B = 0
FaradaysLaw
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
as
r r w 0 E1 = E2
r r n E2 E1 = 0
n E dl = t SB ds 0 C0 y r r x 1 a x x 2 a x x = 0 C0 r r 1t 2t = 0 S0 r r 1t = 2t r r Thetangentialcomponentsoftheelectricfieldacrossan n E2 E1 = 0
r r H1t = H 2t r r n H 2 H1 = 0
r r n D2 D1 = 0
r r n 2 E2 1 E1 = 0 Thenormalcomponentsoftheelectricfieldintensityacrossan r 2 r interfacebetweentwomedia,neitherofwhichisaperfect interface bet een t o media neither of hich is a perfect E1n = E2 n conductorandtherearenosources,arediscontinuous
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
r r n B2 B1 = 0
r r n 2 H 2 1 H1 = 0 r 2 r H1n = H 2n
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Maxwells equations are partial differential equations. Their solutions will contain integration constants that are determined from the additional information supplied by boundary conditions so that each solution will be unique for each given problem.
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
If time variations are of sinusoidal form the fields form, are called Time Harmonic EM fields. The time harmonic variations are represented as e
( x, y, z; t ) = Re E ( x, y, z )e jwt
FromFaradaysLaw:
j t
( x, y, z; t ) = Re B( x, y, z )e jwt
{ [ [
]}
{ }
E ( x , y , z ) = jB ( x , y , z )
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
r r E = j B r r H = j D + J r D = r B = 0
d j dt
Inphysics,itiscommontouse e Faradayslaw:
it
r r E = iB
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
J z = qv v z J s = qs v z I z = ql v z dI z dv z = ql = ql a z dt dt dI z dv d z l = lql = lql a z dt dt
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Ref: Antenna Theory; Analysis and Design by C.A. Balanis
Radiation Mechanism
CurvedWire
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Ref: Antenna Theory; Analysis and Design by C.A. Balanis
Radiation Mechanism
BentWire
DiscontinuousWire
TerminatedWire
TruncatedWire
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Radiation Mechanism
NarrowBandandWidebandRadiation
Acontinuoussinusoidalwaveformofcurrentorchargeproducesradiationatsingle i i id l f f h d di i i l frequency(zerobandwidth). Apulsepropagatingalongthewireproduceswidebandradiation.Shorterthepulsewidth, A l ti l th i d id b d di ti Sh t th l idth broaderwillbethefrequencyspectrum.
DirectionofPropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Radiation Mechanism
RadiationDuetoBendsinConductors
vb va v a= = tb t a t
vr v v r = = v = va vb r r
v vr r v2 a= = Lim =va= t 0 t t rt r
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
2E J 2 E 2 = t t E H = t H E = t
PropagationEquations Propagation Equations
Timevaryingcurrent,J,causestheEfieldto changebothintimeandspace.Ittellsushow change both in time and space It tells us how thedistortionintheEMfieldislaunched. Intheregionofspacearoundthewire,we cansettheconductioncurrent,J=0. h d Sincethecurrentisdefinedasthevelocityof charge,thederivativeofcurrentisequalto charge the derivative of current is equal to theaccelerationofcharge.
Theseequationstellsusthatwheneverwehaveaccelerationofcharge,wecreate p p g propagatingelectromagneticfields. g g
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
TransmissionLine
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Radiation Mechanism
DetachmentofEFieldLinesfromaShort Dipole
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Radiation Mechanism
CurrentDistributiononaTwoWireLineandLinearDipole
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Radiation Mechanism
CurrentDistributiononaLinearDipole
l <<
sin ( kl 2 )
Forsmallangles:
kl 2
l =/2
Radiation Mechanism
CurrentVariationasaFunctionofTimeforHalfWavelength Dipole
t =0
Multiplied bycos(wt)
t = T /8
t =T /4
t = 3T / 8
t =T /2
Ref: Antenna Theory; Analysis and Design by C.A. Balanis
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
Numerical Techniques
FDTD: Finite Difference Time Domain (direct discretization of Maxwells Equation ) TLM: Transmission Line Matrix (3-Dimensionaltransmission line matrix representation) MoM: Method of Moments (requires derivation of Greens function) PEM: Parabolic Equation Method (one way axial propagation simulation) (one-way FEM: Finite Element Method (requires discretization in terms of patches)
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation
EE871:AntennasandWavePropagation