Reconfigurable Microstrip Patch Antenna With Switchable Polarization
Reconfigurable Microstrip Patch Antenna With Switchable Polarization
Reconfigurable Microstrip Patch Antenna With Switchable Polarization
1. INTRODUCTION
In wireless communication systems applications, circular polarization
antenna systems play important roles. In satellite communication
systems, they are very suitable because of their insensitivity to
transmitter and receiver orientations [1]. They are also utilized to
realize frequency reuse for doubling the system capability [2]. In
polarization diversity, circular polarizations can be used to avoid the
detrimental fading loss caused by multi-path eects [3]. In microwave
tagging systems, it is used as a modulation scheme such as the
circular polarization modulation [4]. Recently, recongurable antennas
have attracted signicant attention [59]. Especially, recongurable
antennas with switchable polarization have become the focus of
research. To obtain the switching property between left and righthand circular polarization (LHCP/RHCP), in most of the related
designs, varactor diodes or PIN diodes are used to alternatively short
antenna conguration with additional perturbation segments [912].
In these designs, two problems are often encountered. One is that
excessive diodes will lead to a complex dc-bias network. In order to
provide independent bias for each diode, the dierent biases have to
64
Wei et al.
65
FET SPDT switch. The antenna is built on a 0.76 mm thick TaconicTLX substrate with relative permittivity of r = 2.55. The side length
of the square radiating patch is 61.34 mm, and the resonance frequency
related to the length is 1.5175 GHz. In order to match the patch to the
50 lines of the coupler, two narrow 134.2 lines with each length of
14.8 mm have been introduced as impedance transformers. The 3 dB
hybrid coupler is operated at 1.5175 GHz. Its four ports are shown in
Fig. 1 (denoted as Port1, Port2, Port3, and Port4 respectively). The
insert loss of Port3 and Port4 is about 3.17 dB. The phase dierence
of the two ports is 90 approximately at 1.5175 GHz. The isolation
between Port1 and Port2 is below 41.7 dB.
66
Wei et al.
Figure 4. Measured radiation patterns in x-z plane and y-z plane for
antenna 1 at 1.5175 GHz.
antenna could eliminate the frequency oset phenomenon.
For these two antennas, the radiation patterns are measured at the
resonant frequency 1.5175 GHz. Fig. 4 and Fig. 5 show the measured
gain patterns of antenna 1 and antenna 2. The measured gains are
5.12 dB and 5.26 dB respectively. From experimental results, antenna
1 has a RHCP pattern. Its co-polarization and cross polarization
patterns at x-z plane and y-z plane are given in Fig. 4. The cross
polarization levels for antenna 1 remain below 15.9 dB, and the axial
ratio is about 1.38 dB. Compared with antenna 1, antenna 2 exhibits
a LHCP whose radiation pattern is similar to the radiation pattern of
antenna 1. Its measured radiation patterns are plotted in Fig. 5. The
67
Figure 5. Measured radiation patterns in x-z plane and y-z plane for
antenna 2 at 1.5175 GHz.
cross polarization levels for antenna 2 remain below 14.2 dB, and the
axial ratio is about 1.59 dB. Obviously, the proposed antenna is able
to switch between LHCP and RHCP. In addition, the performances
of the proposed antenna in two cases are almost same, such as return
losses and radiation patterns.
4. CONCLUSION
A switchable microstrip patch antenna with high potentiality is
proposed. The idea of this design is very simple. By using only
a SPDT switch, the proposed antenna can be operated in left or
right-hand circular polarization according to dc-bias voltages. The dcbias network is relatively simple. From the experimental results, the
performances of the proposed antenna agree well in the LHCP case
and the RHCP case. It is very suitable for wireless communication
systems applications.
REFERENCES
1. Chang, F.-S., K.-L. Wong, and T.-W. Chiou, Low-cost broadband circularly polarized patch antenna, IEEE Transactions on
Antennas and Propagation, Vol. 51, 30063009, October 2003.
2. Yang, X.-X. and S.-S. Zhong, Analysis of two dual-polarization
square-patch antennas, Microwave and Optical Technology
Letters, Vol. 26, No. 3, 153156, August 2000.
3. Yang, F. and Y. Rahmat-Samii, A recongurable patch antenna
68
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
Wei et al.