Review of Antenna Geometries and Arrangements. Wireless vs. Cable Communication Systems. The Radio-Frequency Spectrum.)
Review of Antenna Geometries and Arrangements. Wireless vs. Cable Communication Systems. The Radio-Frequency Spectrum.)
Review of Antenna Geometries and Arrangements. Wireless vs. Cable Communication Systems. The Radio-Frequency Spectrum.)
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One of the most important issues in the design of high-power
transmission systems is the matching of the antenna to the transmission
line (TL) and the generator. Matching is specified most often in terms of
VSWR. Standing waves are to be avoided because they can cause arching
or discharge in the TL. The resistive/dielectric losses are undesirable, too.
They decrease the efficiency factor of the antenna.
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• Heinrich Rudolph Hertz demonstrates in 1886
the first wireless EM wave system: a λ / 2 -
dipole is excited with a spark; it radiates
predominantly at about λ ≈ 8 m; a spark
appears in the gap of a receiving loop. Hertz
discovers the photoelectric effect and predicts
that gravitation would also have a finite speed
of propagation. In 1890, he publishes his
memoirs on electrodynamics, simplifying the
form of the electromagnetic equations,
replacing all potentials by field strengths, and
deducing Ohm's, Kirchhoff's and Coulomb's
laws.
• May 7, 1895, the first wireless telegraph
message is successfully transmitted, received,
and deciphered. A brilliant Russian scientist,
Alexander Popov (also spelled Popoff,
Poppov), sends a message from a Russian
Navy ship 30 miles out in sea, all the way to
his lab in St. Petersburg, Russia. The Russian
Navy declares Popov's historical
accomplishment top secret. The title “Father
of Radio” goes to G. Marconi.
• Guglielmo Marconi (the Father of Radio) sends
signals over large distances. In 1901, he
performs the first transatlantic transmission
from Poldhu in Cornwall, England, to
Newfoundland, Canada. The receiving antenna
in Newfoundland was a 200-meter wire pulled
and supported by a kite. The transmitting
antenna in England consisted of 50 wires,
supported by two 60-meter wooden poles.
• The beginning of 20th century (until WW2) marks the boom in wire-
antenna technology (dipoles and loops) and in wireless technology as
a whole, which is largely due to the invention of the DeForest triode
tube, used as radio-frequency generator. Radio links are possible up
to UHF (about 500 MHz) and over thousands of kilometers.
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• WW2 marks a new era in wireless communications and antenna
technology. The invention of new microwave generators (magnetron
and klystron) leads to the development of the microwave antennas
such as waveguide apertures, horns, reflectors, etc.
straight-wire elements
loops helices
(dipoles/monopoles)
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(b) Conical horn
or
Aperture antennas were developed before and during the WW2 together
with the emerging waveguide technology. Waveguide transmission lines
were primarily developed to transfer high-power microwave EM signals
(centimeter wavelengths), generated by powerful microwave sources such
as magnetrons and klystrons. These types of antennas are preferable in the
frequency range from 1 to 20 GHz.
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C. Printed antennas
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PRINTED SLOT RADIATORS
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Slot antennas were developed in the 1980s and there is still intensive
research related to new shapes and types of excitation. They are suited for
integration with slot-line circuits, which are usually designed to operate at
frequencies > 10 GHz.
Both patch and slot antennas share some common features. They are
easy and cheap to fabricate. They are easy to mount; they are light and
mechanically robust. They have low cross-polarization radiation. Their
directivity is not very high. They have relatively high conducting and
dielectric losses. These radiators are widely used in patch/slot arrays,
which are esp. convenient for use in spacecraft, satellites, missiles, cars and
other mobile applications.
D. Leaky-wave antennas
The antennas in the mm-wave band are of big variety and are still a subject
of intensive study.
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E. Reflector antennas
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TYPICAL REFLECTORS
F. Lens antennas
Lenses play a similar role to that of reflectors in reflector antennas.
They collimate divergent energy into more or less plane EM wave. Lenses
are often preferred to reflectors at higher frequencies (f > 100 GHz). They
are classified according to their shape and the material they are made of.
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3.2. Antenna arrays
Antenna arrays consist of multiple (usually identical) radiating
elements. Arranging the radiating elements in arrays allows achieving
unique radiation characteristics, which cannot be obtained through a single
element. The careful choice and control of the phase shift and the
amplitude of the signal fed to each element allows the change of the
radiation pattern electronically, i.e. electronic scanning. Such arrays are
called phased arrays. The design and the analysis of antenna arrays is a
subject of its own, which is also related to signal processing. Intensive
research goes on nowadays, concerning smart antennas, signal-processing
antennas, tracking antennas, etc. Some commonly met arrays are shown in
the figure below.
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4. Wireless vs. cable communication systems.
There are two broad categories of communication systems: those that
utilize transmission lines as interconnections (cable systems), and those
that use EM radiation with an antenna at both the transmitting and the
receiving end (wireless systems).
In areas of high density of population, the cable systems are
economically preferable, especially when broadband communication is in
place. Even for narrow-band communication, such as voice telephony and
low-data-rate digital transmission, it is much simpler and cheaper to build
wire networks with twisted-pair cables, when many users are to be
interconnected. Such lines introduce an attenuation of around 2-3 dB/km
at frequencies about 10 kHz. These lines are not suitable at higher
frequencies because of the higher losses and dispersion. At higher-
frequency carriers, carrying broadband signals (TV transmission and high-
data-rate digital transmission), coaxial cables are commonly used. The loss
is around 4-5 dB/km. The least distortion and losses are offered by the
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optical-fiber transmission lines, which operate at three different
wavelengths: 850 nm (≅ 2.3 dB/km), 1300 nm (≅ 0.25 dB/km) and 1550
nm (≅ 0.25 dB/km). They are more expensive though and the respective
transmitting/receiving equipment is costly. Transmission lines provide a
measure of security and noise-suppression (coaxial, optical-fiber), but they
are not the best option in many cases (long distance, wide spreading over
large areas, low frequency dispersion).
A fundamental feature of all transmission lines is the exponential
increase of loss power. Thus, if the loss is 5 dB/km, then a 20-km line will
have 100 dB power loss (input power is reduced by a factor of 10-10), a 40-
km line will have a 200 dB power loss. This makes it rather obvious why
wireless systems are preferred for long-range communications, and in
scarcely populated areas. In most wireless channels, the radiated power
per unit area decreases as the inverse square of the distance r between the
transmitting and the receiving point. Doubling the distance r would
decrease the received power by a factor of 4 (or 6 dB will be added). Thus,
if a particular system has a 100 dB loss at r=20 km, doubling of its distance
will result in 106 dB loss (as compared to 200 dB loss in a cable system).
The comparison between the coaxial-line losses and free-space attenuation
at f=100 MHz is given in the figure below.
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Modern personal mobile communications
services
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5. The radio-frequency spectrum.
30-300 MHz 10-1 m Very High Frequency TV, FM broadcast, air traffic
(VHF) control, police, taxicab mobile radio
3-30 GHz 10-1 cm Super high Frequency Airborne radar, microwave links,
(SHF) satellite, land mobile
communication
30-300 GHz 10-1 mm Extremely High
Frequency (EHF) Radar, experimental
♣
Sonar (an acronym for Sound, Navigation and Ranging) is a system for underwater detection and location of objects
by acoustical echo. The first sonars, invented during World War I by British, American and French scientists, were used
to locate submarines and icebergs. Sonar is an American term dating from World War II.
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