Antennas: APE-300 Electromagnetic Theory & Antenna

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ANTENNAS

APE-300
Electromagnetic Theory & Antenna
HISTORY
• The first antennas were built in 1888 by German
physicist Heinrich Hertz in his pioneering
experiments to prove the existence of electromagnetic
waves predicted by the theory of James Clerk
Maxwell.
• Hertz placed dipole antennas at the focal point of
parabolic reflectors for both transmitting and
receiving. He published his work in Annalen der
Physik und Chemie (vol. 36, 1889).
INTRODUCTION
• An antenna is an electrical device which converts
electric currents into radio waves, and vice versa.
It is usually used with a radio transmitter or radio
receiver.
• In transmission, a radio transmitter applies an
oscillating radio frequency electric current to the
antenna's terminals, and the antenna radiates the
energy from the current as electromagnetic waves
(radio waves).
• Transmitting Antenna: Any structure designed to
efficiently radiate electromagnetic radiation in a
preferred direction is called a transmitting antenna.
• In reception, an antenna intercepts some of the power
of an electromagnetic wave in order to produce a tiny
voltage at its terminals, that is applied to a receiver to
be amplified. An antenna can be used for both
transmitting and receiving.
• Receiving Antenna: Any structure designed to
efficiently receive electromagnetic radiation is called
a receiving antenna
BASIC STRUCTURE
• It is a metallic conductor system capable of
radiating and receiving em waves.
• Typically an antenna consists of an arrangement of
metallic conductors (“elements"), electrically
connected (often through a transmission line) to the
receiver or transmitter.
• An oscillating current of electrons forced through
the antenna by a transmitter will create an
oscillating magnetic field around the antenna
elements, while the charge of the electrons also
creates an oscillating electric field along the
elements.
• These time-varying fields radiate away from the
antenna into space as a moving electromagnetic
field wave.
• Conversely, during reception, the oscillating
electric and magnetic fields of an incoming radio
wave exert force on the electrons in the antenna
elements, causing them to move back and forth,
creating oscillating currents in the antenna.
• Antenna reciprocity : can be used as transmitter
and receiver.In two way communication same
antenna can be used as transmitter and receiver.
• Antennas may also contain reflective or directive
elements or surfaces not connected to the
transmitter or receiver, such as parasitic elements,
parabolic reflectors or horns, which serve to direct
the radio waves into a beam or other desired
radiation pattern.
• Antennas can be designed to transmit or receive
radio waves in all directions equally
(omnidirectional antennas), or transmit them in a
beam in a particular direction, and receive from
that one direction only ( directional or high gain
antennas).
WHY ANTENNAS ?
• Need of antenna arisen when two person wanted to
communicate between them when separated by
some distance and wired communication is not
possible.
• Antennas are required by any radio receiver or
transmitter to couple its electrical connection to the
electromagnetic field.
• Radio waves are electromagnetic waves which
carry signals through the air (or through space) at
the speed of light with almost no transmission loss.
• Radio transmitters and receivers are used to convey
signals (information) in systems including broadcast
(audio) radio, television, mobile telephones , point-to-
point communications links (telephone, data
networks), satellite links.
• Radio waves are also used directly for measurements
in technologies including Radar, GPS, and radio
astronomy.
• In each and every case, the transmitters and receivers
involved require antennas, although these are
sometimes hidden (such as the antenna inside an AM
radio or inside a laptop computer equipped with wi-fi).
WHERE USED?
• Antennas are used in systems such as radio and
television broadcasting, point to point radio
communication, wireless LAN, radar and space
exploration
• Antennas are most utilized in air or outer space
• But can also be operated under water or even through
soil and rock at certain frequencies for short distances
RADIATION MECHANISM
• Ideally all incident energy must be reflected back
when open circuit. But practically a small portion of
electromagnetic energy escapes from the system
that is it gets radiated.
• This occurs because the line of force don’t undergo
complete phase reversal and some of them escapes.

G
• The amount of escaped energy is very small due to
mismatch between transmission line and
surrounding space.
• Also because two wires are too close to each other,
radiation from one tip will cancel radiation from
other tip.( as they are of opposite polarities and
distance between them is too small as compared to
wavelength )

G
• To increase amount of radiated power open circuit
must be enlarged , by spreading the two wires.
• Due to this arrangement, coupling between
transmission line and free space is improved.
• Also amount of cancellation has reduced.
• The radiation efficiency will increase further if two
conductors of transmission line are bent so as to bring
them in same line.
TYPES OF ANTENNAS
• According to their applications and technology available,
antennas generally fall in one of two categories:
1.Omnidirectional or only weakly directional antennas
which receive or radiate more or less in all directions.
These are employed when the relative position of the
other station is unknown or arbitrary. They are also used
at lower frequencies where a directional antenna would
be too large, or simply to cut costs in applications where
a directional antenna isn't required.
2. Directional or beam antennas which are intended to
preferentially radiate or receive in a particular direction
or directional pattern.
• According to length of transmission lines
available, antennas generally fall in one of two
categories:
1. Resonant Antennas – is a transmission line, the
length of which is exactly equal to multiples of
half wavelength and it is open at both ends.
2.Non-resonant Antennas – the length of these
antennas is not equal to exact multiples of half
wavelength. In these antennas standing waves are
not present as antennas are terminated in correct
impedance which avoid reflections. The waves
travel only in forward direction .Non-resonant
antenna is a unidirectional antenna.
RADIATION PATTERN
• The radiation pattern of an antenna is a plot of the
relative field strength of the radio waves emitted by
the antenna at different angles.
• It is typically represented by a three dimensional
graph, or polar plots of the horizontal and vertical
cross sections. It is a plot of field strength in V/m
versus the angle in degrees.
• The pattern of an ideal isotropic antenna , which
radiates equally in all directions, would look like a
sphere.
• Many non-directional antennas, such as dipoles, emit
equal power in all horizontal directions, with the
power dropping off at higher and lower angles; this is
called an Omni directional pattern.
• The radiation of many antennas shows a pattern of
maxima or "lobes" at various angles, separated by
“nulls", angles where the radiation falls to zero.
• This is because the radio waves emitted by different
parts of the antenna typically interfere, causing
maxima at angles where the radio waves arrive at
distant points in phase, and zero radiation at other
angles where the radio waves arrive out of phase.
• In a directional antenna designed to project radio
waves in a particular direction, the lobe in that
direction is designed larger than the others and is
called the "main lobe".
• The other lobes usually represent unwanted radiation
and are called “sidelobes". The axis through the main
lobe is called the "principle axis" or “boresight axis".
ANTENNA GAIN
• Gain is a parameter which measures the degree of
directivity of the antenna's radiation pattern. A high-
gain antenna will preferentially radiate in a particular
direction.
• Specifically, the antenna gain, or power gain of an
antenna is defined as the ratio of the intensity (power
per unit surface) radiated by the antenna in the
direction of its maximum output, at an arbitrary
distance, divided by the intensity radiated at the same
distance by a hypothetical isotropic antenna.
• The gain of an antenna is a passive phenomenon -
power is not added by the antenna, but simply
redistributed to provide more radiated power in a
certain direction than would be transmitted by an
isotropic antenna.
• High-gain antennas have the advantage of longer
range and better signal quality, but must be aimed
carefully in a particular direction.
• Low-gain antennas have shorter range, but the
orientation of the antenna is relatively
inconsequential.
• For example, a dish antenna on a spacecraft is a high-
gain device that must be pointed at the planet to be
effective, whereas a typical Wi-Fi antenna in a laptop
computer is low-gain, and as long as the base station
is within range, the antenna can be in any orientation
in space.
• In practice, the half-wave dipole is taken as a
reference instead of the isotropic radiator. The gain is
then given in dBd (decibels over dipole)
ANTENNA EFFICIENCY
• Efficiency of a transmitting antenna is the ratio of
power actually radiated (in all directions) to the
power absorbed by the antenna terminals.
• The power supplied to the antenna terminals which is
not radiated is converted into heat. This is usually
through loss resistance in the antenna's conductors,
but can also be due to dielectric or magnetic core
losses in antennas (or antenna systems) using such
components.
POLARIZATION
• The polarization of an antenna is the orientation of
the electric field (E-plane) of the radio wave with
respect to the Earth's surface and is determined by the
physical structure of the antenna and by its
orientation.
• A simple straight wire antenna will have one
polarization when mounted vertically, and a different
polarization when mounted horizontally.
• Reflections generally affect polarization. For radio
waves the most important reflector is the ionosphere -
signals which reflect from it will have their
polarization changed
• LF,VLF and MF antennas are vertically polarized
BEAM-WIDTH
• Beam-width of an antenna is defined as angular
separation between the two half power points on
power density radiation pattern OR
• Angular separation between two 3dB down points on
the field strength of radiation pattern
• It is expressed in degrees
ISOTROPIC ANTENNA
• Isotropic antenna or isotropic
radiator is a hypothetical (not
physically realizable) concept,
used as a useful reference to
describe real antennas.
• Isotropic antenna radiates
equally in all directions.
– Its radiation pattern is
represented by a sphere
whose center coincides with
the location of the isotropic
radiator.
• It is considered to be a point in space with no
dimensions and no mass. This antenna cannot
physically exist, but is useful as a theoretical
model for comparison with all other antennas.
• Most antennas' gains are measured with reference
to an isotropic radiator, and are rated in dBi
(decibels with respect to an isotropic radiator).
HALF WAVE DIPOLE ANTENNA
• The half-wave dipole antenna is just a special case
of the dipole antenna.
• Half-wave term means that the length of this dipole
antenna is equal to a half-wavelength at the frequency
of operation.
• The dipole antenna, is the basis for most antenna
designs, is a balanced component, with equal but
opposite voltages and currents applied at its two
terminals through a balanced transmission line.
• To make it crystal clear, if the antenna is to radiate at
600 MHz, what size should the half-wavelength
dipole be?
• One wavelength at 600 MHz is = c / f = 0.5 meters.
Hence, the half-wavelength dipole antenna's length is
0.25 meters.
• The half-wave dipole antenna is as you may expect, a
simple half-wavelength wire fed at the center as
shown in Figure
• Dipoles have an
radiation pattern,
doughnut symmetrical
about the axis of the
dipole. The radiation
is maximum at right
angles to the dipole,
dropping off to zero
on the antenna's axis.
FOLDED DIPOLE
• Folded antenna is a single antenna
but it consists of two elements.
• First element is fed directly while
second one is coupled inductively at
its end.
• Radiation pattern of folded dipole is
same as that of dipole antenna i.e
figure of eight (8).
Advantages
• Input impedance of folded dipole is four times higher
than that of straight dipole.
• Typically the input impedance of half wavelength
folded dipole antenna is 288 ohm.
• Bandwidth of folded dipole is higher than that of
straight dipole.
HERTZ ANTENNA

• The Hertzian dipole is a theoretical short dipole


(significantly smaller than the wavelength) with
a uniform current along its length.
• A true Hertzian dipole cannot physically exist,
since the assumed current distribution implies an
infinite charge density at its ends, and significant
radiation requires a very high current over its
very short length.
LOOP ANTENNA
• A loop antenna is a radio antenna consisting of a
loop of wire with its ends connected to a balanced
transmission line
• It is a single turn coil carrying RF current through it.
• The dimensions of coil are smaller than the
wavelength hence current flowing through the coil
has same phase.
• Small loops have a poor efficiency and are mainly
used as receiving antennas at low frequencies. Except
for car radios, almost every AM broadcast receiver
sold has such an antenna built inside of it or directly
attached to it.
• A technically small loop, also known as a magnetic
loop, should have a circumference of one tenth of a
wavelength or less. This is necessary to ensure a
constant current distribution round the loop.
• As the frequency or the size are increased, a standing
wave starts to develop in the current, and the antenna
starts to have some of the characteristics of a folded
dipole antenna or a self-resonant loop.
• Self-resonant loop antennas are larger. They are
typically used at higher frequencies, especially VHF
and UHF, where their size is manageable. They can be
viewed as a form of folded dipole and have somewhat
similar characteristics. The radiation efficiency is also
high and similar to that of a dipole.
• Radiation pattern of loop
antenna is a doughnut
pattern.
• Can be circular or square
loop
• No radiation is received
normal to the plane of loop
and null is obtained in this
direction.
• Application: Used for
direction finding applications
TURNSTILE ANTENNA
• A turnstile antenna is a set of two
dipole antennas aligned at right
angles to each other and fed 90
degrees out-of-phase.
• The name reflects that the antenna
looks like a turnstile when mounted
horizontally.
• When mounted horizontally the
antenna is nearly omnidirectional on
the horizontal plane.
• When mounted vertically the
antenna is directional to a right
angle to its plane and is
circularly polarized.
• The turnstile antenna is often
used for communication
satellites because, being
circularly polarized, the
polarization of the signal doesn't
rotate when the satellite rotates.
RHOMBIC ANTENNA
• Structure and construction
– 4 wires are connected in rhombic shape and
terminated by a resistor.
– Mounted horizontally and placed > ^/2 from
ground.
• Highest development of long wire antenna is rhombic
antenna.
• Advantages
– Easier to construct
– Its i/p impedance and radiation pattern are
relatively constant over range of frequencies.
– Maximum efficiency
– High gain can be obtained.
• Disadvantages
– Large site area and large side lobes.
• Application
– Long distance communication, high frequency
transmission and reception.
– Point to point communication.
– Radio communication.
– Short wave radio broadcasting.
ANTENNA ARRAYS
• Antenna arrays is group of antennas or antenna
elements arranged to provide desired directional
characteristics.
• Generally any combination of elements can form an
array.
• However equal elements of regualar geometry are
usually used.
YAGI-UDA ANTENNA
• It is a directional antenna consisting of a driven
element (typically a dipole or folded dipole) and
additional parasitic elements (usually a so-called
reflector and one or more directors).
• All the elements are arranged collinearly and close
together.
• The reflector element is slightly longer (typically 5%
longer) than the driven dipole, whereas the so-called
directors are a little bit shorter.
• The design achieves a very substantial increase in the
antenna's directionality and gain compared to a
simple dipole.
• Typical spacing between elements vary from
about 1/10 to 1/4 of a wavelength, depending on
the specific design.
• The elements are usually parallel in one plane.
• Radiation pattern is modified figure of eight
• By adjusting distance between adjacent directors it
is possible to reduce back lobe
• Improved front to back ratio
ANTENNA APPLICATIONS
They are used in systems such as
• Radio broadcasting
• Broadcast television
• Two-way radio
• Communication receivers
• Radar
• Cell phones
• Satellite communications.
ANTENNA CONSIDERATIONS
• The space available for an antenna
• The proximity to neighbors
• The operating frequencies
• The output power
• Money
Md. Rubel Sarkar
Dept. Of APECE
BSMRSTU,Gopalgonj
THANKS

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