Title: Antenna Basics
1Antenna Basics
SPRAWDZIC 4--6!!!!
2Outline
- Reciprocity Theorem
- Point Radiator Concept
- Irradiance, PFD
- Directivity, Gain, Radiation Efficiency
- EIRP
- Power Transfer
3EM Field EM Forces
- EM Field is a spatial distribution of forces
which may be exerted on an electric charge - Force a vector characterized by its intensity,
direction, orientation - Classical physics
- Coulomb (1736-1806), Galvani (1737-1798) Volta
(1745-1827), Ampere (1775-1836), Faraday
(1791-1867), Maxwell (1831-1879), Hertz
(1857-1894), Marconi (1874-1937), Popov
(1874-1937)
4EM Field
- EM forces fill-in the whole space without limits.
- They interact with the matter.
- Magnetic forces and electric forces act
differently, e.g. the magnetic field interact
with electric charges only when the charges move.
- For many years Electric and Magnetic forces were
considered as being different phenomena and
different branches of physics. Only in 19 century
. realized that they both are different faces
of the same EM phenomenon
5- Abdus Salam, (XX-XX), 1979 Nobel Prize Laureate,
indicated further that electromagnetism and weak
interaction known from quantum physics are
various facets of the same phenomenon. - Richard Feynmann (1918-1988), 1965 Nobel Prize
Laureate ( XXX quantum electrodynamics)
6EM forces are stronger than gravity forces, but
how strong they are?
- Imagine 2 persons at 1 m distance. By some magic,
we decrease the number of protons by 1 in each,
so that each has more electrons than protons, and
is no more electrically neutral they repulse
each other. How strong would be the repulsive
force? - Could it be enough to move a sheet of paper? Or
this table? Or, perhaps, this building?
7- Feynman calculated that the repulsive force would
be strong enough to lift the whole Earth! - EM forces generated in far galaxies can move
electrons on the Earth Panzias Wilson, Nobel
Prize Laureates 1978, showed that the EM residual
noise was generated during the Big Bang
8(No Transcript)
9Maxwell Equations
- Concept of unlimited EM field interacting with
the matter - Mathematics 2 coupled vectors E and H (6
numbers) varying with time and space - Summary The magnetic and electric components of
the time-space-variable electromagnetic field and
the time-variable electric current are mutually
coupled.
10EM Field of Linear Antennas
- Summation of all vector components E (or H)
produced by each antenna element - In the far-field region, the vector
componentsare parallel to each other - Method of moments
O
11EM Field of Current Element
Er
z
E?
OP
E?
?
r
I, dz
y
?
x
I monochromatic AC ampere dz short element
meter
12EM Field of Current Element 2
Idz moment of linear current element
Johnson Jasik Antenna Engineering Handbook T.
Dvorak Basics of Radiation Measurements, EMC
Zurich 1991 J. Dunlop, D. Smith
Telecommunications Engineering1995, p. 216
13EM Field of Current Element 3
- The components of the EM field
- are proportional to the current moment Idz
- are azimuth-independent (axial symmetry)
- decrease with distance as (?r)-1, (?r)-2, or
(?r)-3 if ?r 1, r ?/(2?), C FF Q - E? maximal in the equatorial plane
- Er maximal in the direction of current dz
- H? maximal in the equatorial plane
14EM Field Elementary Current Loop
dm magnetic dipole moment
15Field Components Intensity
?
C, Q Induction fields
FF Radiation field
16Field Impedance
- Field impedance
- Z E/H depends
- on the antenna type and on distance
17Far-Field, Near-Field
- Near-field region
- Angular distribution of energy depends on
distance from the antenna - Reactive field components dominate (L, C)
- Far-field region
- Angular distribution of energy is independent on
distance - Radiating field component dominates (R)
- The resultant EM field can locally be treated as
uniform (TEM)
18Source Characteristics 1
- The radiated (far) field in all direction from a
single monochromatic source in free space is
completely specified by 4 quantities - Amplitude of the E? component of the electric
field as functions of r, ?, and ? - Amplitude of the E? component of the electric
field as functions of r, ?, and ?
19Source Characteristics 2
- Phase lag ? of E? behind E? as a function of ?,
r, and ? - Phase lag ? of a field component behind its value
at a reference point as a function of r, ?, and ? - Phase characteristics are often disregarded but
they are important when the fields from 2 or more
sources are to be added.
20Reciprocity Theorem
- The proprieties of a receiving antenna are
identical with the proprieties of the same
antenna when used for transmitting - Note This theorem is valid only for linear
passive antennas (i.e. antennas that do not
contain nonlinear elements and/or amplifiers)
21Antenna Functions
- To transform the power of time-dependent
electrical current into the power of the
time-and-space-dependent electro-magnetic (EM)
wave (transmitting antenna) -
- To transform the power of the time-and-space-depen
dent EM wave into the power of the time-dependent
electrical current (receiving antenna)
22Intended Unintended Antennas
- Intended antennas
- Radiocommunication antennas
- Measuring antennas, EM sensors, probes
- EM applicators (Industrial, Medical)
- Unintended antennas
- Radiating (any conductor/ installation carrying
electrical current e.g. electrical installation
of vehicles) - Receiving/ Re-radiating (any conducting
structure/ installation irradiated by EM waves) - Stationary (e.g. antenna masts or power line
wires) - Time-varying (e.g. windmill or helicopter
propellers) - Transient (e.g. aeroplanes, missiles)
23Basic Antenna Characteristics
- In terms of field theory (Electromagnetics)
- Gain
- Radiation pattern (Half-power beam width,
unintended lobes) - Polarization (Cross-polarization)
- In terms of circuit theory
- Radiation resistance (Impedance)
- VSWR
24Point Source
- For many purposes, it is sufficient to know the
direction (angle) variation of the power radiated
by antenna at large distances. - For that purpose, any practical antenna,
regardless of its size and complexity, can be
represented as a point-source. - The actual field near the antenna is then
disregarded.
25Point Source 2
- The EM field at large distances from an antenna
can be treated as originated at a point source -
fictitious volume-less emitter. - The EM field in a homogenous unlimited medium at
large distances from an antenna can be
approximated by an uniform plane TEM wave
26Power Flow
- The time rate of EM energy flow per unit area in
free space is the Poynting vector. - It is the cross-product (vector product,
right-hand screw direction) of the electric field
vector (E) and the magnetic field vector (H) P
E x H. - For the elementary dipole E? ? H? and only E?xH?
carry energy into space with the speed of light
27Power Flow 2
- The Poynting vector gives the irradiance and
direction of propagation of the electromagnetic
wave in free space. - Irradiance radiant power incident per unit area
upon a surface. It is usually expressed in watts
per square meter, but may also be expressed in
joules per square meter. - Synonyms Power Density, Power Flow Density (PFD).
28Power Flow 3
- In free space, the radiated energy streams from
the point source in radial lines, i.e. the
Poynting vector has only the radial component in
spherical coordinates. - A source that radiates uniformly in all
directions is an isotropic source (radiator,
antenna). For such a source the radial component
of the Poynting vector is independent of ? and ?.
29Spherical coordinates for a point source of
radiation in free space
Z
Observation point (r,?,?)
Polar axis
Poynting vector
E?
Point source at origin
?
E ?
r
Y
?
X
Equatorial plane
30Power Flow From Point Source
Z
r sin?
Polar axis
Element of area ds r2 sin? d? d?
r d?
?
r
Y
?
X
Equatorial plane
r sin? d?
31Power Flow - General Case
32Power Flow - Isotropic Source
- Notes
- PFD does not depend on frequency/ wavelength
- Distance increases x 2 ? PFD decreases x 4
- Distance increases x 2 ? E decreases x 2
- Isotropic radiator cannot be physically realized
33Anisotropic sources
- Every antenna has directional properties
(radiates more energy in some directions than in
others). - Idealized example of directional antenna the
radiated energy is concentrated in the yellow
region (cone). - The power flux density gains it is increased by
(roughly) the inverse ratio of the yellow area
and the total surface of the isotropic sphere.
Isotropic sphere
34Antenna Gain
- The ratio of the power required at the input of a
loss-free reference antenna to the power supplied
to the input of the given antenna to produce, in
a given direction, the same field strength at the
same distance.
35Antenna Gain 2
Step 2
Step 1
Actual antenna
Measuring equipment
Reference antenna
Measuring equipment
P Power delivered to the actual antenna
S Power received
Po Power delivered to the reference antenna
S0 Power received
Antenna Gain (P/Po) SS0
36Antenna Gains Gi, Gd, Gr
- Gi Isotropic Power Gain - the reference
antenna is isotropic - Gd - the reference antenna is a half-wave dipole
isolated in space - Gr - the reference antenna is linear much shorter
than one quarter of the wavelength, normal to the
surface of a perfectly conducting plane
37Antenna Gain Comments
- Unless otherwise specified, the gain refers to
the direction of maximum radiation. - Gain in the field intensity may also be
considered - it is equal to the square root of
the power gain. - Gain is a dimension-less factor, usually
expressed in decibels
38Radiant Intensity
- Radiated power per unit solid angle
(steradian), ?(?,?), in watts per steradian
z
Observation Point
- A measure of the ability of an antenna to
concentrate radiated power in a particular
direction - Does not depend on distance
?
Transmitting antenna
r
y
?
x
Assumption Distance (r) is very large
39Directivity
- D Has no units
- P0 power radiated
40Gain, Directivity, Radiation Efficiency
- The radiation intensity, directivity and gain are
measures of the ability of an antenna to
concentrate power in a particular direction. - Directivity relates to the power radiated by
antenna (P0 ) - Gain relates to the power delivered to antenna
(PT)
- ? radiation efficiency (0.5 - 0.75)
41Antenna Gain PFD
- S0 PFD produced by a loss-less isotropic
radiator
42Directivity Pattern
- The variation of the field intensity of an
antenna as an angular function with respect to
the axis. - Usually represented graphically for the far-field
conditions. - May be considered for a specified polarization
and/or plane (horizontal, vertical). - Depends on the polarization and the reference
plane for which it is defined/measured - Synonym Radiation pattern.
43Antenna patterns
1
?
P(?)/Pmax(?)
Relative (normalized) power pattern
- Usually represented in 2 reference planes
?const. and ?const. - E PDF relate to the equivalent uniform plane
wave - Note Peak value ?2 x Effective value for
sinusoidal quantities
44Elements of Radiation Pattern
Main lobe
- Gain
- Beam width
- Nulls (positions)
- Side-lobe levels (envelope)
- Front-to-back ratio
Emax
Sidelobes
Emax /?2
Nulls
0
-180
180
Beamwidth
45Linear Antenna with Sinusoidal Current
Distribution
r(z)
r
?
z
z cos?
LinAntLong simulation
46Beam width
- Beamwidth of an antenna pattern the angle
between the half-power points of the main lobe. - Defined separately for the horizontal plane and
for the vertical plane. - Usually expressed in degrees.
47Antenna Mask (Example 1)
- Typical relative directivity- mask of receiving
antenna (Yagi ant., TV dcm waves) - CCIR doc. 11/645, 17-Oct 1989)
48Antenna Mask (Example 2)
0dB
Phi
-3dB
- Reference pattern for co-polar and cross-polar
components for satellite transmitting antennas in
Regions 1 and 3 (Broadcasting 12 GHz)
49Typical Gain and Beamwidth
Type of antenna Gi dB BeamW.
Isotropic 0 3600x3600
Half-wave Dipole 2 3600x1200
Helix (10 turn) 14 350x350
Small dish 16 300x300
Large dish 45 10x10
50Gain and Beamwidth
- Gain and beam-width of highly directive antennas
are inter-related - G 30000 / (?1?2)
- ?1 and ?2 are the half-power beamwidths in the
two orthogonal principal planes of antenna
radiation pattern in degrees.
51Increasing Gain
52Parabolic Antenna
- For the planar wave front, the times/distances
FAA FBB CCC - Extend AA by AA
- Require AA AF
- Locus of points equidistant from F and LL is
parabola - Axial symmetry parabolic reflector
53How to Make Parabolic Reflectors Cheaply
54e.i.r.p.
- Equivalent Isotropically Radiated Power (in a
given direction) - The product of the power supplied to the antenna
and the antenna gain (relative to an isotropic
antenna) in a given direction
55Antenna Effective Area
- Measure of the effective absorption area
presented by an antenna to an incident plane
wave. - Depends on the antenna gain and wavelength
Aperture efficiency ?a Ae / A A physical area
of antennas aperture, square meters
56Power Transfer in Free Space
- ? wavelength m
- PR power available at the receiving antenna
- PT power delivered to the transmitting antenna
- GR gain of the transmitting antenna in the
direction of the receiving antenna - GT gain of the receiving antenna in the
direction of the transmitting antenna - Matched polarizations
57Linear Polarization
- In a linearly polarized plane wave the direction
of the E (or H) vector is constant. -
- Two linearly polarized waves produce one
elliptically polarized wave the resultant E
vector has direction varying in time its tip
draws an ellipse.
58Elliptical Polarization
LHC
Ex cos (wt) Ey cos (wtpi/4)
Ex cos (wt) Ey cos (wt3pi/4)
Ex cos (wt) Ey cos (wt)
Ex cos (wt) Ey -sin (wt)
RHC
Ex cos (wt) Ey sin (wt)
Ex cos (wt) Ey -cos (wtpi/4)
59Polarization ellipse
Ex
- The superposition of two plane-wave components
results in an elliptically polarized wave - The polarization ellipse is defined by its axial
ratio N/M (ellipticity), tilt angle ? and sense
of rotation
M
Ey
?
N
60Polarization states
LHC
(Poincaré sphere)
UPPER HEMISPHERE ELLIPTIC POLARIZATION LEFT_HANDE
D SENSE
LATTITUDE REPRESENTS AXIAL RATIO
EQUATOR LINEAR POLARIZATION
450 LINEAR
LOWER HEMISPHERE ELLIPTIC POLARIZATION
RIGHT_HANDED SENSE
LONGITUDE REPRESENTS TILT ANGLE
RHC
POLES REPRESENT CIRCULAR POLARIZATIONS
61Comments on Polarization
- At any moment in a chosen reference point in
space, there is actually a single electric vector
E (and associated magnetic vector H). - This is the result of superposition (addition) of
the instantaneous fields E (and H) produced by
all radiation sources active at the moment. - The separation of fields by their wavelength,
polarization, or direction is the result of
filtration.
62Antenna Polarization
- The polarization of an antenna in a specific
direction is defined to be the polarization of
the wave produced by the antenna at a great
distance at this direction
63Polarization Efficiency (1)
- The power received by an antenna from a
particular direction is maximal if the
polarization of the incident wave and the
polarization of the antenna in the wave arrival
direction have - the same axial ratio
- the same sense of polarization
- the same spatial orientation
- .
64Polarization Efficiency (2)
- When the polarization of the incident wave is
different from the polarization of the receiving
antenna, then a loss due to polarization mismatch
occurs - Polarization efficiency
- (power actually received) / (power that would
be received if the polarization of the incident
wave were matched to the receiving polarization
of the antenna)
65Polarization Efficiency (3)
LCH
A POLARIZATION OF RECEIVING ANTENNA W
POLARIZATION OF INCIDENT WAVE
W
2?
- Polarization efficiency cos2?
A
H
450 LINEAR
RCH
66How to Produce Circularly-Polarized EM Field
- Radio wave of elliptical (circular) polarization
can be obtained by superposition of 2
linearly-polarized waves produced by 2 crossed
dipoles and by controlling the amplitude- ratio
and phase-difference of their excitations.
y
Iycos(?t?y)
x
Ixcos(?t?x)
67Reflection Image Theory
- Antenna above perfectly conducting plane surface
- Tangential electrical field component 0
- vertical components the same direction
- horizontal components opposite directions
- The field (above the ground) is the same if the
ground is replaced by the antenna image
-
68Polarization Filters
Wall of thin parallel wires (conductors)
E1gt0
E1gt0
E2 0
E2 E2
Vector E ?? wires
Vector E ? wires
- At the surface of ideal conductor the tangential
electrical field component 0
69Depolarization
70e.i.r.p. PFD Example 1
- What is the PFD from a TV broadcast GEO satellite
at Trieste? - EIRP 180 kW
- Distance 38'000 km
- Free space
71e.i.r.p. PFD Example 2
- What is the PFD from a WLAN transmitter?
- EIRP 180 mW
- Distance 3.8 m?
- Free space
In this example, WLAN produces thousand millions
times stronger signal than the satellite!
72Power Transfer Example 1
- What is the power received from GEO satellite
(?0.1m, PT 440 W, GT1000) at Trieste
(distance 38'000 km, GR1)? - Free space
73Power Transfer Example 2
- What is the power from a transmitter (?0.1m,
PT44 mW, GT1) received at distance of 3.8 m
(GR1)? - Free space
74Mismatch Effects
SWR Gain Reduction Gain Reduction
1.0 0 0
1.5 4 0.2 dB
2.0 11 0.5 dB
3.0 25 1.3 dB
5.0 44 2.6 dB
10 67 4.8 dB
752 Identical Antennas
- Excitation I1 I I2 Iej?
- Ant1 field-strength E CD(?, ?)
- Ant2 field-strengthE CD(?, ?)ej(??r?)
r
r
r
?r
?
d
1
2
762 Identical Antennas - AAF
- Resultant field-strength E E E
- E E 1ej(??r?) CD(?,
?)1ej(??r?) CD(?, ?)F(?, ?) ?
Pattern multiplication - AAF(?, ?) F(?, ?) 2 Antenna array
factor Gain of array
77 2 Antenna Array Factor (1)
- F(?) 1ej(??r?) (??r?) x
- F(?) 1ejx 2(1/2)(e-jx/2 ejx/2)ejx/2
2cos(x/2)ejx/2 - F(?) 2cos(x/2) 2cos?(d/2)cos?
?/2) 2cos(?d/?)cos? ?/2 - F(?)2 ? Antenna Array Factor gain of 2
isotropic antennas
782 Antenna Array Factor (2)
- F(?)2 2cos(?d/?)cos? ?/22
- Gain MaxAAF(?)2 4 (6 dBi)when (?d/?)cos?
?/2 0, ?, , k? - Nulls when (?d/?)cos? ?/2 ?/2, , (k 1)?/2
- Relative gain AAF(?)2 / MaxAAF(?)2
cos(?d/?)cos? ?/22
Array2ant simulation
79Isotropic Antenna Over Conducting Plane
2AntOverPlane simulation
80Linear Array of n Antennas
- equally spaced antennas in line
- currents of equal magnitude
- constant phase difference between adjacent
antennas - numbered from 0 to (n-1)
- F 1ejxej2xej3xej(N-1)x (1-ejNx) /
(1-ejx) - F (1-ejNx) / (1-ejx) sin(Nx/2) /
sin(x/2) F(?) ? array factor - x/2 (?d/?)cos? ?/2
Array_Nan simulation
81Phased Arrays
- Array of N antennas in a linear or spatial
configuration - The amplitude and phase excitation of each
individual antenna controlled electronically
(software-defined) - Diode phase shifters
- Ferrite phase shifters
- Inertia-less beam-forming and scanning (?sec)
with fixed physical structure
82Antenna Arrays Benefits
- Possibilities to control
- Direction of maximum radiation
- Directions (positions) of nulls
- Beam-width
- Directivity
- Levels of sidelobes
- using standard antennas (or antenna collections)
independently of their radiation patterns - Antenna elements can be distributed along
straight lines, arcs, squares, circles, etc.
83Beam Steering
Beam direction
- Beam-steering using phase shifters at each
radiating element
Equi-phase wave front
? (2?/?)d sin?
Radiating elements
Phase shifters
Power distribution
844-Bit Phase-Shifter (Example)
Bit 3
Bit 1
Bit 4
Bit 2
Input
Output
00 or 450
00 or 900
00 or 1800
00 or 22.50
Steering/ Beam-forming Circuitry
85Switched-Line Phase Bit
Delay line
Input
Output
Diode switch
- 2 delay lines and 4 diodes per bit
86Switching Diode Circuit
PIN diode
PIN diode
Tuning element
Tuning element
b
a
- a RF short-circuited in forward bias
- b RF short-circuited in reverse bias
87Adaptive (Intelligent)Antennas
- Array of N antennas in a linear or spatial
configuration - Used for receiving signals from desired sources
and suppress incident signals from undesired
sources - The amplitude and phase excitation of each
individual antenna controlled electronically
(software-defined) - The weight-determining algorithm uses a-priori
and/ or measured information - The weight and summing circuits can operate at
the RF or at an intermediate frequency
1
w1
?
wN
N
Weight-determining algorithm
88Direction Separation
RECEIVER
unwanted transmitter
wanted transmitter
U
W
Adaptive antennas
89Directive Antenna Effectiveness
- An ideal directive antenna receives power coming
only from within apical angle ? - It can eliminate (or attenuate) radiation coming
from a limited number of discrete interferers
(but cannot eliminate isotropic noise)
90Directive Antenna Effectiveness
Rec
Rec
Rec
J
J
J
T
T
T
Effective (T within antenna beam J outside)
Limiting case (T and J at edges)
Not effective (T and J within antenna beam)
91Directive Antenna Effectiveness
Receiver
?
?
R
?
?
?
?
R
R
?
h
?
?
?
T
J
A
92Directive Antenna Effectiveness
T
Rc
?
T
J
93Various Antenna Types (Pictures)
94Antenna Summary
- Antenna substantial element of radio link
- We have just reviewed
- Basic concepts
- Radio wave radiation physics
- Elementary radiators
- Selected issues relevant to antennas
95Antenna References
- Scoughton TE Antenna Basics Tutorial Microwave
Journal Jan. 1998, p. 186-191 - Kraus JD Antennas, McGraw-Hill Book Co. 1998
- Stutzman WL, Thiele GA Antenna Theory and Design
JWiley Sons, 1981 - Johnson RC Antenna Engineering Handbook
McGraw-Hill Book Co. 1993 - Pozar D. Antenna Design Using Personal
Computers - Li et al., Microcomputer Tools for Communication
Engineering - Software
- http//www.feko.co.za/apl_ant_pla.htm
- www.gsl.net/wb6tpu /swindex.html (NEC Archives)