Antennas and Waveguides
Antennas and Waveguides
Antennas and Waveguides
WAVEGUIDES
BY: ENGR. SHINBEI BATAC
ANTENNA
A metallic conductor system capable of radiating
and capturing electromagnetic energy.
Used to interface transmission lines to the
atmosphere, the atmosphere to transmission lines,
or both.
At the transmitter, it converts electrical energy
travelling a transmission line into electromagnetic
waves that are emitted into space.
At the receiver, it converts electromagnetic waves
in space into electrical energy on a transmission
line.
PASSIVE OR ACTIVE?
Antennas are passive reciprocal device.
Passive not capable of amplification
Reciprocal - TX and RX Characteristics are the
same.
Active Antenna is just a combination of Standard Antenna and LNA. They
are non-reciprocal.
RADIATION PATTERN
Polar diagram or graph
representing field
strengths or power
densities at various
angular positions relative
to an antenna.
Absolute Radiation
pattern plotted in terms
of electrical field strength
or power density.
Relative Radiation
pattern field strength or
power density is plotted
with respect to the value
at a reference point.
3D IMAGE
RADIATION RESISTANCE
An ac antenna resistance and is equal to the ratio
of the power radiated by the antenna to the
square of the current at its feedpoint. Alaso called
loop radiation resistance.
Rr
= radiation resistance (ohms)
Prad = power raduated by the antenna (watts)
i
= antenna current at the feedpoint.
ANTENNA EFFICIENCY
Ration of the power radiated by an antenna to the sum of the
power radiated and the power dissipated or the ratio or the
ratio of the power radiated by the antenna to the total input
power.
=
100 =
100
ANTENNA EFFICIENCY
2
= 2
=
( + ) +
= antenna efficiency
i = antenna current (ampere)
Rr = radiation resistance (ohms)
Re = effective antenna resistance (ohms)
ANTENNA GAIN
Directive gain ratio of the power density radiated
in particular direction to the power density rafiated
to the same point by a reference antenna.
Directivity maximum directive gain
ANTENNA GAIN
Power gain same as directive gain except that
the total power feed to the antenna is used. I is
assumed that the given antenna and the reference
antenna have the same input power and that the
reference antenna is lossless.
=
() = 10 log
= 10 log
+ 10 log
0.001
= 10 log( )
= 10 log
0.001
= 10 log( )
4 2
4 2
PROBLEM # 1
For a transmit antenna with a power gain At = 10
and an inpt power Pin = 100w, determine
a) EIRP in watts, dBm, dBW
b) Power density at point 10km from the transmit
antenna
c) Power density had an isotropic antenna been
used with the same input power and efficiency.
CAPTURED POWER
=
Pcap = captured power (watts)
P = power density
At = transmit antenna power gain
R = distance between transmit and antenna
Pin = transmit antenna input power
Ac = effective capture area (meters squared)
2
( 2 )(
)
4
4
()
= ( )
2
162 2
= ( )( )
2
= 10
10 log
0.001
16 2 2
ANTENNA BEAMWIDTH
The angular separation
between the two half
power (-3 dB) points on the
major lobe of an antennas
plane radiation pattern,
usually taken in one of the
principal planes.
Sometimes called -3 db
beamwidth or half power
beamwidth
ANTENNA BANDWIDTH
Frequency range
Difference between the half-power frequencies.
Expressed as percentage of antenna opimum
frequency of operation.
Determine the percentage BW for an antenna with anoptimum
frequency of operation of 400 MHz and -3 dB frequencies of 380 MHz and
420 Mhz.
420 380
100
400
= 10 %
ELEMENTARY DOUBLET
Simplest type of antenna
Referres as short dipole, elementary
dipole, hertzian dipole.
ANTENNA LOADING
Process of increasing the electrical length on an
antenna without increasing it physical length.
Loading coils addition of coil(inductor to relatively
increase the antennas electrical length. The
loading coil effectively cancels out the capacitive
components of the antenna input impedance
Top Loading a metallic array that resembles a
spoked wheel is laced on top of the antenna. It
increases the shunt capacitance to ground, thus
reducing the overall capacitance of the antenna.
ANTENNA ARRAYS
Two types of Antenna Elements
Reflector
Driven Element
Director
> /2
/2
Feedpoint
< /2
Folded Dipole
Yagi Uda Antenna
Turnstile Antenna
Log-Periodic Antenna
Loop Antenna
Phased Array Antennas
Helical Antennas
70
70
=
=
WAVEGUIDE
A special type of transmission line that consists of a
conducting metallic tube through which highfrequency electromagnetic energy is propagated.
Used to efficiently interconnect high-frequency
waves between an antenna and a transceiver.
All electrical circuits that carry alternating current
radiate a certain amount of electrical energy in the
form of electromagnetic waves. But, the amount of
energy radiated in the form of electromagnetic
waves.
RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
Most common form of waveguide.
=
Vph = phase velocity (meters per second)
f = frequency (hertz)
= wavelength (meters per cycle)
=
vph = phase velocity (meters per second)
vg = group velocity (meters per second)
c = 3 x 108 meters per second
2 2
( )
2
1( )
CUTOFF FREQUENCY
=
=
2
Where: = 2a
a = cross-sectional length
CHARACTERISTIC IMPEDANCE
=
Zo
fc
f
377
2
1( )
= 377
= characteristic impedance
= cutoff frequency
= frequency of operation
CIRCULAR WAVEGUIDES
RIDGED WAVEGUIDE
FLEXIBLE WAVEGUIDES