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Final Course Requirements / Homework

Instruction:
The antenna center frequency will be used in your assigned antenna is the last four (4) digit of
your ID number 2018 –xxxx then with unit of MHz like 2018-3456, thus my antenna specification
will be 3456Mhz.

Perform the following:


A. Read and watch all the videos. Random questions will be asked during your oral defend.
B. For antenna topics, read lesson 1 to lesson 6 below. This will also be the basis of your activities.
C. Design the antenna manually and perform hand calculation of assigned antenna. Each student will
be given two antennas to be design and be defended in scheduled time.
 Manually draw and plot all antenna parameters using smith chart.
D. Then draw the antenna using software tools like WILP-D, Matlab,etc.
 Plot radiation intensity at polar coordinates on x-y plane.
 Find the azimuthal HPBW in degrees.
 Find the maximum directivity (Dmax)
 Find the ratio of the radiation & field intensities between the main and first side lobes.

Take Note:
a) Forward gain:

The ratio of the intensity in a given direction to the radiation intensity that would
be obtained if the power accepted by the antenna where radiated isotropically.

Standard value: >10dBi

b) Front to back ratio:

The ratio of the maximum intensity in the direction of maximum radiation to the
radiation intensity of the back lobe in the opposite direction.

Standard value: >25dB

c) Front to rear ratio:

The ratio of the maximum intensity in the direction of maximum radiation to the
maximum radiation intensity of the side lobes.

Standard value: >20dB

d) Drive impedance
/SWR:

Due to the mis-match between the load and the feeding system the reflected wave
together with incident wave form a standing wave the SWR is the ratio of Vmax to
Vmin of this standing wave and is related to impedance of the load and the
characteristic impedance if the feeder.

Standard value: <2.5 ; ideal value is 1


Table of contents

Title
Preface
Syllabus
Lesson 1 Antenna Parameters
HW: Antenna Parameters
Lesson 2 Learning the Software
Lesson 3 Antennas
● Wire Antennas

● Linear Arrays Introduction

● Broadside Array

● End-Fire Array
HW: Linear Arrays
Linear Arrays (Broadside Array)
Linear Arrays (End-Fire Array)
Lesson 4 Yagi-Uda antenna
HW: Yagi-Uda Antenna
Lesson 5 Horn antennas
HW: Horn antenna
Lesson 6 Reflector Antennas
HW: Reflector antennas
ANTENNA HOMEWORK/ACTIVITY
Objectives:

 To be familiar with the most popular antenna design programs


 To investigate the different parameters associated with the specific antenna.

 To deal with various wire antennas, dipole , loop, helix … etc.

 To get close to arrays and the different parameters that control the shape of the pattern.

 To design yagi antenna using design graphs and software programs.

 To investigate the high directional antennas such as Horn and Reflector antennas.

Course Plan
References:
 Class Notes

 Antenna Design, Balanis ,2nd Ed.

HW Policy:
● Reports should be done individually.
Lesson

Antenna Parameters

Objective:

 Studying antenna parameters, Radiation pattern, Pattern beamwidth, Radiation


intensity, Directivity, Gain, radiation efficiency.
 Using "MATLAB" to plot radiation intensity, calculating dirctivity and half-
power beamwidths.

Theoretical Background:

 HPBW: is the angle between two vectors, originating at the pattern's origin
and passing through these points of the major lobe where the radiation
intensity id half its maximum

 FNBW: is the angle between two vectors, originating at


the pattern's origin and tangent to the main beam at
its base. It is very often approximately true that
FNBW≈ 2HPBW.
 Radiation intensity U: in a given direction is the power per unit solid angle
radiated in this direction by the antenna.

dΩ = sinθdθdφ

There is a direct relation between the radiation intensity U and the radiation power
density P (that is pointing vector magnitude of the far field) since

Can be defined as the ratio of the radiation intensity of the antenna in a given
direction and the radiation intensity of an isotropic radiator fed by the same amount of
power.

D(θ ,φ ) = U (θ ,φ ) = 4π U (θ ,φ )
U P
Isotropic rad
D0 = U max U
U = 4π max

Isotropic P
rad
2ππ
P
rad

 Gain: =
∫ ∫U (θ ,φ ) sinθdθdφ

00

The gain G of an antenna is the ratio of the radiation intensity U in a given direction
and the radiation intensity that would be obtained, if the power fed to the antenna
were radiated isotropically.

U (θ ,φ)
G(θ ,φ) = 4π

P
in

The gain is dimensionless quantity, which is very similar to the directivity D. when
the antenna has no losses, i.e. when Pin=Prad, then G(θ,φ)=D(θ,φ). Thus, the gain of
the antenna takes into account the losses in the antenna system. It is calculated via the
input power Pin, which is measurable quantity, unlike the directivity, which is
calculated via the radiated power prad.

The radiated power is related to the input power through a coefficient called radiation
efficiency:

P
rad
= ePin

G(θ ,φ) = eD(θ ,φ)

 The beam solid angle ΩA :

Is the solid angle through which all the power of the antenna whould flow if its
radiation intensity were constant and equal to the maximum radiation intensity U0 for
all angles within ΩA.

D0 = 4π 1
= 4π ≈ 4π
2ππ
U (θ ,φ ) 
sinθdθdφ  ΩA θ θ
1r 2r

U
0 o max
The relation between the maximum directivity and the beam solid angle is obvious.
For antennas with narrow major lobe and with negligible minor lobes, the beam solid
angle ΩA is approximately equal the product of the HPBWs in two orthogonal planes.

 The effective area Ae :

The effective area Ae of an antenna is the value corresponding to the direction of


maximal gain Gmax. We write in this case:

G = 4πAe
max
λ2
Lesson

2
Using the WIPL-D Simulation Tool
Software: " WIPL-D Electromagnetic Simulation Software

1. Introduction:

WIPL-D Pro CAD is a modeling and simulation environment uniting versatile, yet
simple geometry modeling, with signature WIPL-D simulation accuracy. The
simulated structure is created using solid-based modeler, along with importer for
various CAD file formats. Specialty tailored quad mesh algorithm produces mesh
which is optimized for WIPL-D numerical kernel.

WIPL-D Pro CAD is a program system for the modeling of 3D arbitrarily shaped
wire structures and for the computation and analysis of their electromagnetic behavior
including radiation and scattering problems.
WIPL-D Pro CAD computes the current distribution on a thin-wire structure
operating in the frequency domain. Using a Method of Moments (MoM) approach
with curved segments simulates the current distribution. This means that the structure
is first divided into segments which exactly follow the contour of the wires instead of
the typical approximation with straight wire segments. The straight wire
approximation often requires a large number of segments to adequately approximate
the curved wire geometry. Because of this by using curved segments the number of
unknowns and memory space can be reduced allowing for the simulation of bigger
problems.
In using the program system simulating a wire structure is a four-step procedure:

⮴ Defining the program's configuration.

⮴ Drawing the wire geometry.

⮴ Performing the computation.

⮴ Visualizing the computed results.

The program's configuration refers to the definition of the operating frequency or


range of frequencies of the system the permittivity and permeability of the medium
and other options defining the type of simulation such as a free space computation or a
simulation over a perfect electric conductor (PEC) ground plane.

2. Set-up
Click the WIPL-D solver

Then GUI will appear

3. Antenna Design
For your antenna architecture, you may design manually or from the
library. For manual design you may draw antenna from the scratch using
“symbols” (1) and “coordinates” (2). Detail discussion in section 3.

You may also, select type of antenna in the GUI Library by clicking folders
(Examples, Tutorial) and by choosing one type of antenna will automatically
show a drawing description in in “symbols” (1) and “coordinates” (2).
Defining antenna configuration:

You may choose any options for input by pressing edit and configure window.

Example of which is Frequency page

The Frequency page has three different options: start, stop and number of
frequency. Number of frequencies will tell you the window is divided by
frequency sweep.

Other input should be configure:


1. Adding sources/loads

o Adding source

o Adding load

But if you are using the library, you may modify the specifications, but some feature are not allowed
to modify due to limited version.
4. Drawing Wires

Antenna have different types of wires. Each wire has its own input parameters and
attributes that can be set in its specific dialog box. Each wire has to be divided into a
given number of segments. An unknown current on each segment must be found in
the simulation process. This number is set automatically by considering the
wavelength and the length of the wire, but can also be set manually by the user.
The “symbol” represents the antenna parts and coordinates represent the
coordinates were each node is connected. Try to modify the symbol and drawing to
see the effect.
4. Performing computations
When the configuration the geometry and the excitation are defined WIPL-D is
ready to compute the currents on the segments. Click Run. Then you will see the
status of the simulation. Check if the Job is successfully finished, if unsuccessful,
error will be prompted.

5. Visualizing computed results


By clicking Output you will be prompted with different information.
a) List
The list bar will display 3 options (Input, YZS, radiation)

● Input- This will show the input information about the frequency used, structure,
loading, excitations, etc.

● YZS
Will show the information of Y,Z,S at different frequency range.

● Radiation – Will show the information the radiated antenna gain and its
signal radiation.
b) Graph – Will display the Y(admittance) Z(impedance)S(s-parameter).
Kindly click the option Y,Z or S.

c) Radiation – It is will show how you antenna is polarised either vertically


polarized or horizontally polarized. 3D and 2D plot could be display.
Lesson

3 Introduction

Linear Arrays

Introduction
All the individual radiators of an array are usually similar, with the most common
array element being the half-wave dipole. The radiation pattern of an array in free-
space depends on four factors:

● The relative positions of the individual radiators with respect to each other

● The relative phases of the currents of fields in them

● The relative magnitudes of the individual radiator currents or fields

● The patterns of the individual radiators

The basic theory of arrays is developed in terms of the first three factors. The fourth
factor assumes that the individual radiators are fictional isotropic point sources. An
isotropic point source is one that radiates with uniform intensity in all directions and
has no physical size and also no ‘electrical’ size, hence, it does not block or otherwise
affect the radiation of the other elements of the array. An array radiation pattern can
be calculated on the basis of these assumptions and then a correction to it can be made
to take into account that in reality the individual radiators do affect each other and do
not radiate isotropically.

Definition of Antenna Pattern


If an antenna is imagined to be located at the centre of a spherical coordinate system,
its radiation pattern is determined by measuring the electric field intensity over the
surface of a sphere at some fixed distance r. Since the field E is then a function of the
two variables θ and φ, it is written E(θ, φ).

A measurement of the electric field intensity E(θ, φ) of an electromagnetic filed in

free space is equivalent to a measurement of the magnetic field intensity H(θ, φ),
since the magnitudes of the two quantities are directly related by the expression E =
377H. Vectorially E and H are at right angles to each other and their phase angles are
equal. Therefore, the pattern could equally well be given in terms of E or H. It is
customary, however, to discuss patterns in terms of the electric field intensity E.
The power density of the field P(θ, φ), can also be computed when E(θ, φ) is known.

The relation being P = E2/377. Therefore a plot of the antenna pattern in terms of P(θ,

φ) conveys the same information as a plot of the magnitude of E(θ, φ).


Assuming free-space propagation, a pattern that represents field strength as a function
of angular direction at a fixed distance from the antenna is identical to a plot of
distance for constant field strength. Therefore, a field-strength pattern can be
interpreted in either of these ways, by simply changing the labelling of the radial
coordinate scale. A similar statement, however, is not true for power-density patterns.

Relative pattern
Often the pattern is plotted in relative terms, that is, the field strength or power
density is represented in terms of its ratio to some reference value. The reference
usually chosen is the field level in the maximum-field-strength direction. The field
strength or power density is given the value unity in this direction and fractional
values in other directions. This relative pattern provides as much information about
the antenna as does an absolute pattern and therefore relative patterns are usually
plotted when it is desired to describe only the properties of the antenna, without
reference to an associated transmitter or receiver.

Two-Isotropic-element Array
The simplest array comprises two isotropic point-source radiators. It is discussed here
because it covers most of the principles of multi radiator arrays.
The meaning of the term phase as applied to the radiating elements of an array is
illustrated by considering the following; At some distant point the fields of the two
radiating elements are examined and are found to be in phase with each other. If then
the phase of the current in Radiator 2 is changed by an amount α radians and the phase
of the current in Radiator 1 is left unchanged, it will be observed that the two fields at
the distant point are now out-of-phase by the amount α radians. The phase of a
radiating element in an array is always discussed in relation to the phases of the other
elements. If the phases of the two radiators in a two-element array are changed by the
same amount, the array pattern is unaffected, but changing the phases between the two
elements affects the way that the individual fields of the tow radiators add up at a
specified distant point.
Figure 1 shows the significant geometry of a two-element isotropic-point-source
array.

Figure 1 – Array of two isotropic sources


The coordinates of P are ‘r’ and φ are two coordinates of the spherical coordinate

system. The third spherical coordinate θ, is not shown because only a plane in which

θ is constant is being considered here, π


namely, the xy-plane in which θ = 2

radians.
The point P is the field point, that is, any point in space where the field is to be
calculated. Hence, an expression of the field strength a P applies to all points and thus
defines the radiation pattern of the array. Calculation of the field due to the array at
an arbitrary point P is the basic problem of array theory. Because the distances r 1 and
r2 are much larger than the distance d, the amplitudes of the separate fields of the two
radiators at point P will be very nearly the same due to the large attenuation that the
radiation from each radiator experiences.
On the other hand, the relative phases of the two fields at P arising from the two
radiators will be dependent on δ, where δ = r2 − r1 , as shown in Figure 2.

Figure 2 – Two-element
array geometry

The resulting phase − 2πδ λ radians,


difference of the fields due
to δ is equal to
where Radiator 1 or R1 is taken to be the reference phase. To this difference must be
added the initial phase difference α, between the two radiators themselves. The total

phase difference ψ of the two fields at P is then given by

(1)

The resultant field at P is the superposition of two fields of equal amplitude, E o, and
phase difference ψ. If two fields of the same amplitude E o, are considered as two

vectors separated by an angle ψ, then the resultant field E, can be found by using the
cosine rule, as
This is the first step toward finding the radiation pattern of the array, which is an
expression of E as a function of φ, the angle of the direction of P from the centre of

the array. To obtain the radiation pattern, it is necessary to express ψ in terms of φ.


From figure 2,
δ = d sinφ (3)

On substituting equation 3 into equation 1 and the resultant back into equation 2,
gives the equation for the field E(φ) at P.

Equation 4 is the expression for the field at P as a function of the angle φ that the
direction of P makes with the line perpendicular to the line of the array. Equation 4
gives the shape of the pattern in the xy-plane
π
or θ= plane. The absolute-value
2

brackets are used to indicate that the field intensity being calculated is proportional to
the amplitude or to the rms value and is therefore a positive number, although the
expression inside the brackets may be signed.
In order to obtain the relative pattern, for which the field strength in the maximum-
intensity direction has the value unity, equation 4 must be divided by the maximum
value of E, which is usually, but not always 2E0.

Three-dimensional pattern

Equation 4 describes the array pattern in the xy-plane, in which the angle θ of a three-
π
dimensional coordinate system is constant (θ = 2 ). Because the angle θ is constant it

does not appear in equation 4.


The three-dimensional pattern is obtained by revolving the xy-pattern about the y-
axis, which is the line of the array. This is possible as the xy-pattern is identical in
shape and size at any value of rotation in the yz-plane. The pattern in the yz-plane is
expressed as a function of the angle θ instead of the angle φ. In other planes, both
angles are involved. The expression for the complete three-dimensional pattern is
given by,
Parallel dipole two-element array

The pattern defined by equation 4 can be plotted as a function of the angle φ for

different values of the parameters d and α. (Note that a parameter is defined in


mathematics as a quantity that can vary but is held constant in a particular problem so
that the effect of some other variable may be studied, uncontaminated by any
variation of the parameter.) Although the various resulting patterns obtained are for an
array of isotropic elements, they also represent the patterns of an array of two dipoles
in the plane perpendicular to their axis. Providing that the dipoles are parallel to each
other and perpendicular to the line joining their centres (line of the array), as shown in
Figure 3. This diagram may be thought of as the horizontal-plane patterns of a pair of
vertical dipoles or monopoles separated by a distance d and with currents having a
phase difference α.
Figure 3 – Geometrical positioning of pattern for two dipoles

It should be noted that when the two elements are in phase (α = 0°), the radiation is
always maximum in the direction perpendicular to the line joining the elements, that is
in the x-direction in Figure 3 above. That is, because the distances from the elements
to the field point P are equal in that direction (φ = 0°), the phase difference due to path

difference is zero also; hence the total phase difference of the superimposed fields is ψ

= 0°. Consequently, the fields add directly and the maximum possible resultant field is

obtained. When α = 0° and the pattern maximum is in the direction perpendicular to


the array line, as shown in Figure 3, the antenna is called a broadside array.
For certain conditions the resultant field in some directions is zero, that is when the
sum of the radiator phase difference α, and the phase difference due to path difference

2
πδ
λ is an odd integral multiple of π radians. The fields of the individual radiators are
in this case, of equal amplitude and opposite phase, so they cancel. This occurs, for
example, when α = 0° and d = λ/2, in the φ = 90° and 270° directions, since in these
directions the field phase-difference is 180 degrees, whereas the phase difference due
to radiator phase difference is zero. The same result occurs when the 180 degrees net
phase difference is due to a combination of path difference and radiator phase
difference. These directions of zero intensity in a pattern are called nulls.
Certain combinations of d and α result in maximum radiation in the direction of the
line joining the array elements. The array is then said to be operating as an endfire
array. The radiation of an endfire array may be either bidirectional or unidirectional.
A bidirectional array is where the radiation lobes are in both directions along the line
of the array. Whereas, a unidirectional array has a lobe in one direction and a null in
the opposite direction.

Multi-element Uniform Linear Arrays


When more than two elements are used in an array, the principle of calculating the
pattern (from which in turn the beamwidth and directive gain can be computed) is the
same as for a two-element array. Except that the fields of all the elements must be
superposed at the field point. The simplest type of multi-element array is one in which
all the radiators are in a line, with equal spacing between adjacent pairs. This is shown
in Figure 4 below. The method of analysis is suggested by showing a field-point P
joined by ray lines to each element. Such an array is called a linear array. When all
the elements are radiating with equal intensity and the phase difference between
adjacent elements is constant, the array is called uniform.

Figure 4 – Linear array of four radiating elements

Radiation Pattern
If the array contains n isotropic point-source elements, with equal spacing d and phase
difference α between adjacent elements, the pattern in a plane containing the line of
the array can be shown to be

For n = 2, this expression reduces to equation 4.


As in the two-element case, the three dimensional pattern is obtained simply by
replacing sinφ by the product sinφ.sinθ. The factor n in the denominator of equation 5
is a normalizing factor that is used to make E rel a true relative pattern. That is, it
permits Erel = 1 for the particular values of φ in the direction of maximum field
intensity, in accordance with the definition of relative pattern given above.
It is equation 5 that is used in the applet to determine the polar pattern of an n element
array.
Lesson 4

3 PART A

Broadside Linear Arrays

When α = 0°, all the elements are in phase and pattern maxima occur at φ = 0° and

φ = 180°, that is, in the directions perpendicular to the line of the array. This
configuration is called a broadside array. The pattern will be maximum in these
directions regardless of the element spacing, d. These will be the only primary
maxima if d < λ. If d = λ, additional maxima occur at φ = 90° and φ = 270°. As d is
increased still further, additional maxima occur as cones of radiation about the axis of
the array. They are known as grating lobes, analogous to the lobes observed in the
optical study of a diffraction or reflection grating. Ordinarily, therefore, the spacing of
elements in a broadside array is kept less than a wavelength. However, there is an
advantage in spacing the elements of an array by more than half a wavelength. For a
two-element array the optimum spacing is about 0.7λ, for a four-element array it is

about 0.8λ and for a large number of elements the optimum is about 0.95λ. The
directivity increases gradually as the spacing is increased until the optimum is
reached, then drops rather sharply with further increase. The advantage of the wider
spacing is in the directivity obtainable with a given number of elements. In terms of
the ratio of the directivity to the total length of the array, there is no advantage in the
wider spacing. These observations can be seen in the applet. Although the above
discussion is based on a uniform linear broadside array of point-source isotropic
radiators, they apply also to a similar array of dipoles. These dipoles have their centres
on the array line and their axes perpendicular to the array line and parallel to each
other. The pattern is in the plane perpendicular to the dipole axes, that is, the xy- plane
as shown in Figure 3. The polarization of the array follows the direction of the
dipoles. If the array line is horizontal and the dipole axes are vertical, the radiation is
vertically polarized. If the array line is horizontal and the dipole axes are horizontal,
as shown in Figure 5, the radiation is horizontally polarized.
Figure 5 shows a broadside array and its polar pattern for n = 6, d = 0.7λ and α = 0°.
Figure 5 – Linear broadside array of six radiating dipoles all elements in phase
showing the position of the polar pattern

The in-phase currents in the individual dipoles, required for a broadside pattern, may
be obtained by properly connecting a branched transmission line to the feed point of
each dipole. That is, if the total line length from the transmitter to each dipole is the
same the dipoles will be fed in phase. It is important to ensure that the same side of
the line is connected to the same side of each dipole. Reversing this connection
reverses the phase.
Broadside arrays may also b e formed from other types of elements, such as horns,
slots, helixes and polyrods. If the elements are unidirectional radiators, such as
sectoral or pyramidal horns, waveguide slots, axial mode helixes and polyrods, a
unidirectional broadside array results.

Beamwidth and Gain of Broadside Linear Arrays

Isotropic elements spaced a half-wavelength


For a uniform broadside linear array of n isotropic elements spaced a half-wavelength
apart, the beamwidth is given by
● For n = 2 60°.

● For n = 3 36°.

● For n >3 102/n°.


The directivity of such an array is equal to n

Isotropic elements spaced other than a half-wavelength


When the element spacing is not half-wavelength but is not greatly different from this
value, the beamwidth formula becomes
(6)
BW = 51λ
nd
Procedure:
Use software to implement a broadside array and its polar pattern for n = 6, d = 0.7λ

and α = 0°
Experiment

3 PART B

Endfire Linear Arrays


π
2 d
If in equation 5 the phase-difference α between adjacent elements is equal to λ
radians, the condition for a maximum of radiation is satisfied when φ = 90° and for

this value only, provided that d < λ/2. The maximum field intensity is radiated in a
direction along the line of the array, “off the end” rather than off the side. Hence the
name endfire array. The maximum is toward only one of the ends of the array, rather
than in both the endfire directions.
In terms of Figure 4, if the progressive phase change is a retardation going in the
direction of the positive y-axis by the amount α per element, the beam will be in the φ

= 90° direction. If the sign of α is changed, or its amount is increased by 180 degrees

without changing the element spacing, the beam will be in the direction φ = 270°.

Although the condition stated above for the value of α results in an endfire array, it
does not result in an endfire pattern with the maximum possible directivity and
narrowest possible beam. Hansen and Woodyard showed that an endfire beam with a
greater gain results if the phase change per element satisfies
Hansen-Woodyard condition
This condition does not
necessarily result in a
unidirectional pattern as does
the basic endfire condition. The basic endfire analysis assumes isotropic radiators, but
it applies also to other radiators that have radiation along the line of the array. Thus,
parallel dipoles can be used buy not collinear dipoles. For isotropic elements the beam
has three-dimensional axial symmetry where the horizontal and vertical beamwidths
are the same.
The case where d = λ/8 with α = 135° and d = λ/4 with α = 90° provide a complete
null or zero field intensity in the back direction for a 2 element array. These patterns
are advantageous in applications where a high front-to-back ratio is required. The
condition for a null condition for any uniform linear endfire array with an even
number of elements is given by
Condition for null in one endfire direction

A null is never absolute because of unavoidable imperfections in the spacing and phasing of the elements
and many-element arrays are more susceptible to such imperfections than those of few elements. Figure 6
shows an endfire arrangement.
Figure 6 – Linear endfire array of six radiating dipoles all elements in phase
showing the position of the polar pattern.

Parasitically Excited Endfire Arrays


It is not necessary to feed each element of an endfire array by direct connection to a
transmission line. If only one dipole as such an array is directly fed, or driven the field
that it sets up will cause currents to flow in adjoining elements. This process is called
parasitic excitation and the elements thus excited are parasitic elements. Endfire
arrays employing this principle are known as Yagi-Uda antennas, which are often just
called Yagis. (Professor Uda first described these antennas in Japanese and H. Yagi
was the first to describe the antenna in English, giving full credit to Uda’s work.) The
Yagi-Uda antenna can also be regarded as a surface-wave antenna.
Parasitic excitation cannot be employed in broadside arrays. To produce the in-phase
currents required for a broadside pattern, a full-wavelength element spacing would be
required. There would then be two endfire lobes of radiation as well as the two
broadside lobes. This type of pattern is not a true broadside pattern. Therefore,
broadside arrays are always driven arrays rather than parasitic arrays.
The phases of the currents in parasitic dipole elements are determined by their spacing
from the adjacent element and also by their lengths. A parasitic dipole cut exactly a
half wavelength or slightly longer will be inductive and the phase of its current will
lag the induced emf. A dipole cut shorter than a half wavelength will be capacitive
and the current in it will lead the induced emf. Comparatively close spacing of
elements is used in parasitic arrays to obtain good excitation and the induction fields
of the elements play a major role. The exact analysis is very complicated. Properly
spaced dipole elements slightly shorter than a half wavelength act as directors,
reinforcing the field of the driven element in the direction away from the driven
element. Thus, a line of directors may be used with each one exciting the next one. On
the other hand, an element one-half-wavelength long or slightly longer will act as a
reflector, if correctly spaced. This reflector reinforces the field of the driven element
in a direction toward the driven element from the reflector. Therefore, if a reflector
element is placed adjacent to a driven element, another element placed beyond the
reflector will not be appreciably excited. Although parasitic elements are usually
longer or shorter than a half wavelength when used as reflectors or directors,
respectively, they may also be one half-wavelength long and made to act as reflectors
or directors by proper spacing.
For these reasons a Yagi-Uda endfire array usually consist of one driven element, one
reflector on one side of it, and a number of directors on the other side of it. Antennas
of this type offer the advantages of a unidirectional beam of moderate directivity with
light weight, simplicity of feed design and low cost. The design becomes critical if
high directivity is attempted trough the use of many elements. Up to fie or six may be
used without difficulty and arrays of thirty or forty elements are possible. The input
impedance of a yagi-Uday array tends ot be low and the bandwidth is limited to
around 2%, typically. Directive gain of around 10 dB is readily achieved with a
moderate number of elements, usually five or six. Higher gains may be achieved by
making a broadside array of which the elements are Yagi-Uda arrays.

Procedure:
Use 4nec2 software to implement an End-Fire array and its polar pattern for n = 6, d =
0.3λ and α = 129°
Lesson

Yagi-Uda

Description of The Antenna

The Yagi (or Yagi-Uda) antenna is a linear array of parallel dipoles. One element is
energised directly by a feed transmission line with the others acting as parasitic
radiators. The function of these elements is to enhance the radiation pattern in the
source direction. Generally the reflector will be 5% longer than the driven element (ie
diploe)and the directors will be 5% shorter. Parameter limits are:

● Driven Element: 0.45-0.49 wavelengths.


● Directors: 0.4-0.45 wavelengths.
● Separation between Directors: 0.3-0.4 wavelengths.
● Radii of directors: 0.15-0.25 wavelengths.
● Separation between driven element an parasitics: 0.15-0.25 wavelengths.

Optimization of the Yagi-Uda Antenna can be achieved by simulating the radiation


patterns for various lengths of the elemnets and the spacing between them. Other
factors that effect the radiation pattern are:

● For an antenna with a length of 6 wavelengths or more the overall gain is


independant of the director spacing.
● The reflector size and spacing have negligable effect on the forward gain and
large effects on the backward gain and input impedance.
● The size and spacing of the directors has a large effect on the forward gain,
backward gain and input impedance.
● More than one reflector provides little improvement on the directivity of the
antenna.
● The addition of more directors will increase the gain of the antenna although
after the addition of approximately 5 directors the advantages of adding more
directors decreases significantly.
● The use of a folded dipole will increase the input impedance of the driven
element. This is an advantage as the Yagi design generally has a low input
impedance and the antenna impedance needs to match the transmission line
impedance.
System Requirements
Design a system showing all the plots in the figure.

Design Curves

The following design curves enable the optimum selection of the following
variables/characteristics (all as a function of boomlength) related to the
design of a simple Yagi antenna:

* Number of elements
* Gain
* Reflector length
* The ratio of reflector length to director length
* Bandwidth
Figure 1 indicates the optimum number of elements for an antenna of
specific boom length

Note: This table is typical performance of Yagi's with the stated number of elements.
Typically, the gain will be within 2 dB of the indicated gain. However, Front-to-back
ratio can vary greatly (as much as 25 dB) from the indicated F/B. F/B is much more
sensitive to adjustments to the element length and spacing.
The gain resulting from using the optimum number of elements is shown in
figure 2 as a function of boom length.

This curve can be used to obtain the gain that will be achieved from a given
boomlength in a boom length limited design, or vice versa. Figure 3 shows
the reflector length required to achieve optimum gain as a function of boom
length.
The director length can be obtained using the known reflector length, and the
curve of the ratio of reflector length to director length shown in Figure 4.

Finally the bandwidth for the particular antenna can be obtained using figure
5.

If a greater bandwidth is required, the reflector to director ratio can be


adjusted to give an increased bandwidth as shown by the red and magenta
plots.
Experiment

Horn Antennas

Horn Antennas:

▪ flared waveguides that produce a nearly uniform phase front larger than the
waveguide itself

▪ constructed in a variety of shapes such as sectoral E-plane, sectoral H-plane,


pyramidal, conical, etc.

Application Areas:

▪ used as a feed element for large radio astronomy, satellite tracking and
communication dishes
▪ A common element of phased arrays

▪ used in the calibration, other high-gain antennas

▪ used for making electromagnetic interference measurements

Horn Antenna Types:


1. E-Plane e
Sectoral 00

Horn

900

E- 1800
Plan
900

E- and H-Plane Patterns


2. H-Plane Sectoral
Horn 00

900

3
10
0 R
0

E-Plane l
20

6
H-Plane 0
0
a 30

900

1800

1
2
E- and H-Plane Patterns 0
0

1
5
3. Pyramidal Horn 0
0

00

3 3
10
0 0
0 R 0

e
20

l
6 6
0 0
a 30 0
0

30 20 10
900
9
0
0

1 1
2 2
0 0
E-Plane 0 0

H- 1 1
Plane 5
0
1800
5
0
0 0

E and H-Plane Patterns


4. Conical Horn Antenna 0
0

3 3
00 10 00
R

e
20

6 l 6
00 00
30
a

30 20 10
0
0 9 900

1 1
2 2
E- 0
0
0
0

Pla
ne 1
5
1
5
0 0
0 0

1800

E- and H-Plane Patterns

Other horn antenna types:

▪ Multimode Horns

▪ Corrugated Horns

▪ Hog Horns

▪ Biconical Horns

▪ Dielectric Loaded Horns

Horn advantages:

▪ Frequency above 1GHz

▪ High gain

▪ Wide bandwidth

▪ Low weight

▪ Easy to construct
Horn Antenna Design:
Design a pyramidal horn so that the gain is 17.05 dbi at f=11GHz.
Horn Antenna Analysis:
Use Sabor software to analyze the designed horn above or other freeware simulator.
Experiment

Reflector Antennas

Objective:
a) The main objective is to know the main characteristics and parameters that
effect on the parabolic reflector antenna.
b) Plotting the radiation pattern of parabolic antenna
c) See the effect of changing it's parameter on radiation pattern such as
● Frequency of operation

● Diameter of the dish

● Focal length to diameter ration F/D

Theoretical Background:
Antennas based on parabolic reflectors are most common type of directive antennas
when a high gain is required. The main advantage is that they can be made to have
gain and directivity as large as required . the main disadvantage is that big dishes are
difficult to mount and are likely to have a large windage.

The basic property of a perfect parabolic reflector is that it converts a spherical wave
irradiating from a point source placed at the focus into plane waves.

Conversely, all the energy received by the dish from a distant source is reflected to a
single point at the focus of the dish. The position of the focus, or focal length, is given
by:
2
D
f=
16c
Where D is the dish diameter and c is the depth of the parabola at its center.
The size of the dish is the most important factor since it determines the maximum
gain that can be achieved at the given frequency and the resulting beamwidth. The
gain and beamwidth obtained are given by:

G=e (πD)2 BW =
70λ
D

λ2
Where D is the diameter of the dish and e is the efficiency.
Total Efficiency

It has been fairly easy to calculate efficiency for an idealized feed horn pattern due to
illumination taper and spillover but there are several other factors that can
significantly reduce efficiency. Because the feed horn and its supporting structures are
in the beam of the dish part of the radiation is blocked or deflected. A real feed horn
also has sidelobes so part of its radiation is in undesired directions and thus wasted.
Finally no reflector is a perfect parabola so the focusing of the beam is not perfect.
We end up with quite a list of contributions to total efficiency:

● Illumination taper

● Spillover loss

● Asymmetries in E- and H-Planes

● Focal point error

● Feedhorn sidelobes

● Blockage by feed horn

● Blockag by supporting structures

● Imperfections in parabolic surface.

● Feedlineloss

Scattering Spillover

Diffraction
Each time the diameter of a dish is doubled the gain is four times or 6db greater, if
both stations doubles the diameter the signal strength will be increased by 12dB, the
total efficiency can be assumed 50% for hand built antenna.

The ratio f/D is the fundamental factor governing the design of the feed for dish. He
ratio is directly related to the beamwidth of the feed necessary to illuminate the dish
effectively. Two dished of the same diameter but different focal lengths require
different design of feed if both are to be illuminated efficiently. The value of .25
correspond to the common focal-plane dish in witch the focus is in the same plane as
the rim of the dish.
Design steps:
Effect of changing the parabolic parameter on radiation:
4

a) Changing Frequency to 4GHz

b) Changing Diameter to 50cm


c) Changing F/D ratio to .3
68

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