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Jaringan Wireless dan Mobile

Program Studi Informatika

Sesi 5 – Antena

Sumber : Introduction to Antennas, Prof. David R. Jackson, 2021

Ambros Magnus Rudolf Mekeng, S.T.,M.T


Introduction to Antennas
Antennas
An antenna is a device that is used to transmit and/or
receive an electromagnetic wave.

Note: The antenna itself can always transmit or receive, but it may
be used for only one of these functions in an application.

Examples:

 Cell-phone antenna (transmit and receive)


 TV antenna in your home (receive only)
 Wireless LAN antenna (transmit and receive)
 FM radio antenna (receive only)
 Satellite dish antenna (receive only)
 AM radio broadcast tower (transmit only)
 GPS position location unit (receive only)
 GPS satellite (transmit only)

2
Introduction to Antennas (cont.)
Antennas are often used for a variety of reasons:
 For communication over long distances, to have lower loss (see next
slide)
 Where waveguiding systems (e.g., transmission lines such as coaxial
cable or fiber optic cable) are impractical or inconvenient
 When it is desired to communicate with many users at once

Coax

Fiber optic cable

Antenna Twisted pair (CAT 5 cable) 3


Comparison of Waveguiding Systems with Wireless Systems

Wireless systems using antennas will always be better (lower loss)


than wired (waveguiding) systems for large distances.

Power loss from antenna broadcast: 1/ r 2 (always better for very large r)

Power loss from waveguiding system: e 2r

Antenna

r
A B

Waveguiding system

4
Comparison of Waveguiding Systems with Wireless Systems (cont.)

Comparison of Two Functions


1
1
e2r
0.1

0.01
  0.1 np/m
f
(x) 3
10

g(x
)
4
10
1
1/ r 2
5
10
1

6
10
1 10 100 1 103 1 104
1 1 x
 10000 r [meters]
5
Comparison of Waveguiding Systems with Wireless Systems (cont.)

Attenuation in dB 1 GHz

RG59 Single Mode Two Dipoles 34m Dish+Dipole


Distance Coax Fiber Wireless Wireless
1m 0.4 0.0003 28.2 -
10 m 4 0.003 48.2 -
100 m 40 0.03 68.2 -
1 km 400 0.3 88.2 39.3
10 km 4000 3 108.2 59.3
100 km - 30 128.2 79.3
1000 km - 300 148.2 99.3
10,000 km - 3000 168.2 119.3
100,000 km - - 188.2 139.3
1,000,000 km - - 208.2 159.3
10,000,000 km - - 228.2 179.3
100,000,000 km - - 248.2 199.3
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Properties of Antennas

Main properties of antennas:

 Radiation pattern
 Beamwidth and Directivity (how directional the beam is)
 Sidelobe level
 Efficiency (power radiated relative to total input power)
 Polarization (linear, CP)
 Input Impedance
 Bandwidth (the useable frequency range)

7
Types of Antennas
Reflector (Dish) Antenna

Ideally, the dish is parabolic in shape.

 Very high bandwidth


 Medium to high directivity (directivity is determined by the size)
 Linear or CP polarization (depending on how it is fed)
 Works by focusing the incoming wave to a collection (feed) point
8
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Dipole Wire Antenna

L  0 / 2
(resonant)
Current

 Very simple
 Moderate bandwidth At resonance : Z in  73  
 Low directivity
 Omnidirectional in azimuth
 Most commonly fed by a twin-lead transmission line
 Linear polarization ( E , assuming wire is along z axis)
 The antenna is resonant when the length is about one-half free-space wavelength

9
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Dipole Wire Antenna (cont.)

The bow-tie antenna has


flared dipole arms, which
increases the bandwidth.

10
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Folded Dipole Antenna

The folded dipole is a variation of the dipole antenna. It has an input


impedance that is 4 times higher than that of the regular dipole antenna.

Compatible with TV twin lead


At resonance : Z in  292  

Z0  300 

11
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Monopole Wire Antenna

h h  0 /
4

Feeding coax
At resonance : Z in  36.5  

This is a variation of the dipole, using a ground plane instead of a second wire.

 Similar properties as the dipole


 Mainly used when the antenna is mounted on a conducting object or platform
 Usually fed with a coaxial cable feed

12
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Monopole Wire Antenna (cont.)

13
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Yagi Antenna

Driven element

Prof. Yagi

This is a variation of the dipole, using multiples wires (with one “reflector” and one
or more “directors”.

 Low bandwidth
 Moderate to high directivity
 Commonly used as a UHF TV antenna
14
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Yagi Antenna (cont.)

UHF Yagi

UHF Yagi UHF Yagi VHF Log-periodic

15
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Yagi of CP Elements

Two
perpendicular
dipoles fed
90o out of
phase.

 Used for circular polarization

16
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Log-Periodic Antenna

Beam

This consists of multiple dipole antennas of varying lengths, connected together.

 High bandwidth Note:


The input impedance,
 Moderate directivity plotted vs. the log of the
 Commonly used as a VHF TV antenna frequency, is periodic.

17
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Log Periodic Antenna (cont.)

18
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Typical Outdoor TV Antenna

UHF Yagi

VHF Log-periodic

19
Types of Antennas (cont.)

Helical Antennas

 Often used for circular polarization GPS satellite

Note: Circular polarization (CP) is often used is satellite communications.


20
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Horn Antenna

It acts like a “loudspeaker” for electromagnetic waves.

 High bandwidth
 Moderate directivity
 Commonly used at microwave frequencies and above
 Often used as a feed for a reflector antenna

21
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Horn Antenna (cont.)

Arno A. Penzias and Robert


W. Wilson used a large horn
antenna to detect microwave
signals from the “big bang”
(Nobel Prize, 1978).
22
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Horn Antenna (cont.)

This is a variety called the “hoghorn” antenna (a combination of horn+reflector).

23
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Microstrip (Patch) Antenna
y

W Current 1 0
L  d / 2
x  2 r
L
h r

It consists of a printed “patch” of metal that is on top of a grounded dielectric substrate.

 Acts as a radiating resonant cavity


 Low bandwidth
 Low directivity (unless used in an array)
 Low-profile (h can be made very small, at the expense of bandwidth)
 Can be made by etching
 Easily fed by microstrip line or coaxial cable
 Can be made conformable (mounted on a curved surface)
 Commonly used at microwave frequencies and above
24
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Microstrip (Patch) Antenna (cont.)

25
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Dielectric Resonator Antenna (DRA)

The dielectric resonator


antenna was invented by our
very own Prof. Long!
r

Cylindrical DRA

It consists of a dielectric material (such as ceramic) on


top of a grounded dielectric substrate.

 Acts as a resonating dielectric


object
 Moderate to large bandwidth
 Low directivity (unless used in an
array) 26
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Dielectric Resonator Antenna (cont.)

GPS antenna

27
Types of Antennas (cont.)
Leaky-Wave Antenna

y Slot

  k2
2
    k0
0  a 
Air
x
Rectangular waveguide

The slot allows the wave to radiate (“leak”) from the slot.
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Antenna Radiation
We consider here the radiation from an antenna.

S = Poynting vector
z

r r r, , 

+ y  “far field”
- r
x

 e  jk0r  F
E r,  ,     r  E  , 


 The far-field radiation acts like a plane wave going in the radial direction.
 The shape of the pattern in the far field is only a function of (, ).
29
Antenna Radiation (cont.)

How far do we have to go to be in the far field?

Sphere of minimum diameter


D that encloses the antenna. r r,  , 

r 

2D 2
+ r
0
-
 e  jk0r  F
E r,  ,     r  E  , 

A derivation is given in the Antenna Engineering book:


C. A. Balanis, Antenna Engineering, 4th Ed., 2016, Wiley.
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Antenna Radiation (cont.)

The far-field has the following form:


E  ˆ E  ˆ E

z H  ˆ H   ˆ
H H
S E
 0 TMz
y H
E
x z

S E
y  0 TEz
E H  
H
x

Depending on the type of antenna, either or both polarizations may be


radiated (e.g., a vertical wire antenna radiates only TMz polarization).
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Antenna Radiation (cont.)

The far-field Poynting vector is now calculated:

1
S  2E  H *
1 ˆ E
 
    ˆ E  ˆ H  ˆ
2 E 
  
H 
0

H
1
 ˆ    E H 
* * E
2r E H 
 0
 * * H  
1   E  
 ˆ  E 
2 r  E    E  0  
  0  
2
1 E E 2 
 ˆ  
r 
2  0 0 

32
Antenna Radiation (cont.)

Hence we have

S E 
2
 E
2
 1 

rˆ  20 

or

 E2 
S  rˆ
 20 

Note:
In the far field, the Poynting vector is pure real (no reactive power flow).

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Radiation Pattern

Assume we are in the far field:

 e  jk0r  F
E r,  ,     r  E  , 

E F  ,    Normalized far - field electric field

In dB: 3-D antenna pattern

 
E  ,  
F

dB  ,    20 log10 F m m  
 E  ,  
 

m , m   direction of maximum radiation


34
Radiation Pattern (cont.)

The far-field pattern is often shown vs. the angle  (for a fixed angle
0) in polar coordinates.
 EF  0 

dB  ,    20 log
10
 EF, 
 m , 0 
A “pattern cut”  
z  
(shown for a dipole antenna)
30°
 30°

  0  0
z 60° 60°

0 dB
-10 dB
m  90o
-20 dB
Note:
-30 dB For the vertical
120° 120° wire antenna the
pattern is
independent of .
150° 150°
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Radiated Power
The Poynting vector in the far field is

2
 E F  ,    1
S r, ,   rˆ    2 
2   r 
0

The total power radiated is then given by


2 
 E F  ,   2
 S  rˆ  r 2 sin  d d   
2 
Prad   sin  d  d 
20 
  0 0

 
0 0

Hence we have
2 
1
Prad 
2 0 
0 0
E F  ,   sin 
2

 d d  36
Directivity

The directivity of the antenna in the directions (, ) is defined as

S r  ,  r
D  ,   rad
 P

/ 4  r 2

The directivity in a particular direction is the ratio of the power density radiated in that

direction to the power density that would be radiated in that direction if the antenna were
an isotropic radiator (i.e., one that radiates equally in all directions).

In dB,

DdB  ,    10 log10 D  ,  

Note:
The directivity is sometimes referred to as the
“directivity with respect to an isotropic radiator”.
37
Directivity (cont.)

z z

30°
 30° 30°
 30°

60° 60° 60° 60°

0 0
dB dB
-9 -6 -3 -9 -6 -3

120° 120° 120° 120°

150° 150° 150° 150°

Antenna with moderate directivity Antenna with high directivity


(e.g., dipole) (e.g., horn or dish)

38
Directivity (cont.)

Resonant half-wavelength dipole:


m   / 2
D  1.643
D  Dmax  D  / 2, 0 
z
z
h 30°
 30°
Dipole

l  2h 60° 60°

Feed
y 0
dB
-9 -6 -3

x 120° 120°

h
150° 150°
39
Beamwidth
The beamwidth measures how narrow the beam is. (The
narrower the beamwidth, the higher the directivity).

HPBW = half-power beamwidth

The power density is down by a factor of 1/2.

The field is down by a factor of 1/2 = 0.707. In

dB, we are down by 3 dB.

Note:
A smaller beamwidth usually means a
higher directivity.

40
Sidelobes
The sidelobe level measures how strong the sidelobes are.

In this example the sidelobe level is about -12 dB.

Main beam
Sidelobe level

Sidelobes

12
dB

41
Gain and Efficiency
The radiation efficiency of an antenna is defined as

 power radiated by antenna


Prad Prad
er  P Pin  power input to antenna
in

The gain of an antenna in the directions (, ) is defined as

G  ,    er D  ,  

In dB, we have

GdB  ,    10 log10 G  ,  
42
Gain and Efficiency (cont.)
The gain tells us how strong the radiated power density is in a
certain direction, for a given amount of input power.

Recall that
Sr  ,   r 
D  ,   rad
 P /  4  r 2

Therefore, in the far field:


S   ,  
  P / 4 r 2
 D   ,  
 Prad 
 ,    er Pin / 4 r 2  D 
r
S rrad e
 r  
 P in 
  ,

S r  ,    Pin /   r 2  G 
4   , 43
Transmit Antenna

The antenna acts like a load impedance during transmit.

 jX in
Zin  Rin

At resonance, the input reactance Xin is zero (the desired situation).

Example:
Zin  73  for resonant half - wavelength dipole
44
Receive Antenna
The Thévenin equivalent circuit of a wire antenna being used as a
receive antenna is shown below.

Pdinc  incident power density  W/m 2


+
E inc - VTh
ZTh  Zin

Zin  73  resonant half - wavelength dipole

2 ZTh
inc
E
Pdinc  2  W/m 2
0 +
 VTh -

45
Receive Antenna

Sometimes the “effective height” is used to calculate the


Thévenin received voltage for a wire antenna.

lˆ The “effective area” of an antenna is a more


general way to characterize a receive antenna.


VTh  E inc  lˆ heff
+
E inc - VTh

Z Th

+
VTh -

46
Receive Antenna (cont.)

At resonance:

L  0 / 2
Dipole:
Zin  73  Current

Monopole: Zin  36.5 h h  0 / 4

Feeding coax

 

47
Receive Antenna (cont.)

The effective area determines the power received for any antenna.

Assume an optimum conjugate-matched load:

PL  power absorbed by load


ZTh

Note:
VTh + Z Z* If we know PL, we can
- L
Th use this to calculate VTh if
we wish.

PL  Aeff Pdinc

 effective area of antenna


Aeff
Pdinc  power density of incident wave [ W/m 2 ]
48
Receive Antenna (cont.)

We have the following general formula*:

Aeff  G 0 
  2

 
 4 

G  gain of antenna in the direction of the incident signal

This assumes that the incoming signal is polarized in the optimum direction.

*A derivation is given in the Antenna Engineering book:


C. A. Balanis, Antenna Engineering, 4th Ed., 2016, Wiley.

49
Receive Antenna (cont.)

Effective area of a lossless resonant half-wave dipole antenna:

Assume that the incident electric field is aligned along the wire and  = 90o.

2 2

   
Aeff  0
D 0
G  D no losses, e  1
G  4   4  r

l 2
 0 
 1.643    D  Dmax 
+
- VTh  4 
 2l 2  1.643
 1.643   l  0 / 2 
E inc   4 
Hence
Note: The dipole will receive more
Aeff  0.523 l power at a lower frequency (larger l),
2 assuming the same incident power.

50
Receive Antenna (cont.)
Example
Find the receive power in the wireless system shown below, assuming that
the receiver is connected to an optimum conjugate-matched load.

z f 1 GHz
 0  29.979
Pin  10
W  r  1 cm 
Pin W  Transmit km  dinc
Receive
P  W/m 2


  90o
r   90o
x

Z  Z *  73
[]
 Pin L Th
Prad

Assume lossless antennas (G = D =1.643, Prad = Pin) 51


Receive Antenna (cont.)
PL  Aeff Pdinc
Gain of receive antenna Gain of transmit antenna

Recall:

  02  Pin
Aeff  1.643
, P
d
inc
 1.643
4 r
 4  2 

Hence

  2
  Pin 
PL  1.643 0  4 r 1.643
 4 
2

The result is

PL  1.54 108
[W]
52
Receive Antenna (cont.)
Effective area of dish (reflector) antenna

In the maximum gain direction:


Now it is the effective area that we know, and
Aeff  Aphy eap from this we can calculate the gain.

Aphy  physical area of dish


eap  aperture efficiency

We then know the gain:

G  Aeff  42 
 0 

The aperture efficiency is usually less than 1 (less than 100%).


53
Receive Antenna (cont.)
Example

A microstrip antenna with a gain of 8 (9.03 dB) on a Cubesat transmits with an


input power of 1 [W] at 10.0 [GHz] from an distance of 50,000,000 [km] (near
Mars).

How much power will be received by the NASA Deep Space Network dish on Earth
(at Goldstone, CA), which has a diameter of 70 [m]? Assume an aperture efficiency
of 0.75 (75%).

Express answer in Watts and in dBm (dB relative to a milliwatt).

Note : PrecdBm  10 10  0.001Pr 


log  
[W]

54
Receive Antenna (cont.)

Example (cont.) Parameters:


r  5.0 1010

Prec  Pinc
d A eff  Pdinc A phy e Amphy   70 / 2 2
ap
 m 2
Pin eap  0.75

Pdinc
 
 4 2  Gtrans
  P 1
in
r
W
G 
trans  8
P  1.014 19
rec
Note:
WdBm

Prec  151.3  4 
Gdish  Aeff  0 
2
  4.036 10 7
76.06 dB

(But we don’t need this for the calculation.)

55

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