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Key Points 1. Principals of EM Radiation 2. Introduction to Propagation & Antennas 3. Antenna Characterization. 1. Principals of Radiated electromagentic (EM) fields . two laws (from Maxwell Equation) 1. A Moving Electric Field Creates a Magnetic ( H ) field
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Key Points 1. Principals of EM Radiation 2. Introduction to Propagation & Antennas 3. Antenna Characterization
1. Principals of Radiated electromagentic (EM) fields • two laws (from Maxwell Equation) • 1. A Moving Electric Field Creates a Magnetic (H) field • 2. A Moving Magnetic Field Creates an Electric (E) field
B A l = /2 An AC current i(t), flowing in a wire produces an EM field • Assume i(t) applied at A with length l = /2 • EM wave will travel along the wire until it reaches the B • B is a point of high impedence wave reflects toward A and is reflected • back again • resistance gradually dissipates the energy of the wave • wave is reinforced at A • results in continuous oscillations of energy along the wire and a high • voltage at the A end of the wire. c 3 108m/s l = /2: wave will complete one cycle from A to B and back to A = distance a wave travels during 1 cycle f = c/ = c/2l
B B A A current distribution at time t voltage distribution at time t − + l = /4 i(t) ++++ +++++++ +++++++++++ +++++++++++++++ +++++++++++++++ − + ----- ----------- ---------------- -------------------- ------------------------ • Dipole antenna: 2 wires each with length l = /4 • attach ends to terminals of a high frequency AC generator • at time t, the generator’s right side = ‘+’ and the left side = ‘−’ • electrons flow away from the ‘−’ terminal and towards the ‘+’ terminal • most current flows in the center and none flows at the ends • i(t)at any point will vary directly withv(t) • ¼ cycle after electrons have begun to flow max number of electrons will be at A and min number at B • vmax(t) is developed • i(t) = 0
EM patterns on Dipole Antenna: • sinusoidal distribution of charge exists on the antenna that reverses • polarity every ½ cycle • sinusoidal variation in charge magnitude lags the sinusoidal variation in • current by ¼ cycle. • Electic field E and magnetic field H 90 out of phase with each other • fields add and produce a single EM field • total energy in the radiated wave is constant, except for some absorption • as the wave advances, the energy density decreases • Standing Wave • center of the antenna is at a low impedance: v(t) 0, imax(t) • ends of antenna are at high impedence: i(t) 0, vmax(t) • maximum movement of electrons is in the center of the antenna at all • times • Resonance condition in the antenna • waves travel back and forth reinforcin • maximum EM waves are transmitted into at maximum radiation
POLARIZATION • EM field is composed of electric & magnetic lines of force that are • orthogonal to each other • E determines the direction of polarization of the wave • vertical polarization: electric force lines lie in a vertical direction • horizontal polarization : electric force lines lie in a horizontal direction • circular polarization: electric force lines rotate 360 every cycle • An antenna extracts maximumenergy from a passing EM wave when it is oriented in the same direction as E • use vertical antenna for the efficient reception of vertically polarized • waves • use horizontal antenna for the reception of horizontally polarized waves • if E rotates as the wave travels through space wave has. horizontal and vertical components
Ground wave transmissions missions at lower frequencies use vertical polarization • horizontal polarization E force lines are parallel to and touch the earth. • earth acts as a fairly good conductor at low frequencies shorts out • vertical electric lines of force are bothered very little by the earth.
2. Introduction to Antennas and Propagation • Types of antennas • simple antennas: dipole, long wire • complex antennas: additional components to • shape radiated field • provide high gain for long distances or weak signal reception • size frequency of operation • combinations of identical antennas • phased arrays electrically shape and steer antenna • transmit antenna: radiate maximum energy into surroundings • receive antenna: capture maximum energy from surrounding • radiating transmission line is technically an antenna • good transmission line = poor antenna
Major Difference Between Antennas And Transmission Lines • transmission line uses conductor to carry voltage & current • radio signal travels through air (insulator) • antennas are transducers • - convert voltage & current into electric & magnetic field • - bridges transmission line & air • - similar to speaker/microphone with acoustic energy • Transmission Line • voltage & current variations produce EM field around conductor • EM field expands & contracts at same frequency as variations • EM field contractions return energy to the source (conductor) • Nearly all the energy in the transmission line remains in the system
Antenna • Designed to Prevent most of the Energy from returning to Conductor • Specific Dimensions & EM wavelengths cause field to radiate • several before the Cycle Reversal • - Cycle Reversal - Field Collapses Energy returns to Conductor • - Produces 3-Dimensional EM field • - Electric Field Magnetic Field • - Wave Energy Propagation Electric Field & Magnetic Field
Antenna Performance depends heavily on • Channel Characteristics: obstacles, distances temperature,… • Signal Frequency • Antenna Dimensions • transmit & receive antennas • theoretically are the same (e.g. radiation fields, antenna gain) • practical implementation issue: • transmit antenna handles high power signal (W-MW) • - large conductors & high power connectors, • receive antenna handles low power signal (mW-uW)
(2) Space Wave • Line of Sight (LOS) wave • Ground Diffraction allows for greater distance • Approximate Maximum Distance, D in miles is • (antenna height in ft) • No Strict Signal Frequency Limitations hrx htx D = • Propagation Modes – five types • (1) Ground or Surface wave: follow earths contour • affected by natural and man-made terrain • salt water forms low loss path • several hundred mile range • 2-3 MHz signal
ionosphere refracted wave reflected wave skip distance transmitted wave (3) Sky Waves • reflected off ionosphere (20-250 miles high) • large ranges possible with single hop or multi-hop • transmit angle affects distance, coverage, refracted energy
Ionosphere • is a layer of partially ionized gasses below troposphere • - ionization caused by ultra-violet radiation from the sun • - affected by: available sunlight, season, weather, terrain • - free ions & electrons reflect radiated energy • consists of several ionized layers with varying ion density • - each layer has a central region of dense ionization F1 & F2 separate during daylight, merge at night
Usable Frequency and Angles • Critical Frequency: frequency that won’t reflect vertical transmission • - critical frequency is relative to each layer of ionosphere • - as frequency increases eventually signal will not reflect • Maximum Usable Frequency (MUF): highest frequency useful for • reflected transmissions • - absorption by ionosphere decreases at higher frequencies • - absorption of signal energy = signal loss • - best results when MUF is used • Frequency Trade-Off • high frequency signals eventually will not reflect back to ground • lower frequency signals are attenuated more in the ionosphere
ionosphere angle of radiation Critical Angle • angle of radiation: transmitted energy relative to surface tangent • - smaller angle requires less ionospheric refraction to return to earth • - too large an angle results in no reflection • - 3o-60o are common angles • critical angle: maximum angle of radiation that will reflect energy • to earth • Determination of minimum skip distance: • - critical angle - small critical angle long skip distance • - height of ionosphere - higher layers give longer skip distances • for a fixed angle • multipath: signal takes different paths to the destination
(4) Satellite Waves • Designed to pass through ionosphere into space • uplink (ground to space) • down link (space to ground) • LOS link • Frequencies >> critical frequency • penetrates ionosphere without reflection • high frequencies provide bandwidth • Geosynchronous orbit 23k miles (synchronized with earth’s orbit) • long distances result in high path loss • EM energy disperses over distances • intensely focused beam improves efficiency
Free Space Path Loss equation used to determine signal levels • over distance • G = antenna gain: projection of energy in specific direction • can magnify transmit power • increase effective signal level at receiver (dB) total loss = Gt + Gr – path loss (dB)
(5) radar: requires • high gain antenna • sensitive low noise receiver • requires reflected signal from object – distances are doubled • only small fraction of transmitted signal reflects back
3. Antenna Characterization • antennas generate EM field pattern • not always possible to model mathematically • difficult to account for obstacles • antennas are studied in EM isolated rooms to extract key • performance characteristics antenna design & relative signal intensity determines relative field pattern • absolute value of signal intensity varies for given antenna design • - at the transmitter this is related to power applied at transmitter • - at the receiver this is related to power in surrounding space
90o 0o 180o forward gain = 10dB backward gain = 7dB 270o +10dB +7dB + 4dB • Polar Plot of relative signal strength of radiated field • shows how field strength is shaped • generally 0o aligned with major physical axis of antenna • most plots are relative scale (dB) • - maximum signal strength location is 0 dB reference • - closer to center represents weaker signals
(i) antenna field pattern = general shape of signal intensity in far-field far-field measurements measured many wavelengths away from antenna near-field measurement involves complex interactions of decaying electrical and magnetic fields - many details of antenna construction • radiated field shaping lens & visible light • application determines required direction & focus of signal • antenna characteristics • (i) radiation field pattern • (ii) gain • (iii) lobes, beamwidth, nulls • (iv) directivity
Measuring Antenna Field Pattern • field strength meter used to measure field pattern • indicates amplitude of received signal • calibrated to receiving antenna • relationship between meter and receive antenna known • measured strength in uV/meter • received power is in uW/meter • directly indicates EM field strength
90o 0o 180o 270o 100 uV/m • Determination of overall Antenna Field Pattern • form Radiation Polar Plot Pattern • use nominal field strength value (e.g. 100uV/m) • measure points for 360o around antenna • record distance & angle from antenna • connect points of equal field strength • practically • distance between meter & antenna kept constant • antenna is rotated • plot of field strength versus angle is made
Why Shape the Antenna Field Pattern ? • transmit antennas: produce higher effective power in direction of • intended receiver • receive antennas: concentrate energy collecting ability in • direction of transmitter • - reduced noise levels - receiver only picks up intended signal • avoid unwanted receivers (multiple access interference = MAI): • - security • - multi-access systems • locate target direction & distance – e.g. radar • not always necessary to shape field pattern, standard broadcast is • often omnidirectional - 360o
(ii) Antenna Gain • Gain is Measured Specific to a Reference Antenna • isotropic antenna often used - gain over isotropic • - isotropic antenna – radiates power ideally in all directions • - gain measured in dBi • - test antenna’s field strength relative to reference isotropic antenna • - at same power, distance, and angle • - isotropic antenna cannot be practically realized • ½ wave dipole often used as reference antenna • - easy to build • - simple field pattern
Antenna Gain Amplifier Gain • antenna power output = power input – transmission line loss • antenna shapes radiated field pattern • power measured at a point is greater/less than that using • reference antenna • total power output doesn’t increase • power output in given direction increases/decreases relative to • reference antenna • e.g. • a lamp is similar to an isotropic antenna • a lens is similar to a directional antenna • - provides a gain/loss of visible light in a specific direction • - doesn’t change actual power radiated by lamp
transmit antenna with 6dB gain in specific direction over isotropic • antenna 4 transmit power in that direction • receive antenna with 3dB gain is some direction receives 2 as • much power than reference antenna • Antenna Gain • often a cost effective means to • (i) increase effective transmit power • (ii) effectively improve receiver sensitivity • may be only technically viable means • more power may not be available (batteries) • front end noise determines maximum receiver sensitivity Rotational Antennas can vary direction of antenna gain Directional Antennas focus antenna gain in primary direction
90o beam width 0o 180o null 270o • (iii) Beamwidth, Lobes & Nulls • Lobe: area of high signal strength • - main lobe • - secondary lobes • Nulls: area of very low signal strength • Beamwidth: total angle where relative signal power is 3dB • below peak value of main lobe • - can range from 1o to 360o • Beamwidth & Lobes indicate sharpness of pattern focus
Center Frequency =optimum operating frequency Antenna Bandwidth -3dB points of antenna performance Bandwidth Ratio: Bandwidth/Center Frequency • e.g. fc = 100MHz with 10MHz bandwidth • - radiated power at 95MHz & 105MHz = ½ radiated power at fc • - bandwidth ratio = 10/100 = 10%
Antenna Dimensions • operating frequencies determine physical size of antenna elements • design often uses as a variable (e.g. 1.5 length, 0.25 spacing) Antenna Design Basics • Main Trade-offs for Antenna Design • directivity & beam width • acceptable lobes • maximum gain • bandwidth • radiation angle • Bandwidth Issues • High Bandwidth Antennas tend to have less gain than • narrowband antennas • Narrowband Receive Antenna reduces interference from adjacent • signals & reduce received noise power
Testing & Adjusting Transmitter use antenna’s electrical load • Testing required for • - proper modulation • - amplifier operation • - frequency accuracy • using actual antenna may cause significant interference • dummy antenna used for transmitter design (not antenna design) • - same impedance & electrical characteristics • - dissipates energy vs radiate energy • - isolates antenna from problem of testing transmitter
Testing Receiver • test & adjust receiver and transmission line without antenna • use single known signal from RF generator • follow on test with several signals present • verify receiver operation first then connect antenna to • verify antenna operation Polarization • EM field has specific orientation of E-field & M field • Polarization Direction determined by antenna & physical orientation • Classification of E-field polarization • - horizontal polarization : E-field parallel to horizon • - vertical polarization: E-field vertical to horizon • - circular polarization: constantly rotating
Transmit & Receive Antenna must have same Polarization for • maximum signal energy induction • if polarizations aren’t same E-field of radiated signal will try to • induce E-field into wire to correct orientation • - theoretically no induced voltage • - practically – small amount of induced voltage • Circular Polarization • compatible with any polarization field from horizontal to vertical • maximum gain is 3dB less than correctly oriented horizontal or • vertically polarized antenna
½ ¼ ¼ Transmission Line gap i +v -v High Impedance 2k-3k Low Impedance 73 Antenna Fundamentals • Dipole Antennas (Hertz): simple, old, widely used • - root of many advance antennas • consists of 2 spread conductors of 2 wire transmission lines • each conductor is ¼ in length • total span = ½ + small center gap • Distinct voltage & current patterns • driven by transmission line at midpoint • i = 0 at end, maximum at midpoint • v = 0 at midpoint, vmax at ends • purely resistive impedance = 73 • easily matched to many transmission lines
E-field (E) & M-field (B) used to determine radiation pattern • E goes through antenna ends & spreads out in increasing loops • B is a series of concentric circles centered at midpoint gap B E
Polar Radiation Pattern Elevation Pattern Azimuth Pattern • 3-dimensional field pattern is donut shaped • antenna is shaft through donut center • radiation pattern determined by taking slice of donut • - if antenna is horizontal slice reveals figure 8 • - maximum radiation is broadside to antenna’s arms
½ dipole performance – isotropic reference antenna • in free space beamwidth = 78o • maximum gain = 2.1dB • dipole often used as reference antenna • - feed same signal power through ½ dipole & test antenna • - compare field strength in all directions • Actual Construction • (i) propagation velocity in wire < propagation velocity in air • (ii) fields have ‘fringe effects’ at end of antenna arms • - affected by capacitance of antenna elements • 1st estimate: make real length 5% less than ideal - otherwise • introduce reactive parameter • Useful Bandwidth: 5%-15% of fc • major factor for determining bandwidth is diameter of conductor • smaller diameter narrow bandwidth
Multi-Band Dipole Antennas L L C 2/4 2/4 1/4 1/4 C Transmission Line • use 1 antenna support several widely separated frequency bands • e.g. HAM Radio - 3.75MHz-29MHz • Traps: L,C elements inserted into dipole arms • arms appear to have different lengths at different frequencies • traps must be suitable for outdoor use • 2ndry affects of trap impact effective dipole arm length-adjustable • not useful over 30MHz
Transmit Receive Switches • allows use of single antenna for transmit & receive • alternately connects antenna to transmitter & receiver • high transmit power must be isolated from high gain receiver • isolation measured in dB • e.g. 100dB isolation 10W transmit signal 10nW receive signal
Antenna Transmission Line R=Z0 earth ground Elementary Antennas low cost – flexible solutions Long Wire Antenna • effective wideband antenna • length l = several wavelengths • - used for signals with 0.1l < < 0.5l • - frequency span = 5:1 • drawback for band limited systems - unavoidable interference • near end driven by ungrounded transmitter output • far end terminated by resistor • - typically several hundred • - impedance matched to antenna Z0 • transmitter electrical circuit ground connected to earth
feed horizon angular radiation pattern polar ration pattern • practically - long wire is a lossy transmission line • - terminating resistor prevent standing waves • Polar radiation pattern • 2 main lobes • - on either side of antenna • - pointed towards antenna termination • smaller lobes on each side of antenna – pointing forward & back • radiation angle 45o (depending on height) useful for sky waves
poor efficiency: • transmit power • - 50% of transmit power radiated • - 50% dissapated in termination resistor • receive power • - 50% captured EM energy converted to signal for reciever • - 50% absorbed by terminating resistor
/2 • Folded Dipole Antenna • - basic ½ dipole folded to form complete circuit • - core to many advanced antennas • - mechanically more rugged than dipole • - 10% more bandwidth than dipole • - input impedance 292 • - close match to std 300 twin lead wire transmission line • - use of different diameter upper & lower arms allows • variable impedance
N-turns Area A Antenna Plane • Loop & Patch Antenna – wire bent into loops • Patch Antenna: rectangular conducting area with || ground plane V= k(2f)BAN V = maximum voltage induced in receiver by EM field B = magnetic field strength flux of EM field A = area of loop N = number of turns f= signal frequency k= physical proportionality factor
Radiation Pattern • maximum to center axis through loop • very low broadside to the loop • useful for direction finding • - rotate loop until signal null (minimum) observed • - transmitter is on either side of loop • - intersection with 2nd reading pinpoints transmitter • Loop & Patch Antennas are easy to embed in a product (e.g. pager) • Broadband antenna - 500k-1600k Hz bandwidth • Not as efficient as larger antennas
Name Shape Gain (over isotropic) Beamwidth -3 dB Radiation Pattern Isotropic 0 dB 360 Dipole 2.14 dB 55 Turnstile -0.86 dB 50 Full Wave Loop 3.14 dB 200 Yagi 7.14 dB 25 Helical 10.1 dB 30 Parabolic Dipole 14.7 dB 20 Horn 15 dB 15 Biconical Horn 14 dB 360x200