Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/124259
Type: Thesis
Title: Ultrawideband and Multi-state Reconfigurable Antennas with Sum and Difference Radiation Patterns
Author: Malakooti, Seyedali
Issue Date: 2019
School/Discipline: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Abstract: Pattern diversity is a term used to describe the operation of several antenna elements working together to produce multiple different radiation patterns with the aim of improving the quality and reliability of a communications system. One useful implementation of pattern diversity considers sum and difference radiation patterns which can be exploited to extend high-gain space coverage and tackle multipath fading. The conventional forms of such pattern diversity antennas are generally working at a single or multiple narrowband frequencies and are designed for specific applications. Hence, generating sum and difference pattern diversity in wide range of frequencies requires the development of new pattern diversity antenna designs. Ultrawideband and frequency reconfigurable designs of pattern diversity antennas are desirable to help reduce the cost and increase the flexibility in applications of pattern diversity antennas. These two types of performances constitute the principal parts of this thesis. The first part of this thesis deals with the challenges of designing ultrawideband Vivaldi antennas with sum and difference radiation patterns. When two Vivaldi antennas are placed next to each other, two mutually exclusive phenomena of grating lobe generation at the highest end of frequency and mutual coupling at the lowest end of frequency will define the bandwidth. Hence, to enhance the bandwidth, the separation between the antenna elements is reduced, which delays the grating lobes generation, and the coupling at lower frequencies is mitigated by introducing an asymmetry in the design of each Vivaldi antenna element. It is shown that this method can be extended to multi-element Vivaldi antennas for higher gain. Next, the bandwidth is further enhanced by adding two vertical metal slabs between the antenna elements improving the isolation at lower frequencies. The proposed antennas use commercially available couplers as feeding networks. As a potential replacement for couplers, an out-of-phase power divider with unequal power division is also proposed. In the second part of this thesis, the pattern diversity function is combined with multistate frequency-reconfigurable filtering functions in a series of novel designs. In the first proposed design, two quasi-Yagi-Uda antennas are used for pattern diversity, while two switchable and reconfigurable bandpass-to-bandstop filters are used to excite the antenna elements. The whole system is excited by an external commercially available rat-race coupler. In a next step, this design is modified to attain wideband, tunable bandpass, and tunable bandstop operations while obviating the need for an external coupler by using three antenna elements excited by a switchable power divider. In another implementation, the filtering functions is extended to dual-band independently tunable bandpass and bandstop to excite wideband antennas. While all the former designs featured E-plane pattern diversity, in another design aiming at increasing space coverage, a switchable patch antennas with sum and difference radiation patterns in both E- and H-plane of the antenna is designed.
Advisor: Fumeaux, Christophe
Ranasinghe, Damith Chintana
Dissertation Note: Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2020
Keywords: Ultrawideband antennas
Reconfigurable antennas
pattern diversity
filtering response
Provenance: This electronic version is made publicly available by the University of Adelaide in accordance with its open access policy for student theses. Copyright in this thesis remains with the author. This thesis may incorporate third party material which has been used by the author pursuant to Fair Dealing exceptions. If you are the owner of any included third party copyright material you wish to be removed from this electronic version, please complete the take down form located at: http://www.adelaide.edu.au/legals
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