DocumentCode :
603811
Title :
EBG-dipole array antenna creating beam-tilt for base-station applications
Author :
Ilkyu Kim ; Rahmat-Samii, Yahya
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA
fYear :
2013
fDate :
9-12 Jan. 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
Summary form only given. For a typical base-station, tilted beam towards the ground has been employed in order to increase the signal reception from the mobile device. This can be realized with either an electronically controlled phased array antenna or a mechanically tilted array antenna. These techniques have been used; however, there exists inherent shortcomings with respect to performance at a tilted angle and practical implementation. For a common phased array, an array pattern is tilted toward a desired direction while element pattern stays toward the broadside. This mainly results in antenna gain reduction at the tilted angle. For the mechanically adjusted array, careful and stable installation is often required, which sometimes make it difficult to implement. Therefore, an enhancement in the conventional basestation array antenna is needed in order to achieve improved antenna performance with robust implementation. In this paper, a novel base-station array element design that consists of a single dipole mounted on an EBG ground plane is presented. Each dipole on an EBG structure provides tilted radiation pattern. This is achieved by employing 6×6 cell miniaturized EBG structure that is modified by connecting four of its unit cells. This EBG structure allows a low profile, high directivity, and beam-tilting single element design. With this dipole-EBG element, the radiation pattern can be steered from the broadside to the desired tilted angle which is suitable for the base-station applications. Based on the element design, an array antenna with four dipole-EBG elements is designed in order to verify the base-station like antenna performance. A down-tilt array pattern incorporated with a progressive phase is utilized in the array along with the tilted element pattern. To validate the proposed array, similar array that consists of non-modified standard EBG unit cell (a broadside element pattern) is employed as a reference. It is observed that the propos- d array, compared to the reference case, achieves better performance with respect to the gain and sidelobe characteristics. The proposed EBG-dipole element incorporated into an array antenna is simulated using full-wave simulator. The proposed EBG antenna operates at 3.5 GHz, which covers part of WiMAX service bands. The directivity of more than 11.5 dB is obtained at the down-tilted angle of 25°. An impedance matching better than -10 dB S-parameter is attained across a reasonable bandwidth. The proposed dipole-EBG element array antenna should allow for performance efficient realization of future base-station antennas.
Keywords :
WiMax; antenna phased arrays; antenna radiation patterns; dipole antenna arrays; microwave antennas; EBG ground plane; EBG-dipole array antenna; WiMAX service band; base-station application; base-station array element design; basestation array antenna; beam-tilt; cell miniaturized EBG structure; dipole-EBG element array antenna; down-tilt array pattern; frequency 3.5 GHz; full-wave simulator; impedance matching; phased array antenna; progressive phase; sidelobe characteristics; signal reception; tilted beam; tilted element pattern; tilted radiation pattern; Antenna radiation patterns; Arrays; Dipole antennas; Metamaterials; Periodic structures; Phased arrays;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Radio Science Meeting (USNC-URSI NRSM), 2013 US National Committee of URSI National
Conference_Location :
Boulder, CO
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-4776-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/USNC-URSI-NRSM.2013.6525029
Filename :
6525029
Link To Document :
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