0% found this document useful (0 votes)
88 views27 pages

Presentation On Antenna and Its Parameters: MD Shabbir Hasan Dept. of ECE Institute of Science and Technology

Md. Shabbir Hasan of the Department of ECE at the Institute of Science and Technology presented on antenna parameters. The presentation defined an antenna as a device that converts guided waves into radiating waves, and discussed key antenna concepts like near and far field regions, as well as important parameters including radiation pattern, directivity, bandwidth, gain, and polarization matching. Ten important antenna parameters were covered in detail: radiation pattern, directivity, radiation resistance and efficiency, power gain, bandwidth, reciprocity, effective aperture, beamwidth and directivity, the Friis formula, and polarization matching.

Uploaded by

rajbabu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
88 views27 pages

Presentation On Antenna and Its Parameters: MD Shabbir Hasan Dept. of ECE Institute of Science and Technology

Md. Shabbir Hasan of the Department of ECE at the Institute of Science and Technology presented on antenna parameters. The presentation defined an antenna as a device that converts guided waves into radiating waves, and discussed key antenna concepts like near and far field regions, as well as important parameters including radiation pattern, directivity, bandwidth, gain, and polarization matching. Ten important antenna parameters were covered in detail: radiation pattern, directivity, radiation resistance and efficiency, power gain, bandwidth, reciprocity, effective aperture, beamwidth and directivity, the Friis formula, and polarization matching.

Uploaded by

rajbabu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Presentation on Antenna and its

parameters

Md Shabbir Hasan
Dept. of ECE
Institute of Science and Technology

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-


827,IST,National University
What is an Antenna?

An antenna is a way of converting the guided waves


present in a waveguide, feeder cable or transmission line
into radiating waves travelling in free space, or vice
versa.

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Necessary Conditions for Radiation

Only accelerating charges produce radiation.

References

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Field Regions

Two fields regions:


oNear field or Fresnel region: The region within the
radius of the smallest sphere which completely encloses
the antenna is called Fresnel region.
In sitting an antenna ,its crucial to keep objects out of
the near field region to avoid coupling the currents in the
antenna with objects.

oFar Field or Fraunhofer region: The region beyond


Fresnel region is called Fraunhofer region

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Radiation Pattern

The radiation pattern of an antenna is a plot of the far-


field radiation from the antenna. More specifically, it is a
plot of the power radiated from an antenna per unit solid
angle, or its radiation intensity U [watts per unit solid
angle]. This is arrived at by simply multiplying the power
density at a given distance by the square of the distance r,
where the power density S [watts per square metre] is
given by the magnitude of the time-averaged Poynting
vector:
U=r^S

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Directivity

The directivity D of an antenna, a function of direction


is defined by the ratio of radiation intensity of antenna in
direction to the mean radiation intensity in all
directions.

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Radiation Resistance and Efficiency
The resistive part of the antenna impedance is split into two parts, a
radiation resistance Rr and a loss resistance Rl. The power dissipated in
the radiation resistance is the power actually radiated by the antenna, and
the loss resistance is power lost within the antenna itself. This may be due
to losses in either the conducting or the dielectric parts of the antenna.
Radiation efficiency e of the antenna as e is the ratio of power radiated
to the power accepted by antenna
antenna with high radiation efficiency therefore has high associated
radiation resistance compared with the losses. The antenna is said to be
resonant if its input reactance Xa =0.

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Power Gain
The power gain G, or simply the gain, of an antenna is
the ratio of its radiation intensity to that
of an isotropic antenna radiating the same total power as
accepted by the real antenna. When
antenna manufacturers specify simply the gain of an
antenna they are usually referring to the
maximum value of G.

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Bandwidth

The bandwidth of an antenna expresses its ability to


operate over a wide frequency range. It is often defined
as the range over which the power gain is maintained to
within 3dB of its maximum value, or the range over
which the VSWR is no greater than 2:1, whichever is
smaller. The bandwidth is usually given as a percentage of
the nominal operating frequency. The radiation
pattern of an antenna may change dramatically outside
its specified operating bandwidth.

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Reciprocity
Reciprocity theorem:
If a voltage is applied to the terminals of an antenna A and
the current measured at the terminals of another antenna B
then an equal current will be obtained at the terminals of
antenna A if the same voltage is applied to the terminals of
antenna B.

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Effective Aperture
If an antenna is used to receive a wave with a power density S [W m2], it will produce a
power in its terminating impedance (usually a receiver input impedance) of Pr watts. The
constant of proportionality between Pr and S is Ae, the effective aperture of the antenna in
square metres:
Pr = AeS
For some antennas, such as horn or dish antennas, the aperture has an obvious physical
interpretation, being almost the same as the physical area of the antenna, but the concept is
just as valid for all antennas. The effective aperture may often be very much larger than the
physical area, especially in the case of wire antennas. Note, however, that the effective
aperture will reduce as the efficiency of an antenna decreases.
The antenna gain G is related to the effective aperture as follows
G=4pi/ (lamda)2Ae

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-


827,IST,National University
Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Beamwidth and Directivity

The directivity of an antenna increases as its beamwidth is


made smaller, as the energy
radiated is concentrated into a smaller solid angle

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-


827,IST,National University
Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Friss Formula

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-


827,IST,National University
Antenna Parameters

Antenna parameters are:


[Link] Pattern
[Link]
[Link] Resistance and Efficiency
[Link] Gain
[Link]
[Link]
[Link] Aperture
[Link] and Directivity
[Link] Friis Formula: Antennas in Free Space
[Link] Matching

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Polarisation Matching
The polarisation mismatch loss is the ratio between
the power received by the antenna and the power
which would be received by an antenna perfectly
matched to the incident wave

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-


827,IST,National University
References
Antennas and Propagation for Wireless Communication
Systems
Second Edition Simon R. Saunders and Alejandro
Aragon-Zavala

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University


Q &A ?

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-


827,IST,National University
Thank You Very Much

This is made by [Link] Hasan ,ECE-827,IST,National University

You might also like