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A multiple‐input‐multiple‐output on‐chip Quasi‐Yagi‐Uda antenna for multigigabit communications: Preliminary study

TLDR
The four elements of Quasi‐Yagi‐Uda antennas (QYUA) are introduced based on the diversity technique to reduce the interference between the elements to solve the problems of OCA designs.
Abstract
This article presents a solution for the low gain and the poor efficiency of the on‐chip antennas (OCA). The four elements of Quasi‐Yagi‐Uda antennas (QYUA) are introduced based on the diversity technique to reduce the interference between the elements. In addition, these antennas achieve high isolations between them due to the use of reflector for each antenna. The QYUA is selected to improve the radiation properties of the end‐fire radiator in the millimeter‐wave range for on‐chip systems. The proposed MIMO antenna is used for the point to point communications. The complementary metal‐oxide semiconductor with 180 nm standard is used in the antenna design with six metal layers. The QYUA combines three parts (driven element, reflector, and director); the driven consists of two meander lines fed by coplanar‐slot and operates as a dipole, the reflector is an arc likes a semicircle to prevent the back radiation and increase the front to back ratio, and the director is a meander line to directive the radiation into the proposed direction (front end‐fire direction). All MIMO parameters such as envelope correlation coefficient, channel capacity loss, diversity gain, and total active reflection coefficient in addition to the different configurations of the MIMO are presented. All results are verified by computer simulation technology and high‐frequency structure simulator. The contribution of this article is the MIMO antenna design for point to point communications to serve multigiga communications systems with high data rate and high gain. This MIMO system is considered here to solve the problems of OCA designs.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Antenna-on-Chip for Millimeter Wave Applications Using CMOS Process Technology

TL;DR: In this paper , an artificial magnetic conductor (AMC) on the M1 layer is proposed to increase the radiation gain and reduce the reflection coefficient (S11) magnitude for impedance matching and antenna performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

On-chip antennas for 60-GHz radios in silicon technology

TL;DR: The design, fabrication, and characterization of on-chip inverted-F and quasi-Yagi antennas for 60-GHz radios using the Zeland IE3D software package are addressed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compact Printed UWB Diversity Slot Antenna With 5.5-GHz Band-Notched Characteristics

TL;DR: In this article, a compact printed ultrawideband (UWB) slot antenna for MIMO/diversity applications is presented, which consists of two modified coplanar waveguides (CPWs) feeding staircase-shaped radiating elements for orthogonal radiation patterns.
Journal ArticleDOI

On-chip integrated antenna structures in CMOS for 60 GHz WPAN systems

TL;DR: The current state of research in on-chip integrated antennas is presented, several pitfalls and challenges for on- chip design, modeling, and measurement are highlighted, and several antenna structures that derive from the microwave microstrip and amateur radio art are proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tapered Fed Compact UWB MIMO-Diversity Antenna With Dual Band-Notched Characteristics

TL;DR: In this article, a compact design of multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) Antenna with dual sharply rejected notch bands for portable wireless ultrawideband (UWB) applications is presented and experimentally investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

A 60-GHz Millimeter-Wave CPW-Fed Yagi Antenna Fabricated by Using 0.18- $\mu\hbox{m}$ CMOS Technology

TL;DR: In this paper, a 60 GHz millimeter-wave on-chip Yagi antenna fabricated with a 0.18-mum CMOS process is presented, where a feeding network is designed in a coplanar waveguide technology.
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