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Journal ArticleDOI

The performance properties of electrically small resonant multiple-arm folded wire antennas

Steven R. Best
- 01 Aug 2005 - 
- Vol. 47, Iss: 4, pp 13-27
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TLDR
In this paper, the resonant radiation properties of electrically small, multiple-arm, folded wire antennas are considered and compared as a function of the antenna's height, the cylindrical diameter occupied, the geometry, and the number of folded arms within the antenna structure.
Abstract
In this tutorial article, the resonant radiation properties of electrically small, multiple-arm, folded wire antennas are considered and compared as a function of the antenna's height, the cylindrical diameter occupied, the geometry, and the number of folded arms within the antenna structure. The radiation properties considered include resonant resistance, efficiency, radiation patterns, and the operating bandwidth, which is characterized using the antenna's quality factor (Q). It is shown that electrically small, multiple-arm, folded wire antenna designs offer significant performance improvements relative to simple open-ended wire antennas, in terms of increased resonant resistance, bandwidth, and efficiency. However, when multiple-arm, folded wire antennas of the same height and cylindrical diameter, but having significantly different geometries, are made to be self-resonant at the same frequency, they exhibit similar resonant performance properties. This illustrates that the resonant performance properties of these antennas are primarily established by their height and the physical volume occupied relative to the resonant wavelength. Various design parameters are considered and described for achieving self-resonance and a reasonable impedance match with an electrically small, multiple-arm folded wire antenna. Finally, the performance properties of the multiple-arm folded wire configurations are compared with those of an impedance-matched, non-folded, open-ended wire configuration. It is shown that the multiple-arm folded wire configurations exhibit a lower Q than the impedance-matched, non-folded wire configuration.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electrically small supergain end-fire arrays

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show how the difficulties of narrow tolerances, large mismatches, low radiation efficiencies, and reduced scattering of electrically small parasitic elements can be overcome by using small resonant antennas as the elements in both separately driven and singly driven (parasitic) two-element, electrically-small supergain end-fire arrays.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Folded-Monopole Model for Electrically Small NRI-TL Metamaterial Antennas

TL;DR: In this article, an improved model for analyzing electrically small NRI-TL antennas is proposed, that highlights the methods that enable these antennas to offer a good impedance match and a high radiation efficiency compared to previously reported designs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A New Chu Formula for Q

TL;DR: In this article, the TM-and TE-mode Q formulas are derived, and a simple approximate form for the lowest-order TM mode is presented, which should better match well-designed electrically small antennas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiband Compact Printed Dipole Antennas Using NRI-TL Metamaterial Loading

TL;DR: In this article, a negative-refractive-index transmission line (NRI-TL) metamaterial-loaded dipole antenna is proposed, which exhibits multiband resonant characteristics that are not harmonically related.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Performance Comparison of Fundamental Small-Antenna Designs

TL;DR: In this article, the performance properties of several fundamental small-antenna designs are compared as a function of overall length and size (ka), where the antennas operate at or very near the same frequency.
References
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Book

Antenna engineering handbook

Henry Jasik
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of the fundamental principles of Antennas, including antennas of Discrete Elements (DDE), dipoles, monopoles, and loops.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamental Limitations of Small Antennas

H.A. Wheeler
TL;DR: In this paper, a simple formula for the more fundamental properties of small antennas and their behavior in a simple circuit is given for 1-Mc operation in typical circuits, which indicates a loss of about 35 db for the I.R.E. standard capacitive antenna, 43 db for a large loop occupying a volume of 1 meter square by 0.5 meter axial length, and 64 db for an antenna loop of 1/5 these dimensions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A re-examination of the fundamental limits on the radiation Q of electrically small antennas

TL;DR: In this paper, an exact method for the calculation of the minimum radiation Q of a general antenna was derived, which is more straightforward than those previously published, and has implications on both the bandwidth and efficiency of antennas which fall into this category.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impedance, bandwidth, and Q of antennas

TL;DR: In this article, exact and approximate expressions for the bandwidth and Q of a general single-feed (one-port) lossy or lossless linear antenna tuned to resonance or antiresonance were derived.
Journal ArticleDOI

The radiation properties of electrically small folded spherical helix antennas

TL;DR: The radiation properties of several electrically small, folded spherical helix antennas are presented in this paper, where the principle design objectives are to achieve self resonance, a low quality factor (Q), and a practical radiation resistance for small values of ka.