Experimental and theoretical study of wide-band spiral antenna miniaturization via material and lumped element loadings
Abstract (Summary)
Spiral antennas are of great interest for many broadband applications because of
their inherent large bandwidth. This dissertation explores novel techniques for reducing
size of conformal antennas with particular emphasis on spirals. Specifically,
a new scheme based on distributed reactive loads is developed for concurrent control
of the spiral impedance and wave velocity, without increasing the antenna volume.
We also show that a properly terminated spiral element with material and absorber
loading can achieve 0 dBi realized gain even when its size is only 0.15 ? per side
and ?/20 in height at the lowest operational frequency (with ground plane backing),
which is 3 times smaller than previous publications. The proposed size reduction
techniques were adapted to develop a ground plane-backed six-element L-band spiral
array delivering circular polarization. This L-band aperture is 1.9 times smaller than
earlier versions and approached optimal size miniaturization. An extension of Chu’s
antenna limit theory is also presented subject to a given impedance mismatch factor.
This extension provided, for the first time, a relation between antenna size and maximum
achievable realized gain for a source with real impedance. Our examination of
spiral miniaturization further indicated that the concept of wave slow-down is both
an enabling and a limiting factor.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The Ohio State University
School Location:USA - Ohio
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:spiral antennas
ISBN:
Date of Publication: