Single substrate wide bandwidth microstrip antenna

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6181280
  • Patent Number
    6,181,280
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, July 28, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 30, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
A microstrip antenna comprising a substrate, a radiating element constructed on the top surface of the substrate, a ground plane on the bottom surface of the substrate, a through hole at a position corresponding to the radiating element of the substrate, and a power feeding conductor at a position corresponding to the radiating element on the substrate.
Description




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




1. Field of the Invention




The present invention relates to microstrip antennas and, in particular, to a method of enhancing the bandwidth of a microstrip antenna without increasing the size or weight of the antenna.




2. Description of the Related Art




Microstrip antennas have many interesting properties such as low profile and lightweight. However, the inherent narrow bandwidth of a microstrip antenna is one of its serious disadvantages. The conventional microstrip antenna typically exhibits a bandwidth of only 1-2% of the resonant frequency. The narrow bandwidth of the microstrip antenna is often inadequate to meet the requirements for practical applications. The development of techniques for the enhancement of the bandwidth of microstrip antenna has been a topic of special emphasis for several years.




A conventional microstrip antenna is shown in

FIGS. 17A and 17B

. The microstrip antenna


170


illustrated in

FIGS. 17A and 17B

consists of a dielectric substrate


101


, a radiating element


102


constructed on the top surface of the substrate


101


and a ground plane


103


constructed on the bottom surface of the substrate


101


. A power feed hole


104


is provided at a point corresponding to the radiating element


102


on the substrate


101


. A connector


105


, used for feeding radio frequency (RF) power to the radiating element


102


, is inserted through the feed hole


104


from the bottom surface of the substrate


101


. The connector


105


is electrically connected to the radiating element


102


with solder


106




a


and is fixed to the ground plane


103


by solder


106




b.






The techniques currently available for enhancing the bandwidth of microstrip antennas (MSA) include use of a thicker substrate, multi-layer stacked microstrip antennas, electromagnetically coupled (EMC) microstrip antennas, microstrip antennas with parasitic elements, aperture coupled microstrip antennas, and use of external matching circuits. As will be clear from the explanations to be provided, some of the above techniques result in an increase in size and weight of the microstrip antenna while some others suffer from the lack in the structural simplicity usually associated with conventional microstrip antennas.




The prior art structural configurations of microstrip antenna for the improvement of bandwidth using the above mentioned techniques are described below. The elements of new microstrip antennas which are similar to that of the conventional microstrip antenna


170


will have same reference numbers as in

FIGS. 17A and 17B

and additional reference explanations will be omitted.




The prior art microstrip antenna


120


with thick substrate material shown in

FIGS. 12A and 12B

has the undesirable characteristics of increased height and weight of the antenna. The thick substrate of the microstrip antenna shown in

FIGS. 12A and 12B

increases the dielectric loss and also increases the cost of the antenna. The thick substrate of the antenna of

FIGS. 12A and 12B

also causes the generation of surface waves and hence degrades the radiation pattern, which is not desirable.




The prior art microstrip antenna


130


with parasitic elements illustrated in

FIG. 13

has two additional parasitic elements


107


adjacent to the radiating element


102


. A narrow gap separates these parasitic elements


107


from the main radiating element


102


. The microstrip antenna


130


has the disadvantages of increased length and weight.





FIG. 14

illustrates the configuration of a prior art electromagnetically coupled microstrip antenna


140


. Antenna


140


has two substrates


101


placed one above the other. The bottom surface of the top substrate


101


does not have conductive film. There is a radiating element


102


on the top surface of the upper substrate


101


and a narrow microstrip line


108


on the top surface of the lower substrate


101


acts as a feed for the radiating element


102


. The microstrip antenna


140


has the disadvantages of increased height, increased weight and higher cost.




A prior art microstrip antenna


150


with multi-layer stacked elements is illustrated in FIG.


15


. Antenna


150


has two radiating microstrip elements


102


, one on the top surface of upper substrate


101


and the other on the top surface of the middle substrate


101


. The radiating elements


102


are stacked one above the other. A narrow microstrip line


108


is positioned on the top surface of bottom substrate


101


. Microstrip line


108


serves as a common feed for the two radiating elements


102


. As in microstrip antenna


140


, there is no conductive film on the bottom surfaces of the upper and middle substrates


101


. The disadvantages of microstrip antenna


150


are increased height, weight, complexity of design, and higher cost.




A prior art aperture coupled microstrip antenna


160


is shown in FIG.


16


and comprises a radiating element


102


on the top surface of upper substrate


101


and a conductive ground plane


103


with an opening or aperture


109


. A narrow microstrip feed line


108


positioned on the top surface of bottom substrate


101


serves as a feed to the aperture


109


. Power is coupled to the radiating element


102


through the aperture


109


. The disadvantages of microstrip antenna


160


are structural complexity, design complexity, increased height, increased weight, and higher cost.




The prior art microstrip antenna with external matching circuit involving inductors and capacitors does not increase the height and or linear dimensions of the antenna. The inductors and capacitors are used near the feed point of the microstrip antenna and provide a better impedance match, hence an improvement in bandwidth results. The disadvantage is that increased bandwidth is at the expense of an undesirable loss in gain of the antenna. Although the matching circuit components are part of the device to which the microstrip antenna is attached and technically are not part of the antenna, they do add to the total cost of the device.




In the past, shorting pins or slots have been used in microstrip antennas to reduce the resonant frequency or to achieve a dual frequency mode of operation. In the prior art, slots or shorting pins have been used separately to achieve dual frequency performance of the antenna. See, for example, S. C. Pan and K. L. Wong “Design of Dual Frequency Microstrip Antennas using shorting pin loading”, IEEE-APS Symposium, Atlanta, June 1998, pp. 312-315; K. L. Wong and W. S. Chen, “Compact microstrip antenna with dual-frequency operation”, Electronics Letters, Apr. 10th 1997, Vol. 33, No. 8, pp. 646-647; S. Maci, Biffi Gentili, P. Piazzesi and C. Salvador, “Dual band slot-loaded patch antenna”, IEE Proc.-Microw. Antennas Propag., Vol. 142, No. 3, June 1995, pp. 225-232; and S. Maci, G. Biffi Gentili and G. Avitabile, “Single-Layer Dual Frequency Patch Antenna”, Electronics Letters, Aug. 5th 1993, Vol. 29, No. 16, pp. 1441-1443, hereinafter referred to as Pan et al., Wong et al., Maci et al., and Maci et al. (II), respectively.




B. F. Wang and Y. T. Lo, “Microstrip Antennas for Dual-Frequency Operation”, IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, Vol. AP-32, No. 9, September 1984, pp. 938-943, describes the dual frequency operation of a microstrip antenna using a combination of slots and shorting pins. In the above-cited references, the obtained bandwidths centered around the dual resonant frequencies have been relatively narrow (1-2% of resonant frequencies). There is also a practical lower limit for ratio of (f


u


/f


L


) (f


u


and f


L


being the upper and lower resonant frequencies, respectively). As a consequence of the lower ratio of (f


u


/f


L


), the resonant bands centered around the dual resonant frequencies are rather widely separated. Therefore, combining the two narrow resonant bands to improve the overall bandwidth is very difficult using the previously used configurations that have been illustrated in the above references.




To circumvent the existing disadvantages of the available microstrip antenna bandwidth enhancing techniques, it is the objective of the present invention to design a single substrate microstrip antenna possessing structural simplicity, wider bandwidth, lightweight, compact size, ease of fabrication, and cost effective to manufacture.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




A compact, wide bandwidth and lightweight microstrip antenna has been designed in order to satisfy the above objectives. The present invention emphasizes the improvement of the bandwidth using only a single substrate or layer. The microstrip antenna of this invention is characterized by: a substrate; a radiating element on the top surface of the substrate; a ground plane on the bottom surface of the substrate; a power feeding conductor placed in a position corresponding to the radiating element on the substrate; three conductive shorting posts or pins arranged along the center line of the radiating element adjacent to the power feeding conductor; two adjacent slots in the radiating element located on the same half of the radiating element with respect to the center line.




The microstrip antenna of this invention depicted in

FIGS. 1 and 2

illustrates that the power feeding conductor, and conductive shorting posts, are positioned along the centerline referenced as


2





2


in FIG.


1


. Unlike the dual frequency mode antennas of Maci et al. and Maci et al. (II), the two slots are on the same half of the radiating element with respect to center line


2





2


. By using both slots and shorting pins as configured in the foregoing antenna, the two resonant frequencies have been adjusted to have a very close separation resulting in a low frequency ratio of (f


3U


/f


3L


) as illustrated in FIG.


3


B. In

FIG. 3B

, it appears that the dual bandwidths centered around the two resonant frequencies (f


3L


,f


3U


) have been combined and adjusted to achieve one wider band. In reality, there are two separate frequency bands but the VSWR in the region between the two frequency bands does not rise above 2:1. This results in the two adjacent narrow frequency bands effectively functioning as one single wide band. The contributing factors for the wide bandwidth characteristics are; the position of the feed pin, the size of the feed pin, the sizes of the slots, the positions of the slots, the sizes of the shorting pins, positions of the shorting pins, as well as the number of shorting pins. Through a selective combination of the above parameters, a good impedance matching condition for broad band performance has been achieved. The bandwidth of the microstrip antenna for VSWR<2 is 93 MHz (3.8%) as compared to the 1-2% bandwidth typical of the conventional style microstrip antenna


170


of FIG.


7


.




In the above described microstrip antenna


10


, a radiating element can be constructed in a square or rectangular shape. The resonant frequency is determined by a combination of the substrate dielectric constant and the dimensions of the radiating element. In the foregoing microstrip antenna


10


, the slots have been designed to introduce a reactive load to the radiating element thereby producing dual resonant frequencies. The reactive loading also enables the antenna to resonate at a lower resonance frequency (

FIG. 9B

) than is typical of a conventional microstrip antenna (

FIG. 5B

) without increasing the overall physical dimensions the antenna. The positions and sizes of the slots determine the resonant frequencies and have been adjusted to align the resonant bands close to desirable band (FIG.


9


B).




In the microstrip antenna of this invention, the positions of the conductive shorting posts or pins have been varied for further tuning of the resonant bands that have been produced by the slots in the radiating element. The shorting pins are also positioned away from the center of the antenna causing an upward shift of the lower resonant frequency. The resulting frequency ratio of (f


3U


/f


3L


) is 1.023 as shown in FIG.


3


B. The diameter of the conductive shorting posts (pins) and the distance of separation between the posts may also be adjusted to vary the resultant reactance offered by the shorting posts. The combination of the reactance of the shorting pins and the position of the feed pin can be adjusted to achieve a good impedance match (low VSWR) in the desirable resonant bands of the microstrip antenna.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is an illustration of the design configuration of a microstrip antenna according to one embodiment of the present invention;





FIG. 2

is a sectional view taken along the line


2





2


of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

illustrates the performance characteristics of the microstrip antenna according to the embodiment of this invention;





FIG. 3A

is a Smith Chart depicting the impedance variation of the antenna of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3B

is a frequency response graph that depicts the characteristics of the VSWR of the antenna of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 4A

illustrates the design configuration of a microstrip antenna, but does not show a shorting post;





FIG. 4B

is a sectional view taken along the line


4


B—


4


B of

FIG. 4A

illustrating shorting post;





FIGS. 5A and 5B

illustrate the performance characteristics of the microstrip antenna of

FIG. 4

;

FIG. 5A

is a Smith Chart and

FIG. 5B

is a frequency response graph that depicts the characteristics of the VSWR;





FIG. 6A

illustrates the design configuration of a further embodiment of the microstrip antenna;





FIG. 6B

is a sectional view taken along the line


6


B—


6


B of

FIG. 6A

which shows a shorting post which is not shown in

FIG. 6A

;





FIGS. 7A and 7B

illustrate the performance characteristics of microstrip antenna of

FIGS. 6A and 6B

;

FIG. 7A

is a Smith Chart and

FIG. 7B

is an illustration of the frequency response characteristics of the VSWR;





FIG. 8A

illustrates the design configuration of a further embodiment of the microstrip antenna;





FIG. 8B

is a sectional view taken along the line


8


B—


8


B of FIG.


8


A and which shows a conductive shorting post which is not shown in

FIG. 8A

;





FIGS. 9A and 9B

illustrate the performance characteristics of the microstrip antenna of

FIGS. 8A and 8B

;

FIG. 9A

is a Smith Chart and

FIG. 9B

illustrates the frequency response characteristics of the VSWR;





FIG. 10A

illustrates the design configuration of a further embodiment of the microstrip antenna;





FIG. 10B

is a sectional view taken along the line


10


B—


10


B of

FIG. 10A

showing shorting posts which are not shown in

FIG. 10A

;





FIGS. 11A and 11B

illustrate the performance characteristics of the microstrip antenna of

FIGS. 10A and 10B

;

FIG. 11A

is a Smith Chart and

FIG. 11B

illustrates the frequency response characteristics of the VSWR;





FIGS. 12A and 12B

illustrate the configuration of a prior art microstrip antenna with a thick substrate.

FIG. 12A

shows the plan view of the microstrip antenna and

FIG. 12B

is a sectional view taken along the line


12


B—


12


B of

FIG. 12A

;





FIG. 13

is an isometric view of a prior art microstrip antenna with parasitic elements;





FIG. 14

is an isometric view of a prior art electromagnetically coupled microstrip antenna;





FIG. 15

is an isometric view of a prior art microstrip antenna with stacked radiating elements;





FIG. 16

is an isometric view of a prior art aperture coupled microstrip antenna;





FIG. 17A

is a plan view of a prior art microstrip antenna; and





FIG. 17B

is a sectional view taken along the line


17


B—


17


B of FIG.


17


A.











DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




Preferred embodiments of the present invention are now explained while referring to the drawings.




Referring to

FIGS. 1 and 2

, a radiating element


12


of the microstrip antenna


10


is constructed on the top surface of the substrate


11


. A ground plane


13


is constructed on the bottom surface of the substrate


11


. A power feed hole


14


is provided at the position corresponding with the radiating element


12


of the substrate


11


.




The connector or feed pin


15


, serving as a coaxial line for supplying Radio frequency (RF) power to the radiating element


12


, is inserted through the feed hole


14


. The connector


15


is electrically connected to the radiating element


12


at


16




a


with solder. The body of connector


15


is connected to the ground plane


13


with solder at


16




b.






A through hole


17


is positioned corresponding to the radiating element


12


on the substrate


11


. A conductive post or pin


18


, which functions as a short circuit between the radiating element


12


and the ground plane


13


, is inserted through the hole


17


. The conductive post


18


is connected to the radiating element


12


at


19




a


with solder. The conductive post


18


is also connected to the ground plane


13


at


19




b


with solder.




A through hole


20


is positioned corresponding to the radiating element


12


on the substrate


11


. A conductive post or pin


21


, which functions as a short circuit between the radiating element


12


and the ground plane


13


, is inserted through the hole


20


. The conductive post


21


is connected to the radiating element


12


at


22




a


with solder. The conductive post


21


is also connected to the ground plane


13


at


22




b


with solder.




A through hole


23


is positioned corresponding to the radiating element


12


on the substrate


11


. A conductive post or pin


24


, which functions as a short circuit between the radiating element


12


and the ground plane


13


, is inserted through the hole


23


. The conductive post


24


is connected to the radiating element


12


at


25




a


with solder. The conductive post


24


is also connected to the ground plane


13


at


25




b


with solder.




The slots


26


and


27


, which are designed to offer reactive loading to the radiating element


12


, are positioned to be adjacent to each other and are on the same half of the radiating element


12


with respect to the center line


2





2


of FIG.


1


.




The radiating element


12


generally is in a square or rectangular shape. The slots


26


and


27


can also be either in a square or rectangular shape. The radiating element


12


and the slots


26


and


27


are constructed by removing the conductive film deposited on the top surface of the substrate


11


. The conductive posts


18


,


21


and


24


are circular in shape and can be of different diameters.




The microstrip antenna


10


configured as specified above, functions as an antenna in which the radiating element


12


corresponds to a single frequency band only. The resonant frequency and the bandwidth of the microstrip antenna, without the slots


26


and


27


and shorting pins


21


and


24


, are determined by the dimensions of the radiating element


12


, the height of the substrate


11


and the dielectric constant of the substrate


11


. A combination of the radiating element


12


, the slots


26


and


27


and the shorting pins


21


and


24


results in dual frequencies of a lower value than the resonant frequency of the radiating element


12


alone. This is due to the reactive loading effects of the slots


26


and


27


and the shorting pins


21


and


24


on the radiating element


12


.




The results of the tests conducted on the embodiment of this invention referred to in

FIGS. 1 and 2

are as follows:

FIG. 3A

is a Smith chart showing the impedance characteristics of the embodiment 10 of this invention and

FIG. 3B

illustrates the VSWR frequency response of the embodiment 10 of this invention.

FIG. 3B

illustrates the dual resonance characteristics of microstrip antenna


10


in which the two resonant frequencies are at f


3L


=2.419 GHz and f


3U


=2.475 GHz . The two resonant bands are within the ISM band of 2.4-2.5 GHz.

FIG. 3B

also illustrates that the frequency ratio of (f


3U


/f


3L


) is 1.023. The bandwidth (for VSWR<2) centered around f


3L


is 1.94% and the corresponding bandwidth centered around f


3U


is 1.86%. The two bands centered around f


3L


and f


3U


are combined to produce a relatively wider bandwidth of 93 MHz (3.8%). The substrate


11


of the antenna tested has a dielectric constant of 3.38.




To arrive at the configuration of this invention, a conventional style microstrip antenna has undergone an evolution of changes. An explanation highlighting the results of the measurement at various intermediate steps is given to illustrate the role of each individual element of the antenna


10


. Microstrip antenna


40


shown in

FIG. 4

, differs from microstrip antenna


10


in that the antenna


40


does not have slots and has only one conductive shorting post


18


. The conductive shorting posts or pins


18


in both the antenna


10


and the antenna


40


are at the center of the respective antennas. The conductive shorting posts


18


at the center of antenna


10


and antenna


40


have no effect on the impedance or resonant frequencies of antennas. The conductive shorting posts


18


allow low frequency grounding of the antennas. The elements of microstrip antenna


40


(

FIG. 4

) having the same component configuration as that of antenna


10


(

FIGS. 1 and 2

) are designated by same reference numerals to keep the illustrations clear and consistent. For component descriptions refer to,

FIGS. 1 and 2

. The length [L] and widths [W] of the radiating elements


12


of antennas


10


and


40


are identical. Likewise, the dielectric constants of the substrates


11


of antenna


10


and antenna


40


are identical. The connectors


15


shown in

FIGS. 2 and 4

are at identical positions. The test results of microstrip antenna


40


(

FIG. 4

) are shown in

FIGS. 5A and 5B

. The microstrip antenna


40


has a narrow bandwidth of 1.52% centered around the resonant frequency f


5


=2.640 GHz as illustrated in FIG.


5


B. The resonant frequency f


5


=2.640 GHz of antenna


40


is higher than f


3L


and f


3U


(

FIG. 3B

) of microstrip antenna


10


of this invention. The test data shown in

FIG. 5B

is a result representative of a conventional type of microstrip antenna.




The microstrip antenna


60


illustrated in

FIGS. 6A and 6B

is intended to demonstrate the dual resonance of a microstrip antenna using a single slot. The microstrip antenna


60


(

FIGS. 6A and 6B

) differs from the microstrip antenna


40


(

FIG. 4

) in that antenna


60


has a slot


26


in its radiating element


12


. It is noted that all other elements on microstrip antenna


60


are identical to that of microstrip antenna


40


which was previously explained. Further, repetitive description of antenna


60


is therefore not given. The test results of the microstrip antenna


60


are illustrated in

FIGS. 7A and 7B

. The dual resonance characteristics of the microstrip antenna


60


due to a slot


26


in its radiating element are shown in FIG.


7


B. The two resonant frequencies f


7L


=2.371 GHz and f


7U


=2.574 GHz (

FIG. 7B

) are lower than the resonant frequency f


5


(

FIG. 5B

) of a microstrip antenna


40


referred to FIG.


4


. The frequency ratio f


R7


(f


R7


−f


R7


=f


7U


/f


7L


) is 1.086. Because of this relatively large frequency ratio, the two resonant frequencies are rather widely separated.




Microstrip antenna


80


shown

FIG. 8

has been configured to reduce the frequency ratio f


R7


further than model


60


. The microstrip antenna


80


(

FIG. 8

) differs from the microstrip antenna


60


(

FIG. 6

) in that the antenna


80


has an additional slot


27


in its radiating element


12


. It is noted that all other elements on microstrip antenna


80


are identical to that of microstrip antenna


60


, which has been explained earlier. Further description of antenna


80


is therefore deleted to avoid repetition. The test results of the microstrip antenna


80


are illustrated in

FIGS. 9A and 9B

. The changes in the dual resonance characteristics of the microstrip antenna


80


due to the slot


27


that has been added to its radiating element


12


, are illustrated in FIG.


9


B. The two resonant frequencies f


9L


=2.365 GHz: f


9U


=2.46 GHz (

FIG. 9B

) are lower than the corresponding resonant frequencies f


7L


;f


7U


(

FIG. 7B

) of microstrip antenna


60


referred to FIG.


6


. The frequency ratio f


R9


(f


R9


=f


9U


/f


9L


) is 1.04. Because of lower value of frequency ratio f


R9


(in comparison to f


R7


=1.086), the separation between the two frequencies f


9L


and f


9U


is reduced. Thus the additional slot


27


in the radiating element


12


of microstrip antenna


80


has the desirable effect of positioning the two resonant bands closer.




The microstrip antenna


100


referred to

FIG. 10

is designed to reduce the frequency ratio f


R9


further. The microstrip antenna


100


(

FIG. 10

) differs from the microstrip antenna


80


(

FIG. 8

) in that the antenna


100


has an additional conductive shorting post


21


on its radiating element


12


. It is noted that all other elements on microstrip antenna


100


are the same as that of microstrip antenna


80


, which has already been described. Further explanation of antenna


100


therefore has not been given. The test results of the microstrip antenna


100


are in

FIGS. 11A and 11B

. The changes in dual resonance characteristics of the microstrip antenna


100


due to conductive shorting post or pin


21


on its radiating element


12


are shown in FIG.


11


B. The two resonant frequencies are f


11L


=2.379 GHz:f


11U


=2.46 GHz (FIG.


11


B). The frequency ratio f


R11


(f


R11


=f


11U


/f


11L


) is 1.034. Because of lower value of frequency ratio f


R11


(in comparison to f


R9


=1.04), the separation between the two frequencies f


11L


and f


11U


is further reduced. Thus the conductive shorting post


21


on the radiating element


12


of microstrip antenna


100


has the desirable effect of positioning the two resonant bands much closer.




The microstrip antenna


10


shown in

FIGS. 1 and 2

is designed to reduce the frequency ratio f


R11


, greater than the frequency ratio reduction of antenna


100


. The microstrip antenna


10


(

FIGS. 1 and 2

) differs from the microstrip antenna


100


(

FIG. 10

) in that the antenna


10


has an additional conductive shorting post


24


between its radiating element


12


and its ground plane


13


. It is noted that all other elements on microstrip antenna


10


are identical to that of microstrip antenna


100


which has previously been described. The configuration of microstrip antenna


10


, which is the preferred embodiment of this invention, has already been explained in detail. To bring out the importance of the additional conductive shorting post


24


on the radiating element


12


of the microstrip antenna


10


(FIGS.


1


and


2


), the test results of antenna


10


will be analyzed again. The changes in dual resonance characteristics of the microstrip antenna


10


due to conductive shorting post


24


on its radiating element


12


are shown in

FIGS. 3A and 3B

. The two resonant frequencies are at f


3L


=2.419 GHz: f


3U


=2.475 GHZ (FIG.


3


B). The ratio f


R3


(f


R3


=f


3U


/f


3L


) is 1.023 as compared to ratio f


R11


(f


R11


=f


11U


/f


11L


) 1.034 of microstrip antenna


100


referred in FIG.


10


. To the best of knowledge of the applicants, this is the lowest frequency ratio that has been attained and reported in the open literature. Because of the very low frequency ratio value f


R3


, the separation between the two resonant frequencies f


3L


and f


3U


has been greatly reduced. Thus the conductive shorting post


24


on the radiating element


12


of microstrip antenna


10


serves in the role of positioning the two resonant bands much closer and in fact they are in the ISM band 2.4-2.5 GHz.




As can be seen from the foregoing discussions, a novel microstrip antenna with a wider bandwidth has been demonstrated. The microstrip antenna


10


of this invention has a wider bandwidth than a conventional microstrip antenna of identical dimensions. The use of slots and conductive shorting posts offer reactive load to the radiating element of the microstrip antenna


10


thereby causing a reduction of the resonant frequency. The reduction of the resonant frequency of microstrip antenna


10


has been accomplished without increasing the antenna's effective area, thereby achieving the miniaturization of the size. The increase in the bandwidth of the microstrip antenna


10


of this invention has been achieved using only a single substrate thereby accomplishing additional miniaturization in size because of reduced height. Microstrip antenna


10


of this invention is lightweight, compact, cost-effective, and easy to manufacture due to its structural simplicity.




Thus the microstrip antenna of this invention has accomplished at least all of its stated objectives.



Claims
  • 1. A microstrip antenna, comprising:a substrate; a radiating element constructed on the top surface of said substrate; said radiating element consisting of two reactive loading slots positioned adjacent to each other and on the same half of said radiating element with respect to the center line of the antenna; a ground plane on the bottom surface of said substrate; a through hole at a position corresponding to said radiating element of said substrate; and a power feeding conductor at a position corresponding to said radiating element on said substrate.
  • 2. A microstrip antenna, comprising:a substrate; a radiating element constructed on the top surface of said substrate; wherein said radiating element consists of two reactive loading slots positioned adjacent to each other and on the same half of said radiating element with respect to the center line of the antenna; a ground plane on the bottom surface of said substrate; a plurality of through holes at positions corresponding to said radiating element of said substrate; a power feeding conductor at a position corresponding to said radiating element on said substrate; and a plurality of conductive shorting posts at positions corresponding to said radiating element of said substrate.
US Referenced Citations (3)
Number Name Date Kind
4379296 Farrar et al. Apr 1983
4701763 Yamamoto et al. Oct 1987
5420596 Burrell et al. May 1995
Non-Patent Literature Citations (3)
Entry
S. Maci, et al. “Dual-band slot-loaded patch antenna”, IEE Proc.-Microw. Antennas Propag., vol. 142, No. 3, Jun. 1995, pp. 225-232.
S. Maci, et al. “Single-Layer Dual Frequency Patch Antenna”, Electronics Letters Aug. 5th, 1993, vol. 29, No. 16, p. 1441 to p. 1443.
Bao F. Wang, et al. “Microstrip Antennas for Dual-Frequency Operation”, IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, vol. AP-32, No. 9, Sep. 1984, pp. 938-943.