Design, simulation, and analysis of microstrip patch antenna for wireless applications operating at 3.6 GHz

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Abstract

In this study, a microstrip patch antenna that works at 3.6 GHz was built and tested to see how well it works. In this work, Rogers RT/Duroid 5880 has been used as the substrate material, with a dielectric permittivity of 2.2 and a thickness of 0.3451 mm; it serves as the base for the examined antenna. The computer simulation technology (CST) studio suite is utilized to show the recommended antenna design. The goal of this study was to get a more extensive transmission capacity, a lower voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR), and a lower return loss, but the main goal was to get a higher gain, directivity, and efficiency. After simulation, the return loss, gain, directivity, bandwidth, and efficiency of the supplied antenna are found to be -17.626 dB, 9.671 dBi, 9.924 dBi, 0.2 GHz, and 97.45%, respectively. Besides, the recreation uncovered that the transfer speed side-lobe level at phi was much better than those of the earlier works, at -28.8 dB, respectively. Thus, it makes a solid contender for remote innovation and more robust communication.

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APA

Rana, M. S., Fahim, T. A., Rana, S. B., Mahbub, R., & Rahman, M. M. (2023). Design, simulation, and analysis of microstrip patch antenna for wireless applications operating at 3.6 GHz. Telkomnika (Telecommunication Computing Electronics and Control), 21(5), 957–967. https://doi.org/10.12928/TELKOMNIKA.v21i5.24813

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