Additively Manufactured Perforated Superstrate to Improve Directive Radiation Characteristics of Electromagnetic Source

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Abstract

Additively manufactured perforated superstrate (AMPS) is presented to realize directive radio frequency (RF) front-end antennas. The superstrate comprises spatially distributed dielectric unit-cell elements with square perforations, which creates a pre-defined transmission phase delay pattern in the propagating electric field. The proposed square perforation has superior transmission phase characteristics compared to traditionally machined circular perforations and full-wave simulations based parametric analysis has been performed to highlight this supremacy. The AMPS is used with a classical electromagnetic-bandgap resonator antenna (ERA) to improve its directive radiation characteristics. A prototype is developed using the most common, low-cost and easily accessible Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) filament. The prototype was rapidly fabricated in less than five hours and weighs 139.3 g., which corresponds to the material cost of only 2.1 USD. The AMPS has remarkably improved the radiation performance of ERA by increasing its far-field directivity from 12.67 dB to 21.12 dB and reducing side-lobe level from-7.3 dB to-17.2 dB.

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Hayat, T., Afzal, M. U., Lalbakhsh, A., & Esselle, K. P. (2019). Additively Manufactured Perforated Superstrate to Improve Directive Radiation Characteristics of Electromagnetic Source. IEEE Access, 7, 153445–153452. https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2948735

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