학술논문

Compact Dielectric Resonator Antenna With Improved Bandwidth via Loading of Metal Ring
Document Type
Periodical
Author
Source
IEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation IEEE Open J. Antennas Propag. Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Open Journal of. 5(2):396-403 Apr, 2024
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Aerospace
Bandwidth
Resonant frequency
Antenna measurements
Perturbation methods
Impedance
Structural rings
Prototypes
Dielectric resonator antenna (DRA)
bandwidth improvement
vehicular communications
Language
ISSN
2637-6431
Abstract
In this paper, a novel dielectric resonator antenna (DRA) characterized by a compact size and wide bandwidth is proposed. The achievement of wideband performance involves the introduction of a metallic ring structure inside the dielectric resonato, ensuring that the antenna’s volume remains compact. Fundamental and higher-order modes, ${\text{TM}}_{01\delta} $ , ${\mathrm{ TM}}_{021+\delta }$ of the cylinder DRA are first investigated by using E-field distribution analysis, and it is found that these two modes are hard to resonate in proximity to each other. Therefore, a thin metal ring, acting as a perturbation structure is inserted into the DR to perturb the E-field of the higher-order mode and reduce its resonant frequency. Consequently, the resonant frequency of the ${\mathrm{ TM}}_{021+\delta }$ mode is significantly decreased, with only a slight effect on the ${\mathrm{ TM}}_{01\delta }$ mode. The resonant frequencies of the three resonances, i.e., ${\text{TM}}_01\delta $ , ${\mathrm{ TM}}_{021+\delta }$ and probe-mode, are moved in proximity to achieve a wide impedance bandwidth. For experimental validation, a prototype is fabricated and tested. The measured results show the proposed antenna achieves a bandwidth of 51.1% with a low profile of $0.156\lambda _{c}$ , where $\lambda _{c}$ represents the wavelength at the center frequency. With these advantages, the proposed design is well-suited for mounting on vehicle platforms, particularly for 4G (2.6 GHz) and 5G (3.5 GHz) communications.