학술논문

Empirical Evaluation of a 28 GHz Antenna Array on a 5G Mobile Phone Using a Body Phantom
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat. Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on. 69(11):7476-7485 Nov, 2021
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Aerospace
Transportation
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Phantoms
Skin
Mobile antennas
Numerical models
Antenna measurements
Mobile handsets
Phased arrays
Antenna array
millimeter-wave
mobile phone
phantom
spherical coverage
user effect
Language
ISSN
0018-926X
1558-2221
Abstract
Implementation of an antenna array on a 5G mobile phone chassis is crucial in ensuring the radio link quality, especially at the millimeter-waves. However, we generally lack the ability to design antennas under practical operational conditions involving body effects of a mobile user in a repeatable manner. We developed numerical and physical phantoms of a human body for evaluation of mobile handset antennas at 28 GHz. While the numerical human model retains a realistic and accurate body shape, our physical phantom has a much simpler hexagonal cross section to represent a body. Gains of the phased antenna array configuration on a mobile phone chassis, called colocated array is numerically and experimentally evaluated. The array is formed by placing two sets of 4-element dual-polarized patch antenna arrays, called two modules, at two locations of a mobile phone chassis. Modules are intended to collect the maximum amount of energy to the single transceiver chain. Spherical coverage of the realized gain by the array shows that the experimental statistics of the realized gains across entire solid angles agree with numerical simulations. We thereby demonstrate that our antenna evaluation method reproduces the reality and our phantom serves repeatable tests of antenna array prototypes at 28 GHz.