Abstract
In the present work, the radiation properties of a graphene plasmonic patch antenna are investigated and enhanced in terms of efficiency, utilizing circuit-matching techniques. Initially, the reflection coefficient of graphene surface waves due to discontinuities is studied, while the power flow towards free-space is numerically extracted. This analysis indicates that the radiated power is increased for higher values of the chemical potential, although the surface wave is weakly confined and prone to degradation due to interference. For this reason, a graphene sheet that supports strongly confined surface waves is terminated via a matching layer, in order to enhance the radiating power. In particular, the matching layer consists of an appropriately selected larger chemical potential value, in order to minimize the reflection coefficient and boost the radiation performance. The numerical investigation of this setup validates the upgraded performance, since the radiating power is significantly increased. Then, a realistic setup that includes a graphene patch antenna is examined numerically, proving the augmentation of the radiation efficiency when the matching layer is utilized. Finally, the latter is designed with a graded increment in the chemical potential, and the computational analysis highlights the significant enhancement of the graphene plasmonic antenna gain towards the desired direction. Consequently, a more reliable framework for wireless communications between plasmonic devices at THz frequencies is established, which corresponds to the practical significance of the proposed methodology for improved radiation efficiency. All numerical results are extracted by means of an efficient modification of the Finite-Difference Time-Domain (FDTD) scheme, which models graphene accurately.
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