On-Chip Circularly Polarized Circular Loop Antennas Utilizing 4H-SiC and GaAs Substrates in the Q/V Band
Author:
Asfour Rawad1, Khamas Salam K.1ORCID, Ball Edward A.1ORCID, Ng Jo Shien1ORCID, Huang Guanwei1, Allanic Rozenn2ORCID, Le Berre Denis2, Quendo Cédric2, Leuliet Aude3, Merlet Thomas3
Affiliation:
1. Department of Electronic & Electrical Engineering, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S1 3JD, UK 2. Department of Electrical Engineering, Laboratoire des Sciences et Techniques de l’Information de la Communication et de la Connaissance (Lab-STICC), University of Brest, 29238 Brest, France 3. Thales LAS OME, 78990 Elancourt, France
Abstract
This paper presents a comprehensive assessment of the performance of on-chip circularly polarized (CP) circular loop antennas that have been designed and fabricated to operate in the Q/V frequency band. The proposed antenna design incorporates two concentric loops, with the outer loop as the active element and the inner loop enhancing the CP bandwidth. The study utilizes gallium arsenide (GaAs) and silicon carbide (4H-SiC) semiconductor wafer substrates. The measured results highlight the successful achievement of impedance matching at 40 GHz and 44 GHz for the 4H-SiC and GaAs substrates, respectively. Furthermore, both cases yield an axial ratio (AR) of less than 3 dB, with variations in bandwidths and frequency bands contingent upon the dielectric constant of the respective substrate material. Moreover, the outcomes confirm that utilizing 4H-SiC substrates results in a significantly higher radiation efficiency of 95%, owing to lower substrate losses. In pursuit of these findings, a 4-element circularly polarized loop array antenna has been fabricated for operation at 40 GHz, employing a 4H-SiC wafer as a low-loss substrate. The results underscore the antenna’s remarkable performance, exemplified by a broadside gain of approximately 9.7 dBic and a total efficiency of circa 92%. A close agreement has been achieved between simulated and measured results.
Reference30 articles.
1. A survey on millimeter-wave beamforming enabled UAV communications and networking;Xiao;IEEE Comms. Surv. Tutor.,2022 2. Performance evaluation of frequency division duplex (FDD) massive multiple input multiple output (MIMO) under different correlation models;Alsabah;PeerJ Comput. Sci.,2022 3. Lal, B., de la Rosa Blanco, E., Behrens, J.R., Corbin, B.A., Green, E.K., Picard, A.J., and Balakrishnan, A. (2017). Global Trends in Small Satellites, IDA Science and Technology Policy Institute. 4. Extremely high frequency (EHF) bands for future broadcast satellite services: Opportunities and challenges;Sacchi;IEEE Trans. Broadcast.,2019 5. Rossi, T., De Sanctis, M., Maggio, F., Codispoti, G., and Parca, G. (2015, January 7–14). Q/V-band satellite communication experiments on channel estimation with Alphasat Aldo Paraboni P/L. Proceedings of the IEEE Aerospace Conference, Big Sky, MT, USA.
|
|