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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Beam-scanning leaky-wave antenna based on CRLH-metamaterial for millimeter-wave applications

Alibakhshikenari, M., Virdee, B.S., Khalily, M., Shukla, P., See, C.H., Abd-Alhameed, Raed, Falcone, F., Limiti, E. 06 March 2019 (has links)
Yes / This paper presents empirical results of an innovative beam scanning leaky-wave antenna (LWA) which enables scanning over a wide angle from -35o to +34.5o between 57 GHz and 62 GHz, with broadside radiation centered at 60 GHz. The proposed LWA design is based on composite right/left-handed transmission-line (CRLH-TL) concept. The single layer antenna structure includes a matrix of 3×9 square slots that is printed on top of the dielectric substrate; and printed on the bottom ground-plane are Π and Tshaped slots that enhance the impedance bandwidth and radiation properties of the antenna. The proposed antenna structure exhibits metamaterial property. The slot matrix provides beam scanning as a function of frequency. Physical and electrical size of the antenna is 18.7×6×1.6 mm3 and 3.43􀣅􀫙×1.1􀣅􀫙×0.29􀣅􀫙, respectively; where 􀣅􀫙 is free space wavelength at 55 GHz. The antenna has a measured impedance bandwidth of 10 GHz (55 GHz to 65 GHz) or fractional bandwidth of 16.7%. Its optimum gain and efficiency are 7.8 dBi and 84.2% at 62 GHz. / Partially supported by innovation programme under grant agreement H2020-MSCA-ITN-2016 SECRET- 722424 and the financial support from the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) under grant EP/E022936/1.
2

Évaluation des technologies d'impression 3D pour le développement d'antennes directives à large bande passante pour les liaisons backhaul en bandes millimétriques V et E / Evaluation of 3D printing technologies for the development of wide-band directive antennas for millimeter wave backhaul links in E and V frequency bands

Nachabe, Nour 06 December 2018 (has links)
Face à la demande croissante de débits de données de plus en plus élevées, l’une des principales solutions proposées par la 5G est de densifier le réseau en y intégrant notamment de nouvelles « Small cells ». La réorganisation de l’architecture du réseau mobile pour s’adapter à l’intégration poussée de ces Small cells, fait naître la problématique de la connexion backhaul entre les stations de bases desservant les Small cells et le cœur de réseau. Ainsi, des liaisons backhaul de plusieurs Gb/s de données sont nécessaires pour pouvoir assurer un débit de données d’au moins 100Mb/s à l’utilisateur qui est l’un des objectifs fixés pour la 5G. Les solutions de connexion backhaul sans fils ont un avantage indiscutable face aux coûts de déploiements de fibres optiques qui sont très élevés. Pour augmenter la capacité spectrale des liaisons sans fils, l’utilisation des fréquences millimétriques au-delà de 6 GHz caractérisées par des larges bandes passantes sera prochainement discutée pour la 5G durant le World Radiocommunication Conference 2019. Parmi ces fréquences, les bandes V (57-66GHz) et E (71-76 GHz et 81-86 GHz) ont un intérêt indéniable grâce aux larges bandes passantes disponibles ainsi qu’aux conditions de licenciement peu exigeantes. Les travaux développés dans cette thèse consistent à concevoir des antennes directives à large bande passante permettant d’établir les liens backhaul point-à-point sans fils (LoS). En exploitant les technologies de fabrications à faibles coût telles que l’impression 3D et Printed Circuit Board (PCB) sur des substrats FR4, la conception de deux types d’antenne directives a été étudiée à savoir des antennes lentilles et des antennes réseaux. / In order to address the ever-increasing demand of higher data rates, adding small cells to the existing macrocells infrastructure is one of the most important milestones of the 5G roadmap. With the integration of small cells and the re-organization of the network topology, backhaul bottleneck is the main challenge to address in the near future. Facing the costs of deployments of fiber optic connections, point-to-point wireless backhaul links using millimeter wave (mmW) frequencies are gaining prominence. 5G future frequencies, to be discussed under the World Radiocommunication Conference 2019 (WRC-19) open-up the way towards mmW frequency band where large bandwidths are naturally available. The high bandwidths available at these frequencies enable several Gbps data rate backhaul links, which is un utmost necessity to respect the 100 Mbps user-experienced data rate promised by the 5G standard. Millimeter-wave frequencies in V and E-bands unlicensed/light licensed spectrum are considered as primary candidates for backhaul links. In addition to the light license regime, the high free space path loss experienced at these frequencies is rather beneficial to limit the interference between small cells links. Moreover, the high available bandwidths at V and E-bands enable to achieve multi Gb/s links without using complex modulation schemes. In this thesis, we focused our research study on developing high gain wide-band antennas usable in point-to-point backhaul links in a Line of Sight (LoS) context. Leveraging cost-efficient technologies like 3D printing and Printed Circuit Board (PCB) on FR4 substrates, we studied two high-gain antenna types: lens antennas and flat array antennas.

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