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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

Reconfigurable Transmitarray Antennas

Lau, Jonathan Yun 31 August 2012 (has links)
Transmitarrays have been shown to be viable architectures for achieving high-directivity reconfigurable apertures. The existing work on reconfigurable transmitarrays is sparse, with only a few experimental demonstrations of reconfigurable implementations. Furthermore, of the designs that have been presented, different approaches have been proposed, but the advantages and drawbacks of these approaches have not been compared. Therefore, in this thesis we present a systematic study of the different approaches to designing reconfigurable transmitarrays, and present designs following these approaches with experimental validation. First, we investigate the distributed-scatterer approach, which is modeled with layers of identical scattering surfaces. We characterize the beamforming capabilities and then present a Method of Moments technique for analyzing and optimizing designs that follow this approach. Then, we present experimental results for a unit cell with varactor-loaded dipoles following this approach. From these results, we demonstrate that the structure thickness following this approach is problematic for beamforming applications. Taking the coupled-resonator approach, we next present a slot-coupled patch design that is significantly thinner and easier to fabricate than designs that follow the first approach. Implementing this design in a fully reconfigurable transmitarray, we demonstrate two-dimensional beamforming. An advantage of this design is that it can also operate as a reflectarray. Next, following the guided-wave approach, we present a transmitarray design that uses a bridged-T phase shifter and proximity-coupled differentially-fed stacked patches. Not only does this design not require vias, it is has a large fractional bandwidth of 10 percent, which is unprecedented in reconfigurable transmitarrays. Implementing this design in a full transmitarray, we experimentally demonstrate reconfigurable two-dimensional beamsteering, as well as shaped-beam synthesis. The main contributions of this thesis are two-fold. First, we thoroughly and systematically compare the transmitarray approaches, which has not been previously done in literature. Secondly, we experimentally demonstrate a reconfigurable array design that achieves better bandwidth, scan angle range, and beam-shaping capability, than existing designs, with reduced fabrication complexity and physical profile.
2

Reconfigurable Transmitarray Antennas

Lau, Jonathan Yun 31 August 2012 (has links)
Transmitarrays have been shown to be viable architectures for achieving high-directivity reconfigurable apertures. The existing work on reconfigurable transmitarrays is sparse, with only a few experimental demonstrations of reconfigurable implementations. Furthermore, of the designs that have been presented, different approaches have been proposed, but the advantages and drawbacks of these approaches have not been compared. Therefore, in this thesis we present a systematic study of the different approaches to designing reconfigurable transmitarrays, and present designs following these approaches with experimental validation. First, we investigate the distributed-scatterer approach, which is modeled with layers of identical scattering surfaces. We characterize the beamforming capabilities and then present a Method of Moments technique for analyzing and optimizing designs that follow this approach. Then, we present experimental results for a unit cell with varactor-loaded dipoles following this approach. From these results, we demonstrate that the structure thickness following this approach is problematic for beamforming applications. Taking the coupled-resonator approach, we next present a slot-coupled patch design that is significantly thinner and easier to fabricate than designs that follow the first approach. Implementing this design in a fully reconfigurable transmitarray, we demonstrate two-dimensional beamforming. An advantage of this design is that it can also operate as a reflectarray. Next, following the guided-wave approach, we present a transmitarray design that uses a bridged-T phase shifter and proximity-coupled differentially-fed stacked patches. Not only does this design not require vias, it is has a large fractional bandwidth of 10 percent, which is unprecedented in reconfigurable transmitarrays. Implementing this design in a full transmitarray, we experimentally demonstrate reconfigurable two-dimensional beamsteering, as well as shaped-beam synthesis. The main contributions of this thesis are two-fold. First, we thoroughly and systematically compare the transmitarray approaches, which has not been previously done in literature. Secondly, we experimentally demonstrate a reconfigurable array design that achieves better bandwidth, scan angle range, and beam-shaping capability, than existing designs, with reduced fabrication complexity and physical profile.

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