Radiation efficiency of microstrip antennas
I have a question about radiation efficiency of microstrip antennas. I know that surface wave contributes to the low radiation efficiency of microstrip antennas. I want to know if there are other factors affect the radiation efficiency. I noticed that different patch shapes have dramatically different radiation efficiency. Therefore, are there any ways to improve the radiation efficiency without changing the substrate material?
Thanks a lot,
The efficiency is set by the substrate material and thickness. In your case you can make the substrate thicker and use aperture coupling through a slit in the ground plane.
Dear flatulent,
Thank you very much for your reply. I agree with your opinions. By increasing the thickness of the substrate, I can increase the radiation efficiency. However, I can't use the group coupled idea due to the design restrains.
Besides these two methods, are there any methods that we can use? I noticed that different patch shapes shows quite different radiation efficiency for the same thickness. What caused it? As a result, what kind of shape should be the best shape with the highest radiation efficiency?
Thanks,
On the feed, you can use coaxial lines to the antenna. The usual problem with thick substrates is that the transmission lines on the substrate will also radiate.
I have not seen any information on the efficiency of shapes. I suspect that the difference in the reports you see are caused by different thicknesses. Do not expect much more than 50% efficiency in the best of situations.
Thank you.
I am doing a lot of simulations based on HFSS. I noticed the difference coming from the same thickness. One design gave me almost 50% radiation efficiency, but the other one only gave me 10% efficiency.
Regards,
Did anyone have the similar experience? Another question, is the dielectric loss a bigger loss than the surface wave loss? I am not sure, although I believe that dielectric loss is not a big deal.
The radiation efficiency is dependent on the antenna size and frequecy.
normally , the small size antenna has lower efficiency ,
the higher frequecy gets more efficiency .
Do you have any proof for that?
For a dielectric material substrate, obviously smaller size substrate will give us higher efficiecy. Usually, I know that big size will give us higher gain.
By the way, in my design, I have two similar shape microstrip antennas, the smaller has higher efficency.
Thanks,
if you post the moles maybe we can help a little more.
can you post the models where the efficiency of the
smaller one is higher?
I know that if you place UC-PBG around the antenna it will attenuate the surface waves resulting in a 'cleaner' radiation pattern. Not sure if it will increase efficency though. There are several published papers on this topic.
I did two simulations of the same antenna. I used the same topology(shape) but not
the same size since the dielectric constant were different and adjusted so both
antennas were exactly tuned to the same frequency.
I used FR4 and Rogers 4350. Rogers gave me an efficiency of 94% while
FR-4 gave an efficiency of 67%, which represented a difference in gain of 1.5 dB.
Hi, Jallem: Normally, larger electrical dimension for the thickness will yield more surface wave loss. When the thickness is large enough, the surface wave loss is very critical. Regards.
Hello Jallem,
What is the thickness that you are using? For 62 mil FR4, I can only get 30 - 50% efficiency in 915 MHz band due to different shapes. Thicker substrate gives me better performance.
I can't upload the file due to the company policy. Sorry about it.
Thanks,
I did two simulations of the same antenna. I used the same topology(shape) but not
the same size since the dielectric constant were different and adjusted so both
antennas were exactly tuned to the same frequency.
I used FR4 and Rogers 4350. Rogers gave me an efficiency of 94% while
FR-4 gave an efficiency of 67%, which represented a difference in gain of 1.5 dB.
