Publicação
Design of broadband low-profile transmitarrays at Ka-band with high-permittivity 3D-printed materials
| Resumo: | Transmitarrays (TAs) are a cost-effective solution for millimeter-wave antenna applications. The widespread use of fully dielectric TAs (DTAs) emerges from the manufacturing simplicity brought by 3D printing. Previously reported DTAs employ readily available low-permittivity materials (?r < 3). However, this implementation implies thicker lenses (exceeding one free space wavelength, > ?0), affecting the DTA performance compared with thinner TA based on printed-circuit-board (PCB) technology. This work shows that, when properly crafted, 3D-printed high-permittivity dielectric (HPD) materials can solve this problem. The design challenge is to circumvent the free-space mismatch and narrowband responses usually associated with HPD materials. A commercially available HPD material compatible with 3D printing is used as an example to demonstrate the feasibility of this type of DTA. This study includes the in-house material characterization for the designed frequency (?r = 13.1 at 30 GHz). A HPD TA is benchmarked against a conventional PCB-based TA for evaluating the impact of HPD materials for the design of this type of TA. A HPD TA with a diameter of 14 ?0 (?0 is the wavelength at 30 GHz in free space) and a height of 0.4 ?0 (excluding the feed horn) is fabricated with the low-cost 3D printing method of fuse deposition modeling (FDM). When illuminated by a standard horn, the HPD TA antenna provides a 27.4 dBi gain, elevation scanning up to 45 degrees (through the horizontal displacement of the feed horn) with a scan loss of 2 dB and a 1-dB gain bandwidth of 16.3%. |
|---|---|
| Autores principais: | Cai, Y. |
| Outros Autores: | Matos, S. A.; Mei, P.; Felício, J. M.; Fernandes, C. A.; Costa, J.; Zhang, S. |
| Assunto: | Transmitarray antennas Dielectric antennas High-permittivity dielectric material Three-dimensional (3-D) printing techniques |
| Ano: | 2025 |
| País: | Portugal |
| Tipo de documento: | artigo |
| Tipo de acesso: | acesso aberto |
| Instituição associada: | ISCTE |
| Idioma: | inglês |
| Origem: | Repositório ISCTE |
| Resumo: | Transmitarrays (TAs) are a cost-effective solution for millimeter-wave antenna applications. The widespread use of fully dielectric TAs (DTAs) emerges from the manufacturing simplicity brought by 3D printing. Previously reported DTAs employ readily available low-permittivity materials (?r < 3). However, this implementation implies thicker lenses (exceeding one free space wavelength, > ?0), affecting the DTA performance compared with thinner TA based on printed-circuit-board (PCB) technology. This work shows that, when properly crafted, 3D-printed high-permittivity dielectric (HPD) materials can solve this problem. The design challenge is to circumvent the free-space mismatch and narrowband responses usually associated with HPD materials. A commercially available HPD material compatible with 3D printing is used as an example to demonstrate the feasibility of this type of DTA. This study includes the in-house material characterization for the designed frequency (?r = 13.1 at 30 GHz). A HPD TA is benchmarked against a conventional PCB-based TA for evaluating the impact of HPD materials for the design of this type of TA. A HPD TA with a diameter of 14 ?0 (?0 is the wavelength at 30 GHz in free space) and a height of 0.4 ?0 (excluding the feed horn) is fabricated with the low-cost 3D printing method of fuse deposition modeling (FDM). When illuminated by a standard horn, the HPD TA antenna provides a 27.4 dBi gain, elevation scanning up to 45 degrees (through the horizontal displacement of the feed horn) with a scan loss of 2 dB and a 1-dB gain bandwidth of 16.3%. |
|---|