Publication | Closed Access
Theory, Design, and Verification of Dual-Circularly Polarized Dual-Beam Arrays With Independent Control of Polarization: A Generalization of Sequential Rotation Arrays
38
Citations
43
References
2020
Year
Cp BeamsEngineeringIndependent ControlMicrostrip Patch ArraysAntennaMicrowave AntennaSmart AntennaSequential Rotation ArraysComputational ElectromagneticsBeamformingPolarization ImagingPlanar Array Antennas
In this article, the theory, design, and validation of planar array antennas capable of producing dual-circularly-polarized (dual-CP) dual-beam radiation with a single feeding network are reported. Importantly, the properties of the formed CP beams with different handedness can be independently controlled. Such a capability is achieved by exploiting both the in-plane rotation-induced Berry phase and excitation phase for all the linearly polarized array elements, which can be regarded as a generalization of the well-known sequential rotation arrays. Microstrip patch arrays with such single-feed dual-CP dual-beam functionalities can be synthesized through a straightforward analytical approach that accurately predicts the radiation patterns for both right- and left-handed CP beams. The proposed technique and design methodology were verified by two proof-of-concept microstrip arrays consisting of 8×8 linearly polarized circular patch elements operating in the K-band, one with uniform excitation amplitudes and the other with tapered excitations for sidelobe suppression. Both arrays were fabricated and measured, experimentally achieving a joint S <sub xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">11</sub> <; -10 dB, axial ratio <; 3 dB, and 3 dB gain bandwidth of more than 22.5%/20.0% and 16.7%/15.8%, respectively, for the right-and left-handed CP beams. Within this broad operational band, the beam squinting is on average within ±3°. The proposed dual-CP dual-beam arrays have fully planarized structures, low profiles, wide operational bandwidths, and high polarization purity, making them useful candidates for applications including satellite communications, point-to-multipoint communications, and so on.
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