Wideband Low-Profile Differential-Fed Patch Antennas With an Embedded SIW Cavity Under Dual-Mode Resonance

2019 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 4235-4240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qianwen Liu ◽  
Lei Zhu ◽  
Jianpeng Wang ◽  
Wen Wu
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik P. Lamers ◽  
Karl E. Zelik

Abstract Occupational exoskeletons and exosuits have been shown to reduce muscle demands and fatigue for physical tasks relevant to a variety of industries (e.g., logistics, construction, manufacturing, military, healthcare). However, adoption of these devices into the workforce has been slowed by practical factors related to comfort, form-factor, weight, and not interfering with movement or posture. We previously introduced a low-profile, dual-mode exosuit comprised of textile and elastic materials to address these adoption barriers. Here we build upon this prior work by introducing an extension mechanism that increases the moment arm of the exosuit while in engaged mode, then collapses in disengaged mode to retain key benefits related to being lightweight, low-profile, and unobstructive. Here we demonstrate both analytically and empirically how this extensible exosuit concept can (a) reduce device-to-body forces (which can improve comfort for some users and situations), or (b) increase the magnitude of torque assistance about the low back (which may be valuable for heavy-lifting jobs) without increasing shoulder or leg forces relative to the prior form-fitting exosuit. We also introduce a novel mode-switching mechanism, as well as a human-exosuit biomechanical model to elucidate how individual design parameters affect exosuit assistance torque and device-to-body forces. The proof-of-concept prototype, case study, and modeling work provide a foundation for understanding and implementing extensible exosuits for a broad range of applications. We envision promising opportunities to apply this new dual-mode extensible exosuit concept to assist heavy-lifting, to further enhance user comfort, and to address the unique needs of last-mile and other delivery workers.


2013 ◽  
Vol 55 (10) ◽  
pp. 2393-2398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quanwen Hou ◽  
Hangfei Tang ◽  
Yahong Liu ◽  
Xiaopeng Zhao

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Juhua Liu ◽  
Yue Kang ◽  
Jie Chen ◽  
Yunliang Long

A new kind of Yagi array of quarter-wave patch antennas is presented. The Yagi array has a low profile, a wide bandwidth, and a high gain. A main beam close to endfire is produced, with a vertical polarization in the horizontal plane. A set of microstrip lines are introduced between the driven element and the first director element to enhance the coupling between them, and therefore the bandwidth could be increased and the back lobes could be suppressed. Measured results show that the Yagi array with 4 elements generates a peak gain of about 9.7 dBi, a front-to-back ratio higher than 10 dB, and a 10 dB return loss band from 4.68 GHz to 5.24 GHz, with a profile of 1.5 mm and an overall size of 80 × 100 mm2. An increase of the number of director elements would enhance the gain and have the main beam pointing closer to endfire.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 2469-2472

Dual-frequency planar antennas can substitute large bandwidth patch antennas, where there is a requirement for large bandwidth to cover two separate transmit receive bands. In this paper a novel single-feed, single layer, double-band, compact short loaded patch antenna is studied theoretically and experimentally. Besides the compactness, this design provides, dual frequency operation with a small frequency ratio of 1.3 between the two resonant bands. Various radiation characteristics are simulated as well as experimentally studied and good concurrence is observed between the simulated and measured results


Author(s):  
Abdelheq Boukarkar ◽  
Rachdi Satouh

Abstract We propose simple designs of compact patch antennas with bandwidth enhancement. Firstly, an inverted “L” strip is loaded onto the corner of one radiating patch edge to create an additional resonant mode which can be combined with that one of the conventional patch to enhance the operating bandwidth. Secondly, the “L” strip is replaced by inverted “T” strip to improve further the bandwidth by creating two adjustable resonant modes. The two proposed patch antennas have the particularity of enhancing the bandwidth significantly without increasing their profile and their overall sizes. Two antenna prototypes are fabricated and tested. Measurements reveal that the patch antenna loaded with “L” strip has stable radiation characteristics with 5.2 times enhancement in the relative bandwidth compared with a conventional patch antenna. The antenna loaded with inverted “T” strip has wider bandwidth (6.25 times wider than the conventional patch) and covers the operating band 5.07–5.89 GHz (15%) with measured peak gain and peak efficiency of 6.25 dBi and 78%, respectively. The proposed antennas are easy to fabricate, have a low-profile, and exhibit good performances which make them good candidates to use in real wireless applications.


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