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Development of “ H‐Shaped ” monopole antenna for IEEE 802.11a and HIPERLAN 2 applications in the laptop computer
Author(s) -
Kulkarni Jayshri,
Kulkarni Neeta,
Desai Arpan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
international journal of rf and microwave computer‐aided engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.335
H-Index - 39
eISSN - 1099-047X
pISSN - 1096-4290
DOI - 10.1002/mmce.22233
Subject(s) - hiperlan , omnidirectional antenna , monopole antenna , dipole antenna , antenna measurement , radiation pattern , electrical engineering , coaxial antenna , microstrip antenna , ground plane , antenna factor , optoelectronics , materials science , antenna (radio) , computer science , physics , electronic engineering , telecommunications , engineering , wireless , wireless lan
A very low profile and ultra‐thin “H‐Shaped” antenna for IEEE 802.11a and HIPERLAN 2 wireless applications in the laptop computer is developed. The antenna is designed using only a pure copper strip of size 17.5( L ) × 4( W ) mm 2 with thickness of only 0.035 mm. The novelty of the proposed antenna is that the antenna is designed with only one rectangular radiating strip without using any additional reactive components, vias or three dimensional structure. Furthermore, the proposed antenna does not require any additional ground plane for installing in laptops. The proposed antenna is comprised of one radiating strip, one rectangular stub, and two resonating slots, namely, “X” and “Y” of length 7.5 mm and 7 mm, respectively. The proposed structure resonates at around 5.5 GHz can cover the (5.15‐5.35/5.725‐5.825) GHz IEEE 802.11a and (5.15‐5.35/5.470‐5.725/5.725‐5.925) GHz HIPERLAN 2 bands. The fabricated prototype antenna has measured impedance bandwidth (VSWR<2) of 15% (5.10‐5.92 GHz) across the operating bands. The measured radiation patterns are nearly omnidirectional along with stable gain of 5 dBi. Moreover, the proposed antenna exhibits excellent radiation efficiency of around 90% across the operating bands. The simulated and measured results of antenna are found to be in good agreement. The very low profile and ultra‐thin structure make it an excellent candidate for wireless operations in the ultra‐thin laptop computers.