Abstract

A linear phased array antenna excited with a novel composite right/left-handed (CRLH) phase shifters structure is proposed. The phase of the conventional CRLH transmission line is controlled with magnetically aligned micron-sized particles embedded inside the unit cell of the CRLH transmission line. The cascading of unit cells produces the desired phase shifts for the main beam scanning of the linear antenna array operating at a 5.5 GHz center frequency for Wi-Fi 6 applications. The proposed phase shifter design has a very low insertion loss (0.5–2 dB), excellent matching characteristics with the antenna array (less than −10 dB) and a small phase error (1–2 degrees). A 1 × 4 linear patch antenna phased array operating at a 5.5 GHz center frequency of the Wi-Fi 6 band is simulated using the Method of Moments (MoM) simulator platform. Then, the array is driven with the proposed novel CRLH phase shifters for the main beam at broadside and the main beam steered at 15- and 30-degree scan angles toward the desired users. For experimental validation, multiple unit cells of the proposed phase shifters are fabricated, and the 1 × 4 patch antenna array is fed with these fabricated unit cells of the phase shifters. The phased array radiation patterns are measured using an in-house fully calibrated anechoic chamber and were compared with simulated phased array patterns. The measured phased array patterns are in good agreement with the simulated patterns. As compared with commercially available phase shifters, the proposed novel CRLH phase shifters do not need external complex biasing circuitry, which is a major advantage in space constraint limitations at the router side of multi-user MIMO-OFDM systems.

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