Abstract

This paper presents a planar CPW-fed Ultrawideband (UWB) antenna with two independently tunable notch bands. The proposed design consists of a modified Rhombus-shaped monopole structure that is integrated with a dual band-stop filter based on hexagonal split ring resonators (HSRR). The antenna is capable of suppressing multiple frequency bands within ultrawideband range (3.1–11 GHz) such as WLAN and X-band downlink satellite communication frequency bands with an independent tunable mechanism to fulfill the on-demand band rejection. The frequency reconfigurability of the two notch bands is obtained by loading the hexagonal filter arms with two varactor diodes (for each band). Details of antenna design steps and reconfigurability mechanism are illustrated. The notch band element is explained using equivalent circuit model and surface current distribution at lower and higher notch frequency bands. A prototype of the proposed design is printed on the RO4003C (ϵr = 3.55) substrate printed circuit board (PCB) and tested to authenticate the performance. The proposed antenna volume is 21.5 ▪ 48 ▪ 1.524 mm3 and demonstrates an omnidirectional radiation pattern in E and H planes with an average gain of 3.7 dBi across the operational passbands, while a sharp reduction in gain of -6.8 dBi and -3.5 dBi is achieved at the lower and higher notch bands, respectively. Continuous tuning is achieved experimentally from 5.08 to 5.77 GHz and 7.75 to 8.52 GHz for the lower and higher notch bands, respectively. Excellent agreement is observed between the simulated and measured results. Application areas include radio-frequency identifications, ground-penetrating radar, and wireless communications.

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