Abstract

A dual-band antenna with pattern similarity using the energy-squeezing mechanism of an epsilon-near-zero (ENZ) metamaterial is designed, and experimental results are presented with simulated data. To achieve high gain and pattern similarity, a waveguide-based ENZ metamaterial property is adopted in a planar microstrip form at the upper band. The designed dual-band antenna is resonating at 4.3 GHz and 9.8 GHz frequencies with the desired radiation pattern. A metamaterial unit cell with ENZ characteristics at 9.8 GHz is designed to improve the antenna’s performance. The permittivity and permeability of the unit cell are characterized using the Nicolson–Ross–Weir method. By adding a square ring structure, the antenna geometry exhibits ENZ characteristics. Using the ENZ material’s energy-squeezing mechanism, a 12-dB gain improvement is achieved in the upper band without affecting the lower band radiation characteristics without increasing the complexity. It can be used in C- and X-band applications, such as mobile, military, defense, and radar communication. The dual-band antenna with ENZ material is fabricated, and the measured results show a good match with the simulated results. The proposed antenna size at 4.3 GHz is 0.58λ × 0.58λ × 0.02λ.

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