A new wideband cross-dipole antenna (CDA) with a circularly polarized (CP) characteristic is proposed in this article. The antenna consists of four L-shaped patches, two modified trapezoid-microstrip lines as an impedance tuner, a pair of vacant-quarter feeding loops as a continuous-phase feeding network, and four grounded inverted L-shaped strips as parasitic elements. It is noticed that the grounded inverted L-shaped strips are inserted directly below the L-shaped patches to increase the CP bandwidth and enhance the gains of the antenna, which is different from the conventional parasitic elements. First, a pair of vacant-quarter feeding loops is used as a feeding structure to provide a sequential phase characteristic. Second, four L-shaped patches as driven elements are connected to the feeding structure to excite two CP resonant modes. Third, two modified trapezoid-microstrip lines are inserted into the feeding structure to adjust the impedance match. Moreover, four grounded inverted L-shaped strips are introduced into the square reflector to achieve wider CP operation by utilizing a gap capacitive coupling feeding way. Finally, the proposed antenna is simulated, manufactured, and measured to verify the design rationality. The measured results indicate the proposed antenna has a broad 3-dB ARBW of 82.5% (1.38–3.32 GHz, 2.35 GHz) and a wide −10-dB IBW of 81.2% (1.18–3.04 GHz, 2.29 GHz). Furthermore, the measured and simulated CP bandwidths are 75.1% (1.38–3.04 GHz, 2.21 GHz) and 74.7% (1.36–2.98 GHz, 2.17 GHz), which is suitable for CP applications in WiBro (2.3–2.39 GHz) and GPS (L1 1.575 GHz) bands.
Read full abstract