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arxiv: 2304.09569 · v1 · pith:US3MLGJZnew · submitted 2023-04-19 · ⚛️ physics.app-ph

Genetically Synthesized Supergain Broadband Wire-Bundle Antenna

classification ⚛️ physics.app-ph
keywords gainstructuresantennabandwidthapplicationsappliedapproachbundle
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High-gain antennas are essential hardware devices, powering numerous daily applications, including distant point-to-point communications, safety radars, and many others. While a common approach to elevate gain is to enlarge an antenna aperture, highly resonant subwavelength structures can potentially grant high gain performances. The Chu-Harrington limit is a standard criterion to assess electrically small structures and those surpassing it are called superdirective. Supergain is obtained in a case when internal losses are mitigated, and an antenna is matched to radiation, though typically in a very narrow frequency band. Here we develop a concept of a spectrally overlapping resonant cascading, where tailored multipole hierarchy grants both high gain and sufficient operational bandwidth. Our architecture is based on a near-field coupled wire bundle. Genetic optimization, constraining both gain and bandwidth, is applied on a 24-dimensional space and predicts 8.81 dBi realized gain within a half-wavelength in a cube volume. The experimental gain is 6.15 with 13% fractional bandwidth. Small wire bundle structures are rather attractive for designing superscattering and superdirective structures, as they have a sufficient number of degrees of freedom to perform an optimization, and, at the same time rely on simple fabrication-tolerant layouts, based on low-loss materials. The developed approach can be applied to low-frequency (e.g., kHz-MHz) applications, where miniaturization of wireless devices is highly demanded.

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