What is Patch Antenna?
Patch Antenna
A
patch antenna (also known as a rectangular microstrip antenna) is a type of
radio antenna with a low profile, which can be mounted on a flat
surface. It consists of a flat rectangular sheet or "patch" of metal,
mounted over a larger sheet of metal called a ground plane. The
assembly is usually contained inside a plastic radome, which
protects the antenna structure from damage. Patch antennas are simple to
fabricate and easy to modify and customize. They are the original type of microstrip antenna described by Howell in 1972; the two
metal sheets together form a resonant piece of microstriptransmission line with a
length of approximately one-half wavelength of the
radio waves. The radiation mechanism arises from discontinuities at each
truncated edge of the microstrip transmission line. The
radiation at the edges causes the antenna to act slightly larger electrically
than its physical dimensions, so in order for the antenna to be resonant, a length
of microstrip transmission line slightly shorter than one-half a wavelength at
the frequency is used. A patch antenna is usually constructed on a dielectric
substrate, using the same materials and lithography processes used to make printed circuit boards.
Fig. :
Rectangular Patch Antenna
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