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Antenna Basics Module 3A

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1 Antenna Basics Module 3A
Jerry Bernardini Community College of Rhode Island CCRI J. Bernardini

2 Presentation Reference Material
The California Regional Consortium for Engineering Advances in Technological Education (CREATE) project CWNA Certified Wireless Network Administration Official Study Guide (PWO-104), David Coleman, David Westcott, 2009, Chapter-1 Cisco Wireless technology 4/17/2017 Wireless Networking J. Bernardini

3 Antenna Principles A theoretical isotropic antenna has a perfect 360º vertical and horizontal beamwidth The Isotropic antenna the a reference for all antennas (dBi) Antennas are symmetrical: A receiving antenna has the same characteristics as a transmitter Antennas have gain in particular directions Direction other than the main intended radiation pattern, are typically related to the main lobe gain CCRI J. Bernardini

4 Different Antennas CCRI J. Bernardini

5 Key Antenna Terms Plane H (H-Horizontal) Plane E(E-Elevation) Lobes
Directional Omnidirectional Beamwidth Bandwidth Polarization Vertical (Elevation) Horizontal (Azimuth) Diversity VSWR Antenna Accessories CCRI J. Bernardini

6 Antenna Gains CCRI J. Bernardini

7 Antenna Characteristics
Main beam is the region around the direction of maximum radiation The main beam is centered at 90 degrees Sidelobes are smaller beams that are away from the main beam. Radiate in directions other than the main beam and can never be completely eliminated. Half Power Beamwidth (HPBW) is the angular separation in which the magnitude of the radiation pattern decrease by 50% (or -3 dB) from the peak of the main beam. Null to Null Beamwidth. the angular separation from which the magnitude of the radiation pattern decreases to zero (negative infinity dB) away from the main beam. CCRI J. Bernardini

8 H-Plane-Azimuth 0o Beamwidth -3dB 270o 90o 180o CCRI J. Bernardini

9 Beamwidths 0 dB -3dB CCRI J. Bernardini

10 Polar Pattern Analysis
50o Beam CCRI J. Bernardini

11 Dipole H and E Planes CCRI J. Bernardini

12 5.8 dBi Omnidirectional Antenna,
CCRI J. Bernardini

13 Typical Dipole Antenna Beam Pattern
Starting from an Isotropic antenna energy lobes are ‘pushed in’ from the top and bottom Higher gain Smaller vertical beamwidth Larger horizontal lobe Typical dipole pattern Side View (Vertical Pattern) Top View (Horizontal Pattern) New Pattern (with Gain) Vertical Beamwidth CCRI J. Bernardini

14 2.4 GHz Omni-Directional Antennas
2 dBi Dipole "Standard Rubber Duck" CCRI J. Bernardini

15 Rubber Ducky Antenna Construction
Each half of the dipole is a 1/4 wavelength, with the length corrected based on the velocity of the coax being used. Assuming a centre frequency for b of 2.441GHz, a 1/4 wavelength in free space is 30.7mm. Length of the metal casing is approx 24mm, with a total length of 50mm. Thin wire whip protruding from the top of the metal casing is approx 26mm Metal casing is a "decoupler", and is typically used to tune the antenna, by moving the decoupler up and down to vary the VSWR . CCRI J. Bernardini

16 High Gain Omni-Directionals
More coverage area in a circular pattern Energy level directly above or below the antenna will become lower CCRI J. Bernardini

17 2.4 GHz Omni-Directional Antennas
5.2 dBi Mast Mount Vertical CCRI J. Bernardini

18 2.4 GHz Omni-Directional Antennas
5.2 dBi Pillar Mount Diversity CCRI J. Bernardini

19 2.4 GHz Diversity Omni-Directional Antennas
2 dBi Diversity Omni-Directional Ceiling Mount CCRI J. Bernardini

20 2.4 GHz Omni-Directional Antennas
12 dBi Omni-Directional (Outdoor only) CCRI J. Bernardini

21 2.4 GHz Diversity Antennas
6.5 dBi Diversity Patch Wall Mount – 55 degree CCRI J. Bernardini

22 2.4 GHz Directional Antennas (cont.)
6 dBi Patch Antenna – 65 degree CCRI J. Bernardini

23 2.4 GHz Directional Antennas (cont.)
8.5 dBi Patch Antenna – 60 degree CCRI J. Bernardini

24 2.4 GHz 13.5 dBi Yagi Antenna – 25 degree Beamwidth CCRI J. Bernardini

25 2.4 GHz Directional Antennas (cont.)
21 dBi Parabolic Dish Antenna – 12 degree CCRI J. Bernardini

26 Antenna Polarization E-Plane is parallel to the antenna
H-Plane is perpendicular to the antenna Horizontal Polarization – the Electric field is parallel to the ground Vertical Polarization – the Electric field is perpendicular to the ground CCRI J. Bernardini

27 FCC Rules 2.4 GHz EIRP Point-to-Multipoint Point-to-Point
FCC allows increasing the gain of an antenna/cable system if the transmitter power is reduced below 30 dBm in a 1:1 ratio Reduce Transmit Power below maximum of 30 dBm by 1 dBm and increase antenna/cable system gain by 1dBi Point-to-Point Maximum of 36 dBm EIRP Installations – 30 dBm maximum transmitter power with 6 dBi in gain attributed to antenna and cable combination FCC allows exceeding the 36 dBm EIRP in Point-to-Point installations using the 3:1 rule Reduce Transmit Power below maximum of 30 dBm by 1 dBm and increase antenna/cable system gain by 3 dBi CCRI J. Bernardini

28 Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR)
A measure of the change in impedance to an AC signal. Ratio of the Maximum Voltage to Minimum Voltage in an RF system. Typical Values: : 1 to :1 (1:1 Ideal system; impossible to obtain) Measure of the amount of energy sent to the antenna that reflects back to the transmitter. Too large a VSWR will reflect too much energy back to the transmitter and damage the transmitter Output of Transmitter must match Cable , which matches Antenna impedance Return Loss – Ratio of Reflected voltage to Transmitter voltage in dB. Ideally this should be small CCRI J. Bernardini

29 VSWR Table CCRI J. Bernardini TRANS. RETURN POWER VSWR LOSS REFL. :1
TRANS. RETURN POWER VSWR LOSS REFL. :1 [dB] [%] 1.00 0,00 100 1.20 1.58 20.83 0.036 99.17 0.83 1.30 2.28 17.69 0.075 98.30 1.70 1.50 3.52 13.98 0.177 96.00 4.00 1.80 5.11 10.88 0.37 91.84 8.16 2.00 6.02 9.54 0.512 88.90 11.10 12.00 4.44 1.94 64.00 36.00 5.00 14.00 2.55 55.60 44.40 6.00 15.60 2.92 3.1 49.00 51.00 10.00 20.00 1.74 4.81 33.10 66.90 CCRI J. Bernardini

30 Impedance Matching Effects
When the impedances are matched –Half of the source power is delivered to the load and half is dissipated within the (equivalent) generator as heat For receiving antenna, half the power captured is lost as heat in the antenna elements, the other part being reradiated (scattered) back into space When the antenna impedance is not matched to the transmitter output impedance (or to the receiver input impedance) or to the transmission line between them, impedance-matching devices must be used for maximum power transfer. -impedance-matching devices are used They are usually narrow-band Transmission lines often have significant losses CCRI J. Bernardini

31 Antenna Diversity Receiver selects the stronger antenna signal compensating for multipath Frame by frame antenna sampling to determine strongest signal Transmitting occurs on the previous strong-signal antenna =Transmit Diversity Not all access points have Trasmitter Diversity CCRI J. Bernardini

32 Multiple-Input Multiple-Output (MIMO)
A sophisticated form of antenna diversity Multipath signals are Space Time Coding (STC) processed to improve receiver performance IEEE n employs MIMO Not specified with a, b,g CCRI J. Bernardini

33 Antenna Path Considerations
Radio line of sight Height of Earth bulge Fresnel Zone Radius Height of Obstacles CCRI J. Bernardini

34 Line of Sight The following obstructions might obscure a visual link:
Topographic features, such as mountains Curvature of the Earth Buildings and other man-made objects Trees Line of sight! CCRI J. Bernardini

35 Longer Distances Line of Sight disappears at 6 miles (9.7 Km) due to the earth curve CCRI J. Bernardini

36 Fresnel Zone Fresnel Zone CCRI J. Bernardini

37 CCRI J. Bernardini

38 Improving Fresnel Effect
Raise the antenna New structure Existing structure Different mounting point Remove trees CCRI J. Bernardini

39 Site to Site Fresnel Zone
Antenna Height Fresnel zone consideration Line-of-Sight over 25 miles (40 Km) hard to implement Antenna Height (Value “H”) Total Distance 60% (Value “F”) Earth Curvature (Value “C”) CCRI J. Bernardini

40 Antenna Alignment Line of Sight CCRI J. Bernardini

41 Antenna Installation Towers and antennas may require permits and must meet local regulations CCRI J. Bernardini

42 Grounding Antenna towers must be ground to protect from lightning
Grounding Rods (6 ft r Antenna CCRI J. Bernardini

43 5 GHz Integrated Antenna
Innovative 5 GHz Combo Antenna: Wall Mount: Fold antenna flat against access point housing for 6 dBi gain patch antenna Ceiling Mount: Fold antenna out at a 90° angle for 5 dBi gain omni antenna In 6 dBi patch position In 5 dBi omni position CCRI J. Bernardini

44 2.4 GHz Accessories CCRI J. Bernardini

45 RP-TNC Connectors CCRI J. Bernardini

46 Lightning Arrestor CCRI J. Bernardini

47 Lightning Arrestor Designed to protect LAN devices from static electricity and lightning surges that travel on coax transmission lines RP-TNC connectors used on all Cisco Antennas To Antenna Lug Lockwasher Nut Ground Wire From RF Device CCRI J. Bernardini


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