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This paper presents the basic characteristics of a beam tilting slot antenna element whose forced resonance is realized by reactance loading; its structure complements that of a dipole antenna element. The radiation pattern is tilted using a properly determined driving point position; a single loading reactance is used to obtain the forced resonance without great changes in the tilt angle. Numerical results show that the reactance element needs to be loaded near the driving point in order to obtain the forced resonance of the antenna and the minimum changes in the beam tilt angle at the same time. When the proposed forced resonant beam tilting slot antenna with a 0.8 λ length is driven at -0.2 λ from the center, the main beam tilt angle of 57.7 degrees and the highest power gain of 3.8 dB are obtained. This slot element has a broad bandwidth, unlike the complementary dipole element.
This letter presents beam tilting characteristics of a slot antenna element with reactance loading. It is found that the beam tilt is obtained by controlling aperture electric field distributions with a loaded reactance on the slot. A large beam tilt angle is obtained when an inductive reactance element is loaded.
The applications of reactance-loaded beam tilting dipole antennas have been reported by many researchers. The reactance elements loaded on the applications reported up to date have been used only for the purpose of beam tilting. This paper presents the basic characteristics of the beam tilting dipole antenna element in which one reactance element is used for the impedance matching at the feed point. The radiation pattern is tilted by the properly determined driving point position, and the loading reactance is used to obtain forced resonance without great changes in tilt angle. The numerical results demonstrate that the reactance element should be loaded in the region where the driving point is placed to obtain forced resonance of the antenna with little changes in beam tilt angle. In case the proposed forced resonant beam tilting antenna with 0.8λ length is driven at 0.2λ from the center, the main beam tilt angle of 57.7 degrees, the highest power gain of 8.6 dB, and VSWR=2.2 are obtained.
Tetsu TANAKA Shigeru AOYAMA Shigeru KOZONO
Theoretical and experimental evaluations of the horizontal rotating and tilting of the base station antenna beam show that these techniques are effective in reducing delay spread. Result show good agreement between predicted and measured values.