Propagation and Antenna
Propagation and Antenna
Propagation and Antenna
FREQUENCY ALLOCATIONS
FREQUENCY DESIGNATION
30 TO 300 HZ EXTREMELY LOW FREQUENCY (ELF)
300 TO 3000 HZ VOICE FREQUENCY (VF)
3 TO 30 KHZ VERY LOW FREQUENCY (VLF)
30 TO 300 KHZ LOW FREQUENCY (LF)
300 TO 3000 KHZ MEDIUM FREQUENCY (MF)
3 TO 30 MHZ HIGH FREQUENCY (HF)
30 TO 300 MHZ VERY HIGH FREQUENCY (VHF)
300 TO 3000 MHZ ULTRA HIGH FREQUENCY (UHF)
3 TO 30 GHZ SUPER HIGH FREQUENCY (SHF)
30 TO 300 GHZ EXTREMELY HIGH FREQUENCY(EHF)
Radio frequency bands used in Railways
Frequency Band Application
range
VHF 30 MHz – 300 MHz Walkie-talkie
UHF 300 MHz – 3 GHz 2 GHz UHF links,
Train radio through
leaky coaxial cable
in tunnels,
GSM & GSM-R
SHF (MW) 3GHz – 30 GHz 7 GHz MW,
18 GHz MW
HF communication (3 MHz-30 MHz band) was once
used in Railways; Now obsolete
POLARISATION OF A WAVE
POLARISATION OF A WAVE
THE POLARISATION OF A WAVE IS DEFINED AS THE DIRECTION OF THE ELECTRIC FIELD AT A
GIVEN POINT OF TIME
TYPES OF POLARISATION
• LINEAR POLARISATION
i) HORIZONTAL POLARISATION
ii) VERTICAL POLARISATION
iii)THETA POLARISATION
• CIRCULAR POLARISATION
• ELLIPTICAL POLARISATION
A WAVE IS SAID TO BE LINEARELY POLARISED IF THE ELECTRIC FIELD LIES
WHOLLY IN ONE PLANE CONTAINING THE DIRECTION OF PROPAGATION.
IF EX AND EY ARE PRESENT AND ARE IN PHASE, THEN THE WAVE IS THETA
POLARISED.
FOR HORIZONTALLY POLARISED WAVE, THE ELECTRIC FIELD LIES IN A PLANE
PARALLEL TO EARTH’S SURFACE.
ALL THE ELECTRIC INTENSITY VECTORS ARE VERTICAL FOR A VERTICALLY POLARISED
WAVE.
THE DIRECTION OF POLARISATION IS SAME AS THE DIRECTION OF ANTENNA.
THUS, VERTICALLY POLARISED WAVE IS RADIATED BY VERTICAL ANTENNA.
HORIZONTALLY POLARISED WAVE IS RADIATED BY HORIZONTAL ANTENNA.
Electric field will oscillate in the x,y plane with z as the propagation direction
E x E xm cos 2 ft
For a monochromatic wave: E y E ym cos 2 ft
where f is the frequency and is the phase difference between Exm and Eym and the coordinate x is
parallel to the horizon, y normal to x, and z in the direction of propagation.
Vertical
Horizontal
CIRCULARLY POLARIZED LIGHT
Right circular
Left circular
Vertical Horizontal
1) TRANSMITTING ANTENNA
2) OPERATING FREQUENCIES
3) MEDIA BETWEEN TX AND RX
2. SOME WAVES NEITHER FOLLOWS THE EARTH, NOR MOVES TOWARD THE
SKY, BUT TRAVELS DIRECTLY FROM THE TX TO THE RX ANTENNA. THESE
ARE SPACE OR TROPOSPHERIC WAVES.
3. SOME WAVES TRAVEL UPWARDS TOWARDS THE SKY AND GET REFLECTED
BACK TO THE RECEIVER.
THESE ARE SKY OR IONOSPHERIC WAVES.
•GROUND WAVES ARE USEFUL FOR COMMUNICATION AT VLF, LF &
MF RANGES (BROADCAST SIGNALS RECEIVED DURING DAY)
• IT EXISTS WHEN
1) BOTH TRANSMITTING AND RECEIVING
ANTENNAS ARE CLOSE TO THE
SURFACE OF THE EARTH.
E
100-120 Km
D
50-90 Km
0 66 12 18 24
Time (in hrs)
SPACE WAVE
OR
TROPOSPHERIC WAVE
SPACE WAVE OR TROPOSPHERIC WAVE PROPAGATION
The EM wave that propagates from the transmitter to the receiver in the
earth’s troposphere is called Space Wave or Tropospheric Wave.
Shadow Zone
2. Effect of Earth’s Imperfections and Roughness
Earth is basically imperfect and rough
For perfect earth, reflection coefficient is unity. But actual earth makes it
different.
For reflection from perfect earth, phase change is 1800. But actual earth
makes it different.
Amplitude of ground reflected ray is smaller than that of Direct ray.
The field strength at receiver is reduced due to the roughness.
3.Effect Of Hills, Buildings and Other Obstacles
These create Shadow Zones.
Hence possible distance of transmission is reduced.
Field strength
in free space
K=4/3
K=2/3
K=1/2
Earth appears to be increasingly flat as the value of K increases.
For K=infinity, the earth appears to be perfectly flat for the MW beam, since the
beam curves at the same rate as earth.
The curvature for various values of K can be calculated by
h=d1d2/(12.75K)
where, h= Change in vertical distance from a horizontal reference line.
d1= Distance from a point to one end of the path (in Km)
d2= Distance from same point to other end of the path (in Km)
Profile Charts
Profile charts for various values of K available
H
E
I
G
H
T
in
Distance in km
Profile Chart for K= 2/3 (Sub-normal condition)
H
E
I
G
H
T
in
m
Distance in km
Profile Chart for K= Infinity
(Super-normal condition)
H
E
I
G
H
T
in
M
Distance in km
Essential clearances for Radio path
By clearance of radio path , we mean ...
B
A
The successive zones have a path difference of l/2 and are 1800 out of phase
when reaching antenna B.
Thus, 1st, 3rd, 5th, etc Fresnel Zone are in phase
2nd, 4th, 6th, etc Fresnel Zone are in phase
1st ZONE
2nd ZONE
3rd ZONE
4th ZONE
Thus we see that the energies are getting diminished with the higher Fresnel Zones.
The transmitted MW will have maximum energy if only the 1st Fresnel Zone is
cleared.
The strength of the MW signal reaching B will depend upon the no. of Fresnel Zone
cleared. (More Fresnel Zone, less strength of signal).
Practically, it is not possible to make an antenna receive only the 1st Fresnel Zone.
So, we limit the the height of TX and RX antenna so that the 2nd Fresnel Zone is
obstructed on the lower side at a certain lower value of K.
If full 1st Fresnel Zone is available for K=4/3, at least 2/3rd of 1st
Fresnel Zone should be cleared for K=1.
Radius of the 1st Fresnel Zone is calculated as
•Multi-path propagation
–Destructive interference of rays reaching on different paths
through atmosphere
f2
BB OUT
BB IN
FREQUENCY DIVERSITY
ADVANTAGES
1. Reliability is more
2. Equivalent to 100% hot stand by, hence no need of providing stand by TX
or RX.
DISADVANTAGES
f1
f1
TX RX1 RX2
BB IN
BB OUT
With space diversity only one frequency pair is used.
ADVANTAGES
DISADVANTAGES
1. The two antennas are kept on the same tower.The lower antenna should be in
Line of Sight with the TX antenna. Hence length of tower may increase beyond
100m.
2. Costly
3. Good tower foundation necessary, since wind pressure will be large.
4. Equipment reliability decreased, hence stand by required.
CALCULATION OF PATH LOSS
For a transmitting and receiving system, the various losses and gains
are:
AG1--- GAIN OF TX ANTENNA
AG2--- GAIN OF RX ANTENNA
W1--- TRANSMITTING SIDE WAVE GUIDE LOSS
W2--- RECEIVING SIDE WAVE GUIDE LOSS
FSL--- FREE SPACE LOSS
M1--- MISCELLENEOUS LOSSES (~2dB) DUE TO HYBRID, SWITCHING
DEVICE, FILTERS, etc. IN TX SIDE
M2--- MISCELLENEOUS LOSSES (~2dB) DUE TO HYBRID, SWITCHING
DEVICE, FILTERS, etc. IN RX SIDE
Overall path loss
AdB= M1+W1-AG1+FSL-AG2+W2+M2
Free Space Path Loss
It is the loss that would be obtained between
two isotropic antennas in free space, where
there are no ground influences or obstructions.
Thus,
Fade Margin increases Reliability of system is more
Fade Margin decreases Reliability is less
ANTENNAS
VHF
For fixed stations : Dipoles for omni-bus
For fixed stations : Yagi for directional
For mobile sets : Whip antennas
UHF
For fixed stations : Yagi, Grid
For mobile sets (Train radio) : Whip antennas
For GSM – BTS : Sectorized antenna
For GSM Mobile sets :
MW
Parabolic antenna (Dish antenna)
Beam reflectors
Passive reflectors
Types of Antennas
Transmitting and receiving antennas for use in the UHF (300 –
3000MHz) and MW (3- 300GHz) regions tend to be directive. The
dimensions of an antenna must generally be several wavelengths in
order for it to have high gain. At the high frequencies , antennas need
not be physically large to have multiple wavelength dimensions. For
UHF and MW frequencies the following antennas are used: -
1. The Yagi-Udi Antennas.
2. Grid Pack or Grid Antennas.
3. Normal Parabolic antenna
The Yagi(Yagi-Uda) antenna is an array consisting of a driven element and
one or more parasitic elements(Director ,Reflector). They are arranged
collinearly and close together to increase directivity.
Folded-dipole Yagi antenna
GRIDPAK ANTENNA
HIGH PERFORMANCE ANTENNA
These antennas use a shroud around the edge of the dish to eliminate
radiation from the sides and back of the antenna.
The radome not only reduces wind loading, but also prevents the
accumulation of foreign matter within the "cup" formed by the
reflector and shroud.
(a) Reflector fitted with shroud & radome (b) Reflector fitted with radome only
PASSIVE REFLECTOR
(PERISCOPIC ANTENNA)
The Bill Board, a large , flat surface which is simply as a reflector is used
as a repeater. Untypical a system, a bill board repeater might be located at a
turn in a valley, effectively bending the beam to follow the valley
Passive repeaters are essentially ‘‘beam benders.’’ They redirect
the microwave signal around an obstruction. A flat billboard
type metal reflector is used to redirect the signal
Radiator
GP ANTENNA
Radials
Co axial line
SMART ANTENNA
SYSTEMS
Smart Antenna Array:
• antenna array with a digital signal
processing capability to transmit and
receive in an adaptive and spatially
sensitive manner.
a combining/dividing network
control unit
Aim :
• to maximize the antenna gain in
the desired direction
• to minimize the gain in directions
of interferers
Types of Smart Antennas
Switched lobe (SL):
( also called “switched beam” )
• simplest technique
Interfering
Antenna User
Array Antenna
Array
Switched Beam System Adaptive Array
Comparison of Switched Beam Antenna
Adaptive Arrays
Criteria Switched Beam Adaptive Array
Integration • Easy to implement • Transceiver complexity
• Low cost • High cost
• Less hardware
redundancy
Range/ • More coverage compared More coverage compared to
Coverage to conventional systems switched beam system
• Less coverage compared to
adaptive array
Interference • Difficulty in distinguishing • Focusing is narrower
Rejection between desired signal and • Capable of nulling
interferer interfering signals
• Does not react to the
movement of interferers.