IEEE Open Journal of Antennas and Propagation (Jan 2021)
Antenna Aperture Synthesis Using Mode-Converting Metasurfaces
Abstract
Mode-converting metasurfaces are passive, lossless devices that can be designed to transform a set of incident modes to a desired set of transmitted modes. In this paper, mode-converting metasurfaces are utilized to synthesize arbitrary, azimuthally-invariant TM apertures. The methods presented in this work can be used to design antennas that can meet specific near-field and far-field criteria unlike most metasurfaces which solely manipulate the far field. The proposed antennas consist of a coaxially-excited, radial cavity topped by the mode-converting metasurface. The main role of the mode-converting metasurface is to establish the desired aperture by converting the modal distribution of the excitation to that of desired aperture. Its secondary role is to impedance match the coaxial feed to the radial cavity. Using modal network theory, an optimization-based design procedure is developed to synthesize the proposed metasurface antennas. The admittance profiles of the electric sheets that comprise the metasurface are optimized to establish the desired aperture profile. To illustrate the design procedure, a radial Gaussian beam antenna is synthesized at 10 GHz and its performance is verified using a full wave electromagnetic solver. The proposed antenna has a height and weight advantage over Gaussian beam horn antennas.
Keywords