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ARTICLES

Hexa-band suppression characteristics from a fork-shaped UWB-MIMO antenna loaded with complementary split-ring resonator and slots

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Pages 2194-2219 | Received 06 May 2020, Accepted 10 Aug 2020, Published online: 25 Aug 2020
 

Abstract

In the present article, a fork-shaped UWB-MIMO antenna is designed and experimentally tested to achieve hexa-band rejection characteristics. Initially, the proposed array consists of two fork-shaped radiators and a reduced ground with a vertical stub, designed to cover a large bandwidth from 3.64–12.2 GHz and high port-to-port isolation. Furthermore, each fork-shaped radiator is defected with two U-shaped slots, inverted U-shaped slot, complementary SRR and a pair of Z-shaped slots to eliminate the interfering frequency bands at 3.95 GHz (downlink C-band), 4.8 GHz (INSAT), 5.35 GHz (WLAN), 6.19 GHz (uplink C-band) and 8.4 GHz (ITU-8) respectively. The reduced ground is loaded with two G-shaped slots to suppress the interfering amateur radio band (10.01–11.27 GHz). The total volume occupied by the proposed array is 21.5 × 57 × 1.64 mm3. The diversity performance of the proposed array is characterized by low ECC, high DG, high MEG, low CCL and stable TARC characteristics. A close resemblance is achieved between the simulated and experimental results.

Acknowledgments

The authors are thankful to Dr. Rajesh Khanna (Professor, TIET) and Mr. Hitender (Research Scholar, TIET) for helping in carrying out the antenna testing procedure at Antenna testing and research laboratory, TIET, Patiala, India.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Arashpreet K. Sohi

Arashpreet K. Sohi was born in Patiala (Punjab), India. She received her B.E. degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering in 2015 from Chandigarh Group of Colleges, Mohali, India and got her M.E degree in 2017 (specialization in Wireless Communications) from Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, Patiala, India. She is presently pursuing her Ph.D. (Electronics and Communications Engineering) from Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology. Her research interests include microstrip patch antennas for wireless communication, microwave imaging for breast cancer diagnosis using microstrip patch antennas, optimization algorithms and fractal antennas. She has six research papers in international journals and conferences.

Amanpreet Kaur

Amanpreet Kaur was born in Udhampur (Jammu and Kashmir), India. She received her B.E. in Electronics and Communication Engineering degree from Jammu University in 2004. She got her M.E. degree in 2006 and Ph.D. degree in 2016 (specialization in Microstrip Antennas for Wireless communications) from Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology, Patiala, India. Since 2006, she is working as an Assistant professor at the Thapar Institute of Engineering and Technology. Her research interests include microstrip antennas for wireless communication systems, MIMO antennas and Microwave imaging of human tissues using UWB antennas. She has guided 29 M.E. thesis and has handled projects worth rupees 25 lakhs. She is also a life member of IETE (Institution of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers). She has twenty-two research papers in international journals and conferences and seven publications in SCIE journals. She is also a member of the editorial board team for the journal entitled “Recent Advances in Electrical & Electronic Engineering”. She is also a reviewer of the many SCI journals (Taylor & Francis, IEEE access, Springer, Cambridge and Elsevier).

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