Design
and Simulation of Hexagonal Lock-Shaped Microstrip Patch Antenna for 2.4 GHz WLAN
Applications
Dr. G. Kalpanadevi1, kalapanadevig.ece@krce.ac.in
Faculty, Department of ECE, K. Ramakrishnan College of
Engineering, Tamilnadu, India
Deni Sebasta Raja2, Hasin
Zafina Nizam Moideen3, Kirisha Murugan4, Kirubha
Shrivaishnavi Gnanaguru5
denisebasta25@gmail.com2,
hasinrounak1630@gmail.com3, kirishamurugan21@gmail.com4,
kirubhashrivaishnavi@gmail.com5
Students, Department of ECE, K. Ramakrishnan College
of Engineering, Tiruchirappalli, Tamil Nadu, India.
Abstract—This paper describes the
design, simulation, and analysis of a new hexagonal lock-shaped microstrip
patch antenna that operates at 2.4 GHz. It aims applications such as Wi-Fi,
Bluetooth and Zigbee. The antenna shows a hexagonal radiating patch with a
semi-circular loop element that looks like a padlock. It is made on a low-cost
FR-4 substrate with a dielectric constant of 4.4. A 50-Ω microstrip
transmission line feeds the antenna and includes a stepped impedance matching
network. Simulation results from CST Studio Suite shows a return loss (S11) of
-12.27 dB at 2.401 GHz and a Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR) of 1.64 at
2.401 GHz. Thus, showing good impedance matching and efficient power transfer
to the radiating element. The compact design, with an overall size of about 30
mm × 30 mm, makes the antenna suitable for modern wireless communication
devices.
Index
Terms—Microstrip patch antenna, hexagonal
antenna, 2.4-GHz application, return loss, VSWR, CST simulation, Wi-Fi antenna,
impedance matching.
I.
Introduction
The technology
of wireless communication has made big improvements in recent years, and
antennas have become a critical component in every transmission and reception
device. Antennas are transducers that convert electricity into electromagnetic
waves and vice versa. There are different kinds of antennas available today;
however, the microstrip patch antenna has become quite popular because of its
flat structure, lightness, ease of mounting on printed circuit boards and
compatibility with integrated circuits.
The microstrip
patch antenna normally consists of a metal strip acting as a radiator, which is
mounted on one side of a substrate, while the ground plane is present on the
other side. The patch may be in various forms, for example, rectangular,
circular, triangular and hexagonal.
The 2.4 GHz
frequency band is widely utilized for Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN)
applications, particularly in Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11b/g/n) standards. This band
offers a suitable balance between coverage range and data transmission
capability, making it very effective for indoor and short-range wireless
communication systems. Due to its unlicensed nature and global availability,
the 2.4 GHz band enables cost-effective and easy deployment of WLAN systems
without regulatory constraints. However, it is also prone to interference from
other devices running in the same band, which mandates the design of efficient
and small antennas with good bandwidth, gain and radiation characteristics to
make sure steady functioning in WLAN situations.
This paper
proposed and simulated a new lock-shaped hexagonal microstrip patch antenna
operating at 2.4 GHz WLAN applications. In this study, the shape of the
radiating portion resembles that of a lock consisting of a regular hexagonal
shaped patch body with a semi-circular loop on top and a keyhole slot patterned
at the centre. The simulation of the proposed antenna was performed using CST
Microwave Studio on an FR-4 substrate and the S11 and VSWR performance
characteristics were calculated and compared with some existing works.
The
rest of the paper is organized in the following way. A literature survey is
given in Section II. Section III discusses the geometry and design of the
proposed antenna. Simulation results of the proposed design are presented in
Section IV. Finally, Section V provides conclusion.
II.
Literature Review
There
have been many publications related to microstrip patch antennas with unusual
configurations, slot-loaded antennas, and various new shapes of patches for the
2.4 GHz WLAN applications. This chapter summarizes twelve research works
related to the hexagonal lock-shaped antenna proposal, including hexagonal
patches, lock and keyhole patches, slot integrated patches and developments in
microstrip antennas in general.
In his book,
Balanis [1] discussed the theory of microstrip antennas based on transmission
line and cavity approaches. These are the first theories used to design patch
antennas at any frequency range. In this project, the main equations are
utilized from this research. Kumar and Ray [2] have presented the theory about
patches with irregular shapes. They proved that by segmenting the patch into
small rectangles, a hexagonal or pentagonal shape could be analysed and the
results would be similar to those obtained by full wave analysis for patches with
frequencies below 6 GHz.
Gupta et al.
[3] analysed a hexagonal microstrip patch operating at 2.45 GHz on the FR-4
substrate. The researchers have found that hexagonal patch provides a more even
surface current distribution compared to a rectangular patch, which leads to
increased radiation efficiency and the formation of symmetrical far fields
useful for WLAN applications. An important advantage of the hexagonal geometry
is its larger area to perimeter ratio, leading to lower fringing field losses
along the patch edges. The compactness and performance of hexagonal patches
with inset feeding were also studied by Pandey and Dhara [4], who observed that
the optimal inset depth is capable of adjusting the impedance from 200 Ω
at the patch edge to 50 Ω.
A detailed
analysis on slot-loaded microstrip patch antennas operating at 2.4 GHz was
carried out by Deshmukh & Kumar [5], showing that the insertion of a
U-shaped or keyhole slot would cause a second resonance, thereby expanding the
impedance bandwidth by up to 18%–25% when compared with a reference patch
without any slot. The geometry of the slots was observed to individually affect
the frequency of the second resonance, hence offering an additional parameter
for designing the antennas. Osman et al. [6] designed keyhole slot antennas for
WLAN applications, revealing that the use of a circular aperture along with a
rectangular channel slot, which resembles a padlock keyhole slot, will disturb
the path of currents on the patch in such a manner as to enhance return loss
while decreasing cross polarization.
In their work,
Singh and Rani [7] presented a lock-shaped microstrip patch antenna working at
2.4 GHz in Bluetooth communication, with the RT or Duroid substrate employed as
the base for the antenna. In their analysis, they found that the closed loop
shackle feature provided in the upper part of the patch led to an additional
loading effect, which moved the resonant frequency down to 180 MHz compared to
a regular hexagonal patch with the same circumscribed diameter, thereby
allowing for miniaturization while maintaining the high radiation efficiency of
the antenna. Similarly, in the work done by Sharma et al. [8], a similar lock
shape patch was used in the FR-4 material. It was seen that the inclusion of
the keyhole slot in the middle of the patch resulted in the combination of slot
antenna effect with the regular patch antenna effect.
A compact
monopole antenna using a circular ring with keyhole aperture was suggested by
Alsath & Kanagasabai [9], which showed that the creation of a
keyhole-shaped slot within a circular ring patch could enable dual-band
resonances and provide the freedom to tune the frequencies individually by
modifying the length of the rectangular and circular components of the slot. A
planar lock-profile antenna for IEEE 802.11 wireless LANs was developed by
Mohamed & Abdalla [10], which indicated that the creation of a
padlock-shaped perimeter around the patch produces an effective surface current
path length of about 0.42λ at 2.4 GHz.
The effect of
substrate permittivity and substrate thickness on different types of patch
antenna with an unusual geometry, like hexagonal patches, was evaluated by Tran
et al. [11]. The work indicated that the use of FR-4 with a thickness of 1.6 mm
can be considered practical for patch antenna at 2.4 GHz frequency with the
gain reduction due to dielectric loss not exceeding 0.8 dBi for patches with
dimensions smaller than 0.5 wavelength. In another review paper, Ullah et al.
[12] have extensively discussed the types of microstrip patch antenna geometry
for use in the IoT and WLAN domains. The review highlighted that antennas with
integrated slot features such as keyholes, H-slots, and E-slots consistently
exhibited better impedance bandwidth and lower VSWR than plain patches of
equivalent area, reinforcing the design rationale of the proposed lock-shaped
antenna. Together, these ten works establish a clear background for the
proposed hexagonal lock shaped antenna and confirm the novelty of combining a
hexagonal patch body, a semi-circular shackle loop and a keyhole slot in a
single integrated 2.4 GHz structure.
III.
DESIGN AND ANALYSIS
The proposed hexagonal
lock-shaped microstrip patch antenna was designed using the CST Studio Suite
electromagnetic simulation software. The antenna geometry was developed through
an iterative optimization process that combined analytical initial estimates
with numerical full-wave simulation refinement.
A. Substrate Selection
The antenna was fabricated
on an FR-4 substrate with the following material properties, relative
permittivity (εr) = 4.4, loss tangent (tan δ) = 0.02 and
substrate thickness (h) = 1.6 mm. For both the radiating patch and the ground
plane, a standard copper cladding thickness of 0.035 mm was employed.
B. Patch Geometry and Dimensions
The radiating structure
consists of three shapes put together to form one patch.
The first shape is a
regular hexagonal patch with sides of length 15.19 mm. This hexagon is the
central body of the design and constitutes the main area that will carry out
the radiation process.
Above the
hexagonal patch, there is a semi-circular loop with a radius of 8 mm. The shape
looks similar to a keyhole and functions as the inductive part of the design,
affecting the resonant frequency and creating another route for the radiation
process.
In the middle
of the hexagonal patch, there is a slot made of two components a circle of 2 mm
in diameter and a rectangle of 2 mm × 4.27 mm dimensions. This slot helps shape
the surface current distribution and improves impedance matching, enabling
additional resonance frequencies close to the desired operating band.
The patch
antenna is fed through a microstrip line having an impedance value of 50 Ω
and a width of 2.5 mm. The feeding point is located on the bottom side of the
hexagonal patch by a stepped impedance matching method. The total length of the
feeding line is 12 mm, in which 7.47 mm is the stub portion, and 5 mm is the
SMA connector interface portion.
Fig 1. Geometry of the design
hexagonal lock-shaped microstrip patch antenna as simulated using CST Microwave
Studio. Dimensions: side of the hexagon = 26.62 mm, radius of the loop = 8 mm,
width of keyhole slot = 2 mm, length of keyhole slot = 4.27 mm and feed width =
2.5 mm.
C. Design Equations
The effective radius
method was used to calculate the operating frequency for the first design of
hexagonal patch antenna. For a normal hexagonal patch that has a circumradius
of R, we can find the effective radius:
fᵣ = 1.8412 * c /
(2π * aeff √εr)
where ε is the
relative permittivity of the substrate and c is the speed of light in a vacuum.
The effective radius incorporates fringing fields that appear at the patch
edges. For a design frequency of 2.4 GHz, together with the chosen substrate,
estimates showed that the circumradius of the hexagonal patch was approximately
22 mm.
A 50 Ω characteristic
impedance was obtained using the equations to calculate the microstrip feed
line for the FR-4 substrate 1.6 mm thick and with a dielectric constant of 4.4.
The standard design equations found the feed line width to be about 2.5 mm.
Fig. 2. Hexagonal Lock
shaped Antenna in CST
IV.Results
and ANALYSIS
The
electromagnetic characteristics of the hexagonal lock-shaped antenna design
were investigated by CST Studio Suite, based on the finite integration
technique using a time-domain solver. The simulation area was enclosed by the
perfectly matched layer absorber boundary condition, while the input excitation
to the antenna was provided via the discrete port feed. The frequency-domain
scattering parameters (S-parameters) and voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR)
were obtained from 2.0 to 3.0 GHz.
A. Return Loss (S11) Performance
S11
(return loss) with respect to the frequency has been presented in Fig. 3 below.
The antenna demonstrated a sharp resonance peak at a frequency of 2.401 GHz,
where the S11 return loss dropped to −12.27 dB. The −10 dB
impedance bandwidth for an antenna can be defined as the range of frequencies,
where S11 is less than or equal to −10 dB. The impedance bandwidth of the
antenna designed in this study has a range of 2.4 GHz. The sharpness of the
resonance curve indicates proper impedance matching between the 50 Ω
transmission line and the patch antenna. The asymmetrical nature of the curve
with respect to slope indicates the presence of inductive loading effect due to
the keyhole slot and semicircular shackle elements.
Fig. 3. Simulated S11
(return loss) of the proposed hexagonal lock-shaped antenna. The marker indicates
S11 = −12.27 dB at f = 2.401 GHz.
B. VSWR Performance
Fig. 4 presents a plot of
VSWR versus frequency. While the lowest recorded VSWR value of 1.64 was
achieved at 2.401 GHz. There was never a VSWR in excess of the normally
acceptable value of 2.0 corresponding to power reflected higher than 10% in the
feed point in relation to the range of 2.4 GHz.
The 0.24 reflection
coefficient corresponds with a VSWR of 1.64. The implication is that 94.4% of
input power passes into the radiating structure. This degree of match would be
acceptable and practically useful for short-range wireless communication system
applications.
Fig. 4. Simulated VSWR of the proposed hexagonal lock-shaped
antenna. The marker indicates VSWR = 1.64 at f = 2.401 GHz.
C. Performance Summary and Comparison
Table
I summarizes the key simulated performance parameters of the proposed hexagonal
lock-shaped antenna, along with the selected reference designs from the
literature operating in the 2.4-GHz band.
TABLE I. Comparison of the
Proposed Antenna with Reference Designs at 2.4 GHz
|
Reference |
Frequency
(GHz) |
S11
(dB) |
VSWR |
Patch
Shape |
|
[3] |
2.45 |
−10.2 |
1.85 |
Hexagonal |
|
[5] |
2.40 |
−9.8 |
2.05 |
Rect.
+ U-slot |
|
[7] |
2.40 |
−8.5 |
2.32 |
Rectangular |
|
Proposed
Work |
2.401 |
−12.27 |
1.64 |
Hex.
Lock-Shaped |
As shown in Table I, the
proposed hexagonal lock-shaped antenna achieved the best return loss of
−12.27 dB and the lowest VSWR of 1.64 among all the compared designs. The
reference designs in [3], [5] and [7] exhibited S11 values of −10.2,
−9.8 and −8.5 dB, respectively; all significantly inferior to the
proposed design. Similarly, the VSWR values of 1.85, 2.05 and 2.32 reported for
the reference designs were considerably higher than the 1.64 achieved by the
proposed antenna, indicating poorer impedance matching. These results confirm
that the hexagonal lock-shaped geometry with its integrated keyhole slot and
stepped impedance feed delivers superior impedance matching performance
compared to conventional hexagonal, slot-loaded rectangular and standard
rectangular patch antenna designs at 2.4 GHz.
V.
Conclusion
A novel hexagonal
lock-shaped microstrip patch antenna for the 2.4-GHz was designed and simulated
in this study. The antenna consists of a hexagonally shaped radiating patch
with a semicircle-shaped shackle along with a key-hole-shaped centre slot to
obtain resonance at 2.401 GHz frequency, where the S11 is −12.27 dB with
VSWR equal to 1.64. Through comparative analysis with previous designs, it is
evident that the antenna under study is superior to other designs in both
return losses and VSWR. From the simulation results, it is clear that the
proposed antenna meets the basic requirement of 2.4 GHz WLAN application operation
through impedance matching, where VSWR < 2.0; additionally, the new antenna
provides a better value of S11 and VSWR than other considered designs. With the
dimensions of 30 mm × 30 mm, the proposed antenna can be fabricated on a
standard printed circuit board (PCB).
References
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