Tag: antenna technology

  • Taoglas unveils AI-driven antenna recommendation platform

    Taoglas unveils AI-driven antenna recommendation platform

    Taoglas has launched its AI-driven Antenna Product Recommendation Engine, a platform that helps engineers and organizations select the company’s antennas and RF components.

    Available worldwide, the tool provides both seasoned RF engineers and non-technical decision-makers with intelligent guidance to make informed choices.

    Early-stage antenna decisions can disproportionately impact system performance, cost and time to market. Yet engineers often rely on datasheets, parametric searches, or manual cross comparison, a process that can consume hours or days amid the growing complexity of modern RF systems.

    The new recommendation platform embeds two decades of Taoglas expertise into a digital tool, applying AI trained on real-world design knowledge to scan, filter and refine suitable products in minutes, drawing on insights from tens of thousands of projects worldwide.

    The tool is the newest addition to the AntennaXpert ecosystem, complementing Taoglas’ Antenna Builder and Cable Builder for configuration, as well as the Antenna Integrator for PCB placement. Together, they enable a seamless path from initial selection to integration, Taoglas said.

  • Antennas: The key to accuracy for high-precision applications

    Antennas: The key to accuracy for high-precision applications

    New developments in antenna technology empower the final positioning solution with better accuracy and reliability. Leading experts discuss the technology advances producing greater user benefits.

    The increasing prevalence of both intentional and inadvertent jamming, new wider bandwidths, and the significance of antenna phase-center variation all bring changes to the dynamic and evolving antenna sector.


    Javad Ashjaee (Photo: Javad GNSS)
    Javad Ashjaee (Photo: Javad GNSS)

    Javad Ashjaee

    President & CEO, JAVAD GNSS

    Advanced filtering techniques enable our antennas to defend against jammers and spoofers and to inform users with the details of these intrusive actions when they are detected.

    Near-Band Interference. The J-Shield is a robust filter in our antennas that blocks out-of-band interference, in particular such signals that are near the GNSS bands like the LightSquared/Ligado signals. The graph below shows the protection characteristics of the J-Shield filters. It has a sharp 10-dB/KHz skirt that provides up to 100 dB of protection. It makes the precious near-band spectrums available for other usages and protects GNSS bands now and in the future.

    In-Band Interference. Our in-band protection digital filter protects against in-band interference like harmonics of TV and radio stations when you get close to them, or against illegitimate in-band transmissions. Our in-band interference protection is based on the 16 adaptive 80th-order filters. Advanced interference mitigation (AIM) filters can be combined in pairs for complex signal processing. This filter can simultaneously suppress several interference signals.

    Graph: Javad GNSS
    Graph: Javad GNSS

    The 16 finite impulse response (FIR) AIM filters can be combined in any number in chain. Each filter is a 255-order FIR filter. It can be used to suppress the stationary interference signal in programmable area (compare with adaptive AIM-filter) or for spectrum shaping. To have more suppressing areas or more aggressive suppressing, one can combine FIR AIM serial.


    Neil Gerein, Portfolio Manager, NovAtel. (Photo: NovAtel)
    Neil Gerein, Portfolio Manager, NovAtel. (Photo: NovAtel)

    Neil Gerein

    Director, Product Management, NovAtel

    At NovAtel we often say, “accuracy is addictive,” and to meet increasingly demanding accuracy and reliability requirements it is vital to concentrate on the antenna. After all, the antenna is the first in a long chain of key technologies that the GNSS signals must pass through to create a position, navigation and timing solution.

    All modern GNSS transmit on multiple frequencies, with wide bandwidth signals, requiring antenna elements and integrated low noise amplifiers (LNAs) that operate across these frequencies. The challenge is to design the antenna element and LNAs for symmetric radiation patterns across all frequencies while minimizing multipath, phase center offset (PCO) and phase center variation (PCV). The result is better carrier-phase measurements, and therefore more accurate solutions in real-time kinematic (RTK) and PPP applications.

    Photo: NovAtel
    Photo: NovAtel

    Since 2016 the Radio Equipment Directive (RED) has been in effect, and all GNSS receiver systems sold into the European Union must be compliant to the standard, including adjacent-band compatibility and spurious emissions testing. RED compliance is an end-to-end system test, where the filtering within the antenna must be analyzed in concert with the filtering capabilities of the connected GNSS receiver to meet the requirements. The antenna performance therefore becomes critical to any GNSS receiver system that is intended to be sold within the EU.


    Gyles Panther, president and CTO, Tallysman Wireless. (Photo: Tallysman)
    Gyles Panther, president and CTO, Tallysman Wireless. (Photo: Tallysman)

    Gyles Panther

    President and Chief Technical Officer, Tallysman

    A fact often not appreciated is that the performance of a GNSS antenna is commonly the limiting factor in system accuracy. Digital signal algorithms in the receiver are helpful, but if the signal delivered by an antenna is less than optimum, the receiver cannot compensate.

    Precision GNSS systems typically rely upon resolved wavelength ambiguity measurements, combined with ephemeris and clock corrections to determine signal time of flight. In real-time kinematic (RTK) and precise point positioning (PPP) receivers, the basis for this measurement is phase locked tracking of received satellite signals. Thus an over-arching measure of antenna performance in the specific application conditions is the proportion of the time that phase lock is maintained by the receiver.

    The VeraChoke GNSS antenna. (Photo: Tallysman)
    The VeraChoke GNSS antenna. (Photo: Tallysman)

    All this provides for an unprecedented level of accuracy, with precision antennas now more akin to the ends of a tape measure than providing a simple GNSS “fix.” To this end, key parameters include a best possible G/T ratio, high multipath rejection, excellent axial ratio, high front-back ratio and minimal phase-center variation (PCV), all with high uniformity in the azimuth — altogether a very demanding design task.

    Combining these parameters to provide exquisite accuracy, the Tallysman VC6100 choke ring antenna has less than 1 millimeter PCV when combined with absolute calibrated corrections data, whilst the lower cost VP6000, with its less complex installation, can be used without corrections data and still be within a millimeter or two of the truth compared to its more precise cousin.

  • ION GNSS+ 2015: Harxon showcases new antenna technology

    Jia Yan Bo, general manager for Harxon, talks about the company’s new antenna technology at ION GNSS+ 2015 in Tampa, Fla.

  • Canadian Army to Test NovAtel’s GAJT GPS Anti-Jam Antenna

    Canadian Army to Test NovAtel’s GAJT GPS Anti-Jam Antenna

    NovAtel-GAJT_antenna
    NovAtel’s GAJT-700ML anti-jamming antenna.

    Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) has selected NovAtel’s GAJT-700ML antenna for testing on Canadian Army armored vehicles. The GAJT-700ML, developed in Calgary at NovAtel’s global headquarters, is a single-unit GPS anti-jam antenna system for land vehicles.

    The testing is being conducted through PWGSC’s Build in Canada Innovation Program (BCIP).

    NovAtel was selected to participate under the BCIP’s “safety and security” priority area. PWGSC will procure a number of GAJT-700MLs on behalf of the Department of National Defense (DND). The Directorate of Land Requirements (DLR) — with the assistance of the Quality Engineering Test Establishment (QETE) and the Land Force Trials and Evaluation Unit (LFTEU) — will oversee all testing on DND’s behalf.

    Field testing, centered on battlefield days, is expected to take place in early March of 2014 at 4th Canadian Division Support Garrison Petawawa. The battlefield days will analyze the performance of GAJT on the Artillery Observation Post Variants (OPV) of the Light Armored Vehicle III (LAV III) in operational conditions to confirm the suitability and robustness of GAJT-700ML for this role. The process is expected to be completed by the end of March.

    “NovAtel has worked closely with Canadian and Allied defence agencies to test the resilience of the GAJT-700ML in challenging jamming environments,” said Jason Hamilton, vice president, Marketing and Product Management. “The BCIP program provides an opportunity to expand this testing to incorporate end user soldier feedback on the installation and operational effectiveness of GAJT during battlefield usage of the LAV OPV. This invaluable feedback will be used by NovAtel to further drive product innovation in support of Canada and its Allied partners.”

    “The Canadian Army requires accurate, secure and reliable access to Global Positioning Systems to conduct operations throughout the full spectrum of conflict in all potential theatres of operation,” said Colonel Andrew Jayne, Director Land Requirements. “With the ever-increasing demands on the electromagnetic spectrum and threat of harmful interference, technologies which contribute to the assurance of position and timing information are a critical enabler of Army and Canadian Armed Forces operations in today and tomorrow’s operating environment.”

    GAJT is a null-forming technology that negates jammers, ensuring the satellite signals necessary to compute position and time are always available. Three categories of GAJT are manufactured by NovAtel:

    • GAJT-700ML: for use with military land vehicles, networks and timing infrastructure
    • GAJT-700MS: for marine vessels, from small boats to capital ships
    • GAJT-AE: for use with an external antenna in size and weight constrained applications

    The BCIP was created by the Government of Canada to strengthen Canadian innovation. The program offers procurement and testing of pre-commercialized products and services, at a late stage of development. The BCIP:

    • Bridges the “pre-commercialization gap”
    • Supports Canadian suppliers by connecting innovators and government users and by testing innovations
    • Provides real-world evaluation of pre-commercial goods and services
    • Improves the efficiency and effectiveness of government operations
  • Saelig Introduces Low-Cost SMD Antennas

    Saelig Introduces Low-Cost SMD Antennas

    Saelig-proant-W

    Saelig Company, Inc., announces the availability of the Proant OnBoard SMD 2400 (2.4GHz band) and SMD GPS (GPS and GLONASS) miniature surface-mount (SMD) antennas for mobile wireless products. The OnBoard series moves embedded antenna integration one step ahead by combining high performance and low cost in this new OnBoard SMD family, the company said.

    Traditionally, small low-cost antennas for printed circuit board assembly have been manufactured with a dielectric substrate as the base for the radiating structure. With this approach, the antenna is normally a rectangular block, which means that the PCB area below the antenna is unavailable for mounting other components. Another drawback is that the substrate itself introduces dielectric losses to the antenna, reducing its total efficiency.

    Proant has taken the concept of small SMD antennas one step ahead by increasing both the antenna performance and design flexibility, and combining this with low cost and manufacturability. The result is the new OnBoard SMD antenna family, which builds on previous OnBoard antennas, but in a surface mounted sheet-metal solution, packaged in tape-on-reel and suitable for high volume manufacturing. One of OnBoard’s key features, which eliminates the need of the dielectric substrate used in other SMD antennas, is the patent-pending capacitively-loaded footprint of the antenna’s supporting pins, which significantly reduces losses and increases the performance.

    The first two products to be launched in this 50 ohm RoHS-compliant family are OnBoard SMD 2400 (2.4GHz band) and SMD GPS (GPS and GLONASS). Future variants will include WLAN dual-band, 868/915 MHz, and GSM versions.

    “We wanted to simplify antenna integration for our customers,” said Tomas Rutfors, CEO of Proant. “The solution was to make a simple product that satisfies both engineering and sourcing needs. With the OnBoard SMD family, we have defined a new product segment, which didn’t exist before.”

    Made in Sweden by Proant AB, a widely respected specialist antenna company in the M2M and wireless market, providing a wide range of embedded and external antennas, OnBoard SMD 2400 (2.4GHz band) and SMD GPS (GPS and Glonass) are available now at under $1 (1000 pcs) from Saelig Company, Inc., the USA technical distributor. A demonstration board is also available at $35.

  • PCTEL to Showcase Antenna Products at MILCOM 2013

    PCTEL, Inc. will display its GPS, GNSS, mobile, and infrastructure communication antennas at the 2013 MILCOM Military Communications Conference. MILCOM is being held in the San Diego Convention Center, San Diego, California, November 18-20.

    PCTEL Connected Solutions provides advanced military antenna designs. Its high-precision, ruggedized antennas enable reliable communications, timing, and location services in the field, while its site solutions products aid deployments of communications equipment for outdoor and indoor applications, the company said.

    PCTEL’s precision GPS and GNSS antennas are used for munitions guidance, aviation, marine, tactical radio manpack, vehicle tracking, soldier, and asset tracking. Recently, PCTEL expanded its GNSS antenna line to include the GPS-LB12GL-MAG, a multiband GPS L1/2, L-Band, and GLONASS antenna. At MILCOM, PCTEL will be showcasing the GPS-L1L2-28MAG, a GPS L1/L2 antenna that has been approved for DAGR (Defense Advanced GPS Receiver) applications. Both of these antennas can be used as soldier-worn asset trackers, military vehicle trackers, and other military tracking applications.

    Reliable communications are critical to any field operation. PCTEL’s ruggedized, high performance antennas have been deployed and qualified for tactical mesh networking, which enables complex field communications. PCTEL designs both SISO and MIMO antennas that cover the NATO IV band, also known as the 4.4 GHz C band. For mesh networking and many other mission critical communications systems, accurate GPS timing information is essential. PCTEL has designed the GPS-TMG-HR-26N GPS timing antenna with high out-of-band rejection for reliable communications in high-interference environments.

    In addition to its high-performance antennas, PCTEL provides site solutions that enable indoor and outdoor deployments of communications systems for public safety and defense applications, including enclosure systems, coaxial cable assemblies, fiber jumpers, lightning protection, and mobile towers.

    “PCTEL designs products that users can count on to help deliver wireless solutions when it matters–and no situation matters more than military field operations,” said Jeff Miller, president of PCTEL Connected Solutions. “We continue to work closely with our customers to expand our portfolio of GPS, GNSS, and communications antennas and site solutions that address emerging needs,” added Miller.

  • Antenna Module for Embedded LBS Receivers

    Photo: Parsec PTA
    Photo: Parsec PTA

    The Parsec PTA and PT active and passive antenna modules integrate seamlessly with the Telit Jupiter SE880 GPS receiver for market leading location aware applications in performance and miniaturization.

    The PTA/PT family delivers best-in-class linearity in the third-order-intercept point (IP3), the measure of a receiver’s critical ability to differentiate signal from noise. All PTA and PT antenna modules are based on Parsec’s family of low noise amplifier (LNA) integrated circuits (ICs).

    The antennas are designed for embedded LBS receivers requiring good user experience that operate with obstructed view of orbiting satellites. The PTA1.5M improves GNSS receiver sensitivity to offset high path loss, improves immunity to receiver descending caused by close proximity radio transceivers, and mitigate the effects of interference from radio mixing products.

    To learn more, visit the Parsec website.

  • Lockheed Martin Delivers Antenna Assemblies for First GPS III Satellite

    Lockheed Martin has completed and is preparing to install the navigation, communication, and hosted payload antenna assemblies for the first satellite of the next-generation GPS III.

    Seven antenna assemblies, produced at Lockheed Martin’s Newtown, Pennsylania, facility were delivered to the company’s GPS III Processing Facility (GPF) near Denver, Colorado, on June 14.  The antennas will be installed on the first GPS III space vehicle (SV01), which Lockheed Martin will deliver to the U.S. Air Force on schedule, “flight-ready,” in 2014.

    The new antennas for GPS III SV01 will provide the satellite’s capability to send and/or receive data for Earth-coverage and military Earth-coverage navigation; a UHF crosslink for inter-satellite data transfer; telemetry, tracking and control for satellite-ground communications; and data acquisition and communication for the nuclear detection system hosted payload. The antenna designs enable three to eight times greater anti-jamming signal power to be broadcast to military users across the globe when compared to previous GPS generations.

    “These antennas on the next generation of GPS III satellites will transmit data utilized by more than one billion users with navigation, positioning and timing needs,” explained Keoki Jackson, vice president of Lockheed Martin’s Navigation Systems mission area. “We have become reliant on GPS for providing signals that affect everything from cell phones and wristwatches, to shipping containers and commercial air traffic, to ATMs and financial transactions worldwide.”

    GPS III is a critically important program for the Air Force, affordably replacing aging GPS satellites in orbit, while improving capability to meet the evolving demands of military, commercial and civilian users. GPS III satellites will deliver three times better accuracy, include enhancements which extend spacecraft life 25 percent further than the prior GPS block, and a new civil signal designed to be interoperable with international global navigation satellite systems.

    The production of the first GPS III satellite continues on schedule. Recent testing of the SV 01 bus — the portion of the space vehicle that carries mission payloads and hosts them in orbit — assured that all bus subsystems are functioning normally and that they are ready for final integration with the satellite’s navigation payload.
    This milestone follows February’s successful initial power on of the SV01 spacecraft bus, which demonstrated  the electrical-mechanical integration, validated the satellite’s interfaces and led the way for functional electrical hardware-software integration testing.

    Lockheed Martin is under contract for production of the first four GPS III satellites (SV01-04), and has received advanced procurement funding for long-lead components for the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth satellites (SV05-08).

    The GPS III team is led by the Global Positioning Systems Directorate at the U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center. Lockheed Martin is the GPS III prime contractor with teammates ITT Exelis, General Dynamics, Infinity Systems Engineering, Honeywell, ATK and other subcontractors. Air Force Space Command’s 2nd Space Operations Squadron (2SOPS), based at Schriever Air Force Base, Colorado, manages and operates the GPS constellation for both civil and military users.

  • FICOSA Integrates OriginGPS Antenna Module in Telematic Unit

    FICOSA demonstrated a telematic unit integrating a multi-service antenna module for positioning and satellite navigation supporting all the geographic positioning standards at the 2013 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February.

    The major advantage of this technological innovation is that the proposed multi-channel GPS/Galileo/GLONASS/BeiDou/QZSS receiver allows tracking across all the different navigation and positioning satellite standards worldwide, so that automakers can  the having to manage different variants of in-vehicle telematic units (iVTUs) depending on the geographical market. iVTUs are needed for emergency call function, fleet management, and other functions. It incorporates an OriginGPS antenna.

    The new module is a complete system-in-package featuring miniature surface mount device technology footprint designed to commit unique integration features for high volume, low power and cost-sensitive applications.

    In addition, the reduced size of the receiver module makes the most of a stacked-up in board integration through miniaturized integrated circuits and surface mount devices, allows an aggressive reduction of the iVTU packaging, which is advantageous for the OEM for car assembly, iVTU localization inside the vehicle, and weight reduction.

    The innovation represents the result of the international collaboration between FICOSA and OriginGPS. “We view the telematics market as a growing market and it is our privilege to cooperate and partner with Ficosa and its excellent engineering team,” said Haim Goldberger, CEO and founder of OriginGPS.

    “In FICOSA, innovation and technology are two main tools for our future and working with OriginGPS is a great issue,” said Jose María Forcadell, Advanced Communications Business Unit Director at FICOSA.

  • Anti-Jam Protection by Antenna

    Anti-Jam Protection by Antenna

    Figure 6. Outdoor jamming test campaign.
    Figure 6. Outdoor jamming test campaign.

    Conception, Realization, Evaluation of a Seven-Element GNSS CRPA

    By Frederic Leveau, Solene Boucher, Erwan Goron, and Herve Lattard

    A controlled radiated pattern antenna can be an effective way to protect GPS receivers against jamming. A new CRPA, composed of seven elements, works on the E5a, E5b, E6, L2, and L1 bandwidths. This article reports on radiation pattern measurements of the array in a test facility.

    Controlled radiation pattern antenna (CRPA) technique is considered to be the best GPS pre-correlation protection technique against interference. It consists of an antenna array and a processing unit that performs a phase-destructive sum of the incoming interference signals, this process being equivalent to making nulls towards interferers in the array radiation pattern.

    Considering the growing Galileo system and the possible interest of the French Ministry of Defense in the Public Regulated Service (PRS) , a prospective study was undertaken to develop an array compatible with GPS M-code, Galileo PRS, and aeronautical radionavigation signals in the E5 bandwidth. The French Expertise & Procurement Defence Agency (DGA) awarded the French company SATIMO a feasibility contract to design, conceive, realize, and evaluate a circular array composed of seven elementary patch antennas (see Figure 1).

    figure1_chart
    Figure 1. CRPA unit receiving satellite and jammer signals.

    Product Features

    SATIMO, a company specializing in R&D for antennas and in innovative antenna test ranges, has since developed this GPS-Galileo CRPA antenna, shown below.

    Figure 2. New CRPA developed by SATIMO.
    New CRPA developed by SATIMO.

    The CRPA consists  of seven elementary patches covering E5a, E5b, L2, E6, L2, and L1 frequency bandwidths, using microstrip multilayer technology. Each element is housed in a 9-centimeter (diameter) by 2-centimeter (height) radome, connector excluded. In that volume, a space provision has been reserved to include a low-noise amplifier (LNA) and two filters for a sharp out-of-band rejection. As a consequence, it is possible to configure three types of arrays: passive without filters, passive with two passband filters, and finally active (including a LNA, with a gain > 26dB, NF<0.9dB) with two passband filters. The maximum gain levels in these configurations are from 3.6 dBi to 29.8 dBi. For radiation patterns, see Figure 2.

    Figure 3. CRPA radiation patterns.
    Figure 2A. CRPA radiation patterns.

    Figure 3B. CRPA radiation patterns.
    Figure 2B. CRPA radiation patterns.

    The design of the single element has been optimized to control the deviations of each patch antenna when included in a seven-element array.

    To limit mutual coupling with respect to the array dimensions, the distance between the elements’ phase centers has been chosen close to 0.7 λ at L1 frequency. This value results in a 36.5-centimeter (diameter) array. The standalone antenna and the CRPA antenna have been validated through an environmental testing campaign.

    Product Development

    The usual iterative tuning and the optimization process for prototyping have been performed on SATIMO’s arch test range. This test facility indeed significantly reduces the time required to characterize the antenna-under-test (AUT) radiation pattern, in comparison with classical anechoic chamber test facilities.

    More precisely, the arch test range instantaneously scans the field in one whole site angle cross-section plane, whereas the legacy systems mechanically scan the same cross-section plane by rotating the AUT for each incremental angle value. The spatial sampling of the near-field radiated by the AUT, thanks to a large number of probes along the arch surrounding it, enables a significant savings in time. The near-field results in the current plane can be displayed in real-time on a computer screen. Then, the rotation of AUT around its axis is automatically controlled by the measurement system, and a new acquisition is performed for each new cross-section plane. A Fourier transform computation is eventually applied to the 3D near-field to get the far-field radiation pattern.

    The radiating characterization of the CRPA has been performed with a SATIMO SG24 system. With such a system, we have measured the complete 3D radiation patterns of each single element in less than 40 minutes per antenna.

    Evaluation

    The evaluation of the CRPA array was performed with this test bed in SATIMO’s facility (see photos below). The process  begain with measuring an element alone on a ground plane, in order to extract the gain, the axial ratio, the aperture angle, the matching values, and every feature that defines a fixed-radiation pattern antenna. The evaluation secondly consisted of characterizing the array, that is, extracting the gain and the phase of each element in the array, with respect to a reference element. To implement such a reference anytime during the near-field acquisition process, the arch test range (Figure 3) is very powerful, because all the probes constantly point at the center of the array, despite AUT’s motions. On the contrary, the need for such a reference makes measurements difficult in anechoic chambers, which often require canceling out misalignments, thanks to specific motions that must be taken into account in the computations.

    Figure 4. CRPA in measurements.
    CRPA in measurements.

    Figure 4. CRPA in measurements.
    CRPA in measurements.

    Fig5
    Figure 3. Arch test range working principle.

    Uses

    Functional tests are another important part of the CRPA unit evaluation. Usually, two kind of tests can be conducted: outdoors or in anechoic chamber.

    Classical Tests. DGA plans to perform outdoor test campaigns by utilizing an array placed on the roof of an all-terrain vehicle (see photo). The array will be connected to a CRPA GPS processing unit and to a receiver in the vehicle. Some interferers will be located along the trajectory of the vehicle, according to various scenarios defining their waveforms and their power levels. The CRPA capability to reject those interferers can then be assessed. These kinds of outdoor tests naturally suit CRPA’s processing unit and array characterization, as they involve radiated GPS and interfering signals. However, these kinds of tests are not reproducible and are quite complicated to set up.

    Figure 6. Outdoor jamming test campaign.
    Outdoor jamming test campaign.

    Some tests in anechoic chambers could be an alternative in order to obtain reproducible test results, but in that case, transmitting GPS constellation signals indoor becomes a challenge. An option could be the use of a GPS signal simulator, but this means a unique direction of arrival of GPS signals. Moreover, no dynamic trajectory could be done.

    New Test Bed. DGA recently acquired a test bed, developed by INEO Defense, that enables evaluating CRPA units in conducted mode, for example. There is no longer a need to radiate either GPS signals or interfering signals. The purpose of this test bed, called BAnc de Caractérisation des Antennes Réseaux Antibrouillage (BACARA), or test bed to characterize anti-jamming antenna arrays (Figure 4 and Figure 5), is to replace the array and simulate its GPS and jamming environment. This means that it is able to create elementary antenna phase delays and gains resulting from the array geometry, by using finite impulse response (FIR) filters (Figure 6). This is the reason why this test bed must be fed with the array phase and gain measurement results obtained with the arch test range.

    Figure 7. BACARA test bed.
    Figure 4. BACARA test bed.

    Figure 8. BACARA working principle.
    Figure 5. BACARA working principle.

    Figure 8. BACARA working principle.
    Figure 6. BACARA working principle.

    Alternatively, these results can be obtained with traditional anechoic chamber measurements. 10 channels of a multi-channel GPS simulator, each one matched with a satellite, are used by the test bed. Thus, BACARA coherently sums GPS constellation simulator output channels and interfering signals, so as to accurately simulate the array’s behavior in the laboratory. As a result, for any CRPA processing unit, it is possible to compare the array’s impact on a processing unit with an ideal array being composed of perfect elementary antennas.

    Unfortunately, BACARA currently operates on L1 or L2, but not on the E6 and E5 bandwidths. On the other hand, this test bed is able to simulate dynamic trajectories, with the mobile positions and attitudes. Up to 10 internal jammers with various waveforms can be set up, and their power levels over time are computed by software like Warfare or Matlab. A numerical calibration allows some transparency of the test bed for CRPA units under test.

    Figure 10.  BACARA graphical user interface.
    Figure 7. BACARA graphical user interface.

    Figure 11. Examples of available simulated array geometry.
    Figure 8. Examples of available simulated array geometry.

    Conclusion

    SATIMO, a company specializing in electromagnetic field measurements in the microwave frequency range and part of the Microwave Vision Group, has developed an array for the reception of M-code, PRS, and aeronautical radionavigation signals. This antenna array has been fully evaluated and qualified through electrical and environmental tests. The measurement methods have enabled the company to demonstrate the feasibility of the performances expected. Functional evaluations restricted to GPS are still under way. To do so, DGA will utilize its complementary outdoor and indoor test means, especially its laboratory test bed BACARA, as a tool to precisely evaluate GPS CRPA units.


    Frederic Leveau works at the French MoD (DGA Information Superiority) as a radionavigation expert. His main interests are Galileo PRS prospective studies and developments and the integration of CRPA systems within French platforms.

    Solene Boucher works at the French MoD (DGA Information Superiority) as a radionavigation expert. Her main interests are Galileo PRS prospective studies and developments. She is also responsible for the test bed BACARA.

    Erwan Goron is an engineer at SATIMO Industries (Microwave Vision Group). His main activity is antenna conception.

    Herve Lattard is an engineer at SATIMO Industries (Microwave Vision Group). His main activity is antenna conception.

  • Optimizing Small Antennas for Body-Loading Applications

    By Oliver Leisten and Viktor Knobe.

    Styling for consumer usage has progressively miniaturized of the antenna package to tiny dimensions compared to a free-space wavelength, even as devices with these miniscule antennas are designed to work close to the absorbent tissues of the user’s body and in the electromagnetic maelstrom of city street levels. GNSS antennas have responded with significant advances.

    The selection of the GNSS antenna, especially for small portable wireless devices, demands careful consideration of how it will interact with its expected environment. A physical appreciation can explain how many impairment factors can actually have a common cause: often the effect of human body-loading. This explanation starts with a counter-intuitive foundation: though the GNSS receiver does not transmit signals, for the sake of clarity we invoke the law of reciprocity and proceed with the conceptual thinking that the antenna is radiating outwards. This gives us a basis for understanding the causal physics of how the antenna shares energy with the immediate environment.

    We can visualize the basic radiating action of the antenna by recognizing that it is a resonant component. We must consider what exactly is in resonance, because the antenna designer has two different design options. In the self-resonant configuration, the antenna can be considered to be resonating autonomously, forming the entire dipole of the antenna within the antenna body. Here, dimensions and topological structure act in conjunction with reflecting and absorbing features surrounding it to define where and how the antenna radiates.

    In the second or probe antenna case, a larger radiating space can be configured by resonating the antenna with the housing together. The antenna typically forms a monopole counterpoised by currents and voltages in the housing. Here, the topology of the radiating system (antenna and housing) acts in conjunction with the near environment to define the radiation pattern.

    The value of distinguishing these two configurations is clearly reflected in the contrast between their behaviors with regard to radiation efficiencies in different uses. We conducted an experiment with three example antennas. Each antenna was installed in as common a package format as was practically feasible to model the top portion of a slim-line demonstration platform, with dimensions typical of consumer devices and containing a conductive chassis 55 millimeters wide. Obviously, a probe antenna must be installed in a chassis in order to function, and this directed the experimental approach to be structured around a similar-housing methodology.

    The probe antenna was a small metal and ceramic chip, and we compared its performance with a small microstrip patch antenna mounted horizontally in a broader but otherwise similar housing, and a hexafilar antenna mounted in an identically dimensioned housing. Strictly, the microstrip antenna is a single terminal element, but it can be considered as self-resonant as the resonance fields are very tightly constrained. Figure 1 plots the radiation efficiencies for benign free-space conditions (without body-loading) together, as frequency responses.

    Source: GPS
    Figure 1. Frequency response of radiated efficiency in unloaded (free-space conditions) and mounted in similar housings (ground-plane width 55mm).

    In benign open-field conditions the probe antenna has excellent efficiency performance and superior bandwidth compared to the two self-resonant configurations. Conversely, the self-resonant antennas (patch and hexafilar) have similarly narrow frequency-response bandwidths and lower efficiencies. We will show how it is important to repeat the test for realistic use scenarios that determine how close the antenna will be juxtaposed to the user’s biological tissues before concluding that the probe antenna is the best solution.

    Antenna studies have shown that the bandwidth reduces very rapidly as the resonant volume of the antenna reduces. This accounts for the reduction in bandwidth shown in Figure 1 for the self-resonant antennas (microstrip patch and hexafilar) with respect to the probe antenna (chip). In the case of the probe, the resonant structure is the entire metal chassis of the device (in this case the circuit-board ground-plane) so that the resonant volume of the resonating system is much larger than those of the self-resonant structures.

    To analyze the behavior of antennas in different use scenarios, it helps to consider the nature of resonance in antennas: open fields, with equal time average amounts of electric and magnetic field energy oscillating in space. These fields, induced by the time-varying voltage potentials and currents in the antenna, can launch a radiating wave into space because time-varying electromagnetic fields can carry or displace energy. We need to appreciate that this volume is where the so-called reactance fields exist, where field oscillations function as a sort of pump that propagates the electromagnetic wave. The antenna induces those fields in a configuration that manages the propagation of waves in useful directions and with desired polarization.

    Any invasion of the reactance field region will disrupt this process and cause impairment. Whilst obstruction of the radiating fields far away from the antenna will just cause a masking effect, a similar obstruction in the reactance-field region can disrupt the basic process of generating radiation. The density of fields in the reactance field region is much higher than would be implied by the straightforward application of the inverse square law.

    Use Near the Body

    We evaluated the antenna types, installed in packages as thin as test antenna dimensions allow, to draw conclusions as to how they might operate in slim-line consumer devices held close to the user’s body. Figure 2 shows CAD diagrams of the three antennas installed in their respective test packages.

    Source: GPS
    Figure 2. Antenna test housings for the chip antenna (left), patch antenna (middle) and hexafilar antenna (right). The housings were constructed to have a height of 26mm, a width of 60mm and a depth of 11 mm for the chip antenna and the hexafilar antenna and of 20.5mm for the patch antenna. In all cases the horizontal width extent of the printed circuit board (with continuous copper ground-plane on at least one side) was set at 55mm.

    Consumer devices have drawn antenna technologies from traditional GNSS applications as well as from terrestrial mobile telephone origins. The overall evolution combines adaptation of the circularly polarized technologies (multi-filar and microstrip patch) into smaller body-loaded platforms with insufficient space for effective ground-planes, together with adaptation of the art of low-cost cellular-telephone embedded antenna technologies that were never developed for circular polarization. Taking our three solutions in their embedded test platforms, we can appraise their body-loaded efficiencies by testing them juxtaposed to a phantom head, providing a means of assessing impairment due to body-loading.

    The phantom head in the loading experiment was filled with a tissue simulating liquid conforming to requirements for specific energy absorption measurements according to CENELEC and IEEE procedures. Comparing the antenna efficiencies for open-field conditions (Figure 1) and body-loaded conditions (Figure 3), reveals impairment to antenna efficiency in all three cases, with the most severe loss of approximately 80 percent by the chip antenna.

    Source: GPS
    Figure 3. Combination of FFT-based acquisition with FDAF.

    The self-resonant antennas suffered less impairment: approximately 30 percent reduction for the patch and 65 percent for the hexafilar antenna. The probe’s significant loss of efficiency is typical of this class of antennas, as the resonant fields are heavily loaded by the phantom head. The peak efficiency for this chip antenna has tuned downwards in frequency as the dielectric loading effect of the head-phantom introduced a regime of net higher relative dielectric constant (εr) into the resonance field region of the antenna system.

    By contrast, the self-resonant antennas did not tune down in frequency as they were brought into proximity with the phantom head. This indicates that the resonance fields were not offered to the dielectric materials of the head phantom to an extent that materially changed the relative dielectric constant (εr).

    Nevertheless, there is a significant difference between the impairment that develops between the patch and hexafilar cases as body-loading is applied, with the hexafilar solution losing more radiation efficiency than the patch antenna. There are two explanations for this difference.

    The first is that the patch housing is simply larger, with a greater depth required to accommodate the patch antenna horizontally at the top of the device housing. On average this larger housing size spaces the resonant fields further from the phantom and from the lossy simulated head tissues.

    The second explanation offers an insight into the symbiotic relationship between the hexafilar antenna and the demonstration platform’s vertically orientated housing. The horizontal ground-plane required for the patch antenna is inconvenient from the style and total integration cost point of view, but also ineffective as a ground-plane as it lacks sufficient width in a device styled to minimize depth. In this scenario the patch antenna is not getting much reflection uplift from the ground-plane; therefore there is little impairment when the device is body-loaded.

    The hexafilar solution is designed to benefit from reflective uplift from the vertically disposed ground-plane of the device. This property is convenient for device packaging because it allows the hexafilar antenna to be integrated at a device corner. The installation of a large and effective vertically oriented ground-plane for the hexafilar case is, by contrast, highly convenient and potentially more cost-effective. When the device is not body-loaded, reflections from the vertically disposed ground-plane uplift the gain and efficiency of the hexafilar antenna. The important advantage over the chip antenna (which is also convenient for space-constrained designs) is that for the self-resonant hexafilar antenna, the frequency of resonance does not change for open-field and body-loaded cases.

    Polarization, Pattern, Positioning

    Sufficient data has now been presented to make an antenna selection on the basis of efficiency and styling. The probe antenna in the guise of a chip antenna provided the highest radiation efficiency in free-space, comparable radiation efficiency to the hexafilar antenna in a body-loaded use scenario, and the small physical size supports compact product designs. However, for GNSS applications we must consider wave polarization, especially if there is multipath scattering. GNSS systems employ right-hand circular polarization (RHCP) and ideally should use antennas with hemisphereically omni-directional antennas. The zenith gain of a circularly polarized antenna is expected to be 3dB higher than that of a linearly polarized antenna of the same efficiency.

    If a GNSS terminal is equipped with an omni-directional but linearly polarized antenna, it can receive circularly polarized signals from all directions (albeit with a spatial average 3dB polarization loss). However, the positioning performance of such a terminal will be compromised because a linearly polarized antenna cannot discriminate between RHCP or LHCP, and reflections change the direction of spin of the circularly polarized wave.

    More color to the subjects of polarization, pattern, and consequential GNSS accuracy can be gained by focussing on the operation of the dielectric-loaded hexafilar antenna, as an example of a small antenna. Figure 4 shows the measured RHCP and LHCP elevation patterns of an exemplary small hexafilar antenna. These are excellent examples of the signature cardiod pattern shapes of good circular polarization antennas, but they point in opposite boresight directions. A dipole rotating anti-clockwise (viewed from above) in a plane would simultaneously excite a RHCP cardiod elevation pattern in the upwards direction and an oppositely directed, but otherwise similar, LHCP cardiod pattern downwards. If the antenna has no ground-plane and the dipole rotation is planar, the power of the upward RHCP and downward LHCP responses are equal. However, the dielectrically-loaded hexafilar antenna is a synthesis of a small travelling-wave upwardly spiralling dipole, emulating the axial-mode of a helical antenna. As the electrical size of such an antenna is increased, the area of the upwardly directed RHCP pattern progressively increases, and the area of the downwardly directed LHCP pattern progressively reduces. The antenna’s dielectric core enables this right-to-left discrimination within dimensions that are very much smaller than a free-space wavelength of the GNSS signal.

    Source: GPS
    Figure 4. RHCP and LHCP elevation for small dielectrically loaded hexafilar antenna (with no ground-plane).

    We can describe the polarization sorting behavior of the small dielectrically loaded antenna in figure 4 as follows. GNSS signals direct from the space vehicles will arrive in the directions of the upper hemisphere of the patterns where the highest sensitivity of the antenna to RHCP is deployed. GNSS signals bounced from a reflective object may also arrive in these upper hemisphere directions, but with reversed polarization: LHCP. In these directions the antenna has a very much lower sensitivity to LHCP, and the GNSS receiving process will accord a low value on these signals that as a result of the low antenna gain will be assessed as relatively noisy.

    Signals that arrive at the antenna from directions in the lower hemisphere will certainly have reflected from the ground surface (assuming that the antenna is held upright). These reflected left-hand polarized signals may have been attenuated by absorption losses of materials present on ground surfaces and also reduced in GNSS receiver process weighting by the antenna’s discrimination in favor of RHCP.

    RHCP and LHCP Gain

    Whilst appraisal of antenna patterns is certainly the most important method for assessing the performance of antennas in different use scenarios, it is nevertheless difficult to report accurately because the three-dimensional data-set is inevitably complex. To provide a meaningful physical basis for discriminating performance between the test antennas for open-field and body-loaded, we propose a single parameter: cross-pole rejection at zenith as one which is directly relevant to GNSS accuracy in a multi-path environment. Figure 5 plots the right hand and left hand comparative frequency responses for open-field and body-loaded use scenarios. Table 1 summarizes these responses.

    (a)

    Source: GPS

    (b)

    (c)

    Source: GPS

    (d)

    Source: GPS
    Figure 5. RHCP and LHCP frequency responses at the zenith direction for conditions of free-space and body-loading. From top to bottom: a) open-field conditions and RHCP, b) open-field conditions and LHCP, c) body-loaded conditions and RHCP, and d) body-loaded conditions and LHCP.

    Source: GPS
    Table 1. RHCP to LHCP gain ratio at the zenith direction (θ=0, φ=0) at GPS L1 center frequency (1.575.42 GHz).

    In open field, the chip antenna does not have a gain advantage for right-hand versus left-hand polarization and also suffers the highest impairment in gain when body-loading is applied. In this test there is an advantage in favor of RHCP gain for the body-loaded test scenario, but we presume this depends on the mounting position of this particular probe antenna on the test device. Perhaps a mounting position towards the left of the assembly might have incurred a disadvantage of similar magnitude?

    The patch antenna has an excellent RHCP over LHCP advantage in open-field conditions, but this advantage diminishes when this solution is body-loaded. This is the least gain-impacted solution as presumably the horizontal ground-plane and much greater device width produce a relatively low body-loading impact.

    The most interesting result concerns the hexafilar antenna, for which the RHCP to LHCP advantage actually improved in the body-loaded test scenario. As this device had the same depth, one might have expected it to sustain a body-loading impairment similar to that of the chip antenna, but due to the self-resonant character of the hexafilar element the loss in gain (in this zenith direction) was actually only slightly greater than that of the patch antenna.

    The hexafilar element’s CP performance is distorted by the lack of circular symmetry of the vertical ground-plane; therefore in open field this direction has a relatively modest RHCP to LHCP gain advantage of about 5dB. However, when the device containing the hexafilar antenna solution is body-loaded, the re-radiation from reflections from the circuit-board are heavily damped by the phantom head. The radiating source is then predominantly the hexafilar self-resonant element that by design is not itself so significantly impacted by the body-loading scenario. This source is restored to a more autonomous circularly polarized form with an advantage of RHC versus LHCP gain in zenith direction, nearly 13.5dB.

    Walk Tests

    Free-space and body-loaded test data, together with arguments concerning polarization discrimination and multipath led to an hypothesis that the antennas with the best circular polarization performance should provide the highest GNSS positioning accuracy. We tested the three devices, worn against the lower torso where the body provides a relatively homogeneous dielectric medium, so that position data could be compared with a reference antenna mounted over a large overhead ground plane.

    Many walk tests were conducted around different routes in London, which collectively demonstrate the value of circular-polarization discrimination as a key enabler for accurate street-level position determination. One segment (Figure 6) in the vicinity of an iconic tall London building commonly known as the Gherkin showed that, though the circularly polarized antennas closely followed the path of the reference antenna, the linearly polarized chip antenna produced an error of as much as 200 meters. It is possible that the dominant reflector in this case is the Gherkin itself.

    Source: GPS
    Figure 6. Data, central London walk test.

    Conclusions

    The chip and hexafilar antennas could be integrated tightly into consumer device housings; both experienced gain uplift from the vertically disposed circuit-board ground-plane. The gain uplift from the chip antenna arose as the resonant volume of the device is enlarged as the device size is increased. The gain uplift from the hexafilar antenna arose as a result of constructive reflections from the circuit-board functioning as a vertical ground-plane.

    The patch antenna was not the most convenient from the styling point of view because the depth was dictated by the size of the horizontally orientated patch. Consequently the housing was significantly thicker than for the chip and hexafilar solutions, and the patch antenna was not receiving significant uplift from reflections from the housing because the depth limitation constrained the ground-plane to ineffective dimensions.

    In body-loaded tests, the chip and hexafilar antennas demonstrated roughly equal radiation efficiency, but the hexafilar provided a significant RHCP advantage. Higher right-hand circular gain was measured for the patch antenna; this was expected due to the greater depth of the housing to accommodate the patch antenna. Urban walk tests showed that the RHCP antennas provided the highest position accuracy.

    Whilst the hexafilar antenna did experience some uplift due to reflections from the device circuit board, these were negated when the device was body-loaded. However, the distorting effects of the device ground-plane were also lost, so that the antenna’s advantage of RHCP over LHCP was improved in the body-loading condition.

    The GNSS industry has advanced the miniaturization of polarization-controlled antennas for small body-loaded uses. This is gaining currency as enabling polarization diversity in 4G data-communication terminals.

    Manufacturers

    Sarantel SL1350 antenna was the hexafilar element under test.

    Position data for all four devices was measured with Telit SE868 evaluation kits using CSR (now Samsung) SiRFstarIV chipset.


    Oliver Leisten is chief technical officer and founder of Sarantel Limited, where Viktor Knobe worked as a student intern from Imperial College London.

     

  • Innovation: GNSS Antennas and Humans

    Innovation: GNSS Antennas and Humans

    A Study of Their Interactions

    By Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle

    GPS World photo
    INNOVATION INSIGHTS by Richard Langley

    GPS IS VIRTUALLY UBIQUITOUS with more than 400 million units estimated to be in use in the United States alone. Some of these units are standalone devices such as those used in surveying and timing applications and those used for vehicle navigation or tracking with permanent or temporary mountings. However, the majority of the units are integrated into cellular telephones, tablet computers, personal digital assistants, watches, cameras, and other devices, which are designed to be operated in close contact with the human body. We even now have GPS shoes!

    It is well known that the performance of the antenna of a radio receiver can be affected when it is used in close proximity to the human body. We only have to touch the whip antenna of a portable AM/FM or scanner radio to convince ourselves of the effect. So, when we use a handheld GPS receiver or wear a GPS watch, or put a GPS-equipped cellular telephone up to our ear, are there any effects on the operation of the receiver?

    It turns out that there are four major effects that can change the performance of a GPS (or other GNSS) receiver antenna when placed near or on the human body. The impedance of the antenna may be changed causing a drop in power transfer to the receiver front end. The center frequency and bandwidth of the antenna may be changed again resulting in a loss of received power. The gain pattern of the antenna may be changed. However, the change may be favorable, improving reception for a given satellite azimuth and elevation angle. And lastly, there will be close-range multipath between the antenna and the body skin.

    All of these factors need to be taken into consideration when a manufacturer is designing a GPS unit to be operated in close proximity to a human body. Trade-offs might be possible and certain designs may make the antenna less likely to interact with its surroundings.

    But how does one go about assessing the antenna’s performance in a repeatable and quantifiable way?

    In this month’s column, a team of researchers from The University of Calgary report on tests conducted on two different types of GPS antennas operated in the vicinity of a human phantom — an artificial body with similar electromagnetic properties as that of a real human.


    “Innovation” features discussions about advances in GPS technology, its applications, and the fundamentals of GPS positioning. The column is coordinated by Richard Langley, Department of Geodesy and Geomatics Engineering, University of New Brunswick. To contact him with topic ideas, email him at lang @ unb.ca.


    GNSS-based navigation is the foundation of many pedestrian navigation systems. The use and benefit of GNSS receivers to locate people has increased dramatically over the past few years. Pedestrian navigation applications include mobile phone users, first responders, health and activity monitoring, consensual tracking (such as offender management), recreational use, and tracking of military personnel. GNSS navigation systems are commonly available in watches and personal entertainment devices. Some applications contain GNSS receivers and antennas in shoes, glasses, and jackets. Since each application using a GNSS receiver to locate people requires an antenna, the optimal type, size, and location on the body is becoming increasingly important.

    This article addresses adverse antenna effects when the antenna is placed near or on the human body, specifically in the reactive near field at the GPS L1 frequency. Using real data collected on a human phantom over prolonged periods, the changes within the antenna are observed as a function of distance from the body. Thus, a performance profile can be generated to quantify the power loss incurred by loading the antenna. The study applies equally well to all GNSS operating at or near the GPS L1 frequency.

    The researchers have theoretically addressed performance of GPS antennas in close proximity to a human body. Using simulations to provide analysis of antenna detuning effects, one research group showed a 24.4-MHz shift in the resonance frequency of the antenna when placed 10–40 millimeters from a simulated human chest. The resonance shift was common at all distances, although the return loss decreased as the antenna was moved further away from the chest.

    A few studies have developed antennas to be located in protective (or otherwise) garments for specific applications. Our team previously analyzed the impact of antenna location on the human body by comparing the solution of eight identical and simultaneous navigation solutions.

    Antenna-Body Interaction

    Antenna detuning refers to the consequence of the electrical interaction between an antenna and an adjacent object, the body of a user in this context, which causes the center frequency of the antenna to deviate from the desired center frequency. More generally, there are several effects that serve to degrade antenna performance that arise when an antenna operates near the body of a user.

    The first of these effects is a change in the impedance of the antenna, as shown in FIGURE 1. (See online sidebar for antenna and electromagnetic radiation term definitions.) The change results in the impedance of the antenna no longer properly matching that of the network that it is expected to drive, therefore causing incomplete power transfer between the antenna element and the subsequent radio-frequency (RF) stages.


    Selected Antenna and Electromagnetic Radiation Terms

    Axial ratio. A measure of the polarization ellipticity of an antenna designed to receive circularly polarized signals. An axial ratio of unity, or 0 dB, implies a perfectly circularly polarized antenna.

    Bandwidth. The range of frequencies over which an antenna is designed to operate efficiently. The bandwidth limits are typically determined by a particular reduction in gain compared to that at the antenna’s center frequency; for example, 3 dB or 10 dB.

    Conductivity. A measure of a material’s ability to conduct an electric current. The reciprocal of resistivity. Units are mhos per meter.

    Dielectric. A material in which there are no free charges that can move through it under the influence of an electric field. An insulator. However, minute displacements of positive and negative charges in opposite directions are possible. A dielectric in which this charge displacement has taken place is said to be polarized.

    Far field. The area sufficiently far from an antenna where the gain pattern is essentially independent of distance. In the far field, the power of an electromagnetic wave traveling in free space drops off as the square of the distance from the transmitting antenna.

    Fresnel reflection coefficient. A measure of the degree of reflection of an electromagnetic wave at the interface between two media. Dependent on the properties of the media, the polarization of the wave, and the angle of incidence.

    Gain. For a transmitting antenna, the ratio of the radiation intensity in a given direction to the radiation that would be obtained if the power accepted by the antenna was radiated isotropically. For a receiving antenna, it is the ratio of the power delivered by the antenna in response to a signal arriving from a given direction compared to that delivered by a hypothetical isotropic reference antenna.

    Gain (amplitude) pattern. The spatial variation of an antenna’s gain.

    Human phantoms. Models of parts of the human body used in engineering, science, and medical studies designed to mimic a particular physical, chemical, or electrical behavior.

    Impedance. The complex ratio of the voltage to the current in an alternating current circuit. Sometimes called complex resistance in which case the absolute value of the complex resistance is called the impedance. Units are ohms.

    Lossy material. A material in which a significant amount of the energy of a propagating electromagnetic wave is absorbed (dissipated) per unit distance traveled by the wave.

    Near field. The region around an antenna within a few wavelengths where there are strong inductive and capacitive effects from the currents and charges in an antenna that cause electromagnetic components not to behave like far-field radiation. Within the radiating part of the near field, the gain pattern is dependent on the distance from the antenna.

    Polarization. The sense of vibration of electromagnetic radiation. There are two main types of polarization: linear, in which the radiating wave’s electric field vector is confined to a particular direction (typically vertical or horizontal); and circular, where the electric field vector rotates as the wave propagates through space. Depending on the sense of rotation, a signal’s waves may be left-hand or, as with GPS signals, right-hand circularly polarized. For maximum response, the polarization of a receiving antenna should match the polarization of the signals.

    (Absolute) Permittivity. A measure of how an electric field affects, and is affected by, a dielectric material. In a sense, it describes a material’s ability to transmit (or “permit”) an electric field. Since the response of most materials to external fields generally depends on the frequency of the field, permittivity is expressed as a complex quantity with real and imaginary components as a function of frequency. Units are farads per meter.

    Relative permittivity. The ratio of the permittivity of a material to that of free space or a vacuum. Also called the dielectric constant. Unitless.

    Return loss. A measure of the effectiveness of power delivery from a transmission line to a load such as an antenna or vice versa. If the power incident on an antenna is Pin and the power reflected back to the source is Pref, the degree of mismatch between the incident and reflected power in the traveling waves is given by the ratio  Pin/Pref.  Units are dB. Functionally related to the Fresnel reflection coefficients and VSWR.

    Voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR). A measure of the size of the reflected waves in a transmission line due to impedance mismatches between the line and a connected antenna. The ratio of the maximum voltage along the line to the minimum voltage along the line. Ideally, an antenna should have a VSWR value of unity.


     FIGURE 1. Change in the reactive portion of the impedance of a patch antenna versus separation distance between the antenna element and imitation human skin (Courtesy, Buckley et al., 2010; see Further Reading). Credit: Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle and Richard Langley
    FIGURE 1. Change in the reactive portion of the impedance of a patch antenna versus separation distance between the antenna element and imitation human skin (Courtesy, Buckley et al., 2010; see Further Reading).

    The figure provides an example of the impedance for a patch antenna plotted against the separation distance of a simulated human wrist. When mounted directly on the user’s skin surface, this specific antenna gains significant reactive impedance that results in a large voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) with the network.

    A second effect of antenna proximity to human skin is the alteration of the center frequency, as well as the alteration of the antenna bandwidth. Depending on the bandwidth of the signal of interest, the bandwidth of the antenna element, and the degree of center-frequency shifting and bandwidth loss experienced, these factors can contribute to significant loss of received power.

    Thirdly, it is important to note that in some configurations, a “lossy” medium adjacent to an antenna may improve the apparent performance of the antenna due to changes in its gain pattern that result in better receive or transmit performance for a given azimuth and elevation angle.

    For any application in which the antenna may be either in free space or directly adjacent to a lossy medium such as a human body, the use of balanced antennas is recommended. The image current of a balanced antenna is contained within complementary structures of the antenna itself, not within the casing or adjacent material of the antenna, therefore making the antenna much less likely to interact with surrounding media.

    Fourth, the close proximity of a reflective material increases close-range multipath. If the distance between the reflector (that is, skin) and the antenna is close to half a wavelength, giving a 180º phase shift of the carrier, deconstructive interference can occur. There are several factors that contribute to this including the back lobe of the antenna gain pattern, reflection coefficient of the skin beneath the antenna, and the incident angle of the incoming ray. Approximation via simple ray tracing becomes dauntingly complex due to the variation of the antenna properties listed above, resulting from detuning. Therefore, observation of the effect becomes easier than modeling an incoming ray and its multipath counterparts.

    Phantom Body Simulation

    To conduct an assessment of the impact of the human body on the radiation patterns of diverse antennas in the context of tracking GNSS signals, a human body phantom has been designed for collecting the experimental data. Variations of the locations and orientations of the antenna rigidly mounted on a human shoulder, head, or any other locations would render the repeatability and comparison of the collected data hardly feasible. Furthermore, the distance that separates the antenna from the human body surface could only be precisely controlled using an artificial modeling of the human body. Therefore, a human body phantom is required for productive analysis.

    Because the human body is mainly composed of water, the presence of human tissue in the vicinity of the antenna introduces an absorption and reflective effect that alters the performance of the antenna. Different mathematical models have been developed for representing the different component combinations of a human body. Based on the study of numerous women and men of different ages and sizes, a classic model predicting the fat-free mass of a person has been developed and assumes that 73 percent of a human body consists of water. Looking at the elemental composition in the human body, it can be found that a concentration of 7 grams of salt per liter of water provides an acceptable modeling of the human tissues. Complex shapes of the human body are used for modeling more precisely the layered structure of the human tissues using either a more realistic human phantom or a more detailed model comprising the extensive data on the dielectric properties of each layer constituting the human tissues of interest. For context of this study, the phantom was kept simple and was made of a large plastic container filled with a 7 percent concentration of a saline solution.

    The radiative transfer of the human body phantom on the reception of GNSS signals can be evaluated through the understanding of the dielectric permittivity of the solution. Different models, including the Wagner, Debye, Cole & Cole, or Fricke, are commonly used for studying the dielectric behavior of biological tissues. The Debye model gives the permittivity of an aqueous saline solution of salinity, S, at a fixed temperature, t, as

    Inn-Eq1 .Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle (1)

    where

    Screen shot 2013-01-04 at 10.01.10 PM . Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle is the angular frequency (Hz),

    εi equals 8.8419 ×10-12 (farads per meter),

    τ is the relaxation time (seconds),

    σ is the ionic conductivity of the dissolved salts (mhos per meter), and

    ε0 and ε∞ are the static and high frequency dielectric constants.

    Equation (1) gives the dielectric proprieties of the human phantom solution for a specific temperature, saline concentration, and temperature. The experiments we conducted and report on in this article lasted several days and were conducted outside, which unfortunately resulted in temperature fluctuations. Consequently, the 7 percent saline solution over the temperature range of 11º to 31º C for L1 (1575.42 MHz) results in a 9 percent variation of permittivity. As shown in FIGURE 2, the dielectric constant over the experimental temperature range is in the interval [74.6, 81.9]. Because the variation is small, the permittivity value can be closely approximated to a mean value of 78.

     FIGURE 2. Real part of the permittivity of the human body phantom as a function of temperature for the GPS L1 frequency. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 2. Real part of the permittivity of the human body phantom as a function of temperature for the GPS L1 frequency.

    Reflection Coefficient of the Phantom Body

    The Fresnel reflection coefficients for a smooth flat surface depend on frequency, the incident angle, polarization, and ground characteristics. Since the container is full of salted water it can also be considered a reflective surface.

    The relative permittivity of the saline solution given in Equation (1) can be reformatted as

    Inn-Eq2 . Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle (2)

    The reflection coefficients with vertical and horizontal polarizations, respectively, of the electromagnetic wave on the surface of the saline water are given by the following Fresnel equations:

    Inn-Eq3 . Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle(3)

    Inn-Eq4 . Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle(4)

    where Rv and Rh are the vertical and horizontal polarized reflection coefficients, respectively, and θ is the incident angle.

    Assuming that the water surface is flat and infinite, Equations (3) and (4) are plotted against the incident angle in FIGURE 3. The reflection coefficients were estimated using a mean temperature of 21°C, a salt concentration of 7 percent and at the L1 frequency.

     FIGURE 3. Fresnel coefficient for L1 considering a flat surface of salted water. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 3. Fresnel coefficient for L1 considering a flat surface of salted water.

    While the saline solution of the human phantom has an angle of incidence and direction of polarization dependent on reflectivity, the fact that the GPS carrier is circularly polarized must be considered. Due to the circular polarization of the carrier and that of most antenna elements intended for GPS use, the received signal strength of the reflected wave will always appear to be equal to or higher than that of the reflected portion of the horizontal polarization.

    Test Setup

    To evaluate the change in gain pattern as function of distance from the phantom, we collected 24-hour data segments. These segments allowed the receiver to observe all satellites. A high-performance GPS L1 receiver module evaluation kit was used with two antennas. The first was a patch antenna while the second was a quadrifilar helix antenna. FIGURE 4 shows both antennas without their coverings. Each antenna has a built-in low noise amplifier (LNA). The antenna specifications are listed in TABLE 1.

     FIGURE 4. Patch (above) and quadrifilar (below) antennas used in the tests. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 4. Patch (above) and quadrifilar (below) antennas used in the tests.

     TABLE 1. Antenna specifications. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    TABLE 1. Antenna specifications.

    A water container holding the saline solution was placed on the roof of a building as shown in FIGURE 5. The container had a slight inclination to move a small air pocket to the corner of the container away from the antenna. After a successful 24-hour data collection period, the antenna was supported by a small plastic box and oriented in the same direction. Six vertical distances were selected, namely 0, 11, 22, 30, 41, and 52 millimeters.

     FIGURE 5. Data collection with patch antenna fixed to phantom body. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 5. Data collection with patch antenna fixed to phantom body.

    The gain pattern as measured by the C/N0 values of the path antenna is shown in FIGURE 6. In general, the largest effect is seen near the zenith where the power decreased by 10–15 dB when the antenna was 22 millimeters from the phantom body. It is also observed that the effect is maximized at 22 millimeters, and then reverts back to near normal operation at 52 millimeters. Additionally, at lower elevation angles (< 30º), the gain behaves more linearly, where the largest distance has the least gain, while the smallest distance has the most gain. The effect of the phantom body appears to flatten the gain pattern.

    The pattern shown in Figure 6 shows the effect of the proximity to the phantom body over all elevation angles. However, a prominent pattern emerges for measurements made at elevation angles of 45º and 85º. In the case of a 22-millimeter antenna distance from the body, a significant power decrease occurs. For satellites with an 85º elevation angle, nearly 8 dB is lost compared to 5 dB loss at a 45º elevation angle.

     FIGURE 6. Gain pattern of the patch antenna as measured by the measured C/N0 at all elevation angles as a function of antenna distance from body. Elevation angles [0º, 90º] have azimuths [180º, 360º], while elevation angles [90º, 180º] have azimuths [0º, 180º]. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 6. Gain pattern of the patch antenna as measured by the measured C/N0 at all elevation angles as a function of antenna distance from body. Elevation angles [0º, 90º] have azimuths [180º, 360º], while elevation angles [90º, 180º] have azimuths [0º, 180º].
    FIGURE 7 provides the trend as a function of distance from the body. The trend of the power loss at 22 millimeters is common on all measurements, albeit more significant for higher-elevation-angle satellites. For satellite measurements made at an 85º elevation angle, the power varies by 12 dB. When all measurements are considered, which includes more frequent lower-elevation-angle satellite measurements and the fact that the gain pattern deviates significantly at higher elevation angles (as shown in Figure 6), the fluctuation is less prominent.

     FIGURE 7. Mean C/N0 measurements of the patch antenna from all measurements and those only at 45º and 85º elevation angles as a function of antenna distance from the body. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 7. Mean C/N0 measurements of the patch antenna from all measurements and those only at 45º and 85º elevation angles as a function of antenna distance from the body.

    To assess the cause of the impact, we removed the phantom and replaced it with a flat aluminum reflector placed beneath the antenna. The antenna was then placed at the same distances above the reflector as previously. Since the gain pattern had been established and this test was to observe the effect of the reflector, only 60 seconds of data was collected at each distance.

    FIGURE 8 provides the change in C/N0 for two tests, which has a comparable trend to that of Figure 7. From the corroboration of the two tests, it appears that the salt water provides similar multipath effects to that of the aluminum sheet. The power loss is then attributed to destructive interference.

     FIGURE 8. Mean C/N0 measurements (over 60 seconds) of satellite PRN 8 with 85º elevation angle when placed above an aluminum reflector. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 8. Mean C/N0 measurements (over 60 seconds) of satellite PRN 8 with 85º elevation angle when placed above an aluminum reflector.

    Similar data collections were conducted with the quadrifilar helix in order to assess its ability to perform close to the human phantom. The quadrifilar antenna has the LNA circuitry vertically below the antenna and therefore was placed horizontally on the water container. FIGURE 9 shows its gain pattern. The overall C/N0 is lower but is subject to less variation compared to that of the patch antenna. In general, we noticed lower C/N0 values with the quadrifilar antenna, regardless of the environment and despite the LNA having 5 dB more amplification. Some moderate variations of up to 10 dB appear on the east side of the antenna (zenith angle [0º, 90º]), but overall the pattern appears to be more regular.

     FIGURE 9. Gain pattern of the quadrifilar antenna as measured by the C/N0 of all measurements as a function of antenna distance from body. Elevation angles [0º, 90º] have azimuths [180º, 360º], while elevation angles [90º, 180º] have azimuths [0º, 180º]. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 9. Gain pattern of the quadrifilar antenna as measured by the C/N0 of all measurements as a function of antenna distance from body. Elevation angles [0º, 90º] have azimuths [180º, 360º], while elevation angles [90º, 180º] have azimuths [0º, 180º].
    The overall power variation was assessed in a similar method. FIGURE 10 shows cubic-like functions with 3-dB variations. There is also no consistent downward power loss trend at 22 millimeters as observed with the patch antenna. As expected, due to the balanced nature of the quadrifilar antenna, the degree of apparent power loss caused by adjacent material is substantially lower compared to the patch antenna. While the peak level of power received is not as high as that experienced with the patch antenna, the consistency of the received power level is better.

     FIGURE 10. Mean C/N0 measurements of the quadrifilar antenna from all measurements and those only at 45º and 85º elevation angles as a function of antenna distance from the body. Jared B. Bancroft, Valérie Renaudin, Aiden Morrison, and Gérard Lachapelle
    FIGURE 10. Mean C/N0 measurements of the quadrifilar antenna from all measurements and those only at 45º and 85º elevation angles as a function of antenna distance from the body.

    Conclusions

    We have investigated the impact of the proximity of the human body on received signal power associated with operation of L1 GPS antennas through experimental tests. GPS signals have been collected using two different antenna types (a patch antenna and a quadrifilar helix antenna), placed on a human body phantom with different separation distances. A strong relationship between these distances and the averaged received signal power has been observed for both antennas with overall lower C/N0 values for the quadrifilar antenna. The largest attenuation is not observed when the antenna is directly adjacent to the user body but when it is about 22 millimeters above it. We found that the attenuation mainly results from destructive interference due to multipath. These results suggest that body-mounted GPS antennas should be directly in contact with the user’s body for achieving better tracking performance. Our future research will include theoretically assessing the experimental results for better understanding of the underlying effects.

    Acknowledgments

    This article is based on the paper “GNSS Antenna-Human Body Interaction” presented at ION GNSS 2011, the 24th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Portland, Oregon, September 19–23, 2011. The authors would like to thank Prof. Ron Johnston, Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Calgary, for his insight and consultation in preparing that paper. We thank John Buckley, Tyndall National Institute, Ireland, and his co-authors for permission to use Figure 1, a version of which appears in “The Detuning Effects of a Wrist-Worn Antenna and Design of a Custom Antenna Measurement System” (see Further Reading).

    Manufacturers

    The tests discussed in this article used a u-blox AG EVK-6T evaluation kit using a LEA-6T L1 GPS module, an Allis Communication Co. Ltd. M827B active L1 patch antenna, and a Sarantel Ltd. SL1206 active L1 quadrifilar helix antenna.


    Jared B. Bancroft is a senior research engineer in the Position, Location And Navigation (PLAN) Group in the Department of Geomatics Engineering at The University of Calgary in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He received his Ph.D. in geomatics engineering in 2010 and has worked in the area of navigation since 2004. Dr. Bancroft’s research interests include pedestrian and vehicular navigation through data fusion of sensors and satellite navigation data.

    Valérie Renaudin is a senior research associate in the PLAN Group. She received an M.S. in geomatics engineering from the Ecole Supérieure des Géomètres et Topographes, France, in 1999 and a doctorate in geomatics engineering from the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, in 2009. She was previously the technical director at Swissat AG. Her research interests include low-cost sensors, hybridization techniques, magnetometers, and indoor navigation.

    Aiden Morrison is a senior research associate in the PLAN Group. He received his B.Eng. in electrical engineering from Ryerson University, Canada, in 2006 and a Ph.D. in geomatics engineering from The University of Calgary in 2010. His research interests include development of integrated navigation systems.

    Gérard Lachapelle holds a Canada Research Chair in Wireless Location in the Department of Geomatics Engineering at The University of Calgary, where he has been a professor since 1988 and heads the PLAN Group. He has been involved in a multitude of GNSS R&D projects since 1980, ranging from RTK positioning to indoor location and GNSS signal processing enhancements.


    Further Reading

    • Previous Work by Authors
    “GPS Observability and Availability for Various Antenna Locations on the Human Body” by J.B. Bancroft, G. Lachapelle, T. Williams, and J. Garrett in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2010, the 23rd International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Portland, Oregon, September 21–24, 2010, pp. 2941–2951.

    • GNSS Antennas
    Mobile-Phone GPS Antennas: Can They be Better?” by T. Haddrell, M. Phocas, and N. Ricquier in GPS World, Vol. 21, No. 2, February 2010, pp. 29–35.

    GNSS Antennas: An Introduction to Bandwidth, Gain Pattern, Polarization, and All That” by G.J.K. Moernaut and D. Orban in GPS World, Vol. 20, No. 2, February 2009, pp. 42–48.

    A Primer on GPS Antennas” by R.B. Langley in GPS World, Vol. 9, No. 7, July 1998, pp. 73–77.

    • Interaction between Receiving Antennas and Human Body Parts
    “The Detuning Effects of a Wrist-Worn Antenna and Design of a Custom Antenna Measurement System” by J. Buckley, K.G. McCarthy, B. O’Flynn, and C. O’Mathuna in Proceedings of the 40th European Microwave Conference, Paris, France, 28–30 September 2010, pp. 1738-1741.

    “One-Layer GPS Antennas Perform Well Near a Human Body” by T. Kellomaki, J. Heikkinen, and M. Kivikoski in Proceedings of EuCAP 2007, the Second European Conference on Antennas and Propagation, Edinburgh, Scotland, November 11–16, 2007, 6 pp.

    “Effects of Human Body Interference on the Performance of a GPS Antenna” by M. Ur Rehman, Y. Gao, X. Chen, C.G. Parini, and Z. Ying in Proceedings of EuCAP 2007, the Second European Conference on Antennas and Propagation, Edinburgh, Scotland, November 11–16, 2007, 4 pp.

    • Wearable Antennas
    “Design of a Protective Garment GPS Antenna” by L. Vallozzi, W. Vadendriessche, H. Rogier, C. Hertleer, and M.L. Scarpello in Microwave and Optical Technology Letters, Vol. 51, No. 6, June 2009, pp. 1504–1508, doi: 10.1002/mop.24372.

    “Wearable Antennas in the Vicinity of Human Body” by P. Salonen, Y. Rahmat-Samii, and M. Kivikoski in Proceedings of the IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, Monterey, California, June 20–26, 2004, pp. 467–470, doi: 10.1109/APS.2004.1329675.

    “A Small Planar Inverted-F Antenna for Wearable Applications” by P. Salonen, L. Sydänheimo, M. Keskilammi, and M. Kivikoski in Digest of Papers, the Third International Symposium on Wearable Computers, San Francisco, California, October 18–19, 1999, pp. 95–100, doi: 10.1109/ISWC.1999.806679.

    • Dielectric Properties of Human Tissue and Sea Water
    “New Permittivity Measurements of Seawater” by W. Ellison, A. Balana, G. Delbos, K. Lamkaouchi, L. Ey, C. Guillou, and C. Prigent in Radio Science, Vol. 33, No. 3, 1998, pp. 639–648, doi: 10.1029/97RS02223.

    Compilation of the Dielectric Properties of Body Tissues at RF and Microwave Frequencies by C. Gabriel, Final Technical Report, AL/OE-TR-1996-0004, Radio Frequency Radiation Division, Occupational and Environmental Health Directorate, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas, January 1996.

    “Studies on Body Composition. III. The Body Water and Chemically Combined Nitrogen Content in Relation to Fat Content” by N. Pacen and E.N. Rathurn in Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 158, 1945, pp. 685–691.

    • Human Phantoms
    “Solid Phantoms for Evaluation of Interactions Between the Human Body and Antennas” by K. Ito and H. Kawai in Proceedings of IWAT 2005, the 2005 IEEE International Workshop on Antenna Technology: Small Antennas and Novel Metamaterials, Singapore, March 7–9, 2005, pp. 41–44, doi: 10.1109/IWAT.2005.1460993.

    “A High-Precision Real Human Phantom for EM Evaluation of Handheld Terminals in a Talk Situation” by K. Ogawa, T. Matsuyoshi, H. Iwai, and N. Hatakenaka in 2001 Digest, IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, Boston, Massachusetts, July 8–13, 2001, Vol. 2, pp. 68–71, doi: 10.1109/APS.2001.959623.