A Topological Design Tool for the Synthesis of Antenna Radiation Patterns
Mirko Barbuto, Mohammad-Ali Miri, Andrea Al\`u, Filiberto Bilotti, and, Alessandro Toscano

TL;DR
This paper introduces a topological design tool leveraging vortex field properties to synthesize and control the radiation patterns of circular patch antennas by manipulating phase singularities in higher order modes.
Contribution
It presents a novel design methodology that exploits topological properties of vortex fields to control phase singularities for antenna radiation pattern synthesis.
Findings
Effective design of antennas with tailored radiation patterns.
Ability to switch between sector and saddle-shaped patterns.
Demonstrated application in base station communication antennas.
Abstract
Patch antennas are among the most popular radiating elements, yet their quasi-2-D structure reduces the degrees of freedom available to tailor their radiation pattern. To overcome this limitation, a possible solution consists in etching on a grounded substrate two concentric radiating elements and combining two modes (one for each element) with proper amplitude/phase relations. Although this technique leads, in principle, to an infinite number of possible configurations (i.e., each patch element can support an infinite number of modes), the theoretical and experimental verifications available in the literature are limited to the first two radiating modes (TM 11 and TM 21 ) of a circular patch antenna. Recently, we have shown that the design of this circular patch can be effectively performed by exploiting the topological properties of vortex fields and, in particular, by controlling the…
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