Radar Cross Section Reduction of Microstrip Patch Antenna using Metamaterial Techniques
Syamly S. B, Job Chunkath

TL;DR
This paper explores using metamaterial structures, including polarization conversion and fractal designs, to reduce the radar cross section of microstrip patch antennas while maintaining key antenna parameters.
Contribution
It introduces novel metamaterial antenna designs for RCS reduction and provides simulation, fabrication, and testing results demonstrating their effectiveness.
Findings
L-structured metamaterial antenna has 29.37% larger bandwidth.
Achieved a gain of 2.94dB with a return loss of -28.28dB.
RCS reduction is demonstrated through simulation and experimental results.
Abstract
Radar cross section (RCS) reduction has become one of the critical research areas in recent years. The RCS of the target should be small to avoid detection. Different methods are used to reduce RCS, but the major challenge with many RCS minimization methodologies is that, it may deteriorate some antenna parameters. When antenna mode RCS is considered; structural mode RCS, and antenna parameters are critical, as the structure should be an antenna and a RCS reducing structure simultaneously. The techniques like applying Radar Absorption Material (RAM) entirely over the target, deployment of Energy Band Gap (EBG) structures, the use of passive, active cancellation, and polarization conversion are prevalent methods to reduce RCS. The manifestation of metamaterial property in an antenna results in the antenna's electromagnetic characteristics becoming negative for a particular bandwidth.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAntenna Design and Analysis · Advanced Antenna and Metasurface Technologies · Antenna Design and Optimization
