Hang Yu, Xingguo Zhang, Hao Zheng, Dachao Li, Zhihua Pu
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
104Flexible antennas, which can conform to the skin and transfer signals to terminals, are particularly useful for wearable electronics. Bending, which frequently occurs to flexible devices, significantly affects the performance of flexible antennas. Inkjet printing has been used as an additive manufacturing technology for fabricating flexible antenna in recent years. However, there is little research on the bending performance of inkjet printing antenna in both simulation and experiment. This paper proposes a bendable coplanar waveguide antenna with a small size of 30 × 30 × 0.05 mm3 by combining the advantages of fractal antenna and serpentine antenna, which realizes the ultra-wideband feature and avoids the problems of large dielectric layer thickness (greater than 1 mm) and large volume of traditional microstrip antenna at the same time. The structure of the antenna was optimized by simulation using the Ansys high-frequency structure simulator, and the antenna was fabricated on a flexible polyimide substrate by inkjet printing. The experimental characterization results show that the central frequency of the antenna is 2.5 GHz, the return loss is -32 dB, and the absolute bandwidth is 850 MHz, which is consistent with the simulation results. The results demonstrate that the antenna has anti-interference capability and can meet the ultra-wideband characteristics. When the traverse and longitudinal bending radius are greater than 30 mm and skin proximity greater than 1 mm, the resonance frequency offsets are mostly within 360 MHz, and return losses of the bendable antenna are within the -14 dB compared with the no bending condition. The results exhibit that the proposed inkjet-printed flexible antenna is bendable and promising for wearable applications.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Bioprinting is a globally recognized publication that focuses on the advancements, scientific discoveries, and practical implementations of Bioprinting. Bioprinting, in simple terms, involves the utilization of 3D printing technology and materials that contain living cells or biological components to fabricate tissues or other biotechnological products. Our journal encompasses interdisciplinary research that spans across technology, science, and clinical applications within the expansive realm of Bioprinting.