Encyclopedia of RF and Microwave Engineering 2005
DOI: 10.1002/0471654507.eme297
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Notch Antennas

Abstract: Notch antennas, also known as the tapered slot antennas (TSA), have been the topics of research for decades. TSA has demonstrated multioctave bandwidth, moderate gain (7–10 dB), and symmetric E ‐ and H ‐plane beam patterns and can be used for many different applications. This article summarizes the research activities on notch antennas over the since the early 1990s with emphasis on their most recent advances and applications. The article begins with some discuss… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…A thicker substrate separation between top and bottom parts increases the directivity (and sidelobes), and the higher the permittivity of the substrate, the narrower the main beam [20]. However, standard thickness FR-4 is used for the substrate material since it is both low cost and easy to manufacture.…”
Section: Experimental Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A thicker substrate separation between top and bottom parts increases the directivity (and sidelobes), and the higher the permittivity of the substrate, the narrower the main beam [20]. However, standard thickness FR-4 is used for the substrate material since it is both low cost and easy to manufacture.…”
Section: Experimental Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The tapered slot antenna 4 and Vivaldi antenna have demonstrated very broad-bandwidths. The difficulty in designing these antennas is the feed network that transforms a microstrip or stripline, as seen in Fig.…”
Section: Stripline To Balanced Antipodal Finlinementioning
confidence: 99%