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This paper presents an investigation on the effect of the aspect ratio (AR or width-to-length ratio) of a conducting sheet for radiation control i.e., gain enhancement or suppression, leading to useful applications for wireless communication. A wideband slot antenna working in 6–8.5 GHz band is adopted as the basic antenna. It is found that for the sheet AR < 1, the boresight (θ = 0°) gain in the entire band is enhanced, while for AR > 1, boresight gain suppression is achieved. For an optimum AR such that AR(enhancement) = 1/AR(suppression), the same sheet can serve the above dual purposes according to its azimuthal orientation with respect to the slot. For ϕ = 0° orientation with respect to the slot, the sheet acts as a gain enhancer, while for ϕ = 90° orientation, it suppresses the radiation, both in θ = 0°. Practically, the sheet orientation can be easily controlled manually. Antenna measurements demonstrate an impedance band of 6–8.66 GHz with bidirectional radiation pattern, and 1.11 dBi boresight gain at 7.25 GHz. A conducting sheet of size 1.45λ0 × 0.29λ0 where λ0 is the free-space wavelength at 7.25 GHz, is loaded above the slot which improves the boresight gain by 5.77 dB, and when rotated by ϕ = 90°, suppresses the gain by 8.78 dB, both relative to the original slot antenna. |
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