Electronics

Antenna Basics

Antenna fundamentals — gain, pattern, polarization, impedance, and common types.

Key parameters

Gain (dBi)Relative to isotropic radiator; dBd = dBi − 2.15
BeamwidthAngular width of main lobe at −3 dB
VSWRStanding-wave ratio — 1:1 perfect match, >3:1 poor
Return lossRL (dB) = −20·log₁₀(|Γ|), want > 10 dB
PolarizationVertical, horizontal, or circular (LHCP / RHCP)
ImpedanceTypically 50 Ω for RF, 75 Ω for TV
Radiation patternDirectional (Yagi, dish) vs omnidirectional (dipole)

Common antenna types

TypeGain (typ.)PatternUse
Quarter-wave whip2–3 dBiOmniFM, 2.4 GHz, simple monopole
Dipole2.15 dBiOmni (donut)Baseline antenna
Folded dipole2.15 dBiOmni300 Ω — TV
Yagi10–20 dBiDirectionalAmateur, TV DX
Patch / microstrip6–9 dBiDirectionalGPS, WiFi, cellular
Helix8–15 dBiCircular pol.Satellite uplink
Dish (parabolic)20–50 dBiNarrow beamMicrowave, satellite, radar
Log-periodic6–10 dBiDirectionalBroadband — HF-UHF
PCB chip antenna0–3 dBiVariesBLE, 2.4 GHz small devices

Path loss (Free-space, Friis)

FSPL (dB)= 20·log₁₀(d) + 20·log₁₀(f) + 32.45 (d in km, f in MHz)
Example@ 2.4 GHz, 100 m → ~80 dB free-space loss

Notes

  • Length: ¼-wave monopole = 300 / (4 · f_MHz) in meters (physical length; velocity factor on wire reduces it ~5%).
  • Always terminate with the correct impedance — mismatches reflect power back and can damage transmitters.
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