I have make a planar toothed log periodic antenna with broadband characteristic, but in the gain measurement ( i used two antenna method) and use the formula (in balanis antenna book), unfortunately i found the gain value (in dB) is negative, what the meaning of negative value? is it an attenuation? or a loss?
thanks b4
If its not Inside an anechoic chamber, a number of things will affect the Power recieved.not only free space losses but attenuation from the surroundings as well.i dont know exactly what electromagnetic harvesting is. probably JIM can shed some light on it.
Regards
ChachitoEL
Of course. But it's already clearly mentioned in the original post, so everyone has taken this understanding as granted, I presume.The gain is a positive value. Only the Gain in dB can be negative
I would disagree with that. The gain is generally defined in terms of the power absorbed by the antenna, not the power received at the antenna terminals. If an antenna has an impedance of 50 Ohms, and you use a 50 Ohm system, all the power will be absorbed by the antenna. But if you change the characteristic impedance of the cable to 1 Ohm, and the transmitter to 1 Ohm, far less power would be abosbed by the antenna. However, the antenna is unchanged - only the feed system is changed. Changing the feed system does not change the gain of the antenna.If your antenna is lossless by design (in other words not containing resitive elements), gain can be split into directivity and impedance mismatch.
It does, as long as gain is referring to a nominal antenna impedance. If we asssume, that the gain is determined by a s21 meaurement, this will be the case. With the measurement method applied by the original poster, mismatch is affecting the observed "gain".Changing the feed system does not change the gain of the antenna.
According to the IEEE Standards, “gain does not include losses arising from impedance mismatches (reflection losses) and polarization mismatches (losses).”
SO When you are doing your calculations are you taking into consideration the losses by the cables and stuff. negative gain=attenuation.i exactly sure to tell you what's going wrong. what kind of attenuation did you see between the recieving and transmitting antenna with standard gain antenna.What is your frequency of operation.
Regards
and this problem is solved, but anyone here can use a network analyzer to measure gain?
thanks
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