Why do patch antennas have leakage if they have standing waves?

In summary, a patch antenna is a type of leaky wave resonant cavity that operates based on the principle of standing waves. The antenna has clearly identified maximum and minimum points, which are characteristic of a specific mode inside the cavity. There is also a phenomenon of reflection on the magnetic walls of the cavity, and the presence of a partially reflected wave can lead to standing waves with varying amplitudes. The position of the nodes and nulls in the standing wave is determined by the nature of the reflector and can also be affected by the speed of light.
  • #36
do we agree on the mathematical derivation ?
 
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  • #37
legyptien21 said:
do we agree on the mathematical derivation ?
Baluncore said:
No.
 
  • #38
Is it possible to have soe details about the reason of this no...?

why mathematically it s wrong ?
 
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  • #39
For a lossless line with a characteristic impedance that is real, terminated in a resistive load.
Avoiding common scale factors.
The incident wave at the load will be Ei = Sin(t).
At a point a time x before the load, Ei = Sin(t+x).
The reflected wave will have an amplitude, A, between –1 and +1, determined by Zo and R.
The reflected wave at the load will be Er = A*Sin(t).
At a point back up the line, a time x after reflection from the load, Er = A*Sin(t–x).
Then the sum of the incident and reflected waves is Es = Ei + Er = Sin(t+x) + A*Sin(t–x)
For values of x = wave period * n / 4 ; there will be maxima and minima in Es.
Es = Sin(t+x) + A*Sin(t–x) represents the standing wave.
legyptien21 said:
Vr*(sin (wt - kx) + sin (wt + kx)) represent a standing wave if we use the Simpson formula...
That should be Es = Vi * Sin(wt + kx) + Vr * Sin(wt - kx)
 
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  • #40
legyptien21 said:
If we have NOT full reflection on the wall so it means there is no standing wave in the cavity right ? the max and mins are moving ?
If you ever had a 'complete' reflection at the ends of a cavity, the amplitude of the standing wave would build up until it was infinite. A cavity, just like a resonant wire (as in a tuned dipole) will have a resonant frequency but, because of its finite Q factor, it will: 1. have a finite standing energy and 2. a finite bandwidth.
There will be power entering the cavity at one end and power leaving the cavity at the slots, resulting in a standing wave (when the frequency and dimensions are appropriate) but the (stationary) nodes of the standing wave will not be perfect because of the net power flowing through them.
 
  • #41
sophiecentaur said:
a finite bandwidth.
You mean a bandwidth different than 0 ? because if we had a full reflection as you said, we would have had a infinite quality factor (with bandwidth = 0) if we suppose a lossless cavity right ?
We agree on these two points ?

sophiecentaur said:
There will be power entering the cavity at one end and power leaving the cavity at the slots, resulting in a standing wave (when the frequency and dimensions are appropriate) but the (stationary) nodes of the standing wave will not be perfect because of the net power flowing through them.

Sophie please can you tell me if you agree with my mathematical derivation at message 30 ? If so I would like to know your opinion about the speed of the sum of the standing wave and propagation wave ?

Thanks
 
  • #42
you have already been told that your workings in post # are incorrect

Baluncore corrected them in post # 39
 
  • #43
davenn said:
you have already been told that your workings in post # are incorrect

Baluncore corrected them in post # 39

And ?

1) I can be wrong, he can be wrong, we are all human.
Most importantly,
2) the justification of Baluncore doesn`t make sense to me because his equation have no sense. Where is the wave number, where is the angular speed... Can you guess the wavelength of his equations... ?

If the equations are right then we take the most general case to do a derivation not a case where we add time in sec with X in meters...
 
  • #44
when are you going to stop your own misunderstandings and listen to people who know what they are talking about ??

legyptien21 said:
to me because his equation have no sense.

then you need to get back to the textbooks and start learning the real stuff and not what you make up out of your head

I trust what Baluncore says because I know he has had a lot of history working in RF electronics
 
  • #45
legyptien21 said:
If the equations are right then we take the most general case to do a derivation not a case where we add time in sec with X in meters...
If you go back and look you will see that I clearly defined x as a time relative to incidence at the load. That eliminates the velocity factor from the equation.
Baluncore said:
At a point a time x before the load, ...
... At a point back up the line, a time x after reflection from the load, ...

legyptien21 said:
Can you guess the wavelength of his equations... ?
The period T is sufficient. Wave number and angular speed are the same for all.
 
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  • #46
Baluncore said:
If you go back and look you will see that I clearly defined x as a time relative to incidence at the load. That eliminates the velocity factor from the equation.

if you start to switch all letter and their meaning, noboday will follow easily. Anyway, I m open to talk about that :

Ei = Sin(t) this is your incident wave I believe ? in every incident wave there is X which represent the distance. so where is the distance in your equation, where is the propagation. there is no point to write it that way and to eliminate the velocity...

If you want to write your derivation with letters and their meaning as your asked me then I will follow you otherwise no one will be able to...

It s late for me now I will answer tomorrow
 
  • #47
legyptien21 said:
Ei = Sin(t) this is your incident wave I believe ?
I clearly defined the incident wave at the load when I wrote ...
Baluncore said:
The incident wave at the load will be Ei = Sin(t).

legyptien21 said:
if you start to switch all letter and their meaning, noboday will follow easily.
I clearly defined x as a time. You chose to ignore it.

legyptien21 said:
in every incident wave there is X which represent the distance. so where is the distance in your equation, where is the propagation.
The incident wave will be a sine wave at the load, Ei = Sin(t). Earlier on the line it will have a time shift of x, giving Ei = Sin(t+x).
Ei does not exist after it has reached the load as it is a forward traveling wave.
The distance in my equation is measured by time along the transmission line from the load.
The time x, is an analogue of distance, just like "Light Years" in astronomy.
I keep t and x separate so as to show the time shift of the incident and reflected waves at any travel time x from the load.
The time shift of Ei and Er is 2 * x. That explains the n * T / 4 standing wave pattern, where n is an integer and T is the period of the wave.
The sign of the reflection amplitude parameter, A, is also important because it may invert the reflected wave.
 
  • #48
Thread locked, pending moderation.
 
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  • #49
legyptien21 said:
if you start to switch all letter and their meaning, noboday will follow easily. Anyway, I m open to talk about that :

Ei = Sin(t) this is your incident wave I believe ? in every incident wave there is X which represent the distance. so where is the distance in your equation, where is the propagation. there is no point to write it that way and to eliminate the velocity...

If you wanna write your derivation with letters and their meaning as your asked me then I will follow you otherwise no one will be able to...

It s late for me now I will answer tomorrow

Thread cleaned up some and reopened for now. @legyptien21 -- What exactly are you asking about in this thread? You started asking about antennas, and then moved more into asking about transmission lines with resonant cavities on the end. What exactly do you want to ask about? What is the physical application? It is better to deal with real physical systems when discussing antenna systems, versus abstract questions. Especially when there is a bit of language translation issue.

BTW, it would be best if you would use "want to" instead of "wanna" -- the word want to has very negative connotations in scientific discussions. Thanks. :smile:
 
  • #50
As you may know, patch antenna, dipole antenna, transmission line, resonance, quality factors, all that are related. And when you start a conversation and ask about antenna, you notice that we don t agree with some more fundamental stuff. If we are not using the same mathematical langage and we do not agree on a very simple matheatical derivation then not need to go further.

I m sure you have good background in physics and you will notice that Sophie has an answer who is not the same at all than Balunchore (position of nulls/nodes are moving around a position because of the flow of energy). It s now very clear, many thanks to Sophiecentaur.

I m done with this post.
 
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  • #51
Unfortunately, nothing is clear in this thread. Partially due to the language translation issues (not your fault), and partially due to the ill-defined and changing questions. Thread will stay closed now. Sigh.
 
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