posted on 2017-02-07, 00:00authored byMario
F. Pantoja, Jogender Nagar, Bingqian Lu, Douglas H. Werner
The
problem of obtaining broadband superdirective radiation from
an electrically small, easy to manufacture antenna is among the most
challenging and elusive problems in electromagnetics. Superdirective
arrays tend to be narrowband and sensitive to tolerancing, while a
single superdirective radiator typically requires a very complicated
and difficult to manufacture design. In this Article, we report on
a new and transformative discovery, the fact that broadband superdirectivity
naturally occurs for a single thin-wire nanoloop of the appropriate
material composition and size. Full-wave simulations have revealed
end-fire directivity of above 4.0 (6 dBi) for a nanoloop with radius
less than 0.2 wavelength. This surprising phenomenon is explained
in two ways: by comparison with two-element superdirective arrays
and via a spherical multipole decomposition. This finding offers a
solution to the problem of the inherently short-range communication
of nanodevices and thus had the potential to strongly impact the fields
of sensors, electronics, and wireless communications.