This study analyzes the methods of antenna education at the universities and compares it with the antenna design process in industry. New methods are offered for electromagnetics (EM), microwave and antenna education by improvements in technology. Video lectures, web-based lectures and virtual lectures are some current educational tools. Each improves the quality of antenna education. Brick-based antenna (BBA) training hardware offers a new method for learning, with time-limited and cost-effective antenna laboratory lectures. The antenna design process in industry is outlined, and each antenna education method is analyzed in terms of the corresponding process steps.

Antenna engineering is of significant importance in wireless communication, defense, satellite and space systems development. Antenna engineering requires a theoretical background in EM, microwave and antenna theory, as well as practical knowledge of production processes, measurements and materials. The complex theoretical background is hard to understand without visualization. Students exposed solely to a theoretical education are often not motivated to pursue a career in antenna engineering. Antenna design in industry, which combines both practical and theoretical aspects, provides a more immersive and rewarding learning experience.

This article compares the antenna design process in industry with a university antenna education that includes BBA training. The goal is to improve the learning experience and increase motivation to pursue a career in this field. To provide a basis for comparing different antenna education methods, the industrial antenna design methodology is divided into process steps. Different antenna education methods are analyzed in terms of these steps. The BBA training method is explained from this perspective. Finally, the various antenna education methods are compared in terms of their similarity to the industrial antenna design process.

ANTENNA DESIGN IN INDUSTRY

The industrial antenna design process is shown in Figure 1. At the beginning of a project, the EM requirements are generally known. If they are not provided, antenna design engineers must work with the customer or system engineers to specify them. They review related books, papers and patents and apply their theoretical knowledge.

Figure 1

Figure 1 Industrial antenna design process.

Analytical calculations are sufficient to design some simple antenna types, but computational EM (CEM) tools are commonly used to design complex structures or to meet challenging antenna requirements. Some engineers write their own software design code, and some make use of commercial software packages. The antenna is designed in a computer environment and the materials specified. If it is a 3D antenna, it commonly requires a few iterations and collaboration with a mechanical engineer. If it is a 2D antenna - printed circuit board (PCB) type - the design must consider PCB fabrication tolerances.

The materials and connectors are purchased and an antenna prototype fabricated. Its reflection coefficient is measured, followed by far-field radiation parameters. Depending on the measured results, the antenna design is iterated. Antenna designers turn back to analytical calculations and modeling via CEM tools. Fabrication, measurement and analysis steps are repeated until the antenna satisfies its performance requirements. The final product is documented and delivered to the customer or system engineering.

ANTENNA EDUCATION AT UNIVERSITIES

Most universities have both theoretical and laboratory lectures. Laboratory lectures generally follow the steps in Figure 2. Students read the experiment sheets, follow the procedures under the control of laboratory assistants or watch the assistants perform the steps. Limited antenna types are usually available for experiment or observation.

Figure 2

Figure 2 Typical antenna laboratory lecture process.

Some universities employ project-based antenna or EM education concepts (see Figure 3).1-11 This includes design using CEM software tools. Depending on the educational resources, some university programs proceed to fabricate the design and perform measurements, while others only perform simulations in a software environment. Students generally have just one opportunity to fabricate their designs. The iteration step, performed in industry, is passed over.

Figure 3

Figure 3 Typical project-based antenna education process.

Project-based training covers more antenna design steps and is more efficient than antenna laboratory lectures alone; however, it is more costly, requiring CEM tools and a fabrication infrastructure.

New methods are available, such as video lectures12-21 and web lectures.22-23 These enable students to easily review theoretical information, increasing the efficiency of antenna education and providing effective training for the theoretical background step of the antenna engineering design cycle.

BBA ENGINEERING EDUCATION

BBA education is a new concept.24-28 BBA hardware comprises metal bricks, dielectric bricks, ground planes and connectors. The bricks, called “antenna cells,” can be connected to each other to form an antenna. They are reusable and can be used to build many different antenna types without soldering or bonding.

Using CEM tools, antenna engineers draw solid structures, and the tools convert the solid structures into discrete mesh cells. Antenna cells work like the mesh cells in CEM software programs. The main difference is the antenna cells are hardware. For realistic results, mesh cell sizes must be less than λ/10 in finite difference time domain analysis, where λ is the wavelength of the highest frequency. Antenna cells have 4 mm x 4 mm x 3 mm (height) resolution. Larger antenna cells including ground planes are in multiples of the minimum mesh cell. A 4 mm dimension corresponds to λ/12.5 at 6 GHz.

Figure 4 is a photo of a dielectric resonator monopole antenna built with antenna cells. The Anten’it antenna training kit,24 which uses the BBA design concept, includes three different kinds of dielectric cells with dielectric constants of 2.6, 4.4 and 8 and loss tangents better than 0.002.

Figure 4

Figure 4 Dielectric resonator monopole antenna built with antenna cells.

Figure 5 shows the antenna laboratory lecture steps using BBA education hardware. Different from other antenna laboratory kits, the objective of the Anten’it antenna training experiments is to design antennas having specific requirements. Antenna cells are reusable, easy to connect and disconnect. Experiments begin with reading the experiment sheets; some require pre-work before the laboratory lecture. For more efficient learning, reading the experiment sheets and related book pages before the experiments is recommended. Analysis before and during the experiments is required for the initial design and subsequent iteration.

Figure 5

Figure 5 Antenna laboratory lecture process steps with BBA education hardware.