Table of Contents
Fetching ...

Spherical Antenna Arrays: Principles, Applications, and Research Directions

Cunhua Pan, Xianzhe Chen, Hong Ren, Jiangzhou Wang

Abstract

With the development of 6G technologies, traditional uniform linear arrays (ULAs) and uniform planar arrays (UPAs) can hardly meet the demands of three-dimensional (3D) full-space coverage and high angular resolution. Spherical antenna arrays (SAAs), with elements uniformly distributed on a spherical surface, provide an effective solution. This article analyzes the issues of traditional arrays, summarizes the advantages and typical structures of SAAs, discusses their potential application scenarios, and verifies their superiority over UPAs via a case study. Finally, key technical challenges and corresponding research directions of SAAs are identified, providing a reference for their research and application in future wireless communications.

Spherical Antenna Arrays: Principles, Applications, and Research Directions

Abstract

With the development of 6G technologies, traditional uniform linear arrays (ULAs) and uniform planar arrays (UPAs) can hardly meet the demands of three-dimensional (3D) full-space coverage and high angular resolution. Spherical antenna arrays (SAAs), with elements uniformly distributed on a spherical surface, provide an effective solution. This article analyzes the issues of traditional arrays, summarizes the advantages and typical structures of SAAs, discusses their potential application scenarios, and verifies their superiority over UPAs via a case study. Finally, key technical challenges and corresponding research directions of SAAs are identified, providing a reference for their research and application in future wireless communications.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 22 sections, 6 figures.

Figures (6)

  • Figure 1: Beam comparison
  • Figure 2: Typical Structures of Spherical Antenna Arrays.
  • Figure 3: Potential application scenarios
  • Figure 4: SAA and UPA
  • Figure 5: Angular Beam Patterns with Three Focal Points
  • ...and 1 more figures