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Despite their great potential in communication and sensing applications, printed leaky-wave antennas have rarely been reported at mm-wave frequencies. In this paper, tapered leaky-wave antennas operating at 80 GHz are designed, fabricated and experimentally characterized. While most continuous leaky-wave antennas use subwavelength strips or other comparably small elements, in this work, the surface impedance is discretized very coarsely using only three square patches per period. With this architecture, a wide range of surface reactance can be achieved while maintaining a minimum feature size of the metallic pattern that is feasible for printed circuit fabrication. As the analytical solution for the bandstructure of sinusoidally modulated reactance surfaces is inaccurate for coarse discretization, we find it using full-wave simulation. In order to control side lobes effectively, we use a tapered aperture illumination according to the Taylor one-parameter distribution. A comprehensive experimental demonstration is presented, including near-field and far-field measurements. Therewith, we verify the designed aperture illumination and we reveal the origin of spurious far-field features. Side lobes are effectively suppressed and spurious radiation is reduced to -18 dB compared to the main lobe.
This paper proposes two spoof surface plasmon polariton (SSPP) leaky-wave antennas using periodically loaded patches above perfect electric conductor (PEC) and artificial magnetic conductor (AMC) ground planes, respectively. The SSPP leaky-wave anten
The paper includes two contributions. First, it proves that the series and shunt radiation components, corresponding to longitudinal and transversal electric fields, respectively, are always in phase quadrature in axially asymmetric periodic leaky-wa
In this paper, a novel concept of a leaky-wave antenna is proposed, based on the use of Huygens metasurfaces. It consists of a parallel-plate waveguide in which the top plate is replaced by a bianisotropic metasurface of the Omega type. It is shown t
Mass production of photonic integrated circuits requires high-throughput wafer-level testing. We demonstrate that optical probes equipped with 3D-printed elements allow for efficient coupling of light to etched facets of nanophotonic waveguides. The
This paper presents an exact solution for a perfect conversion of a TM-polarized surface wave (SW) into a TM-polarized leaky-wave (LW) using a reciprocal and lossless penetrable metasurface (MTS) characterized by a scalar sheet impedance, located on