truth and untruth

8
The Truth and Untruth about Electrically Small Antennas John S. (Jack) Belrose, VE2CV, VY9CRC The title of my talk suggests that there are controversies concerning the performance of electrically small antennas, and indeed there are concerning in particular two very different types of antennas: the so-called crossed field antenna (CFA) and a follow on version the EH antenna, and co mpact transmitting loop antennas. But there is a wider range of controversy: concerning the basic concepts of transfer of power generated by a high frequency tuned power amplifier to the  propagati on media. I have been involved in this debate for about 15-years, and so I will begin with a brief discussion of this topic. But first concerning controversies there is also a controversy concerni ng the use or non-use of baluns, and which balun to use. Since many ante nna types are  balanced, and present day HFTPA’s are unbalanced, and, since the preferred method of feeding antennas is to use coaxial cable, rather than 2-conductor balanced transmissi on line, a b alun should, often must be used in the overall antenna system design. I have during the past 50-years published about eighty  papers, technical articles and technical correspondence on antennas (and an equal number concerned with radio  propagati on). The basic theme of my work has been concerned with providing an understanding of the characteristics of var ious antennas, and in particular addressing the topic:  performance of antennas in their operating environments. Most of what I have written has not generated controversy, at least prior to about 1991. CONTROVERSY BEGINS--- WITH JERRY SEVICK, W2FMI CONCERNING BALUNS In 1991 QST published an article I wrote entitled “Transforming the Balun”. The QST Technical Editor added the byline: “In this QST breakthrough, W2DU’s peerlers 1:1 current balun design serves as the basis for excellent  ferrite-bead-choke current baluns capable of 4:1 and 9:1 impedance transformation” -----------------------------------------------------------------  Presented at the QCWA 2004 International Convention,  Amateur Radio Technical Session, Friday, October 15, held at the Lord Elgin Hotel, Ottawa, ON, Canada The word peerless caught in the throat of Jerry Sevick, W2FMI who had written a book entitled “Transmission Line Transformers”,  2 nd  Edition published by the ARRL in 1990. Jerry considered that his transformer type, a bifilar wound choke type balun on a toroidal core, was superior --- and perhaps only he knew how to design them. This resulted in a controversy that went on for a year or two. Jerry wa nted QST t o publish a rebuttal artic le. I never did see his draft manuscript, which was never  publishe d by the ARRL. But his views were published under the collective title “Baluns Revisited” in Communications Quarterly in 1992, four articles, and in CQ Magazine in 1994. There is nothing wrong with bifilar wound choke  baluns, so called transmission line baluns, bu t provided the VSWR is not too high --- in some cases for example at MF this type is the pr eferred balun. For example see the Figure below. For the amateur in radio the W2DU ferrite  bead over coax is a good balun (Figure) --- it exhibits slightly lower loss (Figure).

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The Truth and Untruth about

Electrically Small Antennas

John S. (Jack) Belrose, VE2CV, VY9CRC

The title of my talk suggests that there are controversies

concerning the performance of electrically smallantennas, and indeed there are concerning in particular 

two very different types of antennas: the so-called

crossed field antenna (CFA) and a follow on version theEH antenna, and compact transmitting loop antennas.

But there is a wider range of controversy: concerning

the basic concepts of transfer of power generated by ahigh frequency tuned power amplifier to the

 propagation media. I have been involved in this debate

for about 15-years, and so I will begin with a brief 

discussion of this topic.

But first concerning controversies there is also acontroversy concerning the use or non-use of baluns,and which balun to use. Since many antenna types are

 balanced, and present day HFTPA’s are unbalanced,

and, since the preferred method of feeding antennas is

to use coaxial cable, rather than 2-conductor balanced

transmission line, a balun should, often must be used inthe overall antenna system design.

I have during the past 50-years published about eighty

 papers, technical articles and technical correspondence

on antennas (and an equal number concerned with radio

 propagation). The basic theme of my work has been

concerned with providing an understanding of thecharacteristics of various antennas, and in particular 

addressing the topic: performance of antennas in their 

operating environments. Most of what I have written

has not generated controversy, at least prior to about

1991.

CONTROVERSY BEGINS--- WITH JERRY

SEVICK, W2FMI CONCERNING BALUNS

In 1991 QST published an article I wrote entitled

“Transforming the Balun”. The QST Technical

Editor added the byline:

“In this QST breakthrough, W2DU’s peerlers 1:1

current balun design serves as the basis for excellent 

 ferrite-bead-choke current baluns capable of 4:1 and 

9:1 impedance transformation” 

-----------------------------------------------------------------

 Presented at the QCWA 2004 International Convention,

 Amateur Radio Technical Session, Friday, October 15,

held at the Lord Elgin Hotel, Ottawa, ON, Canada

The word peerless caught in the throat of JerrySevick, W2FMI who had written a book entitled “Transmission Line Transformers”, 2nd 

Edition published by the ARRL in 1990. Jerry

considered that his transformer type, a bifilar wound

choke type balun on a toroidal core, was superior ---

and perhaps only he knew how to design them.

This resulted in a controversy that went on for a year or 

two. Jerry wanted QST to publish a rebuttal article. I

never did see his draft manuscript, which was never 

 published by the ARRL. But his views were published

under the collective title “Baluns Revisited” in

Communications Quarterly in 1992, four articles, and in

CQ Magazine in 1994.

There is nothing wrong with bifilar wound choke baluns, so called transmission line baluns, but provided

the VSWR is not too high --- in some cases for example

at MF this type is the preferred balun. For example seethe Figure below. 

For the amateur in radio the W2DU ferrite bead over coax is a good balun (Figure) --- itexhibits slightly lower loss (Figure).

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 Jerry send me several of his best baluns, which

unfortunately we destroyed during testing --- blue flamearcing and smoke when subject to high VSWR and high

 power (1 kilowatt). The W2DU ferrite bead over coax balun did not destruct, excepting loss and heating

increases with increasing VSWR.

Whatever type of balun is used a current balun should be used, and the balun should be on the input (tuned)

side of ther ASTU --- see my QST article in the

October 2004 issue of QST.

A CONTINUING SAGA

But the most controversial topic, I have folders andfolders full of correspondence, arose from the article byWarren Bruene, W5OLY entitled “RF Power 

 Amplifier and the Conjugate Match”, published in

QST November 1991 issue. Warren wanted to discredit

Walter Maxwell, W2DU’s book “Reflections-

Transmission Lines and Antennas”, published by theARRL in 1990.

Bruene showed measurements (a curious set of 

measurements) that in his view showed that the outputsource impedance (referred to by him to be the source

resistance) of a tuned RF power amplifier was 5-timesthe load impedance. This of course is wrong, but

Bruene has stuck to his guns to the present date. He

still thinks Walt Maxwell and I are wrong!!

Walter Maxwell, W2DU, Tom Rauch, W8JI, John

Fakan, KB8MU and I corresponded with WB for 

several years, in an attempt to publish a QST article that

addressed our differing views --- but with no success.

In 1997 we gave up and published an extended articlein Communications Quarterly Fall 1997 issue,

expressing our view that for maximum power transfer 

the HFTPA should be conjugately matched, and that the

effective output impedance of the amplifier under such

conditions was equal to the load impedance. We

further stated that this impedance was non-dissipative.

We presented the results of seven experiments, and oneof the experiments was the set-up initially exactly like

that used by Bruene, that supported our view (not h is).

The following issue of Communications Quarterly,

Spring 1998 published Bruene’s rebuttal, a detailedrebuttal claiming that every one of our experiments

were flawed, flawed, flawed.

Let me begin at the beginning by quoting from the

IEEE Dictionary:

“Resistance is also defined as the real part of an

impedance. Because the impedance of a network 

deals with energy transfer, it has nothing to do with

where the energy came from, or what became of it.

The real part of the impedance of a network 

therefore does not dissipate energy of itself. Only

that portion of the real part of an impedance that is

in fact a dissipative resistance will dissipate energy”.

If we measure Vout/Iout, measured at the outputterminals of a properly adjusted PA, tuned for 

maximum design power transfer, which in the practicalcase is an antenna system, we can infer an impedance

Zout = Vout/Iout, which is equal to the loadimpedance. But to measure Zout we have, as my long

time colleague Jim Wait, now deceased, told me, we

have to dissipate power. In other words operate the

 power amplifier into a 50 ohm resistive load. To

measure Zout change the load a little bit, 5-10 percent,

and observe the change in Vout and Iout (rms values).We have to make a small change in the dissipative load

resistance, because we do not want to change the

operating characteristics of the PA tube(s).

This means we have to accurately measure very small

changes in current and voltage. I show in the next

Figure a comparison between what we (Walter 

Maxwell) measured compared with the controversial

curve presently by Bruene.

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 Now let me return to transfer of power to an antennasystem. Zout inferred from Eout and Iout is a

nondissipative impedance --- we do not dissipate power there --- this is the impedance associated with the

generation of power. We want to transfer that power to

the antenna system. Therefore the antenna system must

 be tuned to provide a conjugate match to the PA. The

feeder coax is associated with an impedance ---

typically Zo = 50 ohms. Zo is the characteristic

impedance of the transmission line --- it also is a

nondissipative impedance.

The matched antenna system presents an impedance

looking in Zas = Rr + Rloss. For an efficient antennasystem Rr (the radiation resistance) >> Rloss. Rr is a

non dissipative resistance, since power is not dissipated

in this resistance. Rr is an impedance associated with

the power that is transferred to the propagation

medium.

 Now before I run out of time let me discuss the topic of 

this talk, The Truth and Untruth about Electrically

 Small Antennas.

COMPACT LOOPS

I have operations used, evaluated by experimentalmeasurement and by simulation (numerical modelling)

and written on small compact transmitting loops,

dating back to the mid-eighties --- in the amateur literature let me refer to my November 1993 QST

article “An Up-date on Compact Transmitting Loops”.

I considered that the performance of such antennas

(perimeter/wavelength as small as 0.03 to 0.06) wasabout what one would expect, a few percent,

comparable to a mobile whip --- for example a 1.7 mdiameter loop at 1.8 MHz and at 3.75 MHz, and that

traditional formula for radiation resistance, developed

about 60 years ago was correct.

And present day simulation agreed with experiment.

Mike Underhill, G3LHZ for whatever reason disagrees

with most of what has been written on compact loops,

 beginning with his attention grabbing paper “Magnetic

 Loop or Small Folded Dipole”, published in an IEE

Conference Proceedings in 1997. And since that date

he has written five or six papers/articles, each morecontroversial than earlier papers. In an article entitled

“The Truth about Loops”, published in the RSGB

International Antenna Collection, 2003 he states:

“the very low efficiencies (the few percent for the

very small loop size that I spoke about above),

predicted by simulation and existing theory are,

shown (by his measurements (??)) to be quitefrankly wrong by up to 1000 times (30 dB). How

can such measurements have been overlooked for so

long? It is a bit of a mystery and arguably a bit of a

scandal.”

G3LHZ considers the efficiency of such small loops

to be 80-90 percent, not a few percent.

Pat Hawker, G3VA, in his Technical Topics column in

RadCom, December 2002, I have contributed his TT

Column, discusses this difference of opinion, and he

challenged the antenna establishment to comment. My

response was a 2-part article published in the June/July2004 issues of RadCom.

But the controversy has not ended. In the

August/September issues of RadCom G3LHZ has

 published an even more controversial article entitled

“New truths about small tuned loops in a real 

environment”.

But my loops were in their operating environment.

Mike seems to have gone completely bananas, but since

he writes under the title of a Professor in the School of 

Electronics and Physical Sciences, University of Surrey, I suppose there are some who believe that he

knows what he is talking about??

He claims that his inferred intrinsic efficiencies, 80-90

 percent, inferred not from measured field strengths butfrom Q-factor based on measured VSWR, to be

confirmed by his proposed extensions of EM theory ---

Maxwell’s EM theory is not quite right, according to

Underhill,

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 and the Somerfeld-Norton ground wave propagation

theory needs revision. He also disagrees with the Chu-

Wheeler Q criterion. And field strength measurements

over ground need to re-evaluated.

I could go on --- but I will stop there. My

recommendation is that we should stop reading what

G3LHZ has written --- since this will avoid further 

confusion.

I cannot believe that such nonsense is published. We

do read nonsense published in some amateur literature, but papers published by the IEE??

Let me tell you what I measure, and what I infer from

our numerical simulation studies ---- Figures.

Since the loop is a high_Q inductive reactance antenna,

it can be tuned by means of a capacitor, and power 

couped into it by means of a small auxiliary loop, thesize of which is adjusted so as to realized a 50-ohm

input impedance.

The measured bandwidths of AMA loops, VSWR < 2:1is shown below.

I have numerically modeled various loop antenna using

 NEC-4D, as a simple 1-turn loop, tuning capacitor at

the top (open squares), source on conductor, circles at

the bottom of the loop.

The Figure below shows the vertical radiation pattern

for a vertical 3.4m diameter loop, frequency 3.75 MHz, base height 2m, compared with a half-wave dipole at

10m. Compare this figure with measured NVIS

 performance, see below.

The following Figure shows measured performance for reception of a near vertical incidence skywave signal

(D2 for the dipole, and A2 for the loop). Notice that the

narrow bandwidth of the loop results in improved

reception of the monitored signal, in spite of the fact

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that the received signal is about a S-unit less than for the dipole.

In the figure below we show measured gain (dBi) for

a commercial loop (vacuum variable capacitor usedto tune the loop), for a NVIS path (100 km length),

compared with theory (numerical modeling using

NEC).

For the amateur in radio, he wants to know the

space wave gain for distance communication links.

The Figure below shows the calculated gain in free

space for three AMA Loops.

The Figure below shows the vertical radiation patterns

for horizontal loops (diameters 1.7m and 0,8m),frequency 14.15 MHz, compared with a horizontal

dipole, antenna heights10m. A part of the gain

difference, loops compared with dipole, is that thedipole has directional gain, the horizontal loop has an

omni-directional pattern.

THE CROSSED FIELD ANTENNA

Professor Maurice Hately, G3HAT, Brian Stuart, and

Fathi Kabbary, a student of Maurice’s have dreamed upa super controversial antenna. Not only has this

antenna type, and the new EM theory developed by

them to explain how the antenna works, confused theamateurs in radio, but this antenna type has been

 patented, and as well presented to a learned audiences,

the IEE in an Antennas and Propagation forum, and the

IEEE Broadcast Technology Society, but it has

attracted wide attention and is being sold.

The original CFA concept was a cylinder over a disk,

 both fed, and fed in phase quadrature. The disc wassaid to generate an H-Field, and the cylinder an E-field,

and these fields generated an out-going Pointing vector.

E/H, by adjusting the power fed, was said to be 377ohms in the near field, which is what E/H is in the far 

field --- perfect coupling to the propagation medium.

The intrinsic impedance of free space is 377 ohms.

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Kabbary has sold several of his antennas (costing as

much as $100,000) to MF broadcasters in Italy, Brazil,

Australia, and China. A broadcast consultant group in

Germany erected a CFA, copied in collaboration with

Kabbary, and one of his antennas was erected in the UK 

for testing. Performance to be overseen by the Marconi

Research Laboratories, Chelmsford and the BBC.

But none of these antenna systems performed

satisfactorily --- efficiencies very low and bandwidths

too small for MF broadcasting.

The CFA works only in Egypt, and best at only one

location, Tanta, Egypt --- where it is mounted on the

roof of building (Figure), and its ground plane is well

connected to ground --- yet this antenna system is has

attracting wide interest.

CFA antennas,Tanta, Egypt.

Other installations installed at ground level did not

work so well (how well???).

It is a very electrically small antenna system, a few

electrical degrees in height, yet it is said to achieve a

radiation efficiency equivalent to a well ground quarter 

wave monople --- and as well it is said to possess other attractive features --- high angle skywave is a minimum--- high angle skywave during nighttime hours limits

the useful range of MF broadcast transmission.

I consider that the basic theory on which the antenna is

said to work is flawed, that the method of feed leads toincreased difficulties, and if the antenna works at all it

is due to current flow on grounding wires (the antenna

is usually elevated) or on current flow on the outer 

surface of the feeder coax --- I was in the audience and

said so following the initial presentation of a paper 

 before a learned audience (the IEE) in 1991.

So finally we decided to numerically model the CFA, in

1996/97, but this only resulted in further controversy --

- the inventors claim that the Numerical EM Code I use

cannot model the CFA --- so we built experimentalmodel(s) of the CFA and measured the characteristics,

and radiation efficiency --- in 1998/99. But it was not

 before the autumn of 2000 that we succeeded in tuning

and matching the antenna.

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I only have time in this presentation to give you a brief overview of our work.

Experimental model.

Numerical model.

 Not discussed by the inventors of the CFA, it is merelytwo electrically small antenna system, comprising two

elements mutually coupled. And, when fed in

quadrature this results in power going out, and power 

coming back, in fact the return power, returning to thedisc, is almost as large as the outgoing power, from the

cylinder.

This is seen in our numerical modeling (the resistive

component of the disc is negative.

This makes for very difficult tuning, to achieve (sayequal powers to the both elements, and currents in

 phase quadrature.

Clearly no one but us have ever achieved quadrature

feed --- the inventors only imagined they did. No one

who has fabricated a CFA has ever observed the

 problem of return power.

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Field Strength (dB microvolts/m) versus distance

meters for the conical extension model of the CFA,

transmitter power 10 watts.

The measured field strength at 200 m for a

transmitter power of 10 watts is 87.3 dB

microvolts/m. 

The field strength predicted (according to NEC-4, for 

tuner coil Q-factors equal to 75) is 88.7 dB

microvolts/m (difference 1.4 dB). 

The measured FS referenced to a short vertical over a perfectly conducting ground reveals that the gain of 

our CFA is about 

- 14.5 dB assuming no loss in the tuners;

and - 16.5 dB including tuner losses (about 1.5 dB).

REFERENCES

Belrose, J.S., "Scale Modelling and Full Scale MeasurementTechniques with particular reference to antennas in their 

operational environments", in AGARD Lecture Series No.131, The Performance of Antennas in their OperationalEnvironment, October, 1983. Available: NTIS Access No.

 N84-12367.

Belrose, J.S., G.M. Royer and L.E. Petrie, “HF Wire Antennaover Real Ground: Computer Simulation and Measurement”,

AGARD LS 165, Modern Antenna Design using Computersand Measurement: Application to Antenna Problems of Military Interest, Specialized Printing Services Ltd.,Loughton, Essex, U.K., September 1989 (overview 30 pages).

Belrose, J.S., “Transforming the Balun”, QST, June 1991, pp.30-33.

Belrose, J.S., W. Maxwell and C.T. Rauch, "SourceImpedance of HF Tuned Power Amplifiers and the ConjugateMatch", Communications Quarterly, Fall 1997, pp. 25-40.

Belrose, J.S. and L. Parker, "A tunable all-bands HF

Camp/Mobile Antenna", Communications Quarterly, Fall1998, pp. 47-57.

Belrose, J.S., “Characteristics of the CFA Obtained by Numerical and Experimental Modelling”, CFA Panel Forum,IEEE Broadcast Technology Symposium, Vienna, VA, 27-29September 2000.

Belrose, J.S., “Compact Loops Re-Visited”, AntenneX Online

Magazine, March 2001 (see Archives IV reference No. 70).

Belrose, J.S., “CFAs on the Roof of Buildings”, AntenneXOnline Magazine, June 2001 (see Archives IV reference No.88).

Belrose, J.S., “On the EH Antenna”, Published in the on-line

magazine antenneX April 2003.

Belrose, J.S., “On the CFA and EH Antennas”, TCA – Canada’s Amateur Radio Magazine, pp. 24-26, May/June2003.

Belrose, J.S., “On the Quest for an Ideal Antenna

Tuner”, QST, October 2004.

Belroser, J.S., “A Brief Overview of the Performance of WireAerials in their Operating Environments”, InternationalAntenna Collection (Edited by Dr. George Brown, M5ACN),

Published by The Radio Society of Great Britain, 2003, pp.137-153.

Belrose, J.S., “Performance of Electrically Small TransmittingLoop Antennas: Part I, RadCom, pp. 64-67; Part II, RadCom,

 pp. 88-98, June/July, 2004; Technical Feedback, June 2005, p.78; and Technical Note, August 2006.

Belrose, J.S., “Characteristics of the Crossed Field Antennaobtained by Numerical and Experimental Modelling”, IEEE

AP-S Symposium, Washington, 3-8 July 2005.

Belrose, J.S., “Electrically Small Transmitting Loops”, IEEEAP-S Symposium Digest, Washington, 3-8 July 2005.