Loop antenna
A loop antenna is a radio antenna consisting of at least one loop of wire, tubing, or other electrical conductor with its ends connected to a balanced transmission line. Within this physical description two different antenna designs are common: the small loop (or magnetic loop) with a size much smaller than a wavelength, and the resonant loop antenna with a circumference approximately equal to the wavelength.
Small loops have a poor efficiency and are mainly used as receiving antennas at low frequencies. Except for car radios, almost every AM broadcast receiver sold has such an antenna built in or directly attached to it. These antennas are also used for radio direction finding. In amateur radio, loop antennas can be used where larger antennas would be inconvenient, unsightly, or banned because of size.[1] Loop antennas are relatively easy to build.[2]
A small loop antenna, also known as a magnetic loop, generally has a circumference of less than one tenth of a wavelength, in which case there will be a relatively constant current distribution along the conductor. As the frequency or the size is increased, a standing wave starts to develop in the current, and the antenna starts to acquire some of the characteristics of a resonant loop (but is not resonant); for this reason, these intermediate cases cannot be analyzed using the concepts developed for the small and resonant loop antennas described below.
Resonant loop antennas are relatively large, governed by the intended wavelength of operation. Thus they are typically used at higher frequencies, especially VHF and UHF, where their size is manageable. They can be viewed as a folded dipole deformed into a different shape, and have rather similar characteristics such as a high radiation efficiency.
Loop Antenna Media
A ferrite loopstick antenna, a small loop used for AM reception in a portable radio, consisting of a wire wound around a ferrite core; the most common type of loop antenna today.
A quad antenna is a self-resonant loop in a square shape; this one also includes a parasitic element.
Car-roof-mounted 6-meter halo antenna for mobile amateur radio (WA8FJW). Notice the triple-loop.
Amount of atmospheric noise for LF, MF, and HF spectrum according CCIR 322. The diagram shows how both man-made noise ("interference", "QRM") and natural atmospheric noise ("static", "QRN") both fall precipitously above 20 MHz, but as frequencies fall below 10 MHz their combined power climbs as the frequency drops.
Radiation patterns of loop antennas. Distance from the origin is proportional to the power density in that direction. The full wave loop (left) emits maximum power broadside to the wires with nulls off the sides, the small loop (right) emits maximum power in the plane of its wires with nulls broadside to the wires.
Loop antenna, receiver, and accessories used in amateur radio direction finding at 80-meter (260-foot) wavelength (3.5 MHz).
Ferrite loopstick antenna from an AM radio having two windings, one for long wave and one for medium wave (AM broadcast) reception. About 10 cm (4 inches) long. Ferrite antennas are usually enclosed inside the radio receiver.
A loop antenna for amateur radio under construction
References
- ↑ Low Profile Amateur Radio (A. Brogdon, W1AB)
- ↑ A Great Shortwave Loop http://antenadx.com.br/?page_id=99 Archived 2013-08-15 at the Wayback Machine