LoRa/LoRaWAN tutorial 48: Yagi-Uda Antenna

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 ม.ค. 2020
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    This is part 48 of the LoRa/LoRaWAN tutorial.
    In this tutorial I will explain what a Yagi-Uda antenna is and how to build one.
    The Yagi-Uda antenna, also known as Yagi antenna, is a directional high gain antenna.
    A basic Yagi-Uda antenna consists of three elements.
    A reflector, a driven element and a director.
    The driven element is a half wave dipole and parallel to the driven element on either side of it, are straight wires, the reflector and the director.
    The reflector is slightly longer than 1/2 wavelength, the driven element is 1/2 wavelength long and the director is slightly shorter than 1/2 wavelength.
    I used an online Yagi-Uda antenna calculator to calculate the antenna dimensions:
    www.rfwireless-world.com/calc...
    I have used the 4NEC2 antenna modelling software to verify the design.
    www.mobilefish.com/download/l...
    Next I used the 4NEC2 optimising functionality to improve the design.
    www.mobilefish.com/download/l...
    Performance test A:
    The Yagi-Uda antenna is attached to an end node, which is located inside a building, and transmit messages which will be received by nearby gateways in my area.
    In this test I am only interested which gateways were able to receive the transmitted sensor data.
    The test will be repeated using a sleeve dipole antenna.
    Performance test B:
    The Yagi-Uda antenna is attached to an end node and transmit messages which will be received by a dedicated gateway 6 meters away.
    Both devices are indoors.
    The average RSSI is calculated and also the total time it took to receive 15 messages.
    The test will be repeated using a ½λ dipole antenna.
    Performance test A and B are simple tests and will give me a ROUGH INDICATION how well my antenna performs compared to the dipole antenna.
    Both tests are conducted indoors which means the walls reflects the transmitted signals thus influencing the measurements.
    Therefore take the results with a grain of salt!
    A much better method to tell how your antenna actually performs in the real world, see this procedure:
    github.com/LoRaTracker/Antenn...
    Performance test A:
    The Yagi-Uda antenna performance is compared with a sleeve dipole antenna.
    More information about sleeve dipole antennas, see tutorial 43.
    For this test I am using the end node and antenna C as demonstrated in tutorial 33.
    More information about this end node, see:
    www.mobilefish.com/developer/...
    The end node uses the MCCI LoRaWAN LMIC Library:
    github.com/mcci-catena/arduin...
    The end node uses the following sketch:
    www.mobilefish.com/download/l...
    I have NOT modified the end node transmission power when using the Yagi-Uda antenna.
    In my area there are several gateways and I know that these gateways, which are connected to The Things Network, can receive my transmitted data.
    The Yagi-Uda antenna is attached to the end node at location A and transmits data.
    I have done the same with the sleeve dipole antenna.
    In both cases two messages per minute were transmitted.
    The logged data can be found at:
    www.mobilefish.com/download/l...
    One or more gateways were able to receive my transmitted sensor data, see:
    drive.google.com/open?id=18SK...
    Performance test B:
    Make sure you keep everything in your setup the same when switching from the Yagi-Uda antenna to the ½λ dipole antenna.
    The logged data can be found at:
    www.mobilefish.com/download/l...
    The average RSSI when using the ½λ dipole antenna: -28.0 dBm
    The average RSSI when using the Yagi-Uda antenna: -22.1 dBm
    The time it took for the gateway to receive the 15 messages from the end node:
    Using the ½λ dipole antenna: 15 minutes
    Using the Yagi-Uda antenna: 15 minutes
    The Arduino sketch is configured to transmit 1 message per minute.
    Conclusion:
    Based on the average RSSI test results and the results from performance test A, the Yagi-Uda antenna performs better compared to the sleeve dipole antenna.
    but the Yagi-Uda antenna is a directional antenna, you need to point it to the correct direction.
    The sleeve dipole antenna is an omnidirectional antenna.
    Check out all my other LoRa/LoRaWAN tutorial videos:
    • LoRa/LoRaWAN tutorials
    Subscribe to my TH-cam channel:
    / @mobilefish
    The presentation used in this video tutorial can be found at:
    www.mobilefish.com/developer/...
    #mobilefish #lora #lorawan
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ความคิดเห็น • 11

  • @HFLC
    @HFLC 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I would be also interested on how the antenna comparisons perform in distance. What design went the farthest, etc.

  • @FrankPiesik
    @FrankPiesik 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks for this valuable and informative video!

  • @bartk174
    @bartk174 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    very nice !

  • @muzammilzuki1323
    @muzammilzuki1323 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    hye sir, can i know how to build 1090 Mhz antenna with the same method you are using?

  • @ya7yaGuitar
    @ya7yaGuitar 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hey,
    What's is the reference book for such info?
    Thanks

  • @kolboy2028
    @kolboy2028 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    what is the best antenna for getting a 2 km range in the city using Lora Communication? in all directions (868Mhz Lora) Plz Help

  • @fadli1987
    @fadli1987 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Another conclusion, gateway should use monopole
    (since the msg will get from any direction 360°) and node will use any antenna to reach max gain. As my understanding

  • @nandoanalog
    @nandoanalog 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    so, the driven element is half driven, and half grounded? That feels wrong...

  • @wancable9702
    @wancable9702 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    you can do better antenna, maybe with gamma match design