Aicha Sahel

Work place: Faculty of Science and Technology Mohammedia, Morocco

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Research Interests: Computer systems and computational processes, Image Compression, Image Manipulation, Image Processing

Biography

Aïcha SAHEL is a holder of a doctorate in Electronics and Image Processing in 1996 at the University of Poitiers - France. She is university Professor at the University Hassan II Mohammedia – Casablanca - Morocco (FSTM) where she teaches the electronics, the signal processing, the image processing and Telecommunication.
She is a member of the laboratory EEA&TI (Electronics, Electrotechnics, Automatic and Information processing). The research works of A. SAHEL concern the Communication and Information Technology (Electronics Systems, Signal/Image Processing and Telecommunication). She co-supervises doctoral theses and she is a co-author of several national and international publications. She is a member in financed research projects. She was a member of steering committees of three international congresses in the same domain of research.

Author Articles
Radiation Characteristics Enhancement of Microstrip Triangular Patch Antenna using Several Array Structures

By Hayat Errifi Abdennaceur Baghdad Abdelmajid Badri Aicha Sahel

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijwmt.2015.03.01, Pub. Date: 1 May 2015

In the recent years the development in communication systems requires the development of low cost, minimal weight and low profile antenna that is capable of maintaining high performance over a wide spectrum of frequencies. This technological trend has focused much effort into the design of a microstrip patch antenna. The aim of this paper is to design and simulate a triangular microstrip patch array antenna using HFSS software and compare the performance of 2 elements, 4 elements and 8 elements patch arrays with that of a single patch for the same operating frequency. Also comparisons are made between the performance of series, corporate and series-corporate feed network. These arrays are designed to operate at a frequency of 11 GHz. Our goal is to obtain a high directivity with better gain and reduced losses, to be especially used for X band applications such as satellite communication, radar, medical applications, and other wireless systems.

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