One of the strongest electromagnetic engineering approaches for enhancing antenna performance is the use of photonic crystal (PhC) substrates. This technique can be efficiently applied to antenna design and offers notable advantages, such as gain improvement, increased bandwidth, and frequency-dependent beam scanning. In this paper, a bow-tie dipole antenna has been developed for terahertz operation over the 0.39–1.3 THz band, presenting a novel structure capable of producing strong ultra-wideband (UWB) field enhancement within its feed gap. The feed gap between the two metallic arms has a slot width of 1.24 λ0 (λ0 is the wavelength in free space at a center range of 0.8 THz), which facilitates the generation of an enhanced electric field. The PhC substrate enables surface-wave control through dispersion engineering, thereby enhancing the radiation efficiency of the antenna. The proposed antenna exhibits a radiation efficiency of approximately 73–93% over the entire UWB frequency band. Furthermore, the PhC substrate antenna achieves a maximum gain of 21 dB, exceeding that of a homogeneous-substrate THz bow-tie antenna by at least 3.3 dB. The results indicate that the antenna achieves |S11| < −10 dB impedance matching over the bandwidth of 105.9%, ranging from 0.4 to 1.3 THz. The proposed bow-tie dipole antenna integrated with a PhC substrate demonstrates a wide beam-scanning capability from −54° to +74° across the 0.39–1.16 THz band, while maintaining a compact footprint of 14.9 λ0 × 22.4 λ0. This combination of wide scanning, broad bandwidth, and ultra-low profile represents a notable advancement in the development of compact THz radiating structures.
Gherbi et al. (Tue,) studied this question.