This application is a National Phase Patent Application of International Patent Application Number PCT/KR2019/008343, filed on Jul. 8, 2019, which claims priority of Korean Patent Application No. 10-2018-0088834, filed Jul. 30, 2018. The entire contents of both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present disclosure relates to an air-coupled type ground penetrating radar antenna, and more particularly, to an air-coupled type ground penetrating radar antenna which may reduce a magnitude of a direct wave signal limiting imaging performance of a system when being received at a receiving side of the ground penetrating radar (hereinafter; referred to as “GPR”) by placing a directional antenna used for the air-coupled GPR at a transmitter point, placing a loop antenna at a receiver point to be vertical to a transmitting and receiving antenna plane and providing a feeding direction to be orthogonal to a feeding direction of a transmitter.
In general, GPR antennas include ground-coupled type GPR antennas and air-coupled type GPR antennas according to forms.
The ground-coupled type GPR antenna is used to detect abnormal substances or discontinuous surfaces with a relatively deep depth (1 to 10 m), but as the ground-coupled type GPR antenna has to be attached to the ground, a planar antenna with relatively low directivity is used. Representative examples of the ground-coupled type GPR antenna include a dipole antenna and a bowtie antenna.
The air-coupled type GPR antenna is used for safety diagnosis of pavements and bridges with a relatively shallow depth (0.3 to 1 m) and is operated away from the ground, so an antenna with high directivity is used. Representative examples of the air-coupled type GPR antenna include a horn antenna and a Vivaldi antenna.
Referring to
Referring to
A propagation path from the transmitting antenna 10 to the receiving antenna 20 is indicated by a thick solid line. The propagation path may include a path of a direct wave 12 and a path of a reflected wave 14 for a discontinuous surface of radar. The transmitting antenna 10 and the receiving antenna 20 are arranged in parallel to an x-y plane, that is, an antenna plane 22.
A direction of an electric field (Ex field) 11 of electromagnetic wave radiated from the transmitting antenna 10 is an x-axis direction which is the same as a feeding direction of the transmitting antenna 10. As shown in
On the propagation path from the transmitting antenna 10 to the receiving antenna 20, all of the direct waves 12 indicated by thick solid lines are tangential components with respect to the antenna plane (e.g., the x-y plane indicated by an alternated long and short dash line in
As a propagation direction of the tangential component 14a of the reflected wave 14 is a y-axis direction parallel to the antenna plane and the direction of the electric field 15 of the reflected wave is an x-axis direction, a magnetic field direction 16a is a z-axis direction. As a propagation direction of the normal component 14b of the reflected wave 14 is a z-axis direction that is perpendicular to the antenna plane and the electric field direction 15 of the normal component of the reflected wave is the x-axis direction without change, the magnetic field direction 16b of the normal component of the reflected wave is a y-axis direction. As described above, when the transmitting and receiving antennas have the same shape and have the same polarization characteristics, the direct wave and the reflected wave have only one polarization component (Ex). In this case, the receiving antenna completely receives both a direct wave signal and a reflected wave signal. The system dynamic range of the GPR system has a fixed range. The fixed range has a unique value for the GPR system, and in this situation, in order to detect a radar signal of a less level from the GPR image obtained through detection, the signal of the direct wave 12 directly propagating from the transmitting antenna 10 to the receiving antenna 20 may be reduced. That is, the direct wave, which is a signal other than the reflected wave 14 used to detect a underground structure, may act as a factor limiting the imaging performance of the system, and thus, the direct wave is preferably minimized at a data acquisition step.
Accordingly, the present disclosure is to resolve the above-described problems of the above-mentioned related art and provides an air-coupled type ground penetrating radar antenna which reduces a magnitude of a direct wave signal limiting imaging performance of a system to improve detection performance on underground discontinuous surface of the air-coupled type ground penetrating radar when being received at a receiving side of the ground penetrating radar (hereinafter; referred to as “GPR”) antenna by placing a directional antenna used for the air-coupled GPR at a transmitter point, placing a loop antenna at a receiver point to be vertical to a transmitting and receiving antenna plane with respect to a planarization direction of the transmitting antenna and providing a feeding direction to be orthogonal to a feeding direction of a transmitting antenna.
An air-coupled type ground penetrating radar (GPR) antenna of the present disclosure for achieving the above object, which is an air-coupled type bistatic GPR antenna that is spaced apart from the ground may include:
a transmitting antenna configured to direct toward the ground and penetrate the radio wave into the underground;
a receiving antenna configured to receive the radio wave radiated from the transmitting antenna and then reflected from the underground and having a feeding direction perpendicular to each of a feeding direction of the transmitting antenna and the ground surface; and
The transmitting antenna may use an antenna having high directivity. ‘Having a high directivity’ means that its directivity is higher than that of an omnidirectional antenna such as a dipole antenna.
The receiving antenna includes a loop antenna and a feeding direction of the loop antenna is perpendicular to the feeding direction of the transmitting antenna, and the pair of transmitting and receiving antennas may be arranged in parallel to the ground surface.
The receiving antenna includes the loop antenna and a physical plane perpendicular to the plane of ground surface.
Each of the transmitting antenna and the receiving antenna may be designed by adjusting a length or a width of the antenna to meet frequency and a bandwidth for transmitting and receiving electromagnetic wave pulses. An impedance element having a predetermined impedance value is loaded at points inside the antenna as necessary to minimize ringing occurring inside the transmitting antenna and the receiving antenna.
The transmitting antenna and the receiving antenna are blocked by metal box or non-metal box around the antennas and a radio wave absorbing material is filled in the blocking box to prevent spurious radiation of the radio waves into the air.
Therefore, an air-coupled type ground penetrating radar antenna of the present disclosure may reduce a level of reception of a direct wave to improve radar detection performance of the air-coupled ground penetrating radar system, which may limit detection data quality when being received at a receiving side of the ground penetrating radar (hereinafter; referred to as “GPR”) by placing loop antenna at a receiver point to be vertical to a plane of a transmitting antenna with respect to a planarization direction of the transmitting antenna, and providing a feeding direction of the receiving antenna orthogonal to each of a feeding direction of the transmitting antenna and the ground.
Hereinafter, the present disclosure will be described in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings showing embodiments of the present disclosure.
Referring to
In an embodiment of the present disclosure, a virtual experiment was performed using a horn antenna with high directivity as the transmitting antenna 100 and a loop antenna as the receiving antenna 200 and was compared with a virtual experiment conducted using a horn antenna, which is a general air-coupled type ground penetrating radar antenna, as the transmitting antenna 10 and the receiving antenna 20.
The transmitting antenna 100 radiates the transmitting signal toward the ground and penetrates radio wave into the ground.
The receiving antenna 200 receives radio waves radiated from the transmitting antenna 100, penetrating the ground, and reflected from the underground. A feeding direction of the receiving antenna 200 crosses vertically each of a feeding direction of the transmitting antenna 100 and the ground. Preferably, the transmitting antenna 100 uses a horn antenna having directivity.
In the configuration of the transmitting antenna and the receiving antenna in
In
In
The directional antenna such as the horn antenna used as the transmitting antenna 100 and the loop antenna used as the receiving antenna 200 may be desired by adjusting parameters such as the length and the width of each of the antennas to meet the frequency and the bandwidth for transmitting and receiving the electromagnetic wave pulses. An impedance loading technique may be used inside the antenna as necessary. The impedance loading technique may be used to load, to the point inside the antenna, the impedance element having the impedance value for any point inside the antenna calculated by a predetermined formula by receiving antenna-design parameters, for example, the lengths or the widths of the antennas and may be used to empirically load the impedance elements having any values to the points inside the antennas. For the general directional antenna (the horn antenna) and the loop antenna not using the impedance loading technique, electromagnetic pulse signals transmitted and received may be greatly distorted due to the ringing occurring in the antennas; however, the waveform distortion of the electromagnetic pulse signals applied to the antenna may be minimized using the impedance loading technique.
In addition, peripheries of the transmitting antenna 100 and the receiving antenna 200 of the present disclosure are blocked by a metal or non-metal box and a radio wave absorbing material is filled in the blocking box, thereby suppressing the spurious radiation of the radio waves into the air.
The contents of the present disclosure have been described with reference to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings, but these are only exemplary, and a person having ordinary knowledge in the art would understand that various modifications and other equivalent embodiments can be made based on the above. Therefore, a true technical protection scope of the present disclosure should be determined by the technical idea of the appended claims.
According to the present disclosure, an air-coupled type ground penetrating radar antenna may reduce a level of reception of a direct wave which may limit data quality when being received at a receiving side of a ground penetrating radar (hereinafter; referred to as “GPR”) by placing a loop antenna at a receiver point to be vertical to a transmitting antenna plane with respect to a planarization direction of the transmitting antenna and providing a feeding direction of the receiving antenna orthogonal to a feeding direction of the transmitting antenna and the ground. Therefore, radar detection performance of the air-coupled GPR system may be improved, thereby effectively using the air-coupled GPR system in a radar detection field.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2018-0088834 | Jul 2018 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/KR2019/008343 | 7/8/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/027453 | 2/6/2020 | WO | A |
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