The present disclosure relates to an antenna arrangement comprising a first antenna configured to operate within a first frequency band and a second antenna configured to operate within a second frequency band.
Radar systems are known in the art and are used to detect the range, bearing and velocity of targets in an environment and are applied in several applications such as within the aviation industry, automotive field or for telecommunication purposes.
There are different types of radar arrangements adapted to different types of applications. For instance, there are more complex types of radar arrangements that deploy a first and a second antenna working as a primary radar and a secondary antenna function. In these types of antenna arrangements, the first and the second antenna often operate at different frequency bands and are configured to different purposes.
The first antenna may for instance be used for measuring the bearing and distance of targets and the second antenna may be utilized for target identification as a part of an IFF/SSR system. The second antenna (sometimes operating at a lower frequency band than the first antenna) is conventionally placed in front of the first antenna. It is desired to co-locate the antennas in this manner to optimize areas where the antennas are located, e.g., to minimize the overall size of the two antennas or to fit a radar system, together with an IFF/SSR-system, on a vehicle platform. In other words, it would beneficial to have the ability to co-locate antennas e.g. for compactness.
A problem with this arrangement of the first and second antenna is that the second antenna can disturb the operation and/or the performance of the first antenna. Thus, hampering the performance of the antenna arrangement as such. When combining antennas for different frequency bands, the antenna operating in a higher frequency band is often more affected by the low-frequency antenna. Arranging a low-frequency antenna in front of a high-frequency antenna will therefore often be difficult. In case of an L-band IFF-antenna in front of an X-band radar antenna, the disturbance to the antenna pattern will often be severe especially since the requirement on the antenna sidelobe performance may be very high. The use of active electronically scanned antennas, AESAs, further enhances the requirement on the primary radar sidelobe requirements and thereby the need for low disturbance secondary antennas.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for an antenna arrangement having a first antenna (may also be referred to as a primary antenna) and a second antenna (may also be referred to as the secondary antenna) being placed in front of the first antenna, where the second antenna's disturbance of the operation or performance of the first antenna is removed or at least mitigated. Further, there is also a need for such an antenna arrangement that is convenient and cost effective in terms of manufacturing. There is specifically a lack in the present art of how to improve co-located antennas so to be able to provide an antenna arrangement having a first and a second antenna that can operate without disturbance.
Even though some currently known solutions work well in some situations it would be desirable to provide an antenna arrangement with co-located antennas that fulfils requirements related to improving the performance of the antennas while providing an arrangement that is convenient and cheap to manufacture.
It is therefore an object of the present disclosure to provide an antenna arrangement, a fixed installation and a vehicle comprising such an antenna arrangement, which mitigate, alleviate or eliminate one or more of the deficiencies and disadvantages of currently known solutions.
This object is achieved by means of an antenna arrangement, a fixed installation and a vehicle as defined in the appended claims.
The present disclosure is at least partly based on the insight that in situations where an antenna arrangement has antennas that are co-located, i.e., when a second antenna is placed in front of a first antenna, it is desirable that the second antenna is electrically invisible or transparent to the first antenna. In other words, the antenna arrangement may achieve an improved performance if the first antenna can operate without any disturbance from the second antenna. In more detail, the present inventors realized that by realizing the second antenna as a “chopped dipole”, where the second antenna is a dipole “chopped” into electrically small pieces with reactive loading between the pieces, the second antenna can effectively be realized to maximize power transfer past the second antenna at the operating frequency of the first antenna while maintaining operational capability at its own operating frequency band.
In accordance with an aspect of the disclosure there is provided an antenna arrangement comprising a first antenna configured to operate within a first frequency band, a second antenna configured to operate within a second frequency band, wherein the first frequency band is higher than the second frequency band. The second antenna is at least partly arranged within an illumination-field of the first antenna and the second antenna comprises a dipole structure segmented into a plurality of electrically conductive sections, wherein each electrically conductive section is coupled to an adjacent electrically conductive section by a reactive load section.
A benefit of the present disclosure is that the segmented dipole structure having electrically conductive sections allow the second antenna to be “invisible” from the view of the first antenna. In other words, the operation of the first antenna is not disturbed or hampered by having the second antenna arranged within an illumination-field of the first antenna. Thus, this allows to beneficially arrange a first and a second co-located antenna. Further, the second antenna is a dipole structure segmented into a plurality of electrically conductive sections. In other words, it utilizes a chopped dipole which may be provided by a convenient and cost-efficient standard manufacturing routine. Furthermore, the segmented structure of the second antenna does not disturb its radiation properties allowing it work properly as an antenna while being “invisible” in view of the first antenna (i.e. invisible within the frequency band of the first antenna).
The term “at least partly arranged within an illumination-field of the first antenna” may be construed as that the second antenna is at least partly arranged within a main-lobe of the first antennas radiation pattern. Alternatively, the term “at least partly arranged within an illumination-field of the first antenna” may be construed as that the second antenna is at least partly arranged in a volume defined by the first antenna's (far-field) radiation pattern.
The lowest frequency of the first frequency band may be at least two times greater than the highest frequency of the second frequency band. The first antenna may be configured to operate at a frequency band in the range of 7-11 GHz and the second antenna may be configured to operate at a frequency band in the range of 1-2 GHz. The phrase “wherein the first frequency band is higher than the second frequency band” may be construed as that the first frequency band covers a range of frequencies, each of which, is higher than any frequency in the second frequency band. Thus, in some embodiments, the first frequency band and the second frequency band are non-overlapping.
Each reactive load section may be an inductive load section. The inductive loading between electrically conductive sections provides the benefit of minimizing scattering currents.
The inductive load section may comprise at least one of a meandering line, a planar spiral coil inductor, and a lumped inductive circuit. A benefit of utilizing these types of devices is that they provide required inductances. Further, specifically a meandering line and a planar spiral coil are beneficial since they can be etched on a substrate simultaneously with the segmented structures, so it is a simple manufacturing step if the inductance needs to be varied.
The meandering line, the planar spiral coil inductor and lumped inductive circuit may be coupled to end-portions of adjacent electrically conductive sections. In other words, the inductance device connects each of the segmented structures.
The meandering line may comprise at least a first and a second turn-portion. According to some embodiments, the meandering line further comprises a third, and a fourth turn-portion. However, the meandering line may also comprise a fifth and a sixth turn-portion.
The meandering line extends in a zigzag form, a square-waveform, a sinusoidal-waveform or a saw-tooth form in-between adjacent dipole sections. These kinds of forms allow the meandering line to have a space-efficient structure while having a certain length. Thus, allowing the second antenna to meet the size requirements.
Each electrically conductive section may have a length being equal to or less than a wavelength/3 (λ/3) at a highest frequency of the first frequency band. Moreover, a spacing between adjacent electrically conductive sections may be at least a wavelength/30 (λ/30) at a highest frequency of the first frequency band.
The second antenna may be formed on a block or sheet of dielectric. The block/sheet of dielectric may be a printed circuit board (PCB) or any other suitable substrate.
The antenna arrangement may be a radar antenna arrangement, the first antenna being a first radar antenna and the second antenna being an Identification Friend or Foe (IFF) antenna or a Secondary Surveillance Radar (SSR) antenna. Thus, the second antenna may be able to characterize objects that are located by the first antenna.
The antenna arrangement may be a base station antenna arrangement comprising two different frequency bands.
The dipole structure may be a half-wavelength dipole structure at the second frequency band. Further, the first antenna and the second antenna may according to some embodiments have the same polarization.
There is further provided a fixed installation comprising the antenna arrangement as disclosed herein. The fixed installation may be a base station.
There is further provided a vehicle comprising the antenna arrangement as disclosed herein, the vehicle may be a ground vehicle, an airborne vehicle or a ship.
In the following, the disclosure will be described in a non-limiting way and in more detail with reference to exemplary embodiments illustrated in the enclosed drawings, in which:
In the following detailed description, some embodiments of the present disclosure will be described. However, it is to be understood that features of the different embodiments are exchangeable between the embodiments and may be combined in different ways, unless anything else is specifically indicated. Even though in the following description, numerous specific details are set forth to provide a more thorough understanding of the provided disclosure, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the embodiments in the present disclosure may be realized without these details. In other instances, well known constructions or functions are not described in detail, so as not to obscure the present disclosure.
In the following description of example embodiments, the same reference numerals denote the same or similar components.
As seen in
Furthermore, the first antenna 2 and the second antenna 3 may have the same polarization. Thus, according to some embodiments the first antenna 2 is linearly polarized and the second antenna 3 is also linearly polarized. However, according to some embodiments the first and the second antennas 2, 3 are circularly polarized. However, it should be noted that the first and the second antenna may have any suitable polarization. In reference to the circular polarization, the second antenna may accordingly be in the form of two orthogonal “chopped dipoles” with a 90° hybrid feed.
The antenna arrangement 1 as shown in
The first frequency band is higher than the second frequency band. In more detail, in accordance with some embodiments, the lowest frequency of the first frequency band is at least two times greater than the highest frequency of the second frequency band. According to some embodiments, the first frequency band may be an X-band range i.e. 7-11.2 GHz, wherein the second frequency band may be an L-band range i.e. 1-2 GHz. The second antenna 3 as disclosed in
The second antenna 3 as seen in
It should be noted that, with the segmented structure of the second antenna 3 making it “invisible”, does not, at least substantially, hamper the performance of the second antenna 3. Thus, it still performs according to its requirements (this is further elaborated upon in FIG. 9). In other words, the second antenna 3 remains operational within its frequency band while being electrically “invisible” to the first antenna 2.
Each reactive load section 6 may be an inductive load section. Inductive loading between the segmented dipole structure 4 allows for minimizing any scattering currents.
The inductive load section 6 may comprise at least one of a meandering line 6′, a planar spiral coil inductor, and a lumped inductive circuit.
In
However, as shown in
The inductive load section 6 may comprise any suitable amount of turn-portions 8.
Further, a spacing L2 between the electrically conductive sections 5 may be at least a wavelength/30, λ/30. Moreover, in some embodiments, the spacing L2 is equal to or less than a wavelength/3, λ/3 at a highest frequency of the first frequency band. The spacing L2 between the electrically conductive sections may be less than the lengths L1 of the electrically conductive sections. The length L1 of the electrically conductive sections are preferably the same for all of the segments 5, and the gaps L2 are also preferably equal.
Each memory device 25, 35 may also store data that can be retrieved, manipulated, created, or stored by the control circuitry 26, 36. The data may include, for instance, local updates, parameters, training data, learning models and other data. The data can be stored in one or more databases. The one or more databases can be connected to a server by a high bandwidth FAN or WAN, or can also be connected to a server through a communication network.
The control circuitry 26, 36 may include, for example, one or more central processing units (CPUs), graphics processing units (GPUs) dedicated to performing calculations, and/or other processing devices. The memory device 25, 35 can include one or more computer-readable media and can store information accessible by the control circuitry 26, 36, including instructions/programs that can be executed by the control circuitry 26, 36.
The instructions which may be executed by the control circuitry 26, 36 may comprise instructions for operating a radar system according to any aspects of the present disclosure. For example, operating the first and the second antenna 2, 3 so to detect, identify and characterize targets.
For further describing the disclosure as presented herein accompanied with further advantages thereof, a simulation of the antenna arrangement 1 in accordance with an embodiment as disclosed in
7
b shows the radar cross section values as a function of the length L1 of each electrically conductive section 5 (denoted wire length) in the graph, it's shown in the graph that a maximum length L1 of each electrically conductive section 5 may be less than 8 mm, so to minimize the radar cross section.
Based on the simulations seen in the
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20206203 | Nov 2020 | FI | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2021/051167 | 11/23/2021 | WO |