The present invention application is a U.S. National Phase filing under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application PCT/NZ2020/050037, filed Apr. 24, 2020, which claims priority from New Zealand patent application 752944, filed Apr. 26, 2019. The entire contents of each of these prior applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to artificial dielectric materials and focusing lenses for electromagnetic waves.
The objective of the invention is to provide a light artificial dielectric material for manufacturing such devices as focusing lenses and antennas for radio communication. The provided material has to be simple for manufacturing and have repeatable properties.
Modern mobile communication market needs multi beam antennas creating narrow beams and operating in different frequency bands. Focusing dielectric lens is the main part of the most efficient multi beam antennas. Diameter of a focusing lens has to be several wave length of the electromagnetic wave spreading through a lens to create a narrow beam therefore some lenses of multi beam antennas for mobile communication have diameter more than 1 m. Such lenses made of usual dielectric materials are too heavy therefore much research was done to create lightweight and low loss lenses providing desirable properties of focusing lenses.
The most well-known lightweight artificial dielectric materials consist of randomly oriented conductive parts mixed with nonconductive parts made of lightweight dielectric material. It is very difficult to manufacture uniform material having desirable dielectric properties by randomly mixing of conductive and nonconductive parts therefore a focusing lens is the most expensive component of multi beam antennas. To improve properties and decrease cost of focusing lenses, development of such materials is constantly continuing.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,518,537 B2 describes the lightweight artificial dielectric material comprising plurality of randomly orientated small particles of lightweight dielectric material like polyethylene foam containing conductive fibers placed inside of each particle.
Patent application US 2018/0034160 A1 describes the lightweight artificial dielectric material comprising plurality of randomly orientated small multilayer particles of lightweight dielectric material containing thin conductive patches between layers. It is written in this application that such multilayer particles provide more dielectric permittivity than particles containing conductive fibers.
Patent application US 2018/0279202 A1 describes other kinds of the lightweight artificial dielectric material comprising a plurality of randomly orientated small particles. One described material includes small multilayer particles of lightweight dielectric material containing thin conductive sheets between layers.
All lightweight artificial dielectric materials mentioned above are made by random mixing of small particles. Elimination of metal-to-metal contacts within the material that could lead to passive intermodulation distortion is needed, therefore manufacturing of such materials comprises many stages and its cost is high.
Randomly mixing provides isotropic properties of a final material consisting of small particles but some applications need dielectric material having anisotropic properties. For example cylindrical lens made of anisotropic dielectric material can reduce depolarization of electromagnetic wave passed through cylindrical lens and improve cross polarization ratio of multi beam antenna (U.S. Pat. No. 9,819,094 B2). The cylindrical lens made of isotropic artificial dielectric material creates depolarization of the electromagnetic wave passed through such lens therefore an antenna comprising such lens can suffer from high cross polarization level.
A lightweight artificial dielectric material providing anisotropic properties and suitable for manufacturing a cylindrical lens was described by the New Zealand patent application 752904, filed Apr. 25, 2019. This material consists of short conductive tubes having thin walls and placed inside of a lightweight dielectric material. Tubes are placed in layers. One layer comprises a sheet of a lightweight dielectric material containing plurality of holes. A lightweight dielectric material can be a foam polymer. Tubes are placed in holes made in a sheet of a lightweight dielectric material and contain air inside. Layers containing tubes are separated by layers of a lightweight dielectric material without tubes. The axes of all conductive tubes are directed in perpendicular from layers.
Such structure could have dielectric permittivity (Dk) up to 2.5 for an electromagnetic wave spreading along of axes of tubes but its Dk is significantly smaller for an electromagnetic wave spreading in a perpendicular direction. The reason of such unwanted property of the known artificial dielectric material is anisotropic property of the tubes.
An electromagnetic wave propagating through artificial dielectric material comprising conductive particles excites circular currents flowing on the conductive particles therefore permeability of such materials is less than 1. This effect was described many years ago (W. E. Kock Metallic delay lenses. //Bell System Technical Journal, v.27, pp. 58-82, January 1948). When an electromagnetic wave propagates through square or hexagonal lattice of conductive tubes in direction along the axes of the tubes delay coefficient (n) does not depend from polarization since any polarization excites the same circular currents. When electromagnetic wave propagates through square or hexagonal lattice of conductive tubes in direction perpendicular the axes of the tubes n depends from polarization. The biggest circular currents flow on a wall of the conductive tube in direction perpendicular to axis of the conductive tube when magnetic field of electromagnetic wave is directed in parallel to the axis of the conductive tube. As a result permeability for such polarization is significantly less than for other polarizations and delay coefficient n is also less than n for other polarizations. It is possible to increase delay coefficient n for such polarization by decreasing distance between the tubes disposed in a layer. Increasing capacity between the tubes disposed in the layer increases permittivity of the artificial dielectric material. As a result the known artificial dielectric material can provide very small difference between n for any polarization of electromagnetic wave spreading in direction perpendicular to axes of the conductive tubes but can't provide the same n for other directions of electromagnetic wave.
Because n depends on angle between direction of electromagnetic wave crossing the material and axes of tubes, such artificial dielectric material doesn't suit for many applications requiring an isotropic dielectric material providing the same value of n for any direction and polarization of electromagnetic wave. For example spherical Luneburg lenses have to be made of isotropic dielectric material having the same n for any direction and polarization of electromagnetic wave to keep polarization of electromagnetic wave passed through spherical lens. Therefore a need exists to create an artificial dielectric material providing less dependence n from direction and polarization of electromagnetic wave crossing the material in comparison with the prior art, for example as described by the NZ752904. Such artificial dielectric material has to provide as desirable anisotropic properties to reduce depolarization of electromagnetic wave passed through cylindrical lens so as isotropic properties to be suitable for manufacturing spherical Luneburg lenses. At the same time manufacturing of such material has to be simpler than manufacturing of known lightweight artificial materials made by randomly mixing of small particles containing conductive elements isolated by from each other.
The present invention provides an artificial dielectric material comprising a plurality of sheets of a dielectric material and a plurality of short conductive tubes placed in the sheets of the dielectric material, wherein the sheets of the dielectric material containing the short conductive tubes are separated by sheets of the dielectric material without the short conductive tubes, and wherein axes of the tubes are orientated along at least two different directions.
Preferably, the at least two different directions are orthogonal directions. The short conductive tubes may have a cross section in a shape of a circle or a polygon, and are preferably made of aluminium. However, tubes may alternatively be made from copper, nickel, silver or gold.
Preferably the dielectric material is a foam polymer, which is made of a material selected from polyethylene, polystyrene, polypropylene, polyurethane, silicon and polytetrafluoroethylene.
The short conductive tubes placed in one layer may form a square structure (lattice) providing equal distances between neighboring tubes disposed at the same row or at the same column. Alternatively, the short conductive tubes placed in one layer form a honeycomb structure (lattice) providing equal distances between any neighboring tubes.
The axes of the short conductive tubes placed in one layer may be directed in the same direction. Such axes in one layer may be directed perpendicular to the layer, or may be directed parallel to the layer.
The axes of some short conductive tubes placed in one layer may be directed perpendicular to the layer and axes of other short conductive tubes may be directed in parallel to the layer. The axes of the short conductive tubes directed in parallel to the layer may be directed in different directions.
Delay coefficient n of the provided artificial dielectric material depends of orientation of the tubes, distances between the tubes and between the layers, therefore the provided artificial dielectric material comprising the tubes having different orientation of axes in a layer, and layers with different structures provides more chances to reach desirable dielectric properties compared with the known material such as is described by the NZ patent application 752904. For example dependence n of electromagnetic wave spreading direction and polarization is less since the axes of tubes have multiple directions, such as three orthogonal directions. As a result the provided artificial dielectric material can be applied for manufacturing of many kinds of focusing lenses and antennas.
By providing the above artificial dielectric material the invention goes at least some way to overcoming deficiencies of the known lightweight artificial dielectric material described by the NZ patent application 752904 and provides a light artificial dielectric material providing less dependence n from direction and polarization of electromagnetic wave spreading through the material. At the same time manufacturing of such material may be simpler than manufacturing of known analogues made by mixing of small particles containing conductive elements isolated by from each other.
Instead, the present invention provides a method for manufacturing an artificial dielectric material comprising placing thin conductive tubes in a plurality of sheets of a dielectric material, and stacking said sheets together, wherein the sheets of the dielectric material containing the short conductive tubes are separated by sheets of the dielectric material without the short conductive tubes, and wherein axes of the tubes are orientated along at least two different directions. Preferably, the short conductive tubes are placed into pre-existing holes in the sheets of the dielectric material.
The invention also provides a cylindrical focusing lens comprising the artificial dielectric material described above.
The cylindrical focusing lens may comprise a wide range of structures dependent on the nature of the artificial dielectric material used and its structure. For example, the tubes of each layer may form a square or hexagonal lattice. (
The cylindrical focusing lens may include a dielectric rode placed along longitudinal axis of the cylindrical focusing lens. (
The cylindrical focusing lens is provided for use with multi beam antennas and is simpler for manufacturing compared with known analogues.
In further describing the invention, reference is made to the accompanying drawings by way of example only in which:
Throughout
As described and shown in the figures the lightweight artificial dielectric material includes a plurality of short conductive tubes having thin walls and placed inside of a lightweight dielectric material. A cross section of the tube could be a circle or a polygon for example square, hexagon or octagon. The short conductive tubes are placed in layers. One layer comprises a sheet of the lightweight dielectric material which may contain a plurality of holes for inserting the tubes. The lightweight dielectric material can be a foam polymer. The tubes are placed in holes made in a sheet of a lightweight dielectric material and contain air inside of tubes. The layers containing tubes are separated by layers of a lightweight dielectric material without tubes. The separating layers also could contain holes having smaller diameter than diameter of holes for tubes to provide air ventilation through the lightweight dielectric material. The tubes placed in neighboring layers could be placed above each other on the same axes or layers could be shifted from each other and tubes could have different axes.
The tubes are disposed with different orientation of tubes' axes. Axes of some tubes are directed perpendicular to the layers and axes of other tubes are directed in parallel to the layers. The tubes having axes directed in parallel to the layers could be disposed in perpendicular to each other. Thus, because the axes of the tubes have three orthogonal directions as a result dielectric properties of the provided lightweight artificial dielectric material are less dependent from direction and polarization of electromagnetic wave crossing the material. The tubes placed in one layer could have the same orientation of axes or different orientation. Placed above each other layers containing tubes could have the same structure or different structures.
With reference to
The drawings also provide several exemplary embodiments of a cylindrical lens made of the provided artificial dielectric material and the manner in which the layers may be arranged. With reference to
For other applications the tubes displaced in a layer could form other structures and lenses could comprise other quantities of different layers. For example, a cylindrical lens assembled of two kinds of different layers is shown in
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in in
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in in
Another embodiment of the present invention is shown in in
In one example, the diameter of the conductive tubes is about twenty times less than the wave length of the operating frequency to provide acceptable dependence of properties of the artificial dielectric material versus frequency. A length of the conductive tubes may be 0.2-5.0 of their respective diameter, dependent on desirable properties of the artificial dielectric material.
Density of the provided artificial dielectric material mainly depends on tubes' weight and density of the lightweight dielectric material. For example, polyethylene foam has density in the range 40-100 kg/m3. Aluminum tubes having diameter 6 mm and walls' thickness 0.1 mm have density 180 kg/m3. A provided artificial dielectric material containing such tubes and polyethylene foam has density approximately 140 kg/m3 and permittivity is approximately 2.5 when distances between the tubes and the layers are approximately 1 mm. Permeability of this material is approximately 0.75 and delay coefficient n is approximately 1.37.
A cylindrical lens was assembled of three kinds of foam polyethylene sheets containing hexagonal lattice of the tubes. The axes of the tubes disposed in the first sheet are directed in parallel to the longitudinal axis of the lens as shown in
A group of focusing lenses which could be created of the provided artificial dielectric material is not limited by the described above embodiments. Layers of focusing lenses could be formed by other structures also. For example by the structures shown in
In the claims which follow and in the preceding description of the invention, except where the context requires otherwise due to express language or necessary implication, the word “comprise” or variations such as “comprises” or “comprising” is used in an inclusive sense, i.e. to specify the presence of the stated feature but not to preclude the presence or addition of further features in various embodiments of the invention.
It is to be understood that, if any prior art publication is referred to herein, such reference does not constitute an admission that the publication forms a part of the common general knowledge in the art in any country.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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752944 | Apr 2019 | NZ | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/NZ2020/050037 | 4/24/2020 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2020/218927 | 10/29/2020 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2577619 | Kock | Dec 1951 | A |
2978702 | Pakan | Apr 1961 | A |
3165750 | Tell | Jan 1965 | A |
3254345 | Hannan | May 1966 | A |
3430248 | Lightbowne | Feb 1969 | A |
3886558 | Cary | May 1975 | A |
3886561 | Beyer | May 1975 | A |
6774867 | Diaz | Aug 2004 | B2 |
8803738 | Nguyen | Aug 2014 | B2 |
20100283695 | Geterud | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20100295744 | Lofbom et al. | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20110003131 | Matitsine | Jan 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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752904 | Nov 2019 | NZ |
Entry |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion issued in PCT/NZ2020/050037 dated Aug. 3, 2020. |