None.
The present invention is directed to antennas and more particularly to an antenna having bent plates that enable operation of the antenna over a wide frequency bandwidth.
An antenna may be used for transmission of a signal, in which radio-frequency electrical energy from a transmitter is converted to electromagnetic energy and radiates into the surrounding environment for reception of a signal. Electromagnetic energy impinging on the antenna converts into radio-frequency electrical energy and is fed to a receiver. The frequency bandwidth depends on the size and design for a particular frequency while reception and transmission signal strength depends on the orientation of the antenna with respect to a signal path.
Antennas that operate efficiently over a wide frequency bandwidth and have a beam pattern to permit reception and transmission of signals over a substantial portion of the space above are highly desirable.
The bent plate antenna of the present invention includes a surface mounting base having a horizontal or flat portion and a vertical portion. The vertical portion is perpendicular to the flat portion to define a vertical plane. A planar face of a base piece attaches to the vertical plane with the base plate integral to a first arm and a second arm collinear to the base plate.
The first arm includes a first section extending from the base piece in the vertical plane. The first section has a proximal end connected to the base piece and a distal end. The first arm also includes a second section having a proximal end connected to the distal end of the first section. The second section extends orthogonal from the distal end of the first section in the vertical plane. The first arm also includes a third section extending linearly from a distal end of the second section. The third section is bent at an angle out of the vertical plane.
The second arm includes a first section extending from the base piece in the vertical plane. The first section has a proximal end connected to the base piece and a distal end. The second arm also includes a second section having a proximal end connected to the distal end of the first section and extends angularly from the distal end of the first section in the vertical plane. The second arm further includes a third section extending linearly from the distal end of the second piece. The third section is bent at an angle out of the vertical plane.
A connector port is fastened to the mounting base. A stem connects the base piece to the connector port.
The antenna of the present invention operates over a nominal bandwidth of plus or minus twenty-three percent from a center design-frequency and is not impacted by de-tuning issues. The antenna is shaped and sized to radiate or receive signals over a large hemispherical portion of space. The antenna maintains the hemispherical beam pattern characteristic over a wide band of frequencies with an electrical match to a 50-ohm receiver or transmitter.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reference to the following description of the preferred embodiments and to the drawings, wherein corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings and wherein:
Referring to the drawings,
The mounting base 104 also has a vertical portion 110. The vertical portion 110 defines a vertical plane perpendicular to the ground plane 200. The vertical portion 110 is divided into a first section 112 and a second section 114. Each of the sections 112, 114 is in the same vertical plane. A gap is located between the sections 112, 114. The vertical portion 110 fastens to the metal sheet 102.
An insulating support 118 is provided between the metal sheet 102 and the vertical portion 110. The insulating support 118 may be made of a polymer (e.g., Delrin). A connector port 120 is fastened to the mounting base 104 between the first section 112 and the second section 114. Typically, the connector port 120 is a coaxial connector with an insulated center pin connected to a signal receiver, as would be known by one of ordinary skill in the art. A stem 122 connects the metal sheet 102 to the connector port 120. The stem 122 may be made of metal or other conductive material.
The first arm 126 further includes a second section 136 having a proximal end 138 connected to the distal end 134 of the first section 130 and a distal end 140. The second section 136 extends orthogonal from the distal end 134 of the first section 130 in the same vertical plane as the first section 130 and the base piece 124. The first arm 126 further includes a third section 142 extending linearly from the distal end 140 of the second section 136. The third section 142 is bent at an angle out of the vertical plane.
The second arm 128 includes a first section 144 extending perpendicular from the base piece 124 in the vertical plane. The first section 144 has a proximal end 146 connected to the base piece 124 and a distal end 148. The second arm 128 also includes a second section 150 having a proximal end 152 connected to the distal end 148 of the first section 144 and a distal end 154. The second section 150 extends at an angle from the distal end 148 of the first section 144 in the same vertical plane as the first section 144 and the base piece 124. The second arm 128 further includes a third section 156 extending linearly from the distal end 154 of the second section 150. The third section 156 is bent at an angle out of the vertical plane. As shown in
Referring to
where υ0 is the speed of light (≈3×108 meters/sec).
Once the wavelength λ0 is calculated, dimensions for the various sections of the antenna 100 are determined such that the realized power gain of the antenna 100 is at maximum. Table 1 lists empirically derived nominal antenna dimensions for maximum gain at the center design frequency.
The antenna dimensions listed in Table 1 yield peak power gain at the center of the selected design frequency. The gain falls away from a peak value at rates dependent on the electrical conductivity and size of the ground plane 200. For a finite-size metal ground plane, the normalized gain reaches one-half (or 3-dB down) of a maximum value at a frequency deviation of about 23.5% from the center design frequency, while for a seawater ground plane; the deviation is somewhat asymmetrical, being approximately 24% below and approximately 29% above the center design frequency.
The radiation beam patterns of the antenna are generated by the vector surface current distribution on the first arm 126 and the second arm 128 as well as the ground plane 200. The magnitude and phase of the current along the first arm 126 and the second arm 128 are controlled by the electromagnetic coupling from arm-to-arm and from arm-to-ground, as set by the spatial arrangement. For a given ground plane size, the pattern shape is stable with variation in frequency and with satisfactory levels (greater than 0 dBi).
The antenna beam pattern when mounted on a ground plane of finite-extent will change from that of the infinite-extent case because a fraction of the vector surface currents induced on the ground plane (as generated by the antenna) propagate toward the edges with an amplitude that varies inversely with the electrical size of the ground plane. An abrupt discontinuity is presented by these edges to those propagating currents, which in turn generate a secondary radiative source, sometimes referred to as a Huygens source, having an amplitude and phase that depends on the ground plane shape and its electrical size.
The antenna 100 of the present invention is useful in maritime satellite communications. The pattern of the antenna over seawater is similar to the infinitely large metal ground plane case, except near the horizon (90° and 270°) where the pattern tucks inward due to the interaction between the direct ray from the antenna and the reflected ray from the sea. As the elevation angle approaches 90° (and 270°); the vector sum of the direct and reflected rays becomes smaller as each component becomes equal in magnitude but opposite in phase. In the shadow region, the fields are nonexistent.
It will be understood that many additional changes in the details, materials, steps and arrangement of parts, which have been herein described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art within the principle and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.
The invention described herein was made in the performance of official duties by employees of the U.S. Department of the Navy and may be manufactured, used, or licensed by or for the Government of the United States for any governmental purpose without payment of any royalties thereon.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20060071871 | Tang | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20170069974 | Shamblin | Mar 2017 | A1 |
20200411985 | Sun | Dec 2020 | A1 |