The present invention relates to an omni-directional bicone antenna and more specifically to an antenna having two cone-shaped antenna elements and a beam shaping lens formed within a single blank of dielectric material.
A bicone is generally an antenna having two conical conductors, where the conical elements share a common axis, and a common vertex. The conical conductors extend in opposite directions. That is, the two flat portions of the cones face outward from one another. The flat portion of the cone can also be thought of as the base of the cone or the opening of the cone. The flat portion, or opening, of a cone is at the opposite end of the cone from the vertex or point of the cone. Bicone antennas are also called biconical antennas. Generally, a bicone antenna is fed from the common vertex. That is, the driving signal is applied to the antenna by a feed line connected at the antenna's central vertex area.
Positioning two cones so that the points (or vertices) of the two cones meet and the openings (or bases) of the two cones extend outward (opposite one another) results in a bowtie-like appearance. As such, some bicone antennas are called bowtie antennas.
Bicone antennas are generally omni-directional and thus may have low gain. The elevation pattern of a bicone can be directed or shaped using a lens. Such a lens is generally an additional external element that must be positioned within the field of the antenna in order to influence the radiation patterns of the bicone. These external elements may involve additional handling, manufacturing, cost, and complication. They may also reduce mechanical robustness of an antenna assembly. Furthermore, external lens elements may not be available for all bicone systems and may not fulfill specific elevation shaping requirements.
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for a broadband omni-directional bicone antenna with an integrated beam shaping lens where the bicone structure and lens can be machined or molded from a single piece of material.
The present invention comprises a broadband omni-directional bicone antenna. The inventive antenna typically comprises conical voids provided within a single dielectric body. The surfaces of the conical voids can be metallized to provide conductive cone antenna elements. The outside surface of the dielectric body can support radio frequency (RF) lens structures operable for beam forming. The beam forming achieved by the lens can modify the elevation pattern of the radiation from the bicone antenna. The dielectric body may be machined or molded from a single piece of material to provide both the conical voids as well as the beam shaping lenses. Machining from a single piece of material may reduce material costs, material handling costs, and manufacturing costs.
The outer surface beam shaping lenses can be zoned or continuous and can provide elevation patterns with increased gain, cosecant squared falloff, or various other patterns. The beam forming lens may be formed from any low-loss dielectric. Alternatively, the lens may be formed from a less dense material such as dielectric foam that can support radial conductive beam forming vanes.
The discussion of bicone antennas with integrated beam forming lenses presented in this summary is for illustrative purposes only. Various aspects of the present invention may be more clearly understood and appreciated from a review of the following detailed description of the disclosed embodiments and by reference to the drawings and the claims that follow. Moreover, other aspects, systems, methods, features, advantages, and objects of the present invention will become apparent to one with skill in the art upon examination of the following drawings and detailed description. It is intended that all such aspects, systems, methods, features, advantages, and objects are to be included within this description, are to be within the scope of the present invention, and are to be protected by the accompanying claims.
Many aspects of the invention can be better understood with reference to the above drawings. The elements and features shown in the drawings are not to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon clearly illustrating the principles of exemplary embodiments of the present invention. Moreover, certain dimensions may be exaggerated to help visually convey such principles. In the drawings, reference numerals designate like or corresponding, but not necessarily identical, elements throughout the several views.
The present invention supports a broadband omni-directional bicone antenna comprising conical voids provided within a dielectric structure. The surfaces of the conical voids can be metallized to form conductive cone antenna elements. The outside surface of the dielectric structure can be shaped as radio frequency (RF) lens structures operable for beam forming. The beam forming can modify the elevation pattern of the radiation from the bicone antenna. The dielectric structure may be machined or molded from a single piece of material to provide both the conical voids as well as the beam shaping lenses.
The outer surface beam shaping lenses can be zoned or continuous and can provide elevation patterns with increased gain, cosecant squared falloff, or various other patterns. The beam forming lens may be formed from any low-loss dielectric. Alternatively, the lens may be formed from a less dense material such as dielectric foam that can support radial conductive beam forming vanes.
Exemplary bicone antenna systems with integrated beam forming lenses will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to
The invention can be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those having ordinary skill in the art. Furthermore, all “examples” or “exemplary embodiments” given herein are intended to be non-limiting, and among others supported by representations of the present invention.
Turning now to
An upper conical surface 150A can be provided by forming an inverted conical void within the dielectric 110. A lower conical surface 150B can be provided by forming an upright conical void within the dielectric 110. The upper conical surface 150A and lower conical surface 150B may be relatively positioned as to share a common axis. The upper conical surface 150A and lower conical surface 150B may be relatively positioned as to share a substantially common vertex 130. The angle of the upper cone 150A and the angle of the lower cone 150B may the same, substantially the same, or different. The tip of the upper cone 150A or the tip of the lower cone 150B may be blunted or truncated.
The conical surfaces 150 provided within the dielectric 110 can be metallized to form the two conical radiators of the bicone antenna 100. The conical surfaces 150 may be metallized in many different ways. Some examples to metallize the conical surfaces 150 are pressing, adhering, or otherwise positioning a conductive foil or thin sheet to the conical surfaces 150. Some examples to metallize the conical surfaces 150 are plating, depositing, or evaporating a conductive material onto the conical surfaces 150. Some examples to metallize the conical surfaces 150 are supporting cone shaped conductive plates or solid conductive cones within the conical surfaces 150. Some examples to metallize the conical surfaces 150 are providing a conductive mesh, array of wires, or other non-continuous conductive material to the conical surfaces 150. In all examples of metallizing the conical surfaces 150, the conductive material used can be any conductor, such as copper, silver, gold, aluminum, tin, bronze, brass, steel, or any alloy thereof. The metallization itself may be layered, plated, continuous, or discontinuous. The metallization may be formed of different metals or different alloys for different sections or areas of the same antenna system 100.
A feed line 170 can be provided to carry radio frequency energy into or away from the antenna system 100. The feed line 170 may be coaxial, bare conductor, twin-lead, waveguide, rectangular waveguide, circular waveguide, conical waveguide, or any other transmission line. The feed line 170 can be connected to the bicone structure 150 at the vertex 130. The connection may be formed so that one conductor of the feed line 170 is connected to the upper cone 150A and another conductor of the feed line 170 is connected to the lower cone 150B. Additional detail of the feed point at the vertex 130 of the antenna system 100 is discussed below with respect to
The single dielectric structure 110 of the antenna system 100 can support the bicone structure 150 as well as a beam forming lens 120. The material of the dielectric structure 110 can be any low-loss dielectric. One example material for the dielectric structure is a cross linked polystyrene such as REXOLITE (a trademark of C-Lec Plastics, Inc.). The dielectric structure 110 may be formed of a single piece of material or multiple pieces of material. Sections of the dielectric structure 110 may be formed of dielectric material of differing properties such as different dielectric constants or loss parameters.
A beam forming lens 120 can be provided by shaping the outside surface of the dielectric structure 110. The lens 120 illustrated in
Supporting the conical surfaces 150 of the bicone antenna and the beam shaping lens 120 within a single piece of dielectric material 100 may simplify manufacturing, rigidity, and robustness of the bicone antenna system 100. Such simplification may also provide for a lower cost antenna system 100. The bicone antenna system 100 may be used within a radome, within a polarizer, in multiples to form an array of antennas, or in combination with other types of antennas to form an array of antennas. The bicone antenna system 100 can be used as a transmitter to electromagnetically excite the surrounding medium, or also as a receiver that is itself excited by the surrounding medium.
Throughout the discussion of
Turning now to
The upper conical surface 150A and the lower conical surface 150B may be slightly offset from sharing a common vertex 130; also the vertices of the cones 150 may be slightly blunted to facilitate entry and connection of the feed line 170.
Turning now to
The lenses 120 of
The lens 120 of
While the bicone antenna is generally broadband, zoned lenses, for example those illustrated in
Turning now to
Turning now to
In Step 510, a blank of low loss dielectric material 110 is provided. This material can provide the support for the conical surfaces 150 of the bicone antenna as well as the material for the beam forming lens. The step of providing a material blank may also involve proving a material for injection molding. The step of providing a material blank may also involve the use of a low density dielectric 420 for use with radial conductive vanes.
In Step 520, the conical voids 150 that support the bicone elements are formed within the blank of dielectric material 110. Forming conical voids within a solid dielectric 110 can allow for the conductive cones to be any type of material including very thin material (foil for example) to reduce the cost of the conductive cone elements. This may also allow for the use of more expensive conductor material since less of it may be required. The step of forming the conical voids may include machining, forming in a mill or on a lathe, grinding, molding, injection molding, cutting by water, laser, abrasive, or any other technique for forming the conical voids, or cone shaped slots within the dielectric material 110.
In Step 530, a beam forming lens is shaped onto the outer surface of the blank of dielectric material 110. The lens may be of many different shapes including the examples of Fresnel lenses, Fresnel zone plates, curved lenses, or lenses for forming elevation patterns with cosecant squared falloff. The step of forming the dielectric lens may include machining, forming in a mill or on a lathe, grinding, molding, injection molding, cutting by water, laser, abrasive, or any other technique for forming the lens shape onto the dielectric material 110. Step 530 may also include the step of selecting a beam shaping lens geometry to achieve a desired elevation pattern for the bicone antenna
In Step 540, the conductive bicone material is formed into the conical voids formed in Step 520. That is, the two conical voids 150 may be metallized in Step 540. The conical surfaces 150 may be metallized in many different ways. Some examples to metallize the conical surfaces 150 are pressing, adhering, or otherwise positioning a conductive foil or thin sheet to the conical surfaces 150; plating, depositing, or evaporating a conductive material onto the conical surfaces 150; supporting cone shaped conductive plates or solid conductive cones within the conical surfaces 150; or providing a conductive mesh, array of wires, or other non-continuous conductive material to the conical surfaces 150. In all examples of metallizing the conical surfaces 150, the conductive material used can be any conductor, such as copper, silver, gold, aluminum, bronze, brass, steel, or any alloy thereof. The metallization itself may be layered, plated, continuous, or discontinuous. The metallization may be formed of different metals or different alloys for different sections or areas of the same antenna system 100.
The step of metallizing the conical surfaces 150 may also include the step inserting conductive beam forming vanes into the dielectric material 420.
In Step 550, a feed line 170 is connected to the bicone elements. This step may also involve applying a connector to the antenna to allow external feed lines to be attached. The feed line 170 may be coaxial, bare conductor, waveguide, rectangular waveguide, circular waveguide, conical waveguide, or any other transmission line. The feed line 170 can be connected to the bicone structure 150 at the vertex 130. The process 500, while possibly run continuously, may be considered complete after Step 550. The process 500 may also include steps of finishing, testing, and packaging or assembly into systems or arrays.
From the foregoing, it will be appreciated that an embodiment of the present invention overcomes the limitations of the prior art. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the present invention is not limited to any specifically discussed application and that the embodiments described herein are illustrative and not restrictive. From the description of the exemplary embodiments, equivalents of the elements shown therein will suggest themselves to those skilled in the art, and ways of constructing other embodiments of the present invention will suggest themselves to practitioners of the art. Therefore, the scope of the present invention is to be limited only by the claims that follow.
This patent application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/772,232, entitled “Bicone Pattern Shaping Device,” filed Feb. 10, 2006. The complete disclosure of the above-identified priority application is hereby fully incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070205961 A1 | Sep 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60772232 | Feb 2006 | US |