The present disclosure relates generally to antennas.
A conventional antenna module includes one or more printed circuit boards (PCBs) each fabricated with multiple dielectric layers and multiple metallization layers alternated with the multiple dielectric layers. The conventional antenna module generally employs complex mechanical support structures for radiators of the antenna module and a combination of ferrite and dielectric material to achieve wideband frequency performance. The aforementioned combination and diversity of components and materials used in the antenna module significantly complicate the process of fabricating the antenna module, increase the weight of the antenna module, and increase the cost of the antenna module.
In an embodiment, an antenna module is configured as a dual-polarized, coincident phase center, microstrip fed, planar ultrawideband modular antenna (PUMA) module. The antenna module comprises: stacked printed circuit boards (PCBs) (stacked PCBs) centered on an axis and including: a first PCB having a ground plane; a second PCB, spaced above the first PCB, having a first radiator pair and a second radiator pair that face the ground plane and orthogonally crisscross each other at the axis, each radiator pair having respective signal and ground connection pads adjacent to the axis to form a coincident phase center at the axis for each radiator pair; a third PCB, spaced above the second PCB, for impedance matching; and signal connectors extending through the first PCB; and support PCBs extending from the ground plane to the second PCB, the support PCBs having microstrip feeds to connect the respective signal and ground connection pads of the first radiator pair and the second radiator pair to the signal connectors and to the ground plane.
In another embodiment, an antenna array comprises multiple PUMA modules arranged in a matrix having N rows and M columns of the multiple PUMA modules.
Embodiments presented herein are directed to a dual-polarized, coincident phase center, microstrip fed, planar ultrawideband modular antenna (PUMA) element (referred to simply as an “antenna module”) configured to operate across L, S, and C telemetry bands (1-6 GHz), for example. The antenna module includes radiating elements (i.e., “radiators”) that have connection pads fed with microstrip printed circuit board (PCB) lines (e.g., microstrips) at signal and ground connections of the radiators, without any balun. Due to the coincident phase center, the antenna module is polarization-diverse. The antenna module offers a reduction in size, weight, power, and cost (SWaP-C) and reduces design complexity compared to conventional antennas. Due to the compactness and modularity of the antenna module, the antenna module may form part (i.e., become a component) of a subarray tile configuration, in which each tile represents a fully constructed array from replicas of the antenna module. The form factor of each subarray tile permits placement of the tiles immediately adjacent to each other to form a larger array. The subarray tile placement provides continuous radiating element spacing and pattern integrity, which can be easily reconfigured.
PCBs 102, 104, and 106 lie in parallel horizontal planes one on top of the other to form a vertical stack of the (planar) PCBs. PCBs 102, 104, and 106 are centered on a vertical center axis C that extends through the vertical stack. PCBs 102, 104, and 106 may have generally rectangular (or square) shapes in their planar dimension. The vertical stack includes PCB 102 forming a bottom or base of the vertical stack to serve as a ground PCB, PCB 104 spaced vertically above PCB 102 to serve as an antenna radiator PCB, and PCB 106 spaced vertically above PCB 104 to serve as a wide-angle impedance matching (WAIM) PCB. PCBs 102, 104, and 106 may be referred to as “vertically-stacked PCBs” or simply “stacked PCBs.” PCBs 102, 104, and 106 are each respectively configured as a single-layer (i.e., a one-sided) PCB having a dielectric layer with metallization formed on only one side of the dielectric layer (i.e., only one metallization layer), as described in detail below. Metallization layers and microstrip structures employed in antenna module 100 may comprise copper, for example. Other metals may be used in addition to and/or in place of copper.
PCB 102 has a dielectric layer 102a with vertically opposing top and bottom sides. PCB 102 further includes metallization on the top side of dielectric layer 102a facing PCB 104 to serve as a ground plane 102b (i.e., a ground layer) that is coextensive with the dielectric layer. There is no metallization on the bottom side of dielectric layer 102a. RF connectors RF1 and RF2 are mounted to and extend vertically through first PCB 102, so as to be spaced-apart from each other across the PCB.
As shown in
With continued reference to
Radiator pair RP2 includes a radiator R3 and a radiator R4 (i.e., a “radiator pair R3, R4”). Radiator R3 and radiator R4 lie along axis line A2 on opposite sides of axis line A1, such that the radiators directly oppose/face each other across the axis line A1. Radiator R3 includes a connection pad C3 immediately adjacent to center axis C and a patch P3 spaced farther away from the center axis than the connection pad along axis line A2. Radiator R4 includes a connection pad C4 immediately adjacent to center axis C and a patch P4 spaced farther away from the center axis than the connection pad along axis line A2. Connection pads C3 and C4 respectively represent RF signal and ground connection pads or feeds of radiator pair RP2. As shown, connection pads C3 and C4 are circular in shape, but they can be any arbitrary shape (i.e., square, triangular). Patches P3, P4 have respective diameters parallel to axis line A1 that increase moving away from center axis C, to give the patches symmetrical shapes about the axis line A2. In addition, patches P3, P4 are symmetrical with each other across axis line A1.
In summary, radiator pairs RP1 (R1, R2) and RP2 (R3, R4) are centered on center axis C, crisscross/intersect each other orthogonally at the center axis, and have their RF signal and ground connection pads (C2, C1) and (C3, C4) immediately adjacent to/collocated with the center axis. Positioning the RF signal and ground connection pads (C2, C1) of radiator pair RP1 adjacent to center axis C, and positioning the RF signal and ground connection pads (C3, C4) of radiator pair RP2 also adjacent to the center axis (i.e., collocating all of the connection pads about the center axis), advantageously forms a coincident phase center for the radiator pairs (and thus for antenna module 100) at the center axis. For example, in an embodiment in which connection pads C2 and C3 are driven by the same RF signal concurrently, radiator pairs RP1 and RP2 generate orthogonally polarized antenna patterns (e.g., horizontally and vertically antenna patterns) that have the coincident phase center at center axis C.
Returning to
Antenna module 100 further includes PCBs 108 and 110 that respectively lie in orthogonal vertical planes (i.e., the PCBs have planar dimensions that extend vertically) and crisscross each other (orthogonally) along center axis C. That is, PCBs 108, 110 lie on their narrow edges such that their planar dimensions extend vertically from ground plane 102b to antenna elements AE formed on the bottom side of PCB 104. PCBs 108, 110 are each respectively configured as a two-layer PCB that includes a dielectric layer having horizontally opposing front and back sides that each carry/include metallization (i.e., each of the PCBs includes a respective metallization layer on each of opposing sides of a single dielectric layer).
The two-sided metallization of PCB 108 includes a microstrip feed 120 (e.g., an H-Pol feed) formed on front side 108a of PCB 108 to connect a center signal pin of RF connector RF1 to connection pad C2 of radiator R2. Microstrip feed 120 has a serpentine shape as shown in
PCB 110 is configured similarly to PCB 108.
PCB 110 includes a vertical cut-out or slot N2 at a midpoint of top edge 110d. Slot N2 provides a slot structure to interlock PCBs 108 and 110. Slot N2 extends vertically downward from top edge 110d to distance D from bottom edge 110c. That is, slot N2 is complementary to slot N1 of PCB 108. To assemble antenna module 100, PCBs 108 and 110 are positioned orthogonally to each other with PCB 108 above PCB 110 and with slots N1 and N2 aligned vertically. PCB 108 is then slid-down vertically into a rest position mated to PCB 110 such that slots N1 and N2 are interlocked with each other. In this way, slots N1, N2 of PCBs 108, 110 serve as complementary interlocking or intertwined slots for the PCBs.
The two-sided metallization of PCB 110 includes a microstrip feed 130 (also referred to as an “H-Pol feed”) formed on front side 110a of PCB 110 to connect a center signal pin of RF connector RF2 to connection pad C3 of radiator R3. Microstrip feed 130 has a serpentine shape as shown in
In the examples described above, the planar dimensions (e.g., side areas) of PCBs 102, 104, and 106 are generally equal and coextensive, and the planar dimensions of PCBs 108 and 110 are also generally equal. As a result, antenna module 100 forms a generally rectangular parallelopiped. In a more specific example, antenna module 100 forms a cube. In an example of a small cubic configuration of antenna module 100, the cube has approximate dimensions of length=1 inch, width=1 inch, and heigh=1 inch, and a weight of approximately 1 ounce.
In summary, antenna module 100 includes:
The antenna module offers many advantages over conventional solutions. For example, the antenna module is a modularized, easy to fabricate, light-weight, planar ultrawideband antenna module having reduced cost and weight. The antenna module includes PCBs that have only one dielectric layer and at most only two metallization layers. The coincident phase center of the polarization-diverse radiating antenna elements of the antenna module are fed by “egg-crate” arranged microstrip feed PCBs that provide mechanical support to the antenna elements and also reduce weight. The microstrip feed PCBs are soldered to a lightweight copper laminate ground plane.
The regular rectangular or cubic shape of antenna module 100 lends itself to combining multiple replicas of antenna module 100 (i.e., multiple PUMA modules) contiguously side-by-side into a large planar antenna array. That is, antenna module 100 may be used as a building block to construct the large planar antenna array or “tile,” as shown in
As used herein, terms such as first and second, left and right, and upper and lower, are relative and may be used in place of each other. For example, first and left (or right) may be used interchangeably, second and right (or left) may be used interchangeably, first and upper (or lower) may be used interchangeably, and second and lower (or upper) may be used interchangeably. Also, the terms horizontal and vertical are used to denote orthogonal directions and may be replaced with terms such as transverse, perpendicular, and the like. As used herein, unless expressly stated to the contrary, use of the phrase ‘at least one of’, ‘one or more of’, ‘and/or’, variations thereof, or the like are open-ended expressions that are both conjunctive and disjunctive in operation for any and all possible combination of the associated listed items. For example, each of the expressions ‘at least one of X, Y and Z’, ‘at least one of X, Y or Z’, ‘one or more of X, Y and Z’, ‘one or more of X, Y or Z’ and ‘X, Y and/or Z’ can mean any of the following: 1) X, but not Y and not Z; 2) Y, but not X and not Z; 3) Z, but not X and not Y; 4) X and Y, but not Z; 5) X and Z, but not Y; 6) Y and Z, but not X; or 7) X, Y, and Z.
In summary, in some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module including: stacked printed circuit boards (PCBs) (stacked PCBs) centered on an axis and including: a first PCB having a ground plane; a second PCB, spaced above the first PCB, having a first radiator pair and a second radiator pair that face the ground plane and orthogonally crisscross each other at the axis, each radiator pair having respective signal and ground connection pads adjacent to the axis to form a coincident phase center at the axis for each radiator pair; a third PCB, spaced above the second PCB, for impedance matching; and signal connectors extending through the first PCB; and support PCBs extending from the ground plane to the second PCB, the support PCBs having microstrip feeds to connect the respective signal and ground connection pads of the first radiator pair and the second radiator pair to the signal connectors and to the ground plane.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the stacked PCBs include planar PCBs that are stacked vertically along the axis, which is a vertical axis; and the support PCBs include planar support PCBs that extend vertically from the ground plane to the second PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, further including: a foam spacer sandwiched between the second PCB and the third PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the stacked PCBs are all single-layer PCBs having metallization on only one side.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the support PCBs are all two-layer PCBs having metallization on opposing sides of each support PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the stacked PCBs have rectangular shapes that are coextensive.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the signal connectors include first and second signal connectors; and each support PCB includes respective signal and ground microstrip feeds to connect respective ones of the respective signal and ground connection pads of each radiator pair to a respective one of the first and second signal connectors and to the ground plane.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: each support PCB includes a two-layer PCB having the respective signal and ground microstrip feeds on opposing sides of the two-layer PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: a ground microstrip feed of the respective signal and ground microstrip feed includes a ground pad soldered to the ground plane and a ground leg that extends from the ground pad to a ground connection pad of the respective signal and ground connection pads.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the support PCBs crisscross each other along the axis.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the support PCBs have complementary interlocking slots that extend along the axis where the support PCBs crisscross each other.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the first radiator pair includes opposing first radiators respectively having first signal and ground connection pads; the second radiator pair includes opposing second radiators respectively having second signal and ground connection pads; the signal connectors include a first signal connector and a second signal connector; and the support PCBs include: a first support PCB having first signal and ground microstrip feeds to connect the first signal and ground connection pads to the first signal connector and the ground plane; and a second support PCB having second signal and ground microstrip feeds to connect the second signal and ground connection pads to the second signal connector and the ground plane.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna module, wherein: the first support PCB is a first two-layer PCB having the first signal and ground microstrip feeds on opposing sides of the first two-layer PCB; and the second support PCB is a second two-layer PCB having the second signal and ground microstrip feeds on opposing sides of the second two-layer PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array including: multiple antenna modules arrange in a matrix having N rows and M columns of the multiple antenna modules, wherein each antenna module includes: stacked printed circuit boards (PCBs) (stacked PCBs) centered on an axis and including: a first PCB having a ground plane; a second PCB, spaced above the first PCB, having a first radiator pair and a second radiator pair that face the ground plane and orthogonally crisscross each other at the axis, each radiator pair having respective signal and ground connection pads adjacent to the axis to form a coincident phase center at the axis for each radiator pair; a third PCB, spaced above the second PCB, for impedance matching; and signal connectors extending through the first PCB; and support PCBs extending from the ground plane to the second PCB, the support PCBs having microstrip feeds to connect the respective signal and ground connection pads of the first radiator pair and the second radiator pair to the signal connectors and to the ground plane.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array, further including: a foam spacer sandwiched between the second PCB and the third PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array, wherein: the stacked PCBs are all single-layer PCBs having metallization on only one side.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array, wherein: the support PCBs are all two-layer PCBs having metallization on opposing sides of each support PCB.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array, wherein: the stacked PCBs have rectangular shapes that are coextensive.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array, wherein: the signal connectors include first and second signal connectors; and each support PCB includes respective signal and ground microstrip feeds to connect respective ones of the respective signal and ground connection pads of each radiator pair to a respective one of the first and second signal connectors and to the ground plane.
In some aspects, the techniques described herein relate to an antenna array, wherein: each support PCB includes a two-layer PCB having the respective signal and ground microstrip feeds on opposing sides of the two-layer PCB.
The above description is intended by way of example only. Although the techniques are illustrated and described herein as embodied in one or more specific examples, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.