The present invention relates to a computer assisted method for manufacturing a foldable paraboloid antenna, of the kind that can be deployed in space to perform antenna or reflector functions.
There are several examples of foldable structures such as an antenna used in space applications.
The Japanese engineer Koryo Miura designed a folding solar panel applied to a satellite in 1995.
Other projects have used patterns as shapes for structures that deploy after the launch and delivering in orbit is completed. One example is the “Eyeglass Telescope Project” by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in collaboration with Robert J. Lang, which follows an Origami pattern.
Another project that uses a technique of folding is the James Webb Space Telescope.
All these proposals refer to systems that are able to fold in a solid state to be used in space, and when unfolded they generate a flat surface.
On the other hand, there are systems composed by an element that behaves as an antenna and a tensegritic structure that holds the antenna and provides its shape. In order to be able to be folded and unfolded, a solution proposed has been to use a metallic fabric attached to the control points of the tensegrity structure. However, in this proposal the size of the holes generated by the fabric crosses (warp and weft) decrease the range of frequencies able to be reflected. High band frequencies (higher than 60 GHz) are smaller than those holes, so they go through the antenna and are not reflected.
Thus, it is an object of the invention to provide a computer assisted method for manufacturing an antenna with a surface without holes able to unfold into a paraboloid surface.
The invention provides a computer assisted method for manufacturing a foldable paraboloid antenna that comprises the following steps:
The invention allows that in an unfolded position a non-planar antenna with a general paraboloid shape is obtained, the segments of the flexible mesh acting as hinges between two adjacent triangles.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of an illustrative embodiment and not limiting its purpose in connection with the accompanying figures.
In this description the simplest subdivisions that can be made in an Origami folding pattern will be called a “unitary cell”
In order to be able to obtain a foldable paraboloid antenna, a computer assisted method is performed, which can use a software such as CATIA.
A two-dimensional radial Origami pattern with triangular cells (such as the one shown in
The next step consists in transforming the triangles with curved sides into triangles with straight sides. For this purpose, the vertices of the projected triangles with curved sides are selected, and then they are joined to form a pattern with triangular cells with straight sides, as shown in
Once defined the pattern, it is necessary to design the hinges that can make the triangles fold. In order to do that, the centroids of the triangles are calculated to make a progressive scaling of each triangle with a homothetic operation from the focus (see
Once each triangle has been reduced locally taking as a reference the centroid (which avoids the displacement of the corresponding triangle), we can obtain a surface with a parametrized spacing between triangles. A mesh with a plurality of segments and a plurality of triangular cells delimited by the segments of the mesh is obtained by computer, as shown in
It is important to take into account that the above process can be made by circular sectors, i.e., the two-dimensional radial Origami pattern with triangular cells can be divided in several circular sectors (for instance, 12 circular sectors), and the steps of the method are repeated for each sector separately (for instance,
Afterwards the antenna is assembled (see
In order to avoid the contact between two adjacent triangles when the antenna is folded, the width of each segment of the mesh is at least the sum of the thicknesses of the two adjacent rigid triangles.
A tool for support of the paraboloid antenna while being assembled can be used. This tool can be divided in circular sectors, as shown in
The mesh of the paraboloid antenna (shown in
The triangles have to be made in a reflective rigid material (for example, CFRP). In an embodiment, the CFRP used has a thickness of 1 mm, so in that case the distance between adjacent triangles is at least 2 mm, to avoid the contact or overlapping between the adjacent triangles when the antenna is folded.
Once the foldable paraboloid antenna has been manufactured, it is placed on the tensegrity structure and is joined to it through pins. Accordingly, the foldable paraboloid antenna is held by a tensegrity structure being able to fold radially. When unfolded, a triangularization of a non-flat structure (a paraboloid) is obtained.
Although the present invention has been fully described in connection with preferred embodiments, it is apparent that modifications can be made within the scope, not considering this as limited by these embodiments, but by the content of the following claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/ES2019/070810 | 11/27/2019 | WO |