This invention relates to deployable antennas, and more particularly to deployable high-gain, high efficiency antenna having a lightweight architecture suitable for use on microsatellite platforms.
Compact, extremely lightweight, deployable RF antennas are key to enabling state-of-the-art RF communications and sensing on a microsatellite platform. Deploying a highly compacted, electronically functioning antenna to the required rigidity, size, and pointing accuracy is an extremely challenging problem. Though considerable effort has been invested in the development of deployable structures and antennas, there is currently no fully functional deployable antenna that is compatible with microsatellite platforms. For example, although large reflector antennas achieve suitable gain (dBi) values, they exhibit very low antenna efficiency and require very large physical antenna areas that are heavy and difficult to transport and deploy. Inflatable reflective array antennas and waveguide array antennas require substantially smaller physical antenna areas, but exhibit lower gain values and only slightly higher antenna efficiencies. Inflatable passive array antennas also have small physical antenna areas and achieve higher antenna efficiencies, but have low gain values and difficulty holding tight dimensional tolerances.
What is needed is a deployable high-gain, high efficiency antenna having a lightweight architecture optimized for use on microsatellite platforms that overcomes the problems associated with conventional deployable antenna solutions.
The present invention is directed to an antenna assembly including an array of multifilar (e.g., quadrifilar, hexifilar or octofilar) helix antenna (MHA) structures that are rigidly maintained in an optimal (e.g., hexagonal) phased array configuration by a lightweight linkage, and are controlled by a central antenna feed circuit such that the MHA structures collectively perform phased array antenna operations capable of maintaining a circularly polarized radiation pattern while requiring an approximately four-times (4×) smaller physical area than an equal gain aperture-type antenna (e.g., parabolic dish). Each MHA structure includes multiple (e.g., four, six or eight) helical filar elements disposed in a spaced-apart relationship around a central axis (i.e., disposed within an elongated cylindrical volume), with each helical filar element coupled by way of intervening electronics to the central antenna feed circuit, which in turn is configured to transmit signals to and receive signals from the multiple helical filar elements in accordance with known phased array operating practices. The lightweight linkage includes several support structures connected by bar-like linkage elements, and a fixed end of each MHA structure is fixedly connected to one of the support structures such that all of the MHA structures extend parallel to each other from the linkage. The resulting phased array antenna assembly achieves a highly-directive beam at higher gain values (43.4 dBi or greater) and higher aperture (antenna) efficiencies (i.e., 92% or greater) than conventional deployable antenna approaches by multiplying the gain of each MHA structure by the number of MHA structures in the array. Moreover, by rigidly arranging the MHA structures in an optimal array configuration (pattern), phased array antenna assemblies produced in accordance with the present invention achieve an equivalent effective antenna area (EFA; i.e., target antenna area) consistent with conventional antennas requiring four times the physical area. Further, each MHA structure utilizes multiple helical elements to generate a single forward lobe, which obviates the need for a dedicated ground plane structure required by single helical and other antenna topologies, whereby phased array antenna assemblies produced in accordance with the present invention have a significant weight and space advantage over conventional deployable antenna approaches. Accordingly, by utilizing an array of MHA structures, a lightweight linkage and the central antenna feed circuit discussed above, the present invention facilitates the production of high-gain, high-efficiency phased array antenna assemblies exhibiting highly accurate beam pointing capabilities that are difficult to achieve using conventional antenna approaches, and also have lightweight architectures and scalable footprints that can be optimized for use on a wide range of microsatellite platforms.
According to a presently preferred embodiment, each MHA structure includes helical filar elements that are modified to minimize weight and to enable phased array operations, whereby the MHA structures are further optimized for microsatellite platforms. In a first specific embodiment, each of the helical filar elements utilized by the MHA structures is produced by disposing (e.g., plating or printing) a metal or other conductive material on a lightweight base structure (e.g., a liquid crystal polymer core or a flexible plastic substrate), and then bending the composite structure into the required helical shape. In a second specific embodiment, each of the four helical filar elements includes a thin-walled cylindrical metal (e.g., aluminum) tube surrounding a central vacuum air-filled void that is bent into the required helical configuration. Both the first and second specific embodiments provide helical filar elements having substantially lower weight/mass values than solid wire filars used by conventional single filar and multiple filar antennas. In another embodiment, each MHA structure further includes two lightweight (e.g., plastic or polymer) spacers respectively secure opposite (i.e., fixed and free) ends of the helical filar elements, and a local feed circuit board that is fixedly attached to the spacer connected to the fixed end of each helical filar element. The spacers are configured to secure and maintain the helical filar elements in a spaced-apart relationship such that the helical filar elements are reliably offset by common (i.e., equal or uniform) radial distances (e.g., 90°, 60° or 45°, depending on the number of elements) relative to the central axis, thereby facilitating low-cost assembly. The local feed circuit board is electrically connected to the helical filar elements of each M-QHA structure, and functions to coordinate the transmission of signals from the filar elements to the central antenna feed circuit in a manner described below. In an exemplary practical embodiment, each MHA element is a modified quadrifilar helix antenna (M-QHA) structure including four modified (lightweight) filar elements, but in other embodiments helical hexifilar or octofilar topologies may be utilized to increase gain and improve the compaction ratio.
According to another specific embodiment, the phased array antenna assemblies of the present invention include local antenna feed circuits that function in cooperation with the central antenna feed circuit to implement phased array operations. Each local antenna feed circuit is disposed adjacent to an associated said MHA structure (e.g., mounted on the support structure to which the associated MHA structure is connected) and electrically coupled between the central antenna feed circuit and the associated MHA structure's helical filar elements (e.g., by way of wires extending along the linkage elements and support structures of the linkage). In an exemplary embodiment, each local antenna feed circuit includes first and second hybrid couplers connected to each of four helical filar elements, and a third hybrid coupler coupled between the first and second hybrid couplers and an amplifier, which in turn is coupled to the central antenna feed circuit. With this arrangement, phased coupling of the four helical filar elements is controlled locally (i.e., by each local antenna feed circuit) in order to simplify operations of the central antenna feed circuit. In another exemplary embodiment, each local antenna feed circuit includes both a low-noise amplifier (e.g., a SiGe MMIC) for signal reception, and a power amplifier (e.g., a GaN HEMI) for signal transmission. To facilitate separate send and receive operating modes, a first (e.g., RF) switch is operably connected between the amplifiers and the third hybrid coupler, and a second switch is operably coupled between the amplifiers and the central antenna feed circuit. With this arrangement, the switches are configured to operably couple the low-noise amplifier between the central antenna feed circuit and the third hybrid coupler during each receive mode operating phase, and configured to couple the power amplifier between the central antenna feed circuit and the third hybrid coupler during each transmit mode operating phase, thereby facilitating phased array operations.
According to a presently preferred specific embodiment, the phased array antenna assembly is configured such that the MHA structures are disposed in a hexagonal pattern to provide optimal phased array operations. In an simplified exemplary embodiment, the phased array antenna assembly includes a total of seven MHA structures made up of six peripheral MHA structures disposed in a hexagonal pattern around a centrally disposed (first) MHA structure. With this basic arrangement, all six peripheral MHA structures are evenly spaced from two adjacent neighboring peripheral MHA structures and from the centrally disposed (first) MHA structure, thereby optimizing phased array operations. In practical embodiments, phased array antenna assemblies having larger numbers of MHA structures are formed by including additional peripheral MHA structures extending outward from the six peripheral MHA structures using the same linkage arrangement, whereby the phased array antenna assembly is easily scalable to provide a phased array having, for example, 55 or 115 MHA structures.
According to presently preferred embodiment, the phased array antenna assembly is further enhanced for use on microsatellite platforms by way of implementing the lightweight linkage using an expandable (e.g., flexural-scissor-grid) linkage that adjusts from a retracted state (stowage configuration) to an deployed state (expanded/operational configuration). When the expandable linkage is in its retracted state, the MHA structures are maintained in a closely-spaced parallel relationship (e.g., in a hexagonal close-pack arrangement with minimal spacing between adjacent MHA structures) such that the size (volume) of the phased array antenna assembly is optimally minimized for payload storage. During subsequent deployment, the expandable linkage is actuated (e.g., using force generated by a motor or spring) such that the support structures move away from each other to separation distances determined by the lengths of the intervening linkage elements, whereby the MHA structures are positioned and rigidly subsequently maintained in a spaced-apart parallel relationship (i.e., with a relatively large spacing between adjacent MHA structures) in an arrangement optimized for phased array operations. Once the MHA structures are deployed in this manner, the central antenna feed circuit initiates phased array operations by way of simultaneously controlling all of the MHA structures using signals passed, e.g., on wires mounted on the linkage elements of the expandable linkage. By utilizing an expandable linkage to deploy the array of MHA structures, phased array antenna assemblies produced in accordance with the present invention are further optimized for use by microsatellite platforms by way of exhibiting a compaction ratio (i.e., a ratio of the deployed state volume to the retracted state volume) of 60-to-1, 120-to-1 or higher, thereby minimizing valuable payload space and weight requirements, while also providing suitable rigidity and size/spacing characteristics in the deployed state that are optimized for reliable RF communications.
According to an aspect of the presently preferred embodiment, the expandable linkage is further configured to minimize payload space requirements and maximize phased array operations by way of maintaining the MHA structures in a coplanar relationship in both the retracted and deployed states. That is, the expandable linkage is configured such that the fixed ends of all of the MHA structures collectively define a relatively small (first) plane when the expandable linkage is in the retracted state, and such that the fixed ends of all of the MHA structures define a relatively large (second) plane when the expandable linkage is in the deployed (expanded) state. In an exemplary practical embodiment, this functionality is achieved using a flexure-scissor-grid linkage mechanism made up of vertical (parallel) slide rods that are operably mechanically coupled by intervening scissor units (linkage elements), where each scissor unit includes two bars connected at intermediate points by a pivot hinge. A central MHA structure is attached to a central slide rod by way of a first support structure, and six peripheral MHA structures are attached to six peripheral slide rods by way of associated support structures, with the six peripheral slide rods (and hence the six peripheral MHA structures) disposed in a hexagonal pattern around the central slide rod. To facilitate suitable expansion while limiting the overall length of the slide rods, six intermediate slide rods are disposed between the central slide rod and the six peripheral slide rods. Each scissor unit is connected between two adjacent associated slide rods, with the bars of each scissor unit pivotably attached at first (e.g., upper) ends to one of the associated slide rod, and pivotably and slidably attached (e.g., by way of a slide bearing) at a second (lower) ends to the second associated slide rod. To maintain the six peripheral MHA structures in the hexagonal pattern around the central MHA structure, six primary (innermost) scissor units are connected between the central slide rod and the six intermediate slide rods, and twelve secondary scissor units are connected between the six intermediate slide rods and the six peripheral slide rods, with each bar of each scissor unit is pivotably (non-slidably) attached at one end to a first associated slide rod, and is pivotably and slidably attached at its opposite end to an adjacent associated slide rod. With this arrangement, deployment is achieved by biasing the second (lower) ends of the six primary (innermost) scissor units upward along the central slide rod (e.g., by pulling the central slide rod downward using a spring or motor while preventing downward movement of the second (lower) ends), thereby causing the six primary (innermost) scissor units to pivot from an open position toward a closed position. The resulting radially outward movement of the six intermediate slide rods (i.e., away from the central slide rod) causes the twelve secondary scissor units to substantially simultaneously pivot toward the closed position, causing the six peripheral slide rods to also move radially outward from the central slide rod while maintaining the six peripheral MHA structures in the desired coplanar, hexagonal pattern relative to the central MHA structure. Another advantage provided by this scissor-grid linkage mechanism is that it is easily expandable (i.e., by way of mounting additional slide rods and additional scissor units to facilitate forming deployable phased array antenna assemblies having any number (e.g., 31, 55 or 115) MHA elements while maintaining the desired expandable coplanar relationship between the arrayed MHA elements.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, where:
The present invention relates to an improvement in deployable antennas. The following description is presented to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention as provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. As used herein, directional terms such as “upper”, “upwards”, “lower”, and “downward” are intended to provide relative positions for purposes of description, and are not intended to designate an absolute frame of reference. The terms “coupled” and “connected”, which are utilized herein, are defined as follows. The term “connected” is used to describe a direct connection between two circuit elements or mechanical structures, for example, by way of a metal line formed in accordance with normal integrated circuit fabrication techniques or a weld. In contrast, the term “coupled” is used to describe either a direct connection or an indirect connection between two circuit elements or mechanical structures. For example, two coupled elements may be directly connected by way of a metal line, or indirectly connected by way of an intervening circuit element (e.g., a capacitor, resistor, inductor, or by way of the source/drain terminals of a transistor). Various modifications to the preferred embodiment will be apparent to those with skill in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments. Therefore, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments shown and described, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features herein disclosed.
Linkage 110 includes seven support structures 112-1 to 112-7 that are operably mechanically coupled together by bar-like linkage elements 114 such that support structures 112-1 to 112-7 are rigidly maintained in a predetermined pattern. In a preferred embodiment, a central support structure 112-1 is operably mounted on a rigid base 113, and peripheral support structures 112-2 to 112-7 are disposed in a hexagonal pattern by way of intervening linkage elements 114 around central support structure 112-1. Each support structure 112-1 to 112-7 is mechanically connected to an associated QHA structure 120-1 to 120-7 such that QHA structures 120-1 to 120-7 extend in parallel directions above linkage 110, with a centrally disposed QHA structure 120-1 mounted on central support structure 112-1, and six peripheral QHA structures 120-2 to 120-7 respectively mounted on peripheral support structures 112-2 to 112-7, whereby QHA structures 120-1 to 120-7 are also maintained in a hexagonal arrangement by way of linkage 110.
In the preferred embodiment, as depicted by
Referring to
During subsequent deployment, the expandable linkage 110 is actuated (e.g., using force generated by a motor or spring, as described below with reference to the exemplary flexural-scissor-grid linkage) such that support structures 112-1 to 112-5 move away from each other to separation distances determined by the lengths of intervening linkage elements 114. As depicted in
Referring to QHA structure 120-3 in
Referring to
A comparison between state-of-the-art aperture deployable antenna designs and a QHA-based phased array antenna assembly having 115 QHA structures and produced in accordance with the present invention is provided in Table 1 (below). The performance specs associated with the QHA-based antenna assembly are derived from rigorous EM simulations using commercial EM solvers.
Table 1 demonstrates that QHA-based phased array antenna assemblies produced in accordance with the present invention possess the highest combination of gain and antenna efficiency as compared to other competing deployable antenna technologies. The efficiency is higher, compared to other approaches, not only because of the scheme employed, but also because this design approach eliminates many of the factors that degrade a dish reflector such as feed illumination mismatch, aperture taper, cross polarization, aperture blockage, and non-single feed point. The performance, exhibited by the QHA-based phased array is sufficient to provide the required equivalent isotropically radiated power (EIRP) levels (˜50 dbW) required to fulfill the link requirements, without the need for high power transmitters that are incompatible with microsatellite designs. From the standpoint of physical size, antenna gain and antenna efficiency, antenna assemblies produced in accordance with the present invention clearly exceed the performance of the state-of-the-art deployable antennas.
Although the present invention has been described with respect to certain specific embodiments, it will be clear to those skilled in the art that the inventive features of the present invention are applicable to other embodiments as well, all of which are intended to fall within the scope of the present invention. According to one possible alternative embodiment, multifilar helical antenna (MHA) structures having any number of helical filar elements may be utilized in place of the QHA structures described above. For example, hexifilar helical antenna structures having six helical filar elements radially spaced 60° apart, or octofilar helical antenna structures having eight filar elements radially spaced 45° apart may be utilized in place of the QHAs to increase gain and improve the compaction ratio.
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