This application is a 35 U.S.C § 371 national stage application for International Application No. PCT/SE2019/050182, entitled “DUAL-BAND MULTIMODE ANTENNA FEED”, filed on Mar. 4, 2019, the disclosures and contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
The application relates to a dual-band multimode antenna feed for a high-frequency band and a low-frequency band. The feed comprises four high-frequency waveguide ports, each high-frequency waveguide port being connected to a respective high-frequency input/output waveguide. Each high-frequency input/output waveguide has a high-frequency waveguide aperture facing a first section for mixing electromagnetic modes in the E-plane. The first section is connected to a second section for mixing electromagnetic modes in the H-plane. The application also relates to providing an antenna feed.
So called monopulse-techniques are used in many types of antennas where accurate position estimation of objects is required. Position estimation is obtained by generation of so called sum- and difference radiation patterns simultaneously in different antenna channels. Thus the term mono-pulse; in theory, the position of an object can be determined by one radar-pulse only, see e.g. A. I. Leonov, K. I. Fomichev, “Monopulse Radar” Artech House, 1986. In particular monopulse-techniques are used in reflector antenna systems for tracking radars where one sum-channel and two difference channels, one in azimuth, and one in elevation, are used. Sum- and difference channels are usually obtained by forming different linear combinations of four input/output waveguides. Techniques for position estimation based on sum- and difference radiation patterns can be used also for passive systems.
A particular advantageous way of obtaining reflector antenna feeds with good radiation properties (low side lobes etc.) in both, sum- and difference channels is to use multimode waveguide techniques in the feed. Such techniques were originally described in S. Drabowitch, “Théorie et Applications des Antennes Multimodes”, Revue Technique CFTH, no 37, November 1962 and further in S. W. Drabowitch, “Multimode Antennas”, Microwave Journal, January 1966.
One design for three channels involves mixing modes in two consecutive waveguide sections, one where modes are mixed with respect to the E-plane, and one where modes are mixed with respect to the H-plane. Waveguide modes relevant for mixing with respect to E-plane are TE10, TE11, TM11, TE21 and TM21. Waveguide modes relevant for mixing with respect to the H-plane are TE10, TE20 and TE30.
Design of the three channel feed is elaborated upon in conference publication U. Lidvall, M. Persson, G. Larsson, “Broadband Multimode Feed for Monopulse Tracking Antenna”, Proc. 18th European Microwave Conference, 1988, 500-505. Such a feed designed for three channels is however a complex device and it is not easy to e.g. implement dual frequency band operation in such a feed.
In a reflector system antenna, where two different frequency bands use the same aperture, a tracking radar function can be provided by an internal feed. The internal feed is a three channel monopulse multimode feed as described above. The internal feed illuminates a hyperbolic polarisation selective subreflector which has one of its focal points collocated with the internal feed. The frequency selective main reflector is polarisation twisting at the frequency band of the internal feed. The other focal point of the subreflector coincides with the parabolic main reflector's focal point where a feed for another frequency band is located; for the frequency band and polarization of this feed the subreflector is “not seen”; the wave reaching the main reflector is not polarisation twisted.
There are several drawbacks of this solution:
There is thus a need for improvement in the field of antenna feeds.
An object of this disclosure is to provide a dual-band multimode antenna feed that addresses the problems described above. This object is achieved by the technical features contained in the characterizing portion of independent claims 1 and 12. The dependent claims contain advantageous embodiments, further developments and variants of the antenna feed.
The disclosure relates to a dual-band multimode antenna feed for a high-frequency band and a low-frequency band. The low frequency band can e.g. be a subset of the X-band, between 8 and 12 GHz. The high frequency band ca e.g. be a subset of the Ku-band, between 12 and 18 GHz. The feed comprises four high-frequency waveguide ports, each high-frequency waveguide port being connected to a respective high-frequency input/output wave-guide. Each high-frequency input/output waveguide has a high-frequency waveguide aperture facing a first section for mixing electromagnetic modes in the E-plane. The first section is connected to a second section for mixing electromagnetic modes in the H-plane. The feed further comprises a low-frequency waveguide port connected to a low-frequency input/output waveguide, wherein a low-frequency waveguide aperture faces the first section. A filter is arranged inside the first section, where the filter is arranged to be transparent for plane wave modes exhibited at lower frequencies and reflecting for plane wave modes exhibited at higher frequencies. Waveguide modes can be seen as a superposition of plane wave modes or Floquet waves and are known in the art of electromagnetic wave propagation in periodic structures.
One advantage with an antenna feed according to the disclosure is that it enables a compact reflector antenna system involving two frequency bands. No external feed arrangements with support struts, de-icing equipment and similar are needed. The antenna feed combining two frequency bands further provides better side lobe performance due to no external feed arrangements and support struts. No long waveguides are required with the antenna feed.
The filter may be a plane-wave band-pass/band-stop filter. The filter can be adapted to be transparent for different frequency bands.
The filter may consist of periodically repeating cells and comprises at least one cell comprising electrically connected conducting patterns arranged on opposite sides of a dielectric sheet.
Each conducting patterns may be a cross with crossbars at its four ends surrounded by a rectangular frame. In the conducting pattern, a central part of the conducting pattern may be a cross with crossbars at its four ends, similar to a cross potent. One advantage with this feature is that it provides an advantageous separation between the passband and the stopband. The rectangular frame achieves the passband together with the central part. The central part achieves the stopband. The central part and the rectangular frame are not in electrical connection with each other, but the patterns on the opposite sides of the dielectric sheet are electrically connected by at least one via or vertical interconnect access.
The low-frequency wave-guide port and waveguide may be arranged centrally in the feed. Thereby, an up/down and left/right symmetry of the antenna feed is achieved.
An aperture size of each high-frequency waveguide aperture of each high-frequency input/output waveguide facing the first section may be reduced by an inductive diaphragm at a boundary of the first section. It is advantageous to reduce the size of the four high-frequency waveguide apertures corresponding to the upper frequency band relative to the sizes of the prior art antenna feed in order to be able to match the waveguide for the lower frequency band. Furthermore the reduced size of the high-frequency apertures improves isolation between the low frequency waveguide and the four high frequency waveguides.
The aperture size of the high-frequency waveguide apertures of the high-frequency input/output waveguides may be reduced such that a cut-off frequency of the fundamental mode corresponding to the aperture size of the high-frequency waveguide apertures of the high-frequency input/output waveguides is higher than the upper frequency limit of the low-frequency band. This is advantageous in order to match the low frequency band.
The aperture size of the low-frequency waveguide aperture of the low-frequency input/output waveguides may be reduced by an inductive diaphragm. This enables good mode mixing in the E-plane cavity and thereby good radiation patterns at the high-frequency band with respect to the E-plane. This is further done to maintain the conditions of the original design as closely as possible. One reason for this is that some of the modes existing in the first section are degenerate: TE21, TM21, TE11 and TM11; the former two are even modes relevant for sum patterns with respect to E-plane; the latter two are odd modes relevant for difference patterns with respect to E-plane. When exciting these modes, their relative phase and amplitude have to be correct and this is governed by boundary conditions at the beginning and end of the first section; the phase between the different modes is independent of the length of the first section because they have the same propagation constants. Thus the phase relation between these pair of modes cannot be tuned by changing the length of the first section.
The cut-off frequency of the fundamental mode corresponding to the aperture size of the high-frequency waveguide apertures of the high-frequency input/output waveguides may be close to or within the high-frequency band. This is done in order to be able to accommodate and match the low frequency band.
The aperture size of the low-frequency waveguide aperture of the low-frequency input/output waveguides may be reduced such that the cut-off frequency for the fundamental mode is above, within or just below the frequency band of operation for the low-frequency band. This enhances the advantages described above. Normally for a waveguide, the nominal frequency band is significantly higher than the cut-off frequency. For the standard waveguide IEC R100, the cut-off frequency is 6.56 GHz and the lower limit for the nominal band is 8.2 GHz.
An interface between the first section and the second section may comprise inductive diaphragms. In the present antenna feed the second section or H-plane section comprising at least four different waveguide cavities begins directly after the first section or E-plane section; there is no overlap. These diaphragms enable good radiation patterns at the high-frequency band with respect to H-plane.
The disclosure also relates to a reflector antenna system comprising a polarization selective subreflector and a polarization twisting main reflector and an antenna feed according to the above. The antenna feed makes it possible to design a reflector antenna with a high-frequency band and a low-frequency band without needing external equipment on the radar. One advantage with a reflector antenna comprising an antenna feed according to the above is that the internal focal point can be used for both the high-frequency and the low-frequency bands, thereby reducing the need for two separate antenna feeds.
The disclosure also relates to a method of providing an antenna feed, where the method comprises:
The method may further comprise:
The method may further comprise:
The method may further comprise:
The method may further comprise:
In the description, references to the E-plane and H-plane are made. The E-plane is the plane along which the electric field has its polarisation. The H-plane is the plane along which the magnetic field has its polarisation.
The antenna feed 1 comprises four high-frequency waveguide ports 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d arranged at the rear end 2 of the antenna feed 1. Each high-frequency waveguide port 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d is connected to a respective high-frequency input/output waveguide 9a, 9b, 9c, 9d. Each high-frequency input/output waveguide 9a, 9b, 9c, 9d comprises a high-frequency waveguide aperture 10a, 10b, 10c, 10d facing a first section 11, or E-plane section, for mixing electromagnetic modes in the E-plane. The first section 11, is connected to a second section 12, or H-plane section, for mixing electromagnetic modes in the H-plane. The second section 12 is arranged at the front end 3 of the antenna feed 1.
The antenna feed 1 also comprises a low-frequency waveguide port 13 connected to a low-frequency input/output waveguide 14. A low-frequency waveguide aperture 15 faces the first section 11. A filter 16 is further arranged inside the first section 11, where the filter 16 is arranged to be transparent for plane wave modes exhibited at lower frequencies and reflecting for plane wave modes exhibited at higher frequencies. Waveguide modes can be seen as a superposition of plane wave modes or Floquet waves. In this way, the same aperture can be used by two frequency bands, one band involving three antenna channels for monopulse measurements and one channel at a lower frequency band used for other purposes.
The four high-frequency waveguide ports 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d are arranged in a 2×2 grid where a first high-frequency waveguide port 8a is arranged at an upper left position, a second high-frequency waveguide port 8b is arranged at an upper right position, a third lower high-frequency waveguide port 8c is arranged at a lower left position and a fourth high-frequency waveguide port is arranged at a lower right position 8d. All positions are seen from the rear end 2 of the antenna feed 1. The positions of the high-frequency waveguide ports 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d are thus the same as in the prior art antenna feed.
Each high-frequency input/output waveguide 9a, 9b, 9c, 9d comprises a sloping high-frequency waveguide part 17a, 17b, 17c, 17d and a horizontal high-frequency waveguide part 18a, 18b, 18c, 18d. The high-frequency input/output waveguides 9a, 9b connected to the first and second high-frequency waveguide ports 8a, 8b comprise first and second upward sloping high-frequency waveguide parts 17a, 17b respectively, each connected to a first and second horizontal high-frequency waveguide part 18a, 18b. Similarly, the high-frequency input/output waveguides 9c, 9d connected to the third and fourth high-frequency waveguide ports 8c, 8d comprise third and fourth downward sloping high-frequency waveguide parts 17c, 17d respectively, each connected to a third and fourth horizontal high-frequency waveguide part 18c, 18d. Horizontal in this case refers to the fact that the high-frequency waveguide parts 18a, 18b, 18c, 18d do not change their height over their extension along the z-axis. The sloping high-frequency waveguide parts 17a, 17b, 17c, 17d creates a space (shown in
The first and second horizontal high-frequency waveguide parts 18a, 18b connect to first and second high-frequency waveguide apertures 10a, 10b facing the first section 11. The third and fourth horizontal high-frequency waveguide parts 18c, 18d connect to third and fourth high-frequency waveguide apertures 10c, 10d facing the first section 11. An aperture size of each of the first, second, third and fourth high-frequency waveguide apertures 10a, 10b, 10c, 10d of each high-frequency input/output waveguide 9a, 9b, 9c, 9d facing the first section 11 are reduced by a respective first, second, third and fourth inductive diaphragm 19a, 19b, 19c, 19d at a boundary between each waveguide 9a, 9b, 9c, 9d and the first section 11.
The low-frequency input/output waveguide 14 comprises a first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a, an angled low-frequency waveguide part 22 and a second horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21b. The low-frequency waveguide port 13 is connected to the first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a which is arranged along the x-axis. The low-frequency waveguide port 13 and first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a is in this example arranged on the left side 7 of the antenna feed 1, at approximately 90° angle relative to the high-frequency waveguide ports 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d. The low-frequency waveguide port 13 and first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a can also be arranged on the left side 7 of the antenna feed 1, at an angle different from 90° relative to the high-frequency waveguide ports 8a, 8b, 8c, 8d depending on the antenna feed design.
The low-frequency waveguide port 13 and first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a is arranged close to the rear end of the left side 7, as seen along the y-axis, i.e. that the first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a connects to the left side 7 having an equal height of the low-frequency waveguide part 21a positioned on each side of the plane bisecting the antenna feed 1 along the x-z plane. The low-frequency waveguide port 13 and first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a can also be arranged on the right side 6 of the antenna feed 1.
The first horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21a is in turn connected to an angled low-frequency waveguide part 22 changing the direction of the waveguide from extending along the x-axis to the z-axis. The angled low-frequency waveguide part 22 is connected to a second horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21b arranged along the z-axis. The second horizontal low-frequency waveguide part 21b connects to the low-frequency waveguide aperture 15 facing the first section 11. The antenna feed 1 has an extension somewhat longer along the z-axis than the prior art antenna feed in order for the angled low-frequency waveguide 22 part to fit. The angled low-frequency waveguide part 22 is placed as far back as possible in the antenna feed, in the space created by the sloping high-frequency parts 17a, 17b, 17c, 17d.
An aperture size of the low-frequency waveguide aperture 15 facing the first section 11 is reduced by a fifth inductive diaphragm 19e at a boundary between the waveguide aperture 15 and the first section 11.
The sloping high-frequency waveguide parts 17a, 17b, 17c, 17d allow the low-frequency input/output waveguide 14 to be arranged between the four high-frequency horizontal waveguide parts 18a, 18b, 18c, 18d, thereby making it possible to maintain the size of the antenna feed 1 with respect to the extension along the x- and y-axes
In the first section 11, or E-plane section, a filter 16 comprising a grid of 4×5 periodic cells 20 is placed. In the prior art antenna feed, the first section 11 comprised an internal metallic wall. This wall is replaced by the filter 16 which is transparent for plane wave modes exhibited at lower frequencies and reflecting for plane wave modes exhibited at higher frequencies. The first section 11 thus comprises two cavities separated by the filter 16. The filter 16 has an extension along the y-axis and the z-axis. Each cell 20 comprises an electrically connected conducting pattern arranged on opposite sides of a dielectric sheet.
The prior art antenna feed comprises an overlapping section between the E-plane section and the H-plane section. This section consists of eight waveguides in parallel. The purpose of this section is to enter and excite the H-plane section in a favourable manner. Since these waveguides inevitably would be cut-off at the lower frequency band the overlap has to be removed.
In the present application, second section waveguides 23, or H-plane waveguides, in the second section 12 are arranged facing the first section 11. The second section 12 comprises at least 4 parallel H-plane waveguides 23 arranged to mix the H-plane modes, similar to the prior art antenna feed. Inductive second section diaphragms 24 are inserted at the beginning of each second section waveguide 23 in the second section 12 and the second section 12 thus begins directly after the first section 11; there is no overlap as in the prior art antenna feed. The function of the diaphragms 24 is to obtain good radiation patterns at the upper frequency band with respect to the H-plane and they replace the overlapping section between the first and second sections in the prior art design.
In the example shown in
In the example, the aperture size of the low-frequency waveguide aperture is reduced to 78% of its original size, from 22.8 mm to 17.8 mm. The cut-off frequency of the fundamental mode corresponding to the aperture size of the low-frequency waveguide aperture is thereby increased from 6.585 GHz to 8.426 GHz. The characteristics for the high-frequency band (the mode generation in the E-plane cavity and thereby the radiation patterns with respect to the E-plane) are improved the more this aperture size is reduced. In order for the cut-off frequency to be increased to within the low-frequency band of operation, the aperture would have to be reduced to approximately 15.0 mm.
The dielectric sheet has a thickness of between 0.1 and 1 mm. The height along the y-axis and the width along the z-axis of one cell is dependent on the wavelength the filter is designed for and is typically between 0.1 and 0.7 times the wavelength. According to one example, the cell has a size of 5.55 mm along the z-axis and 5.44 mm along the y-axis. The cross 30 is 4.1 mm long along the z-axis and 4.05 mm long along the y-axis. The dimensions of the cross are such that it is reflecting across the high-frequency band. The dimensions of the frame and cross together are such that transmission is obtained across the low frequency band.
The surrounding frame can e.g. be omitted giving another type of filter response (pure band-stop). The central part can also have another shape, it can e.g. be a cross without bars or shaped as a rectangular patch changing the filter characteristics shown in
Reference signs mentioned in the claims should not be seen as limiting the extent of the matter protected by the claims, and their sole function is to make claims easier to understand.
As will be realised, the invention is capable of modification in various obvious respects, all without departing from the scope of the appended claims. Accordingly, the drawings and the description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature, and not restrictive.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2019/050182 | 3/4/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/180220 | 9/10/2020 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3308469 | Drabowitch | Mar 1967 | A |
4241353 | Salvat et al. | Dec 1980 | A |
4357612 | Salvat et al. | Nov 1982 | A |
5066959 | Huder | Nov 1991 | A |
6831613 | Gothard | Dec 2004 | B1 |
11444384 | Fraysse | Sep 2022 | B2 |
20050007289 | Zarro et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20160254601 | Runyon et al. | Sep 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2626926 | Dec 1977 | DE |
2137428 | Oct 1984 | GB |
Entry |
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International Search Report and Written Opinion dated Nov. 15, 2019 for International Application No. PCT/SE2019/050182, 12 pages. |
J. Lidvall et al., “Broadband Multimode Feed for Monopulse Tracking Antenna”, Proc. 18th European Microwave Conference, Sep. 12-15, 1988, Stockholm, Sweden, pp. 500-505 (6 pages). |
H. Bayer et al., “A Dual-Band Multimode Monopulse Tracking Antenna for Land-Mobile Satellite Communications in Ka-Band”, 6th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EUCAP), Mar. 26-30, 2012, Prague, Czech Republic, pp. 2357-2361 (5 pages). |
Extended European Search Report dated Sep. 20, 2022 for European Patent Application No. 19918331.0, 5 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220352650 A1 | Nov 2022 | US |