Not Applicable
Not Applicable
The present disclosure relates to directional or steerable beam antennas, of the type employed in such applications as radar and communications. More specifically, it relates to leaky-waveguide antennas, of the type including a dielectric feed line (i.e., a potentially leaky waveguide) loaded with scatterers (antenna elements), where coupling between the scatterers and the feed line can be altered by switches, whereby the antenna's beam shape and direction are determined by the pattern of the switches that are respectively turned on and off.
Steerable antennas, particularly leaky-wave antennas, are capable of sending electromagnetic signals in, and receiving electromagnetic signals from, desired directions. Such antennas are used, for example, in various types of radar, such as surveillance radar and collision avoidance radar. In such antennas, the receiving or transmitting beam is generated by a set of scatterers coupled to the feed line or waveguide. Interacting with the feed line, the scatterers create leaky waves propagating outside of the feed line. If the scatterers are properly phased, they create a coherent beam propagating in a specific direction. The leakage strength and phase caused by each scatterer depend on the geometry and location of the scatterer relative to the feed line or waveguide. The coupling strength can be controlled by changing the geometry of the scattering elements. Correspondingly, the shape and direction of the scattered beam can be controlled by varying the scatterer geometry or topology. The geometry (topology) of the scatterers can be electronically altered by using microwave (or other suitable) switches connecting parts of the scatterers. Thus, the shape and direction of the antenna beam can be controlled electronically by changing the state of the switches. Different ON/OFF switch patterns result in different beam shapes and/or directions.
Any of several types of switches integrated into the structure of the antenna elements or scatterers may be used for this purpose, such as semiconductor switches (e.g., PIN diodes, bipolar and MOSFET transistors, varactors, photo-diodes and photo-transistors, semiconductor-plasma switches, phase-change switches), MEMS switches, piezoelectric switches, ferro-electric switches, gas-plasma switches, electromagnetic relays, thermal switches, etc. For example, semiconductor plasma switches have been used in antennas described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,151,499, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. A specific example of an antenna in which the geometry of the scattering elements is controllably varied by semiconductor plasma switches is disclosed and claimed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,777,286, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety. Another example of a currently-available electronically-controlled steerable beam antenna using switchable antenna elements (scatterers) is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 7,995,000, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein its entirety.
sinα=β/k−λ/Pd (1)
The above-described antenna 10 may be viewed as a single array 12 of switchable scatterers 14 and a feed line 16 that feeds an electromagnetic signal to, or receives an electromagnetic signal from, the array 12. Each of the scatterers 14 is switchable between a low state L and a high state H. A specific pattern of H-state and L-state scatterers 14 represents a hologram that forms a coherent “leakage” (coupling between the free space and the feed line 16). By changing the pattern of H-states and L-states by means (for example) of a control signal source (not shown), the beam can be steered or manipulated in different ways, such as beam-steering, tracking, control of side lobes, multi-beam creation, control of beam width, etc.
In theory, in an ideal antenna, the L-state scatterers would not scatter electromagnetic power at all. In practice, however, real L-state scatterers still scatter a small amount of power. This so-called “parasitic” scattering degrades the desired steerable antenna beam, and may result in compromised radar resolution, detection of non-existing targets, etc. A beam pattern affected by parasitic scattering is illustrated graphically in
It would therefore be desirable to provide a mechanism for reducing the parasitic scattering in an electronically-controlled steerable beam antenna without measurably reducing the amplitude of the steerable beam.
In one aspect, this disclosure relates to an electronically-controlled steerable beam antenna with suppressed parasitic scattering, comprising a feed line defining an axis x; and first and second arrays of electronically-controlled switchable scatters distributed along the axis x, each of the scatterers in the first and second arrays being switchable between a high state and a low state to scatter an electromagnetic wave propagating through the transmission line so as to form a steerable antenna beam; wherein each of the scatters of the second array is configured to be 180°-phase-shifted relative to a corresponding scatter of the first array; and wherein the switchable scatterers of the first and second arrays are configured into high states and low states relative to each other so as to suppress parasitic scattering of the electromagnetic wave without suppressing the steerable antenna beam.
In another aspect, this disclosure relates to a method of scattering an electromagnetic wave into a steerable antenna beam, in an electronically controllable steerable beam antenna including a feed line defining an axis x and a first array of electronically controlled scatterers arranged along a first side of the axis x, each of the scatterers in the first array being switchable between a high state and a low state, the method comprising providing a second array of electronically-controlled switchable scatters arranged along the opposite side of the axis x from the first array, the scatterers in the second array being switchable between a high state and a low state; phase-shifting the scatters of the second array 180° relative to the scatterers in the first array; and switchably configuring the scatterers in the first and second arrays into high states and low states relative to each other so as to suppress parasitic scattering of the electromagnetic wave without suppressing the steerable antenna beam.
More specifically, the disclosure relates to an electronically-controlled steerable beam antenna with suppressed parasitic scattering, comprising a feed or transmission line defining an axis x (which may be linear or curved), and first and second linear arrays of electronically-controlled switchable scatterers parallel to, and on opposite sides of, the axis x, wherein the scatterers of the first array are configured to scatter an electromagnetic wave propagating through the transmission line in given phases φ(x), wherein the scatterers of the second array are configured to scatter the propagating wave in phases opposite to the given phases (i.e., λ(x)+π radians, or 180° out of phase with respect to the given phases), and wherein the H-state scatterers in the first array follow the periodic or quasi-periodic pattern H1(x) with a period Pd (where d is the spacing between the scatterers along the axis x, and P is the number of scatterers per period, as in Equation (1) above), and the H-state scatterers in the second array follow the pattern H2(x)=H1(x±Pd/2), i.e., a pattern that is shifted by one-half period (180°) along the x axis relative to the H-state scatterers in the first array. The parasitic scattering created by the L-state scatterers in the second array destructively interferes with, and thus suppresses, the parasitic scattering created by the L-state scatterers in the first array. The half-period shift of the H-state scatterers in the second array gives the H-state scatterers in the second array an additional 180° phase shift, so that the H-state scatterers in the second array scatter the propagated wave in phase with H-state scatterers in the first array, thereby avoiding the suppression of the steerable beam, and creating a constructive interference in the direction given by the desired angle a of the steerable beam.
In operation, some of the scatterers 52 in the first array 54 will be switched to the H-state, as will the complementary scatterers 56 in the second array 58. To avoid destructive interference among the H-state scatterers, the H-state pattern H2(x) of the second array 58 of scatterers is shifted relative to the H-state pattern H1(x) of the first array 54 of scatterers by a distance equal to Pd/2 along the x axis. In the illustrated example, P=4; therefore, the shift of Pd/2 equals the distance of two scatterer separation distances. Thus, the H-state pattern in the second array may be expressed as H2(x)=H1(x±Pd/2). This H-state pattern shift produces an additional phase shift of π radians (180°) for the H-state scatters only in the direction of the steerable beam, and thus avoids destructive interference between the H-state scatterers in the first array 54 and the H-state scatterers in the second array 58 (and, in fact, may produce constructive interference between the H-state scatterers 52, 56 in each complementary pair). The result is that the antenna 50 produces the steerable beam in the desired direction and/or shape, but with strongly suppressed parasitic scattering.
The arrangement of the components of the antenna part comprising the second array 58 of scatterers 72 is a mirror image of the arrangement of the components of the antenna part comprising the first array 54 of scatterers 62. Specifically, the conductive scatterer elements 62 in the first array 54 and the conductive scatterer elements 72 in the second array 58 are disposed back-to-back (mirror symmetry with respect to each other relative to the axis x); that is, the closed portion of each of the scatterer elements 62 in the first array 54 faces the closed portion of a corresponding scatterer element 72 in the second array 58 across the feed or transmission line 60, with the open ends of the scatterer elements 62, 72, in the first and second arrays 54, 58, respectively, facing away from the feed or transmission line 60. This arrangement creates the 180° phase shift between the scatterers 62 in the first array 54 and the scatterers 72 in the second array 58, which, as discussed above, results in the suppression of parasitic scattering. For transmission/reception of an electromagnetic wave having a wavelength λ, the total length of each conductive scatterer element 62, 72 is advantageously about λ/2, as corrected for the substrate material and the particular scatterer geometry.
The direction and the shape of the steerable antenna beam is controlled by switching the appropriate scatterers 62, 72 between the L-state and the H-state by means of the control signal circuit or bias circuit 80, as noted above. In
The antenna 50 is reciprocal: it can operate in both transmitting mode and receiving mode. In the former case the feed line 60 is coupled to a transmitter (not shown); in the latter case the feed line is coupled to a receiver (not shown), as is well-known in the art.
The performance of the antenna 50 shown in