Embedded surface wave antenna methods and apparatuses having a relatively wide bandwidth and favorable pattern characteristics are provided.
In designing antenna structures, it is desirable to provide appropriate gain, bandwidth, beamwidth, sidelobe level, radiation efficiency, aperture efficiency, radar cross-section (RCS), radiation resistance and other electrical characteristics. It is also desirable for these structures to be lightweight, simple in design, inexpensive and unobtrusive, since an antenna is often required to be mounted upon or secured to a supporting structure or vehicle, such as high velocity aircraft, missiles, rockets or even artillery projectiles, which cannot tolerate excessive deviations from aerodynamic shapes. It is also sometimes desirable to hide the antenna structure so that its presence is not readily apparent for aesthetic and/or security purposes. Accordingly, it is desirable that an antenna be physically small in volume and not protrude on the external side of a mounting surface, such as an aircraft skin, while yet still exhibiting all the requisite electrical characteristics.
One type of antenna that has been successfully used for broadband conformal applications is the Doorstop™ antenna. The Doorstop™ antenna belongs to a class of antennas known as traveling wave antennas. Examples of other traveling wave antennas are polyrod, helix, long-wires, Yagi-Uda, log-periodic, slots and holes in waveguides, and horns. Antennas of this type have very nearly uniform current and voltage amplitude along their length. This characteristic is achieved by carefully transitioning from the element feed and properly terminating the antenna structure so that reflections are minimized. An example of a Doorstop™ antenna is found in U.S. Pat. No. 4,931,808, assigned to the assignee of the present invention, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.
A Doorstop™ antenna generally comprises a feed placed over a dielectric wedge, a groundplane supporting or adjacent to the dielectric wedge, and a cover or radome. The Doorstop™ antenna has two principal regions of radiation that affect patterns: the feed region and the lens region. The size and shape of these two regions generally control bandwidth and pattern performance.
In a typical Doorstop™ antenna, the measured voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) improves with increasing frequency. At reduced frequencies the Doorstop™ element is electrically too short and functions more like a bent monopole antenna. The low frequency limit for the Doorstop™ element is set by the electrical depth of the element. More particularly, the maximum wedge depth and wedge dielectric constant determine the lowest frequency of operation. Once the physical depth and dielectric constant of the wedge are established, the lens to feed length ratio of the basic Doorstop™ configuration determines the pattern performance. At low frequencies, the pattern tends to look very uniform and nearly omni-directional, while at high frequencies the pattern becomes quite directional or end-fired. Additionally, at high frequencies the pattern develops a characteristic null at the zenith that moves forward toward the horizon as the frequency increases. For certain applications and greater operating bandwidths, this characteristic pattern performance is undesirable.
Within about a 3 to 1 operating bandwidth, the pattern characteristic can be controlled by adjusting the lens to feed length ratio of the antenna. As the frequency increases above the 3 to 1 ratio, the lens becomes electrically long, producing field components that either support or interfere with the radiation from the feed region. This leads to the creation of nulls in the forward portion of the farfield elevation plane pattern.
Other aspects of the typical Doorstop™ antenna that degrade performance include the use of an unsupported (not grounded) microstrip line near the coax feed, which adversely affects the element impedance match. Also, the coaxial pin typically used to interconnect the feed to a transmission line and the microstrip line are sources of radiation, that can degrade pattern performance by creating pattern nulls at certain angles. In addition, trapped energy in the dielectric wedge results in large impedance variation at low frequencies. As still another disadvantageous feature, because the element feed of a typical Doorstop™ antenna is on the surface of the device, it is exposed to improper handling and high temperatures that cause variation in radio-frequency (RF) performance.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed to solving these and other problems and disadvantages of the prior art. In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, Doorstop™ antenna elements having improved high frequency and/or low frequency performance characteristics are provided. In one aspect, radar absorbing material (RAM) is incorporated to improve low frequency performance. In another aspect, a lens perturbation feature is incorporated into a Doorstop™ antenna element to reduce nulls at angles of interest and at high frequencies. In still another aspect, a buried feed arrangement is provided, improving the low frequency performance characteristics of the antenna element, and improving resistance to adverse effects of high operating temperatures and/or improper handling of the antenna element.
The incorporation of a dielectric comprising a RAM or other lossy material in the feed region of the antenna element can reduce low frequency reflections without overly degrading high frequency performance. The lossy material may be combined with a feed mirror to further improve performance of the element at low frequencies, without unduly affecting high frequency performance.
Lens perturbation features in accordance with embodiments of the present invention generally include features to control or shape the wave or phase front of a signal. Accordingly, a lens perturbation feature may comprise the inclusion of volumes of differential dielectric material within the lens portion of the antenna element. For example, a wedge of dielectric material having a relatively low dielectric constant may be inserted in a forward portion of the lens region, while the remaining portion of the lens region may incorporate a dielectric material having a relatively high dielectric constant. In accordance with further embodiments of the present invention, a lens perturbation feature may include shaping the ground plane in the lens region of the antenna element to control the shape of the phase front.
A buried feed feature in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may include a feed that is covered by relatively low dielectric constant material in a feed region or on a feed side of the feed element. The lens region on a side of the feed element opposite the feed side may incorporate a dielectric material having a relatively high dielectric constant. In addition, an antenna element with a buried feed may provide a coaxial or other connector for interconnecting the feed element to a transmission line that lies under the dielectric material generally filling the volume defined by the ground plane.
Additional features and advantages of the present invention will become more readily apparent from the following description, particularly when taken together with the accompanying drawings.
Embodiments of the present invention are generally directed to providing antenna elements that are particularly suited for conformal applications. More particularly, embodiments of the present invention provide design features that assist in improving the performance of embedded surface wave antenna elements. In general, improving performance refers to providing more favorable bandwidth and radiation performance in areas of interest than would otherwise be available from a comparable embedded surface wave antenna element. Certain of the design features are particularly effective at improving performance at low frequencies, while other design features are particularly effective at improving performance at high frequencies. As used herein, “low frequencies” and “high frequencies” are not limited to any particular frequency ranges. Instead, these terms respectively apply to the low end and the high end of the overall range of operating frequencies of the antenna element. In addition, through the application of features in accordance with embodiments of the present invention, the useful overall operating range of an antenna element can be improved as compared to an element that did not benefit from the use of such features, through improvements to the beam patterns at the low and/or high frequency ends of the overall operating range.
With reference to
In the embodiment illustrated in
In
In
A perspective view of the embodiment of the antenna element 104 shown in
The effect on the phase front 512 can be modified by changing the relative dielectric constants of the dielectric materials 324, 504. Typically, the materials have dielectric constants that differ from one another by about a 2 to 1 ratio. For example, the first dielectric material 324 may have a dielectric constant of about 3.6, and the lens perturbation dielectric material 504 may have a dielectric constant of about 1.8. The effect on the phase front 512 can also be modified by changing the depth of the wedge comprising the lens perturbation dielectric material 504. This depth can be characterized by the dimensions illustrated as l1 and l2 in
An alternative configuration of an antenna element 104 incorporating a lens perturbation feature in the form of a lens perturbation dielectric material 504 disposed in the lens region 320 is illustrated in
Another alternative configuration of an antenna element 104 incorporating a lens perturbation feature in the form of a second dielectric material comprising lens perturbation material 504 in order to improve high frequency performance is illustrated in
The high frequency performance of an antenna element 104 can also be altered by providing a lens perturbation feature or means for altering a phase front of a signal in the form of ground plane 304 having an altered shape within the lens region 320. For example, as illustrated in
Many of the improvements in performance obtained through use of a buried feed 904 are seen in the low frequency range. In order to improve high frequency performance, the buried feed 904 configuration can be combined with lens perturbation features of other embodiments, such as the incorporation of a wedge or volume of lens perturbation dielectric material 504 having a relatively low dielectric constant in the lens region 320 of the antenna element 104. Such an embodiment is illustrated in
The advantages of the buried feed configuration can be enhanced by providing another dielectric material in the form of a radar absorbing material or means for absorbing radio-frequency energy 1104 in a volume between the feed 904 and the radome 326, on a side of the feed 904 opposite the lens region 320 (See
With reference now to
At step 1208, determination is made as to whether a feed mirror 332 and/or a feed loading dielectric material 328 is to be included in the antenna element 104. If such features are to be included, the feed loading material 328 or the feed mirror 332 are placed within the volume defined by the ground plane 304. For example, the feed loading material 328 comprising a dielectric radar absorbing material may be later placed on a portion of the ground plane 304 corresponding to the feed region 316, and the feed mirror 332 may be formed on top of the radar absorbing material 328.
At step 1216, determination is made as to whether lens perturbation features using dielectric materials are to be included in the antenna element 104. If such lens perturbation features are to be included, supporting dielectric material 324 and lens perturbation material or materials 504 are placed within the volume defined by the ground plane 304. Furthermore, these materials may be placed in the lens region 320 of the antenna element 104. If it is determined that lens perturbation features using dielectric materials are not to be included in the antenna element 104, supporting dielectric material 324 is placed within the volume defined by the ground plane 304, and in particular within a volume including at least a portion of the lens region 320 of the antenna element 104.
At step 1228, the feed 308 or 904 is formed on top of the dielectric material 324. For example, a conductive foil or film may be laid on top of the supporting dielectric material 324 and interconnected to the connector 312. A determination may then be made as to whether the feed is a buried feed 904. Where the feed is a buried feed 904, another dielectric material 908 can then be placed on top of the feed 904 (step 1236). After placing feed region dielectric material 908 on top of the feed, a determination may be made as to whether feed region RAM 1104 is to be included (step 1240). If feed region RAM is to be included, the feed region RAM 1104 is placed on the feed region dielectric material 908 (step 1244). After determining, that the feed is not a buried feed, or after placing feed region dielectric material and/or feed region RAM, a radome 326 may be placed over the antenna element 104 components (step 1248). As can be appreciated by one of skill in the art, a radome 326 is not required. Furthermore, radome 326 may be placed over antenna element 104 components after installation of the antenna element 104 in a vehicle 108 or other structure. In addition, after placement of the antenna element 104 in a vehicle 108 or other structure, the connector 312 may be joined to a transmission line.
As can be appreciated by one of skill in the art and after consideration of the present disclosure, the required shape of the dielectric materials 324, 328, 504, 908 and/or 1104 may be fairly complex. Accordingly, the material or materials 324, 328, 504, 908 and/or 1104 may be molded into the final shape (or near the final shape), in order to avoid or reduce machining or milling operations.
Although various embodiments of the antenna elements 104 are described herein have been illustrated having wedges or volumes of dielectric materials with sharp angles between surfaces, it should be appreciated that other configurations are possible. For example, curved interfaces between adjacent materials can be used to lower the radar cross-section of the antenna element 104.
As can be appreciated by one of skill in the art from the description provided herein, various of the features provided herein can be used in combination to provide improved antenna performance at low and high frequencies. Furthermore, it can be appreciated that combinations in addition to those illustrated are possible. For example, multiple lens perturbation features in the form of multiple volumes of lens perturbation dielectric materials may be provided. As a further example, a lens perturbation feature comprising one or more lens perturbation dielectric materials 504 can be combined with a lens perturbation feature comprising a curved ground plane 304. As still another example, a buried feed 904 and/or loaded feed 308 or 904 can be combined with any of the lens perturbation features. In addition, although operation of an antenna element incorporating features described herein has at times been described in connection with the transmission of radio frequency or microwave energy, it can be appreciated that embodiments of the present invention also have application in connection with improving the performance of antenna elements operating to receive radio frequency or microwave energy.
The foregoing discussion of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. Further, the description is not intended to limit the invention to the form disclosed herein. Consequently, variations and modifications commensurate with the above teachings, within the skill or knowledge of the relevant art, are within the scope of the present invention. The embodiments described hereinabove are further intended to explain the best mode presently known of practicing the invention and to enable others skilled in the art to utilize the invention in such or in other embodiments and with the various modifications required by their particular application or use of the invention. It is intended that the appended claims be construed to include alternative embodiments to the extent permitted by the prior art.
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