The present invention relates in general to a flat aperture waveguide sidewall-emitting twist-reflector antenna.
A flat aperture waveguide sidewall-emitting twist-reflector (FAWSET) antenna is provided. The FAWSET antenna includes an E-plane sectoral flare having a depth merely the H-plane width of the waveguide. Extending from the E-plane sectoral flare includes a twist-reflector tilted from one sidewall of the E-plane flare and a trans-reflector extending from another opposing sidewall of the E-plane flare. An angle between distal end of the twist-reflector and the trans-reflector is a function of the frequency of the incoming wave.
The direction of the incoming wave is also defined based on the frequency thereof. More specifically, the propagation direction of the incoming wave is so selected that when the TE10 mode of the incoming wave is incident on the sidewalls of the E-plane sectoral flare, such TE10 mode will be reflected with an angle of (φ=sin−1(fc/f) relative to the sidewalls. Therefore, when the TE10 mode reflected off from the sidewalls arrives at the twist-reflector, a twist-reflected output wave can be resulted and transmit through the trans-reflector. However, when the TE10 mode impinges the trans-reflector before approaching the twist-reflector, the trans-reflector will reflect the TE10 mode towards the twist-reflector to result in a twist-reflected output wave.
In one embodiment, the flat aperture waveguide sidewall-emitting twist-reflector antenna can be modified with a cylindrical configuration. In the cylindrical version of the FAWSET antenna, three E-plane waveguides are equidistantly distributed along a circle. Each of the E-plane waveguides provides a rectangular cross section for guiding the incident E-wave. These three E-plane waveguides gradually broaden along the circle to eventually merge as a hollow cylinder. The hollow cylinder is then encircled by a plurality of loops of wire, forming a trans-reflector. A full 360° azimuthally continuous input Eφ is required to feed the antenna to result in axially. polarized E-wave output.
These and other features and advantages of the various embodiments disclosed herein will be better understood with respect to the following description and drawings, in which like numbers refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
The conveyance of the input microwave power from a standard-size rectangular waveguide to such a large aperture, in a low-profile package, is not practical with more conventional means, such as pyramidal horns. This is because serious phase-front distortion (phase error) and wave-reflection will occur if such a horn is made too short. In contrast, a low-profile (i.e., small depth) antenna becomes possible by the novel employment of a transreflector and twistreflector integrated into the waveguide, in a configuration that reflects the power around a 90-degree bend, while simultaneously expanding the aperture beyond that which would be possible with a conventional waveguide bend that did not employ a trans-reflector/twist-reflector combination.
To yield output radiation normal to the trans-reflector face, that is, normal to the aperture, the tilt angle α of the twist-reflector is not π/4. This is because the incident TE10 wave is not a free-space mode, which is a crucial fact for providing the advantages offered by the FAWSET antenna as explained below.
The TE10 phase velocity can be expressed as:
v
ph
=c/√{square root over (1−(fc/f)2)} (1)
where fc is the cutoff frequency. To simplify the geometric interpretation, the two-layer twist-reflector is replaced by an idealized thin-surface twist-reflector as shown in
v
ph
=c/cosφ (2),
or
v
ph
=c/√{square root over (1−sin2φ)} (3).
Comparing this to the expression of Vph in Equation (1), it follows that
sinφ=fc/f (4).
Considering f=1.3 GHz in WR-650 waveguide of which the cutoff frequency fc is 0.9079 GHz, the phase φ can be computed as 44.30°; and thus, the tilt angle α can be derived as 22.85°, which is just over π/8. It appears that the tilt angle α is much less than 45° (π/4). Based on this effect, a long aperture (l∝1/tan α) can be obtained in such a flat package.
In
Because the angle φ is a function of frequency, the antenna can be frequency steered, subject to the bandwidth of the twist-reflector. Alternatively, for a fixed-frequency HPM source, the tile angle α can be chosen during the design process to set the angle of the output radiation to any preferred direction with reasonable limits in the plane. Referring to
A three-dimensional finite numerical model as shown in
In high-power operation, a modified FAWSET antenna can be configured to be filled with dielectric throughout, possibly using a different dielectric material in the twist-reflecting slab region. A rippled-wall dielectric-to-air window outside the trans-reflecting wall would provide a smooth transition and additional resistance to surface breakdown there.
The operation principle can be extended beyond particular geometric realization of
Some results from a three-dimensional finite element model of a full-around 360° cylindrical FAWSET antenna are shown in
It will be appreciated that intermediate configurations between the flat and the cylindrical types are possible, and would employ alternative configurations of feeding waveguides.
The above description is given by way of example, and not limitation. Given the above disclosure, one skilled in the art could devise variations that are within the scope and spirit of the invention disclosed herein. Further, the various features of the embodiments disclosed herein can be used alone, or in varying combinations with each other and are not intended to be limited to the specific combination described herein. Thus, the scope of the claims is not to be limited by the illustrated embodiments.
The present application claims priority to Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/695,779, filed Jun. 30, 2005, entitled FLAT-APERTURE WAVEGUIDE SIDEWALL-EMITTING TWIST-REFLECTOR ANTENNA.
This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. F29601-03-M-0182 awarded by the United States Air Force. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60695779 | Jun 2005 | US |