Deployable antennas, which can be compressed and expanded, can be useful for many applications, such as satellite communications. In such applications, it is important for the antenna to be able to fit into a small space and to be able to expand to an operational size once orbit is reached. While the sensors and operating electronics of satellites can be scaled to small volumes, the wavelengths of the signals used by miniaturized satellites to communicate do not scale accordingly. Given that the wavelength of a signal determines the size of an antenna needed to communicate that signal, antennas for miniaturized satellites still must have dimensions similar to those for larger satellites. Because of these size limitations for deployable antennas, some of the advantages of satellite miniaturization remain unrealized.
Embodiments of the subject invention provide novel and advantageous foldable antenna devices formed on a rigid substrate. The substrate can be planar in an unfolded state. A metal layer (e.g., a copper layer) can be formed on the rigid substrate, which is foldable, and the metal layer can act as the antenna element. The rigid substrate can include mountain folds and valley folds such that it is foldable from its unfolded state to a fully folded state. Alternatively, multiple rigid substrates can be connected to each other by hinges such that the antenna device is foldable from an unfolded state to a fully folded state.
In an embodiment, a foldable antenna device can comprise a rigid substrate configured to be folded and an antenna element disposed on the rigid substrate. The rigid substrate can be configured to be folded by having predefined folding lines, hinges, or both, for folding into a predetermined configuration, such that the foldable antenna device has an unfolded state and a fully folded state. The antenna element can comprise a metal layer, which can be symmetrically disposed about a central hub of the rigid substrate. The foldable antenna device can be configured to operate as a linearly polarized dipole antenna in the unfolded state and a circularly polarized broadband antenna in the fully folded state. The foldable antenna can be a segmented conical spiral antenna (CSA) in the fully folded state.
In another embodiment, a method of fabricating a foldable antenna device can comprise: providing a rigid substrate configured to be folded; folding the rigid substrate to create folding lines such that the rigid substrate is configured to be folded into a predetermined configuration, such that the foldable antenna device has an unfolded state and a fully folded state; and forming an antenna element on the rigid substrate. The antenna element can be formed on the rigid substrate before or after folding the rigid substrate.
In another embodiment, a method of fabricating a foldable antenna device can comprise: providing a plurality of rigid substrates; connecting the rigid substrates to each other using at least one hinge such that the plurality of rigid substrates is configured to be folded into a predetermined configuration, such that the foldable antenna device has an unfolded state and a fully folded state; and forming an antenna element on the plurality of rigid substrates. The antenna element can be formed on the plurality of rigid substrates before or after connecting the rigid substrates to each other with hinges.
Embodiments of the subject invention provide novel and advantageous foldable antenna devices formed on a rigid substrate. The substrate can be planar in an unfolded state. A metal layer (e.g., a copper layer) can be formed on the rigid substrate, which is foldable, and the metal layer can act as the antenna element. The rigid substrate can include mountain folds and valley folds such that it is foldable from its unfolded state to a fully folded state, as well as to intermediate folded states as well (if desired). Alternatively, multiple rigid substrates can be connected to each other by hinges such that the antenna device is foldable from an unfolded state to a fully folded state, as well as to intermediate folded states as well (if desired).
In some embodiments, the antenna can be a conical spiral antenna (CSA) (e.g., a segmented CSA) in its folded state, and the rigid substrate can include mountain folds and valley folds such that when it is folded, it is a CSA. The rigid substrate can have folds (e.g., mountain folds and valley folds) such that it is an origami flasher model (see, e.g.,
In some embodiments, a balun (e.g., a microstrip balun) can be attached to the rigid substrate, electrically connected to the metal layer, such that the balun is part of the antenna in the folded state as well (e.g., the balun can be partially or fully in the middle of a segmented CSA in the folded state (see, e.g.,
In many embodiments, the substrate can be attached to a framework and/or an actuator, which can be used to fold the substrate back and forth between its folded state and unfolded state. The actuation system can be compact and easy to operate, which makes the antenna design beneficial for space-borne and satellite applications.
The substrate can be any suitable material known in the art, including but not limited to plastic or FR4 (or other glass epoxy laminate). The substrate can have a thickness of any of the following values, at least any of the following values, about any of the following values, no more than any of the following values, or within any range having any of the following values as endpoints (all values are in millimeter (mm)): 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, 0.7, 0.8, 0.9, 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.6, 1.7, 1.8, 1.9, 2, 2.5, 3, 3.5, 4, 4.5, 5, 5.5, 6, 6.5, 7, 7.5, 8, 8.5, 9, 9.5, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 25.4, 26, 27, 28, 29, or 30. These values are exemplary only and should not be construed as limiting. Any thickness can be used as long as the substrate can fold without breaking.
The purpose of an origami antenna design is to develop an antenna that is easily deployable and packable with reconfigurable performance. Origami includes: rigidly foldable origami, where stiff panels are folded along hinged creases and creases are geodetically fixed within the pattern; and non-rigidly-foldable origami, where deformation is allowed on each individual face and/or vertices and creases can move within the pattern. Designs of related art origami antennas are based on non-rigidly-foldable origami, which are built with flexible dielectric substrates, such as sketch paper and plastic materials, or with flexible liquid metal alloy 3D printing techniques. Each facet of these models undergoes the surface deformation when the origami antenna is folded and/or unfolded. The thickness of the flexible substrate is negligible compared to the antenna demission, but when the application requires the folding of thick/rigid panels, material thickness can inhibit the folding motion. In these origami antenna designs, extra rigid supporting structures are needed for actuating the non-rigid origami base. Also, these designs would not be able to withstand an environment like space, the desert, or rainy conditions. A rigid/thick origami structure offers a purely geometric mechanism that can be realized at any scale because it does not rely on the elasticity of materials and is not significantly hindered by gravity. The transformation of rigid origami from an unfolded state to a final configuration is controlled by a smaller number of degrees of freedom, which makes the equipment geometry more accurate and repeatable. The thick origami structure also enables more choices for the manufacturing process for origami electromagnetic devices; for example, printed circuit boards (PCBs) can be directly used as facets of the origami model.
A major difficulty that has been encountered is transforming from paper-made origami models to rigid origami models. The origami flasher model, a thickness accommodating mathematical model, can be used for the antenna design. The origami flasher model was developed and presented by Robert Lang et al. in 2013 (S. A. Zirbel, R. J. Lang, S. P. Magleby, M. W. Thomson, D. A. Sigel, P. E. Walkemeyer, B. P. Trease and L. L. Howell, “Accommodating Thickness in Origami-Based Deployable Arrays,” Journal of Mechanical Design, vol. 135, no. 111005, pp. 1-11, Nov. 2013); this Lang et al. paper is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Every facet of the model is rigid, and the material thickness and spacing between panels can be adjusted.
The CSA is one of the most popular frequency-independent antennas, and it is widely used in space and satellite communications due to its directional circularly polarized radiation performance. Segmented spiral-shaped antennas can provide approximately equivalent performance compared to the conventional spiral/helical antenna, with a lower profile and a simpler manufacturing process. The origami flasher model can wrap a 2-D pattern around a central hub, making it a good candidate for origami segmented CSA design.
One difficulty in developing a non-zero thickness origami structure from a thickness accommodating structure is spacing between layers. The vertices that are physically adjacent to each other need spacing in order for the design to fold. The thickness accommodating origami flasher model allows for spacing in between each layer for better foldability. A coordinate system is established in the Lang et al. paper, based on which the indexed points pi,j,k stand for points in the 2-D creased pattern and p′i,j,k as their respective images in the folded pattern are used to build the origami model. The coordinate system is shown in
p
i,j,k
=p
i,j,k+m, p′i,j,k=p′i,j,k+m. (1)
Several functions are defined in the Lang et al. paper in order to derive the coordinate values of p′i,j,k. The function rot(i, j) is the number of angular increments (of 2π/m) that the point p′i,j,k gets rotated relative top p′0,0,k (which is the kth corner of the central polygon):
The function ht(i, j) is defined as the discrete (normalized) height of p′i,j,k above the xy plane:
ht(i, j)≡|(min(i+1, j)−h) mod 2h-h|. (3)
The 3D rotation matrix is defined as
Then, the point p′i,j,k has the value
Based on Equation (5), a Mathematica code that sets up the constraints for a general flasher model and solves for vertex coordinates for both the crease pattern and folded form is developed. The code is available for download (R. J. Lang, “Mathematica 8 Notebook,” 2012, Available at: http://www.langorigami.com/publication/accommodating-thickness-origami-based-deployable-arrays), and this code is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. There are five main parameters (m, r, h, dr, dz) that can be tinkered in the mathematical model in order to generate the flasher model fitting the needs of the CSA design.
The parameter m is the rotational order of the flasher model, which equals the number of sides of the central hub. The integer h≥1 is defined as the height order, which is the number of axial bends it takes for the diagonal fold to travel once from the bottom to the top of the cylinder in the folded form. The integer r≥1 is defined as the number of distinct “rings” in the pattern, or equivalently the number of times the diagonal moves from bottom to top and vice versa. The value of j runs from 0 to r×h. The parameter dr has a floating point value, which is the desired separation between two nearest-neighbor vertices at the same radial position, normalized to the diameter of the circumcircle of the central polygon. The parameter dz is also with a floating point value, which is a factor that sets the height of the outermost ring relative to its theoretical (zero-thickness) value.
Referring to
In many embodiments, the arrangement of the metal layer area on the origami base follows the two rules: a) the length of each segment of the antenna arm increases exponentially; and b) the metallic area is identical in size and shape with the non-metalized area when the origami structure is fully folded, i.e., the cone has a self-complementary structure. After completing the same steps described by Yao et al. (S. Yao, X. Liu and S. V. Georgakopoulos, “Morphing origami conical spiral antenna based on the nojima wrap,” IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., vol. 65, no. 5, pp. 2222-2232, 2017), the layout shape of the metal (e.g., copper) layer on the thick origami base is obtained as shown in
N=(1+r×h)/m (6)
In the design of
The bandwidth of related art CSAs is limited by the minimum and maximum diameter of the cone. For a segmented CSA, the bandwidth approximately equals the ratio of the side length of the pyramid bottom to the side length l of the central hub, which also equals the ratio of the maximum radius vector to the minimum radius vector. The horizontal distance between the neighbor vertices along radial position, Dr, is
D
r
=dr×/sin(π/m) (7)
where (l/sin(π/m)) is the diameter of the central polygon. In the design of
The horizontal distance, Dh, between the top corner vertex and the bottom corner vertex in a same sector of the origami flasher model can be derived as
Then, the bandwidth (BW) can be expressed as
BW≈1+dr×r×h×2 (9)
Therefore, the theoretical bandwidth of a CSA when m=4, r=2, h=2, dr=0.15, and dz=0.7, is approximately 2.2.
There are at least two options to create the physical model of the flasher pattern base. One option is to allow the panels to fold along their diagonals (the lightest (gray) interior lines in
In many embodiments, the substrate can be attached to a framework and/or an actuator, which can be used to fold the substrate back and forth between its folded state and unfolded state. Several actuation methods and actuators for the deployment of foldable substrates are described in Zirbel et al. (S. A. Zirbel, B. P. Trease, S. P. Magleby and L. H. Howell, “Deployment methods for an origami-inspired rigid-foldable array,” in Energy Production and Conversion: Mech. Eng., May 01, 2014. pp. 189-194), which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Any of the actuators/actuation methods described in Zirbel et al. can be used with a foldable substrate of an embodiment of the subject invention. The actuation system can be compact and easy to operate, which makes the antenna design beneficial for space-borne and satellite applications.
Reconfigurable foldable segmented CSAs of embodiments of the subject invention can be based on a rigid-foldable pattern/substrate. The antenna can work as omnidirectional linearly polarized dipole in an unfolded state and a directional circularly polarized broadband antenna in a folded state. The segmented CSA can exhibit large bandwidth (for example, 1.76 bandwidth (2.1-3.7 GHz), though embodiments are not limited thereto). Segmented CSAs can be fabricated using a rigid substrate.
Embodiments of the subject invention provide rigid, foldable or origami-based, antennas. A two dimensional (2D) foldable pattern can be folded into a three dimensional (3D) structure, such as a symmetrical 3D multilateral conical structure. An omnidirectional linearly polarized dipole antenna (unfolded state) can transform itself into a directional circularly polarized broadband antenna (e.g., segmented CSA). Foldable antennas with rigid panels can change their geometrical shape in order to change their antenna radiation characteristics, such as radiation pattern, bandwidth, beamwidth, and directivity, thereby providing multi-functionality (i.e., one antenna can serve multiple services and applications). Antennas of embodiments of the subject invention are suitable for spaceborne and airborne applications as they are deployable, packable, and have multifunctional performance. Such antennas are also very well suited for tactical antennas, field antennas, and portable antennas. Foldable antennas with rigid panels can be built using thick, rigid (i.e., capable of being bent but not flexible) substrates (e.g., printed circuit boards) providing robust and reconfigurable operation through a large number of folding/unfolding (i.e., collapsing/deploying) cycles. Various types of hinges can be used to connect panels (e.g., substrates or portions of the same substrate) to each other. Various materials can be used to provide electrical connection across hinges, including but not limited to flexible conductors, liquid metals, textiles, and polymers integrated with stretchable conductors. Foldable antennas with rigid panels offer a purely geometric mechanism that can be realized at any scale because it does not rely on the elasticity of materials and is not significantly hindered by gravity.
A greater understanding of the embodiments of the subject invention and of their many advantages may be had from the following examples, given by way of illustration. The following examples are illustrative of some of the methods, applications, embodiments, and variants of the present invention. They are, of course, not to be considered as limiting the invention. Numerous changes and modifications can be made with respect to the invention.
A foldable antenna was fabricated on a rigid substrate, as shown in
It should be understood that the examples and embodiments described herein are for illustrative purposes only and that various modifications or changes in light thereof will be suggested to persons skilled in the art and are to be included within the spirit and purview of this application.
All patents, patent applications, provisional applications, and publications referred to or cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety, including all figures and tables, to the extent they are not inconsistent with the explicit teachings of this specification.
This invention was made with government support under Grant Number 1332348 awarded by National Science Foundation (NSF). The government has certain rights in the invention.