The present disclosure pertains to methods and systems for improving the gain roll-off over scan of hybrid mechanical-lens antenna phased arrays for satellite or terrestrial communications. The disclosure more specifically relates to methods and systems for configuring the lens elements with various tilting and rotating arrangements.
Arrays of substantially planar elements suffer from gain degradation over elevation scan largely due to the reduction of projected antenna aperture area in the direction of scan. Gimbaled parabolic dish antenna and gimbaled flat panel antennas overcome this gain degradation through the use of two-dimensional mechanical motion to continuously point the entire antenna in the direction of desired scan. These gimbaled solutions result in very high-profile terminals that can be problematic or undesired in certain applications.
A phased array panel that is configured to electronically steer along one axis can be rotated to produce an antenna with coverage at all azimuth angles and across the achievable elevation-plane scan range of the panel. In this way, the azimuthal scanning axis is controlled mechanically, and the elevation axis controlled electrically. This reduces the height of a dual-gimbaled solution but introduces scan losses to far elevation scan angles. The elevation-plane scan range can be increased (or the scan losses reduced/gain at far scan improved) by tilting the panel towards the horizon in the same plane as the elevation-plane scanning axis. This increases the height but reduces the effective elevation-plane scan angle for pointing targets near the horizon.
A single-axis electrically-steered panel is much simpler and less expensive than a full two-dimensional scanning phased array, but has a narrow azimuthal beamwidth, which maintains the high requirements on pointing accuracy and response time on the mechanical actuators.
Phased arrays of electrically-reconfigurable RF lens modules, as in U.S. Pat. No. 10,116,051 to Scarborough et al., offer a number of advantages in power consumption and component count over conventional phased arrays for SATCOM, radar, and other purposes.
The disclosure pertains generally to a radio-frequency lens array that employs tilted elements, tilted sub-arrays, and/or a degree of azimuthal mechanical scan to all or a subset of the lens elements. The addition of mechanical rotation allows for a reduction to the required scanning range, and therefore feed count, of each lens element. The azimuthal scan that the mechanical rotation provides also enables various configurations of tilted elements and tilted arrays. Tilting the individual lens elements and/or tilting the arrays provides improved gain performance at scan compared to a standard planar-phased array, while maintaining a low profile compared to gimbaled antennas.
In the simplest case, a planar array of a plurality of lens modules is mechanically rotated. This configuration allows for a significant reduction in the scan range, and therefore feed count, required of each lens element. The elements themselves primarily provide elevation scan with limited range of azimuth scan. The main azimuth scan is provided by the mechanical rotation. Unlike a standard phased array that has been configured for single-axis scanning, the lens array maintains a degree of two-dimensional scanning capability within the beamwidth of the lens element pattern (typically 5-15 deg). In this way, the antenna can electrically scan (for example) within any +/−5 deg cone of all points on the line between 0 and 65 deg parallel with the Azimuth=0 deg axis relative to the panel itself.
In order to increase scanned gain performance from the above configuration, the array can be tilted towards the horizon in a specified azimuth angle. The provides a larger projected area of the array facing the scan direction, thereby increasing the scanned gain.
Alternatively, or in combination with the described tilted array, each element within the array can be tilted towards a specified azimuth angle. This configuration reduces the scan requirement of each lens element thereby increase the element pattern gain at far scan angles.
Another configuration has two discrete lens arrays: a primary array and a secondary array. Each array can be configured with various combinations of array tilt, lens tilt, and mechanical rotation so as to focus scanning performance on different angular regions.
In one configuration, the primary array has planar elements that scan in both azimuth and elevation. A secondary array of lenses surrounds the primary array and the lenses are tilted outwards from the center of the antenna to supplement the gain at far scan angles (greater than 60 deg). Neither array uses mechanical motion.
Another configuration of the described antenna utilizes mechanical motion of both the primary and secondary array. The primary array may have planar elements, tilted elements, or a tilted array. The secondary array is configured along the perimeter of one-half of the primary array with all elements facing the same azimuth angle. Each element in the secondary array contributes additional gain performance at the specified azimuth angle while mechanical rotation of both the primary and secondary arrays provides azimuthal scanning. The feeds under both the primary and secondary array can be reduced to a single line of feeds or fewer such that each element mainly scans in elevation while the mechanical rotation scans in azimuth.
Another configuration has each individual lens tilted to various independent angles. The tilt variation provides grating lobe reduction, since there would not be a single, consistent element pattern and so generate constructive interference.
In all of the described cases, the transmit and receive signals from both the primary and secondary arrays are combined to provide a single beam.
The accompanying drawings are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. It is to be understood that the drawings illustrate only some examples of the disclosure and other examples or combinations of various examples that are not specifically illustrated in the figures may still fall within the scope of this disclosure. Examples will now be described with additional detail through the use of the drawings, in which:
This disclosure relates to specific design augmentations to a lens array antenna, such as for example the planar lens array in U.S. Pat. No. 10,116,051, to support design simplification, cost reduction, and increased design flexibility around trade between boresight and scan antenna gain performance. The entire contents of the '051 patent are herein incorporated by reference.
Referring to
The antenna 101 is mounted on a flat surface of the underlying support platform 103. For example, the support platform 103 can represent a tower, building roof or the roof of a car, boat, bus, or other vehicle where it may be desirable to install the antenna. The platform 103 may but is not necessarily level, in which case the boresight direction and scan angles of the terminal are relative to the orientation of the platform and the resulting orientation of the antenna 101. The antenna assembly 101 further includes a housing 105 that mechanically supports the rest of the structure (but is not RF-transparent) and an RF-transparent radome 111 that is removably attached to 105, protects the antenna from the elements, and allows the RF signals to propagate through. The housing 105 can be directly connected to the platform 103 via bolts or other fixtures. The housing 105 and the radome 111 jointly form a closed or sealed enclosure containing the antenna (e.g., lenses 121, platform 109 and actuator 107) to prevent moisture, dust, and environmental debris from interacting with the electrical and mechanical components of the antenna.
The rotation platform 109 can be relatively thin and have a flat top surface and a flat bottom surface. The lens array 120 is mounted to the top surface of the rotation platform 109, such that the flat bottom surface of the lens modules 121 engage the flat top surface of the rotating platform 109, either directly or indirectly (e.g., the lens modules 121 can be situated on and/or coupled to a flat substrate). The rotation actuator 107 has a base member and a connector that extends upward from the base. In one example embodiment, the connector can pivot and/or rotate with respect to the base member. The connector has a flat top surface that fixedly connects to the flat bottom surface of the rotating platform 109. In another example embodiment, the connector can rotate with respect to the base member, but does not pivot, and instead the rotating platform 109 is fixedly connected to the flat top surface of the connector at a fixed or adjustable angle.
Thus, the lens modules 121 in the array 120 are fixedly mounted on the rotation platform 109, and face substantially orthogonal to the plane of the rotating platform 109 and support platform 103. The beams communicated by those lens modules 121 are also substantially orthogonal to the plane of the rotating platform 109 and support platform 103. The rotation platform 109 is fixedly mounted to the connector of the actuator 107, and the base of the actuator 107 is fixedly mounted to the bottom surface of the housing 105. The rotation actuator 107 pivotally and/or rotationally mounts the rotation platform 109 to the housing 105, which in turn is fixedly mounted to the support platform 103. In particular, as shown by the arrows in
Similar to most electrically-steered antennas, a drop in gain between 6 and 10 dB between boresight and 70 degrees is common. The reduced gain at scan is a result of the reduced effective aperture area (the projected area of the array 120 when viewed from 70 degrees is smaller than the projected area at smaller scan angles). Reduced gain indicates lower signal strength on signals received at angles at scan compared to boresight. This general behavior corresponds to the expected behavior by all beam-steering antennas, and is not distinct to this antenna.
Referring to
Referring to
In
In all cases, the feeds form a regular or generally uniform (hexagonal or rectilinear) grid, where spacing of the feeds is dependent on the properties of the lens, and are generally (but not exclusively) separated by approximately half a wavelength at the operational frequency of the antenna for optimal scanning performance and resolution of the resulting beams.
Several example broad classes of alternate feed arrangements that trade reduced feed count and cost compared to
Referring to
In this case, the actuator 107 can rotate the lenses 121b to track movement of the target sufficient to keep the desired beam target inside the accessible region 313, rather than needing to track the target satellite or communications target to a 0.2 degrees of accuracy as a conventional gimbaled antenna for SATCOM purposes would require. Even with substantial (>1-5 degrees) pointing error in the mechanical actuator, the antenna as a whole will meet the required accuracy and fast scanning response time via the electronic scanning, and access to the full range of φ angles through rotation supported by the actuator 107. Full antennas 101 constructed using this module 121b can support multiple beams connecting to different satellites, since the mechanical rotation of the array 120 containing the modules 121b needs only to point the center of the coverage region towards the midpoint of the two or more satellites. Any two, and many configurations of three or more satellites (particularly geosynchronous satellites that will always be all-north or all-south of the antenna) can be simultaneously addressed by this configuration.
Referring to
A variation on the case 121c (
In all of these cases, reducing the number of feeds 205 by removing feed elements (for example) from the lens assemblies 121a to obtain a modified configuration (such as lenses 121c) reduces the scanning range of the lens module 121, but doesn't directly reduce or affect the gain of the lens module within the remaining accessible scan range. Since the feeds are only enabled if the antenna is pointing in the direction covered by the feed, removing a feed simply means that that that feed cannot be enabled (meaning the antenna cannot point in the directions supported by the feed), and the remaining feeds can be selected and operate normally. Any of the cases that restrict the scanning range in the azimuthal direction then require mechanical rotation of the lens, feeds, or entire array (by an actuator 107) in order to point beams anywhere within the ordinary scanning range of the lens (i.e., to scan in directions where corresponding feeds have been removed). Any necessary motion in these cases can be accomplished with only a single axis of low-resolution, relatively low-accuracy rotational motion driven by a rotation actuator 107, rather than multiple dimensions of high-precision actuators as required for a gimbaled parabolic reflector antenna. Here, low-resolution and low-accuracy are evaluated relative to that required for a multiaxis gimbaled SATCOM parabolic antenna, which requires accuracy better than 0.2 deg in all axes at all times, with very high constraints on tracking speeds and acceleration to follow both the platform 103 and potential satellite motion.
Referring to
Thus, in the example embodiment of
As further illustrated by the example embodiment of
The effect of splitting into two arrays 421, 423 and configuring the secondary array 423 as a skirt partway around the perimeter of the array is that at scan angles close to the tilt angle of the skirt (typically between 45 and 70 degrees relative to boresight), the lens modules 121d in the secondary (skirt) array 423 are nearly boresight to the desired beam, and therefore do not suffer from scan losses as do the lens modules in the primary array 421. Thus, the primary section is in a primary plane and the secondary portion is in a secondary plane, and the planes are at an acute angle of about 45-70 degrees to one another. Thus, the planes are at an angle to be offset from one another. As illustrated in
It is an interesting result that, the worse the original roll-off (difference between boresight and scanned gain) of the lens module itself, the better the impact and gain improvement at scan is available for the skirt secondary array 423. This means that skirt array 423 should be targeted at or close to the edge of scan θmax (in 333) for the primary array 421 to maximize the improvement while minimizing the sacrificed boresight gain. This means that a skirt targeted at a low scan angle, such as 30 degrees, will provide very little apparent benefit, since the scan losses to 30 degrees are typically small to moderate, and targeting a skirt array beyond the scanning range of the primary array 421 (such as about over 70 degrees or even 75-85 degrees) will require the skirt array to be very large in order to maintain performance, since it will no longer be assisting the primary array. For these reasons, the best angles for the skirts fall between 45 and 70 degrees, since smaller angles show smaller benefit, and larger angles go past the supported range for the primary array.
It should also be noted that the relative size of the primary array 421 and the secondary array 423 (measured in number of lens modules as well as aperture area) are subject to some constraints. The impact of the skirt is highest when the number of lenses in the skirt is on the order of 3-9 dB (½ to ⅛) of the number of lenses in the primary array. Depending on the number of modules in the primary array 421, this might be satisfied by one or multiple stacked layers of skirts; single layers are more convenient, since multiple layers (while possible) increase the height of the antenna and are therefore less desirable. This places upper bounds on the size of the array that can practicably include an effective single-level skirt, as illustrated in
To extend the elevation-plane scanning range of the antenna beyond that of the individual lens 201 and lens module 121, it is necessary to further modify the primary array. Referring to
The variation antenna assembly 500 (side view in
The angled lenses 121c shift the coverage region towards the horizon by the amount of the tilt. This is illustrated by the coverage range 525 in
The example variation of antenna assembly 530 (side view in
Both of the previous approaches can be combined; example variation antenna assembly 540 (side view in
Another example variation antenna assembly 550 (side view in
Referring to
In each of the cases above, the rotation platform 107 is shown as one piece between the primary and secondary arrays. In all cases, a separate rotation platform could be used for the primary and secondary arrays (e.g., the primary array mounted to a primary rotation platform and the secondary array mounted to a secondary rotation platform that rotates independent (either in the same direction or opposite direction) of the primary rotation platform), supporting each lens module either integrally or separately from the others. The separate rotation platforms (if used) can be integrally formed with the first platform, or separate and discrete from the first platform and fixedly, removably and/or dynamically rotatably coupled with the first platform. For example, one rotation platform can be concentrically positioned inside the other rotation platform, or on top of the other platform. Thus, each element can be at a fixed tilt or a dynamically adjustable tilt in unison with or separately from each other element. The lens elements in the secondary array are tilted at an angle that may be the same or different from the tilt angle of the primary lenses. Both the primary and secondary array are mechanically rotated to provide azimuth scanning.
As an extension of the skirt concept, a skirt secondary array may be applied to a fixed or non-rotating antenna 701 (referring to side view in
In each of the embodiments discussed above, the primary and secondary arrays each have circuitry and control capability as is standard to individually point a beam or beams in the commanded elevation and azimuth relative to the orientation of the rotation platform 109. In addition, a joint controller and circuitry is included to combine the signals from the separate primary and secondary arrays to as to form a single beam from the combined arrays.
In each of the embodiments discussed above, the mounting platforms and support stages are substantially flat planar members having a flat top surface, and one or more elements of the array are fixed or coupled to the respective platform or support stage. However, in other embodiments, the platforms and support need not be planar.
It is further noted that with respect to
In addition, in one embodiment, the actuator 107 can be rotated manually and fixed in position. And the secondary portion of the rotation platform 409 can be formed at a fixed angle to the primary portion of the rotation platform 409. However, in another embodiment, a processing device such as a controller, processor, computer, or the like, can be provided to control rotation of the actuator 107, either under control of the user or automatically. And, the secondary portion 409b of the rotation platform 409 can be pivotally or rotatably coupled to the primary portion 409a of the rotation platform 409, such as for example by a hinge, and the user can manually rotate the secondary portion 409b with respect to the primary portion 409a between the first and second angles to a suitable angle or to be planar, or a processing device can control that movement automatically or under user control. Likewise, the top surface of the platform 509 can be integrally formed at fixed angles or can pivot with respect to the platform 509 to be individually adjustable manually or by the processing device.
The embodiments above describe and illustrate the arrays and apertures as circular or approximately so. Circular arrays are convenient when using rotation, since circular apertures are efficient in terms of gain for the size of the region traversed by the rotating structure (when compared with a rectangle, for example). However, the details described above can be applied to arrays and antennas of any shape and outline.
Any frequency band can be used, and the most flexible system would be when the antenna and system can operate at and listen to different frequency bands. However, electrically-steered antennas that operate at multiple frequencies are difficult to build and are expensive. So, most practical systems will operate at a single band, with the most common communications systems bands being Ka and Ku for VSAT operation.
This disclosure, although described primarily as being used for SATCOM purposes, may be applied for different applications within communications and remote sensing, such as reconfigurable or mobility point-point microwave links, radar, 5G, etc.
As used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a”, “an” and “the” include plural referents, unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Similarly, the adjective “another,” when used to introduce an element, is intended to mean one or more elements. The terms “comprising,” “including,” “having” and similar terms are intended to be inclusive such that there may be additional elements other than the listed elements.
Additionally, where a method described above or a method claim below does not explicitly require an order to be followed by its steps or an order is otherwise not required based on the description or claim language, it is not intended that any particular order be inferred. Likewise, where a method claim below does not explicitly recite a step mentioned in the description above, it should not be assumed that the step is required by the claim.
It is noted that the description and claims may use geometric or relational terms, such as right, left, upper, lower, top, bottom, linear, curved, parallel, orthogonal, concentric, crescent, flat, planar, coplanar, etc. These terms are not intended to limit the disclosure and, in general, are used for convenience to facilitate the description based on the examples shown in the figures. In addition, the geometric or relational terms may not be exact. For instance, walls may not be exactly parallel to one another because of, for example, roughness of surfaces, tolerances allowed in manufacturing, etc., but may still be considered to be perpendicular or parallel.
Numerous applications of the present system and method will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, it is not desired to limit the invention to the specific examples disclosed or the exact construction and operation shown and described. Rather, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the scope of the invention.
The present application is a continuation claiming the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 120 of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/865,123, filed May 1, 2020, and entitled “GAIN ROLL-OFF FOR HYBRID MECHANICAL-LENS ANTENNA PHASED ARRAYS” which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/865,123 claims the benefit of priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/842,905, filed on May 3, 2019, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62842905 | May 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16865123 | May 2020 | US |
Child | 18313200 | US |