The present invention relates generally to a high-gain broad coverage antenna array and method of using its grating lobes, and in particular embodiments, to an antenna array, a dual-band antenna array, and methods of constructing and using an antenna array.
In high-frequency wireless communication systems, high antenna gain and directivity, and broad coverage are typically design trade-offs. Wireless communication systems having broad coverage often sacrifice beam directivity and efficiency. Broader coverage allows an antenna system to potentially serve more users and more devices. Likewise, wireless communication systems having good directivity and a high gain antenna system having long link distances, do so at the expense of coverage area.
Directivity is generally a characteristic of a main lobe or main beam generated by the antenna or antenna array. Antenna arrays are typically designed to avoid grating lobes that draw power from the main beam, although many arrays still generate grating lobes when steering the main beam. Directivity characterizes the ability of the antenna to focus power in a particular direction, an increase in which narrows the coverage of the antenna.
An embodiment antenna system includes a first and second planar array. The first array has a first element spacing in an x-dimension and a y-dimension and is operable in a first frequency band. The second array has a second element spacing in the x-dimension and the y-dimension, and is operable in a second frequency band. The second planar array is displaced from the first planar array in a z-dimension for co-aperture operation of the first and second planar arrays. The second planar array is disposed parallel to and in a near-field of the first planar array. Elements of the second planar array are disposed and steerable, in a u-v plane for interleaving a first plurality of grating lobes generated by the first planar array with a second plurality of grating lobes generated by the second planar array.
An embodiment method of using a dual-band antenna includes a first planar array radiating, in a first frequency band, a first main lobe having a first beam direction. The first planar array also radiates, in the first frequency band, a first plurality of grating lobes according to the first beam direction and a first element spacing for the first planar array. The method also includes a second planar array radiating, in a second frequency band, a second main lobe having a second beam direction. The second planar array also radiates, in the second frequency band, a second plurality of grating lobes according to the second beam direction and a second element spacing for the second planar array. The second plurality of grating lobes are interleaved with the first plurality of grating lobes.
An embodiment method of constructing an antenna system includes forming a first planar array of radiating elements having a first element spacing related to a first wavelength. The first planar array is configured to generate a first plurality of grating lobes according to the first element spacing. The method also includes forming a second planar array of radiating elements having a second element spacing related to a second wavelength. The second planar array is configured to generate a second plurality of grating lobes according to the second element spacing. The method also includes coupling the first planar array to the second planar array in a co-aperture fashion. A first plane of the first planar array and a second plane of the second planar array are both configured to radiate in a same direction, such as boresight. The first planar array and the second planar array comprise a top planar array disposed in a near-field of a bottom planar array. The radiating elements of the second planar array are disposed in the second plane to interleave the second plurality of grating lobes among the first plurality of grating lobes to fill nulls among the first plurality of grating lobes.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention, and the advantages thereof, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The making and using of embodiments are discussed in detail below. It should be appreciated, however, that the present invention provides many applicable inventive concepts that may be embodied in a wide variety of specific contexts. The specific embodiments discussed are merely illustrative of specific ways to make and use the invention, and do not limit the scope of the invention.
The respective planes of first planar array 110 and second planar array 120 are defined in an X-dimension 130 and a Y-dimension 140. The radiating elements of first planar array 110 are separated by an element spacing in X-dimension 130 and Y-dimension 140. The element spacing is generally uniform within first planar array 110, which impacts the production of grating lobes. Similarly, radiating elements of second planar array 120 are separated by another element spacing. In the embodiment of
Grating lobes typically appear when the uniform spacing within a uniform grid array of radiating elements are spaced at least one wavelength on the antenna array. If the main beam is to be scanned, grating lobes will appear with element spacing less than one wavelength. As the spacing increases beyond one wavelength, multiple grating lobes occur periodically according to how the main lobe is steered. It is realized herein that rather than avoiding the generation of grating lobes, embodiment antenna arrays use them to their advantage. Typical antennas use a single beam that may or may not be steerable. Other solutions may only provide the coverage using a single frequency band.
First planar array 110 is disposed above second planar array 120 and in the X-Y plane in a co-aperture fashion such that grating lobes generated by first planar array 110 are interleaved with the grating lobes generated by second planar array 120. Grating lobes can be achieved with first planar array 110 and second planar array 120 by steering their respective main lobes accordingly. The nulls formed among the main lobe and grating lobes of first planar array 110 are filled by the main lobe and grating lobes of second planar array 120.
At the center of plot 300 is a solid black triangle representing the location of a first main lobe 310 generated by the first planar array of the embodiment antenna system. Also centered in plot 300 is a solid black elliptical outline representing an area visible to first main lobe 310, i.e., grating lobes falling within visible area 320 manifest as a resultant array radiation pattern. Plot 300 shows the location of first main lobe 310 as (o, o) in the u-v plane. (o, o) is one possible location for first main lobe 310. Alternatively, first main lobe 310 can be steered within visible area 320.
Plot 300 also illustrates respective locations of a first plurality of grating lobes 330 generated by the first planar array. These locations are represented by unfilled black triangles in plot 300, which are arranged in a grid in the U-V plane. Each of the first plurality of grating lobes 330 has a corresponding visible area 340, which are represented by dashed black elliptical outlines. A given grating lobe is centered within its corresponding visible area, which bounds the positions to which the grating lobe can be steered. The steering of the grating lobes is a function of the steering of the main lobe.
Plot 300 also illustrates respective locations of a second main lobe 350 and corresponding grating lobes 360 generated by a second planar array of the embodiment antenna system. Second main lobe 350 is represented by a bold black unfilled square. Locations of corresponding grating lobes 360 are shown as non-bold black unfilled squares arranged in a grid in the U-V plane. Although not shown in
Elements of first planar array 410 are steered to generate a radiation pattern 430 and elements of second planar array 420 are steered to generate radiation patterns 440. The radiation patterns include a main lobe and grating lobes. As a whole, first planar array 410 and second planar array 420 generate a beam pattern 480 such that grating lobes from each planar array are interleaved to fill nulls is the radiation patterns. In LOS system 400, multiple devices 450 are configured to receive the beams from the embodiment antenna system.
At a second forming step 630, a second planar array of radiating elements is formed. The radiating elements of the second planar array are similarly arranged in a grid with a second element spacing. The second element spacing is expressed in terms of a wavelength for the second planar array's operating frequency. The second element spacing is also selected in the design of the second planar array such that grating lobes will be generated in addition to its main lobe. The wavelength, i.e., reciprocal of its operating frequency, of the second planar array is not necessarily the same as that of the first planar array. In some embodiments, the frequency band of the first planar array is distinct from the frequency band of the second planar array. In other embodiments, the first and second planar arrays operate in the same frequency band. The main beam of the second planar array is steered to a position in the u-v plane such that its plurality of grating lobes are interleaved with a first plurality of grating lobes generated by the first planar array. Steering is achieved by adjusting delays or phases of radiating elements.
At a coupling step 640, the first planar array is coupled to the second planar array in a co-aperture fashion. The two planar arrays are coupled such that their respective planes are parallel, i.e., share a normal vector, and resulting beams and grating lobes are radiating at boresight. In one embodiment, the co-aperture arrangement arranges one of the planar arrays disposed on top of the other, separated by a distance, but such that the top planar array is in the near-field of the bottom planar array. The two planar arrays can be coupled, for example, by standoffs. The coupling can include clamping at least one standoff between the first planar array and the second planar array. The two planar arrays, in other embodiments, can be mounted on a structure that disposes the two planar arrays according to embodiments described herein. The two planar arrays are disposed in the X-Y dimensions and steered such that the respective grating lobes generated by the first and second planar arrays are interleaved, covering each other's nulls. The grating lobes generated by the first planar array may leave nulls in the radiation pattern that are filled by the interleaved grating lobes of the second planar array. The method then ends at an end step 650.
Plot 740 illustrates a normalized radiation pattern for the second of the two planar arrays. Plot 750 shows a projection of the normalized radiation pattern onto the U-V plane. Around the center of plot 750 are four dark spots that represent a main lobe and corresponding periodic grating lobes generated by the second planar array. As can be seen in plot 750, like plot 720 for the first planar array, nulls are also present in the radiation pattern of the second planar array. Plot 760 illustrates a non-normalized radiation pattern for the second of the two planar arrays.
Plot 770 illustrates a normalized combination radiation pattern for the first and second planar arrays. Plot 780 shows the projection of the combination onto the U-V plane. Observing the progression from plot 720 to 750 to 780, it is clear the main lobe and corresponding grating lobes of one planar array interleave the main lobe and corresponding grating lobes of the other planar array, covering the nulls. The result, shown in plot 780, is a broad coverage antenna without sacrificing directivity and range. Plot 790 illustrates the combined radiation pattern without normalization.
Plot 840 illustrates a normalized radiation pattern for the second of the two planar arrays. Plot 850 shows a projection of the normalized radiation pattern onto the U-V plane. Around the center of plot 850 are four dark spots that represent a main lobe and its corresponding periodic grating lobes generated by the second planar array. As can be seen in plot 850, like plot 820 for the first planar array, nulls are also present in the radiation pattern of the second planar array. Plot 860 illustrates a non-normalized radiation pattern for the second of the two planar arrays.
Plot 870 illustrates a normalized combination radiation pattern for the first and second planar arrays. Plot 880 shows the projection of the combination onto the U-V plane. Observing the progression from plot 820 to 850 to 880, it is clear the main lobe and corresponding grating lobes of one planar array interleave the main lobe and corresponding grating lobes of the other planar array, covering the nulls. The result, shown in plot 880, is a broad coverage antenna without sacrificing directivity and range. Plot 890 illustrates the combined radiation pattern without normalization.
While this invention has been described with reference to illustrative embodiments, this description is not intended to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications and combinations of the illustrative embodiments, as well as other embodiments of the invention, will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to the description. It is therefore intended that the appended claims encompass any such modifications or embodiments.
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