The present invention is directed generally to horn antennas, and more specifically to a new class of hybrid-mode horn antennas having selective gain.
Maximum directivity from a horn antenna is obtained by uniform amplitude and phase distribution over the horn aperture. Such horns are denoted as “hard” horns. They can support the transverse electromagnetic (TEM) mode, and apply to linear as well as circular polarization. They are characterized with hard boundary impedances:
Zz=−Ez/Hx=0 and Zx=Ex/Hz=∞, (1)
Hard horns can be used in the cluster feed for multibeam reflector antennas to reduce spillover loss across the reflector edge. Such horns may also be useful in single feed reflector antennas with size limitation, and in quasi-optical amplifier arrays.
Two different hard horns which meet these conditions are one having longitudinal conducting strips on a dielectric wall lining, and the other having longitudinal corrugations filled with dielectric material. These horns work for various aperture sizes, and have increasing aperture efficiency for increasing size as the power in the wall area relative to the total power decreases. Dual mode and multimode horns like the Box horn can also provide high aperture efficiency, but they have a relatively narrow bandwidth, in particular for circular polarization. Higher than 100% aperture efficiency relative to the physical aperture may be achieved for endfire horns. However, these endfire horns also have a small intrinsic bandwidth and may be less mechanically robust. Linearly polarized horn antennas may exist with high aperture efficiency at the design frequency, large bandwidth and low cross-polarization. However, these as well as the other non hybrid-mode horns only work for limited aperture size, typically under 1.5 to 2λ.
The present invention provides a new class of hybrid-mode horn antennas. The present invention facilitates the design of boundary conditions between soft and hard, supporting modes under balanced hybrid condition with uniform as well as tapered aperture distribution. In one embodiment, the horn is relatively simple mechanically, has a reasonably large bandwidth, can support linear as well as circular polarization, and can be designed for a wide range of aperture sizes.
In one embodiment, antennas of the present invention are dielectric-loaded circularly or linearly polarized hybrid-mode horn antennas which can be designed to a desired high directivity (gain) and low cross-polarization (axial ratio) over a wide frequency band. In one embodiment of the present invention, an antenna comprises a dielectric core inside a horn, where the core has two or more dielectric layers, and where the core is separated from the horn wall. The antenna boundary conditions facilitate a balanced hybrid-mode in the inner dielectric region with zero or negligible cross-polarization at the design frequency. With proper design, this mode can be close to a TEM mode with uniform or nearly uniform aperture distribution and consequently high gain.
Horn antennas of the present invention will have a wide range of uses. For example, in one embodiment the horn is used as an element in a limited scan phased array where a larger element aperture size is needed. They may provide high aperture efficiency and low grating lobes. In another embodiment, the horns are used as feed elements for reflector antennas or in quasi-optical amplifier arrays. It could be particularly useful in millimeter wave applications. Embodiments having a flat top pattern design make it a candidate earth coverage horn on-board satellites and a candidate feed for reflector antennas with enhanced directivity.
In one embodiment, a horn antenna of the present invention includes a conducting horn, a first dielectric layer disposed over at least a portion of the conducting horn, a second dielectric layer disposed over at least a portion of the first dielectric layer, and a third dielectric layer disposed over at least a portion of the second dielectric layer.
In alternative embodiments, the second dielectric layer comprises a higher dielectric constant than the third dielectric layer, and the third dielectric layer comprises a higher dielectric constant than the first dielectric layer. The first dielectric layer further may comprise a gas or air-filled gap, a vacuum region, and the like.
In one aspect, the conducting horn comprises an inner wall surface, and the second dielectric layer is spaced apart from the inner wall surface by a plurality of spacers. At least one of the spacers may be aligned axially or circumferentially relative to the conducting horn.
In one aspect, the first and second dielectric layers have a generally uniform thickness in an axial direction of the conducting horn. In another aspect, the first and/or second dielectric layer have a variable thickness in the axial direction. The horn antenna may further include a matched horn throat defined by at least a portion of the second and third dielectric layers. The horn antenna also may include an impedance matching layer near the aperture. The matching layer may be a portion of the second and/or third dielectric layers. In one aspect, the impedance matching layer is a corrugated matching layer. In another aspect, the matching layer comprises a plurality of spaced apart holes, rings, ringlets, or the like.
In another embodiment of the present invention, a horn antenna includes a dielectric core coupled to a conducting horn by a plurality of spacers to define a gap between the horn and core. The dielectric core includes an outer portion and an inner portion, with the outer and inner portions each including a dielectric material. The inner portion dielectric material has a different dielectric constant than the outer portion dielectric material. In one aspect, the dielectric constant of the outer portion dielectric material is greater than the dielectric constant of the inner portion dielectric material. In another aspect, the gap is at least partially filled, or completely filled with a third dielectric material having a lower dielectric constant than the dielectric constants of both the inner and outer portion dielectric materials.
Another embodiment of the present invention includes a reflector antenna having a reflective dish and at least one horn antenna as previously described. The horn antenna is adapted to direct a signal towards the reflective dish. In another embodiment, the present invention provides an antenna array system comprising two or more horn antennas. In still another embodiment, the present invention provides a spacecraft incorporating horn antenna(s) as described herein. The horn antenna(s) may be coupled to a spacecraft bus as needed for antenna operation.
The summary provides only a general outline of some embodiments according to the present invention. Many other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more fully apparent from the following detailed description, the appended claims and the accompanying drawings.
In one embodiment, a new and mechanically simple dielectric loaded hybrid-mode horn is presented. In alternative embodiments of the present invention, the horn satisfies hard boundary conditions, soft boundary conditions, or boundaries between hard and soft under balanced hybrid conditions (low cross-polarization). Like other hybrid mode horns, the present design is not limited in aperture size. In some embodiments, design curves were developed based on a plane wave model, and radiation performance was computed based on a cylindrical waveguide model. In one embodiment, aperture efficiency of about ninety-four percent (94%) has been computed at the design frequency for a 3.38λ aperture with hard boundary condition and a dielectric constant of 4.0. The same horn with a dielectric constant of 2.5 can provide higher than about eighty-nine percent (89%) aperture efficiency and under −30 decibels (dB) cross-polarization over about a fifteen percent (15%) frequency range. Predicted peak sidelobes ranging from −19 to −26.5 dB at the design frequency have been obtained. In one embodiment, the horn can be designed to radiate a flat-top pattern. In a particular embodiment, the horn could be useful for millimeter wave applications and quasi-optical amplifiers.
The space within horn 100 is at least partially filled with a dielectric core 130. In one embodiment, dielectric core 130 comprises an inner core portion 140 and an outer core portion 150. In some embodiments, inner core portion 140 comprises foam, honeycomb, or the like, and outer core portion 150 comprises polystyrene, polyethylene, teflon, or the like. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that alternative materials also may be used within the scope of the present invention.
In some embodiments, dielectric core 130 is separated from wall 110 by a gap 160. In one embodiment, gap 160 is filled or at least partially filled with air. In another embodiment, gap 160 comprises a vacuum. In one embodiment, gap 160 corresponds to a first dielectric layer. In the embodiments having gap 160, a spacer or spacers 170 may be used to position dielectric core 130 away from horn wall 110. Spacer(s) 170 may comprise a variety of shapes and sizes. For example, spacer(s) 170 may comprise one or more spaced rings or ring segments, or longitudinal ridges or ridge segments, running circumferentially around horn wall 110. Spacer(s) 170 may further comprise axially aligned ridges or ridge segments. In still other embodiments, spacer(s) 170 include one or more blocks, foam pieces, honeycomb spacers, and the like. In a particular embodiment, spacer(s) 170 comprise a dielectric material with low dielectric constant. In one embodiment, the axial length of the spacers is one-quarter wavelength (¼λ) of the dielectric spacer material.
In another embodiment, spacer(s) 170 completely fill gap 160. In this manner, spacer(s) 170 define a dielectric layer lining some or all of horn wall 110, and may help to correctly position core 130. In this embodiment, spacers 170 define a first dielectric layer, with outer core portion 150 comprising a second dielectric layer and inner core portion 140 comprising a third dielectric layer. In one embodiment, the dielectric constants of outer core portion 150 and inner core portion 140 are different. In a particular embodiment, outer portion 150 of dielectric core 130 has the highest dielectric constant, while the dielectric constant of inner portion 140 of core 130 falls between that of outer portion 150 and the dielectric material associated with gap 160. In a particular embodiment, outer core portion 150 has a higher dielectric constant than does inner core portion 140. In one embodiment, inner core portion 140 has a higher dielectric constant than does gap 160.
In a particular embodiment, gap 160 is a generally uniform gap having a thickness t3 and extending from about throat region 120 to aperture 180. In one embodiment, outer portion 150 of core 130 has a generally uniform thickness t2. Gap thickness t3 and outer core portion thickness t2 depends on the frequency as shown, for example, in
In one embodiment, throat region 120 of horn 100 is matched to convert the incident field into a field with approximately the same cross-sectional distribution as is required in aperture 180. This may be accomplished, for example, by the physical arrangement of inner core portion 140 and outer core portion 150 depicted in
Horn 100 may further include one or more matching layers 190 between dielectric and free space in aperture 180. Matching layers 190 may comprise, for example, one or more dielectric materials coupled to core portion(s) 140 and/or 150 near aperture 180. In one embodiment, matching layer 190 has a dielectric constant between the dielectric constant of core portion(s) 140, 150 to which it is coupled, and the dielectric constant of the ambient air or vacuum. In a particular embodiment, matching layer 190 includes a plurality of spaced apart rings or holes. The spaced apart rings or holes (not shown) may have a variety of shapes and may be formed in symmetrical or non-symmetrical patterns. In one embodiment, the holes are formed in the aperture portion of core portions 140 and/or 150 to create a matching layer portion of core 130. In one embodiment, the holes and/or rings are formed to have depth of about one-quarter wavelength (¼λ) of the dielectric material in which they are formed. In a particular embodiment, outer portion 150 includes a corrugated matching layer (not shown) at aperture 180.
Horns 100 of the present invention can have different cross sections, including circular, rectangular, elliptical, or the like for circular or linear polarization (
Plane Wave Horn Model
By inserting (4) and (5) into (3), the following design condition is obtained for the support of modes under balanced hybrid conditions in the central (interior) horn region:
This is achieved for gracing incidence if εr1>εr3. Thus the following expression for supporting balanced hybrid modes in the central horn region can be derived:
where
The thickness t3 of the outer region has its minimum value when the square root expression in the numerator of (9) is zero. The special cases T2=0 and T2=∞ result in the following design condition when applied to (8):
If εr1=εr2 both cases above results in the same solution, and similar or identical to a single dielectric soft horn solution.
The condition for ideally soft and hard boundaries can be derived by applying (4) and (5) to (1) for hard boundary condition, and to equation (2) for soft boundary condition. Both these boundary conditions result in the same expression for t3, but different t2 according to:
Based on
Circular Cylindrical Horn Model
A computer program was developed to predict the propagation constant and field distribution inside a circular cylindrical waveguide symmetrically filled with three dielectric materials as shown in
Computed Results—Plane Wave Model Analysis
In all the cases analyzed below it is assumed that εr3=1.0 (air gap 160 in outer region) and that θ1=90° (gracing incidence). In
The total “wall” thickness t2+t3 versus εr1 with εr2 as a parameter is illustrated in
Computed Results—Circular Cylindrical Model Analysis
In this section, the results are based on computations based on the circular cylindrical model. In all embodiments, the horn diameter is 70 mm or 3.38λ at 14.5 GHz, εr1=1.3, and uniform phase is assumed over the aperture (ideal cylindrical aperture model).
The present invention provides a new class of hybrid mode horn antennas which can be designed for a specific gain or sidelobe requirement and low cross-polarization. In one embodiment, the horn consists of a conical metal horn with a dual dielectric core, separated from the horn wall by a thin air-gap and/or low-dielectric material. In one embodiment, the central conical core is implemented with low dielectric, ensuring low dielectric loss, or with solid, low loss dielectric to allow for millimeter wave implementation. Cross-polarization is expected to be low since the horn supports modes under balanced hybrid condition inside the central core, although contribution to cross-polarization from the wall region may degrade the cross-polarization performance somewhat. A plane wave model was developed to derive design expressions and generate parametric design curves for the horn. Also, a circular cylindrical waveguide model was developed to analyze the radiation performance of the horn.
In one embodiment, predicted aperture efficiency over about 94% and relative peak cross-polarization under −37 dB was predicted at center frequency for a 3.38λ hard horn with a dielectric constant of 4.0. Cross-polarization under −40 dB has been predicted slightly off center frequency. Similarly, predicted aperture efficiency over about 89% and relative peak cross-polarization under −30 dB was predicted over the frequency band 12.5 to 14.5 GHz for the same aperture size. In one embodiment, the same horn is designed with aperture efficiency ranging from about 92% to about 78% and corresponding relative peak sidelobes between −19 to −26.5 dB at the design frequency, and with cross-polarization under −36 dB over the range. In one embodiment, the horn is used to generate a flat top pattern over a ±30° field-of-view and with −30 dB relative peak cross-polarization.
In one embodiment, the new horn is mechanically simple relative to other known hard horn antennas. According to the present invention, the horn can be used as an element in a limited scan array where a larger aperture size is needed. It can also be used in applications where gain and sidelobes could be traded for optimal antenna performance, e.g. as feeds for reflector antennas or in quasi-optical amplifier arrays. The horns of the present invention are particularly useful in millimeter wave applications in an embodiment. Finally, the flat top pattern design makes it a candidate earth coverage horn on-board satellites and a candidate feed for reflector antennas with enhanced directivity.
Notwithstanding the above description, it should be recognized that many other functions, methods, and combinations thereof are possible in accordance with the invention. Thus, although the invention is described with reference to specific ents and figures thereof, the embodiments and figures are merely illustrative, and ting of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is to be determined solely by the appended claims.
The present application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/440,715, filed Jan. 16, 2003, entitled “Dielectric-Loaded Hybrid-Mode Horn Antenna with Selectable or High Gain and Large Bandwidth”; and from U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/480,369, filed Jun. 19, 2003, entitled “Hybrid-Mode Horn Antenna with Selective Gain”, the complete disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2650985 | Meyer et al. | Sep 1953 | A |
4246584 | Noerpel | Jan 1981 | A |
5117240 | Anderson et al. | May 1992 | A |
5166698 | Ashbaugh et al. | Nov 1992 | A |
5642122 | Lockie et al. | Jun 1997 | A |
6266025 | Popa et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6323818 | Koh et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6456254 | Reineix et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6501433 | Popa et al. | Dec 2002 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60440715 | Jan 2003 | US | |
60480369 | Jun 2003 | US |