This invention relates to a micro-strip antenna apparatus and a wireless communication system utilizing such apparatus. More particularly, this invention relates to a micro-strip antenna apparatus having a number of antenna elements and arrays integrated with substrates of smart materials, such as piezoelectric devices, and to a system employing such apparatus for enabling wireless communication to and/or from smart structures.
A so-called smart patch may be surface mounted or embedded in a structure (such as helicopter rotor blades, high-speed machinery, and so forth). Such smart patch may include a sensor or sensors, an actuator or actuators, associated electronics, and/or a control circuit. A structure containing one or more smart patches is referred to as a smart structure.
Smart patches in a smart structure may operate as sensors so as to detect a predetermined characteristic (such as strain) of the respective structure. Additionally, such smart patches may operate as actuators so as to cause a predetermined force, torque, or the like, to be imposed on the respective structure. Ultimately, such smart patches may be utilized both as sensors and as actuators.
A significant concern in placing smart patches in or on smart structures involves power delivery and communications thereto. That is, power and/or signal lines are normally provided between each smart patch and a central control or processing device so as to enable power to be delivered to a desired number of the smart patches and to enable communication with such smart patches which may involve providing control signals thereto and/or to permit feedback signals to be received therefrom. As is to be appreciated, such use of power and/or signal lines may limit the application wherein smart patches may be effectively utilized, or may make the installation of smart patches into a structure relatively costly and difficult. Furthermore, inclusion of wires and signal lines in a structure may cause structural degradation and therefore rapid fatigue.
The present invention enables smart patches to receive power and/or transmit signals and/or communicate with a central control device without the use of power and/or signal lines. More particularly, in the present invention, smart patches may receive power signals and may communicate with the central control device in a wireless manner over a predetermined frequency range (such as a microwave frequency range). Accordingly, the above-described problems and/or disadvantages associated with power and signal lines may be eliminated with the present invention.
An object of the present invention is to provide a wireless communication system which enables a number of predetermined characteristics of a structure to be detected and a signal indicative of such detection to be supplied from the structure in a wireless manner.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a wireless communication system as aforesaid wherein a number of sensors each having an antenna such as a micro-strip type antenna, are arranged in or on the structure.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a wireless communication system as aforesaid wherein each sensor includes only passive electronic devices. Furthermore, modulation and demodulation of signals may be achieved through inherent nonlinear characteristics of the material being utilized as a substrate for the microstrip antenna.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a wireless communication system as aforesaid wherein a respective number of smart patches may be actuated to impose a force on the structure so as to cause a desired movement or deformation of the structure.
Yet another objective of the present invention is to enable power to be delivered to a smart structure by way of electromagnetic radiation (possibly in the microwave frequency range). The power delivery is achieved in a wireless manner by way of a control transceiver and a microstrip antennas located on the smart patches. The received power signal may be utilized in a substantially instantaneous manner or stored in an energy storage device such as a rechargeable thin-film battery or a capacitor bank or a combination thereof.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a microstrip antenna apparatus for performing simultaneous sensing and actuation operations. In this arrangement, a single antenna may be utilized not only to transmit a signal corresponding to a predetermined characteristic of the structure, but also to receive a power signal or a control signal for actuation operation.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a multi-layer antenna apparatus which may be utilized to achieve a relatively high level of actuation by increasing the amount of power that may absorb. This arrangement of a plurality of microstrip antennas may be obtained by having several patches on a substrate or having several patches on several vertical layers integrated with the smart material.
A still further object of the present invention is to is provide arrangements of multi-layer microstrip antennas which achieve noise immunity and provide environmental protection of the microstrip antenna and the associated electronic circuitry. Furthermore, such multi-layer arrangements may provide relatively good impedance matching which may produce a relatively high efficiency of the microstrip antenna.
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention a wireless communication system is provided which comprises a number of sensors each having an antenna and being located on or within an element. Each of the sensors is adaptable to detect a respective predetermined characteristic of the element. The system further comprises a control transceiver device, operable to communicate in a wireless manner with the sensors, for supplying power to a desired number of the sensors so as to activate each respective antenna thereof and enable the desired sensor or sensors to detect the respective predetermined characteristic and to transmit an output signal indicative of the detected respective characteristic to the control transceiver.
The present invention is particularly beneficial in applications where health monitoring is essential and the structure of the device is degraded when wires are attached to the embedded or surface mounted sensors. The invention may also be applied to applications involving rotating machinery and the like where slip rings or other means are necessary to send signals back to a monitoring station.
The present invention enables wireless communication between sensors and actuators and/or powering of such sensors and actuators located on or within a structure. Power may be delivered to the sensors and actuators through the utilization of electromagnetic radiation in the radio frequency (possibly microwave) range. To this end, so-called microstrip antennas may be utilized. Such microstrip antennas may receive and transmit power simultaneously; therefore, not only may the power be collected by one antenna for actuation purposes, but also the same antenna may transmit a signal which may be used for structural health monitoring and/or feedback control purposes.
Microstrip antennas are relatively inexpensive and light-weight and may be utilized as radiating/receiving elements in radar and communication systems. Basically, a microstrip antenna may be fabricated by depositing/printing a small rectangular metallic patch on one side of a dielectric substrate, with the other side completely plated by a conducting plane. Such microstrip antennas may be fabricated in a variety of other shapes and sizes, such as those which may enable a microstrip antenna to be easily flushed mounted or arranged onto the body of a car, airplane, rotor blades, high speed machinery or the roof of a building. More complex geometries of microstrip antennas with multiple radiating elements, multiple substrate layers, or complex feed structure are obtainable as described herein so as to meet diverse design requirements. Such multilayer configurations can be integrated with electronics and other control circuitry on separate substrate layers that would allow advanced electronic beam steering, digital control and adaptive processing.
Further, the microstrip antenna elements may be integrated onto multilayered dielectric-piezoelectric substrates, along with other electronics and feed distribution circuits, for remote actuation and sensing of mechanical systems. The microstrip antennas would allow wireless communication with a distance transmitter. The power received can be used to remotely actuate the piezoelectric material. Furthermore, signals from the local piezoelectric sensors can be communicated via the microstrip antennas back to the remote station for monitoring and feedback control purposes. Embedded into the body material of a mechanical structure, and properly distributed over the entire body, such integrated designs enable smart structures to be dynamically monitored and controlled for desired performance by wireless means.
The present invention utilizes micro-strip antenna arrays integrated with piezoelectric (or other smart materials) substrates for enabling wireless communication in various applications such as smart structures. Furthermore, the present invention provides a totally passive antenna system which may be used for sensing operations.
The present invention may be utilized in passive (or active) sensing systems such as remote stress monitoring, electronic identification/tagging, security systems, transmission is of signals when slip rings are required, and so forth. Additionally, the present invention may be utilized to perform actuation functions, such as in ultra-high accuracy measuring tools and devices, cutting tools, light-weight robotic manipulators, laser and other optical heads and probes, actuation and health monitoring of aircraft wings and rotor blades for helicopters; health monitoring of turbine blades, health monitoring and active vibration isolation for payloads requiring vibration isolation (e.g., microgravity experiments in space), and so forth.
Other objects, features and advantages according to the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of illustrated embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which corresponding components are identified by the same reference numerals.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
The dimensions of the antenna 30, the location of the probe feed 32, the thickness and material properties of the substrate 34 determine the proper operation of the antenna. The length of the antenna should be about half the effective wavelength for resonant operation. The width and the location of the probe feed should be such so as to achieve proper impedance matching for maximum radiation efficiency. The thickness or the dielectric substrates may be selected to obtain the necessary bandwidth. For instance, to achieve an antenna with a 2.6 GHz resonant frequency, a 1.5 cm×1.5 cm patch may be deposited on a 0.02 inch thick duroid (approximately 2.5 inches×1.5 inches) bonded to a 0.02 inches thick piezoceramic (PZT 5H−approximately 2.5 inches×1.5 inches). The probe feed is to be located at 1 millimeter from one edge, centered about the other dimension. For the two-layer arrangement of
A two- or multi-layer antenna structure may be preferable over a single-layer antenna for several reasons. First, producing a microstrip antenna directly on a single-layered piezoelectric structure can be quite difficult and problematic. The high-dielectric constant of a piezoelectric substrate may result in a very low level of input radiation impedance, which can be difficult to match. Second, available piezoelectric substrates may be quite lossy at microwave frequencies, with poor reproducibility of their microwave characteristics. A two-layer arrangement with a dielectric substrate cascaded on top of a piezoelectric substrate minimizes such undesired effects by concentrating a major fraction of the fields in the dielectric region. In addition, as hereinafter discussed, for sensing applications, the two-layer arrangement provides a relatively simple and effective mechanism to combine and modulate the microwave signal across the antenna together with the low-frequency sensing signal across the piezoelectric substrate.
As shown therein, such arrangement includes multiple antenna patches 304, connected with the array input 308 using metal feed lines 306 so as to increase the received power level. Each microstrip antenna element 304 may be configured as in
In
It may be noted, that the vibration of the sensing platform can result in a doppler effect, independent of the smart material (e.g., piezoelectric ceramic) sensing. This doppler information, which may have some correlation with the sensing signal, may not be a reliable measure of the internal mechanical stress. For example, a doppler component may not contain information about stress and vibration components in directions perpendicular to the microwave radiation, or large internal stress variation that produces only small physical displacements and vibration. Accordingly, it is preferable to filter the doppler component and background noise in order to clearly detect the sensing signal. If the transmitting radio frequency (fc) is slightly shifted or perturbed, the corresponding doppler component would shift linearly with the change in the radio frequency; whereas, the sensing signal would remain unaffected by the small change in the radio frequency. This property can be strategically used for suitable signal processing, and enhanced detection and sensing.
The sensing antenna is preferably a passive device, which does not require any battery source for biasing and circuit operation. The only electronic component that may be used in the antenna 411 is a diode. It may be noted that the substrate itself (e.g., piezoceramic) exhibits some radio/microwave non-linearity of its real and/or imaginary part of the dielectric constant. This non-linearity can be effectively used for modulation purposes without the need for any additional electronic components. This would allow the realization of a single passive device without any additional electronics, which would perform radio/microwave reception from a remote control station, sensing and modulation with the microwave signal, and re-transmission of the modulated signal for detection at the remote control station.
Such system includes a microwave signal source 500, a control a signal source 510, a modulator 502, a transmitting antenna 504 and a receiving antenna 506 which is part of an activation antenna 511. A control signal from the control signal source 510 is modulated by a radio-frequency (possibly in the microwave or millimeter wave range) signal from the microwave signal source 500 by the modulator 502 so as to form an activation signal which is transmitted by the transmitter antenna 504. The signal received by the actuation antenna 506 is converted to activation power signal using the non-linear element 508. The non-linear function of the element 508 can be implemented using an electronic diode or by the microwave non-linearity of a substrate used with the antenna. The substrate for the antenna may be piezoceramic.
In other words,
The antenna 601 shown in
Therefore, microstrip antenna elements may be integrated onto multilayered dielectric-piezoelectric substrates, along with other electronics and feed distribution circuits, for remote actuation and/or sensing of mechanical systems. The microstrip antennas may allow wireless communication with a distance transmitter. As a result, power may be supplied in a wireless manner to a desired number of smart patches so as to actuate the piezoelectric material included in such smart patches, thereby causing a force, torque, or the like to be imposed on the structure having the smart patches. Additionally, signals indicative of a sensed or detected predetermined characteristic of the structure from local piezoelectric sensors may be communicated via the microstrip antennas back to a remote station for monitoring and feedback control.
An article entitled “Utilization of Microstrip Antenna for Wireless Communication in Smart Structures” by Nirod K. Das et al., (in press), and presented at the NATO workshop on Smart Electronic Structures in Belgium, NATO Headquarters in November 1996 is hereby incorporated by reference.
An article entitled “Active Vibration Damping and Pointing of a Flexible Structure with Piezoceramic Stack Actuators” by F. Khorrami et al., in proceedings of the SPIE 1996 Symposium on Smart Structures and Materials, (San Diego, Calif.), February 1996 is hereby incorporated by reference.
Although preferred embodiments of the present invention and modifications thereof have been described in detail herein, it is to be understood that this invention is not limited to these embodiments and modifications, and that other modifications and variations may be affected by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
This is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 08/806,565, filed Feb. 25, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,970,393.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 08806565 | Feb 1997 | US |
Child | 09407184 | US |