The present disclosure relates to reflector antennas. In particular, the present disclosure relates to a liquid-crystal reconfigurable metasurface reflector antenna.
Next generation wireless networks are likely to rely on higher frequency, lower wavelength radio waves, including for example the use of mm-wave technologies within the 24-100 GHz frequency band. At these frequencies, larger aperture and more directive antennas are likely to be used to compensate for higher propagation losses. Common technologies for large-aperture mm-wave antennas are lens and reflector antennas. Reflector antennas have been used for various communications applications for many years. There are various types of reflector antennas, including prime-feed reflectors, offset-feed reflectors, dual-reflector antennas, etc. All these reflectors uses some form of curved metallic reflector and/or sub-reflectors to form a RF beam-collimation structure, such as the most commonly used parabolic reflectors and the Cassegrain dual-reflectors. These reflector antennas offer simplicity, low-cost and high-gain antenna performances. However, due to use of curved shaped reflector, these antennas tend to be bulky and typically can provide only a fixed beam with single feed horn.
Accordingly there is a need for a re-configurable, space-efficient reflector antenna suitable for small wavelength applications.
The present description describes example embodiments of a beam steerable, flat, reflector antenna that uses a liquid-crystal-loaded metasurface reflector. The embodiments described herein may, for example, be applicable to implementation of general classes of reflector antennas, including prime-feed reflectors, offset feed reflectors, and dual-feed reflector antennas. Instead of using a curved metallic surface as in conventional reflector antennas, the embodiments described herein use an electronically tunable flat metasurface as the main reflector, whose reflective phase can be electronically reconfigured to allow effective beam forming and beam steering. Such a configuration may in some applications permit a compact, space efficient and cost effective antenna that is adapted for small wavelength, high frequency applications and that can be dynamically reconfigured.
According to one aspect there is provided a reflector antenna that includes a feed for generating a radio frequency (RF) signal, and a metasurface reflector for reflecting the RF signal originating from the feed. The metasurface reflector includes an array of cells each having a volume of liquid crystal with a controllable dielectric value enabling a reflection phase of the cells to be selectively tuned to effect beam steering of the reflected RF signal.
In one example, the antenna is a prime focus reflector with the feed generating the RF signal towards the metasurface reflector. The feed may be in-line with or offset from a center of the metasurface reflector. In another example the antenna is a dual-reflector antenna with the feed generating the RF signal towards a sub-reflector that reflects the RF signal towards the metasurface reflector.
In example embodiments the metasurface reflector includes first and second double sided substrates defining an intermediate region between them containing liquid crystal in a nematic phase. The first substrate has a first microstrip patch array formed on a side thereof that faces the second substrate, the first microstrip patch array comprising a two-dimensional array of microstrip patches each being electrically connected to a common potential. The second substrate has a second microstrip patch array formed on a side thereof that faces the first substrate, the second microstrip patch array comprising a two-dimensional array of microstrip patches each having a respective conductive terminal. The first microstrip patch array and the second microstrip patch array are aligned to form the array of cells, each cell comprising a microstrip patch of the first microstrip patch array arranged in spaced apart opposition to a microstrip patch of the second microstrip patch array with the volume of the liquid crystal located therebetween. The conductive terminal to the microstrip patch of the second microstrip patch array permits a control voltage to be applied to the cell to control the dielectric value of the volume of the liquid crystal, thereby permitting the reflection phase of the cell to be selectively tuned.
In some examples, the metasurface reflector includes a gridded wire mesh on the first substrate, each of the microstrip patches of the first microstrip patch array being electrically connected to a respective point of the gridded wire mesh to provide the common potential. In some examples, the first and second double sided substrates are formed from planar printed circuit boards.
According to another aspect, there is provided a method of beam steering that includes: generating an RF signal at a feed for application to a metasurface reflector comprising a two dimensional array of cells each including a volume of liquid crystal; reflecting the applied RF signal off of the metasurface reflector; and adjusting voltages to control terminals associated with a plurality of the cells of the metasurface to adjust a phase of the reflected RF signal by adjusting an orientation of the molecules of the liquid crystal within each cell. In some examples, the feed generates the RF signal towards the metasurface reflector. In some examples, the feed generates the RF signal towards a sub-reflector that directs the RF signal towards the metasurface reflector.
According to a further example aspect is a reflector antenna that includes a reconfigurable metasurface reflector for reflecting RF signals, the metasurface reflector comprising an array of cells each having a tunable reflection phase. The antenna also includes a controller configured to apply control signals to the array of cells to tune the reflection phase of the cells to selectively beam steer RF signals reflected from the metasurface reflector, and a feed structure for at least one of: feeding RF signals to the metasurface reflector; and receiving RF signals reflected from the metasurface reflector. In example configurations, the cells each have a volume of liquid crystal with a dielectric value that is controllable by the control signals.
Reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings which show example embodiments of the present application, and in which:
Similar reference numerals may have been used in different figures to denote similar components.
Example embodiments are described below that incorporate metasurface technology, and in particular a metasurface that is a two-dimensional periodical structure that contains electrically small scatterers with periodicity relatively small compared to the operating wavelength. A metasurface can be used to provide tailored reflection and transmission characteristics of EM waves using fixed patterned metallic structure. As described in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/398,141 filed Oct. 5, 2016, (incorporated herein by reference), a reconfigurable metasurface can be achieved by loading a metasurface with nematic liquid crystal. The metasurface makes use of the tunable dielectric anisotropy of liquid crystals to realize phase-tunable flat metasurface reflectors. By varying DC voltages on microstrip patches of unit cells, effective dielectric constant, and therefore the phase differential at various locations of the metasurface can be changed as desire. This concept combines features of metasurface with the unique properties of electronically tunable liquid crystal to enable real-time reconfiguration of metasurface to achieve beam steerable, flat, reflector antennas.
The present description describes example embodiments of a beam steerable, flat, reflector antenna that uses a liquid-crystal-loaded metasurface. The embodiments described herein may, for example, be applicable to implementation of general classes of reflector antennas, including prime-feed reflectors, offset feed reflectors, and dual-feed reflector antennas. Instead of using a curved metallic surface as in conventional reflector antennas, the embodiments described herein use an electronically tunable flat metasurface as the main reflector, whose reflective phase can be electronically reconfigured to allow effective beam forming and beam steering. In example embodiments, the flat metasurface is loaded with liquid crystal, embedded between two microstrip patch array layers, which form an array of individually controllable cells. An effective dielectric constant between the two microstrip patch layers at each unit cell can be tuned individually by varying electrostatic field between the patches due to the anisotropy of the liquid crystal. Therefore, the resonant frequency of each unit cell can be tuned individually and electronically by adjusting DC voltage at each cell. Because reflection phase is determined by the frequency of the incoming wave with respect to the resonance frequency, such surface can be tuned to form a distributed 2D phase shifter. Therefore, an incoming wave can be redirected by adjusting DC voltages of unit cells of the metasurface to give proper phase distribution for the desired direction of reflected wave.
In this regard, example embodiments of an electronically tunable metasurface reflector 100 that can be used to implement a reflective antenna is shown in
A physical implementation of metasurface reflector 100 will now be described according to example embodiments.
Upper PCB 120 has a central non-conductive substrate layer (shown in cross-hatch in
Lower PCB 122 has a central non-conductive substrate layer (shown in cross-hatch in
In the example embodiment described above, control voltages are provided to the lower microstrip patches 142 through PTH vias 114 that are accessible through the ground plane 130. Other embodiments could have different configurations, including a control line layer that could be integrated into substrate 122 to provide conductive control terminals to each of the microstrip patches 142.
As described above, the upper and lower PCBs 120, 122 are located in spaced opposition to each other with an intermediate layer of liquid crystal 146 located between them. The upper PCB microstrip patches 140 and the lower PCB microstrip patches 142 align with each other to from an array of cell regions 144, each of which contains a volume of liquid crystal 146, thus providing an array of individually controllable, LC cell regions 144.
Accordingly, as can be appreciated from
The metasurface reflector 100 has a resonant frequency that can depend on the geometry of the cells 106 and dielectric properties of the materials used in the PCBs 120, 122. In a example embodiments, the microstrip patches 140, 142 have rectangular surfaces (for example square) having a maximum normal dimension that is less than ¼ of the minimum intended operating wavelength, however other microstrip patch configurations could be used. In example embodiments, the microstrip patches 140, 142 may have dimensions that are less than quarter of a wavelength of the intended operating wavelength of the metasurface reflector 100. In an example embodiment, wire mesh 118 has a periodicity and grid dimensions that correspond to those of microstrip patches 140, with a grid intersection point occurring over a center point of each microstrip patch 140.
As noted above, in at least some examples, the metasurface reflector 100 illustrated in
In example embodiments, the liquid crystal 146 is a nematic liquid crystal that has an intermediate nematic gel-like state between solid crystalline and liquid phase at the intended operating temperature range of the metasurface reflector 100. Examples of liquid crystal include, for example, GT3-23001 liquid crystal and BL038 liquid crystal from the Merck group. Liquid crystal 146 in a nematic state possesses dielectric anisotropy characteristics at microwave frequencies, whose effective dielectric constant may be adjusted by setting different orientations of the molecules of liquid crystal 146 relative to its reference axis.
At microwave frequencies, the liquid crystal 146 may change its dielectric properties due to different orientations of the molecules 602 caused by application of electrostatic field between the microstrip patches 140 and 142. Thus, the dielectric constant between the microstrip patches 140 and 142 at each unit cell 106 can be tuned by varying the DC voltage applied to patch 142, allowing the reflection phase at each individual unit cell 106 to be controlled. The unit cells 106 can be collectively controlled so that metasurface reflector 100 acts like a distributed spatial phase shifter that interacts with an incident wave and produces a reflected wave with varying phase shift across its aperture. Because reflection phase is determined by the frequency of the incoming wave with respect to the resonance frequency, the metasurface reflector 100 can be tuned to form a distributed 2D phase shifter. Therefore, an incoming wave may be redirected by adjusting DC voltages of unit cells 106 to give proper phase distribution for the desired direction of reflected wave.
In example embodiments the metasurface reflector 100 has a relatively high density/small periodicity of cells 106. In an example embodiment, where λ represents an minimum intended operating frequency, top PCB 120 is relatively thin, having a thickness h1<λ/20 and the liquid crystal 146 in cell region 144 has a thickness of h2<λ/20 (i.e. the gap between the opposed microstrip patches 140 and 142). The thicknesses h1 and h2 can be different from each other. In example embodiments the bottom PCB 122 has a finite thickness h3<λ/4.
It will thus be appreciated that the reflection phase of an incident wave at the surface of the metasurface reflector 100 can be controlled by varying the DC voltages applied to unit cells 106 such that continuous beam steering of an EM wave can be achieved by regulating DC voltage distribution to unit cells 106 across the metasurface reflector 100.
Example embodiments of LC reconfigurable metasurface reflector antennas will now be described. Although the reflector antenna embodiments described below incorporate LC reconfigurable metasurface reflector 100, it is possible that other LC reconfigurable metasurface configurations could also be suitable for use as a reflector in the antennas described below.
As with parabolic reflectors, many types of feed configurations can be used with flat metasurface reflectors.
In each of the configurations of
Referring to
Where:
Based on the dimension of the metasurface reflector (Dm) and its focal length (Fm), along with the required beam tilt angle (θo), an initial phase distribution ϕ(xi,yi) (where xi, yi represent a cell location in the metasurface reflector) for the cell units 106 of the metasurface reflector 100 can be calculated by controller 165 using the path delay:
Controller 165 can apply DC voltages to unit cells 106 required to achieve the calculated phase distribution. In examples, the calculations can be ongoing to provide adaptive phase compensation across the metasurface reflector 100, allowing the reflector to be continuously shaped for optimum amplitude taper to give optimum beam performance. In example embodiments, controller 265 comprises a processor and an associated digital storage that stores instructions and data for the processor to enable the beam steering functionality described herein. In some examples, controller 265 may comprise a programmable logic controller.
In example embodiments the metasurface reflector antennas 170, 180, and 190 can be operated to both transmit and receive RF signals. In the case of RF signal transmission, the RF feed structure 172, 192 converts electric currents from a transmitter circuit into wireless RF waves that are reflected by the metasurface reflector 100, and in the case of RF signal reception, the RF feed structure 172, 192 converts RF waves reflected by the metasurface reflector 100 into electric currents for a receiver circuit. In some examples the metasurface reflector antennas 170, 180, and 190 may be used as transmit-only or receive-only antennas.
By way of example,
The present disclosure may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the subject matter of the claims. The described example embodiments are to be considered in all respects as being only illustrative and not restrictive. Selected features from one or more of the above-described embodiments may be combined to create alternative embodiments not explicitly described, features suitable for such combinations being understood within the scope of this disclosure. For examples, although specific sizes and shapes of cells 106 are disclosed herein, other sizes and shapes may be used.
Although the example embodiments disclose individually addressable cells, other embodiments may have cells that may be addressable by row or column or in a multiplexed manner.
Although the example embodiments are described with reference to a particular orientation (e.g. upper and lower), this was simply used as a matter of convenience and ease of understanding in describing the reference Figs. The metasurface may have any arbitrary orientation.
All values and sub-ranges within disclosed ranges are also disclosed. Also, while the systems, devices and processes disclosed and shown herein may comprise a specific number of elements/components, the systems, devices and assemblies could be modified to include additional or fewer of such elements/components. For example, while any of the elements/components disclosed may be referenced as being singular, the embodiments disclosed herein could be modified to include a plurality of such elements/components. The subject matter described herein intends to cover and embrace all suitable changes in technology.
This application claims priority to and the benefit of United States provisional patent application No. 62/409,710 filed Oct. 18, 2016, which is incorporated herein by reference.
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20180109002 A1 | Apr 2018 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62409710 | Oct 2016 | US |