Inflight radomes and antennas are essential components on modern aircrafts and missiles. Antennas can allow for communication and targeting, and a radome generally protects antennas from elements while typically allowing low loss EM transmission. Aerodynamic heating can pose significant challenges regarding structural design and materials selection for hypersonic flights.
During hypersonic flight operations (e.g., at velocities greater than Mach 5), due to aerodynamic drag, the expected temperature of the outer surface of a radome wall can exceed 1,000° C. within several-minutes of flight time (see, e.g., Nair, R. et al., Progress in Electromagnetics Research, 2015, 154, 65-78). The electromagnetic (EM) window regions of a typical nose-cone radome structure, corresponding to antenna scan ranges, can include one or more regions that reach up to 1400° C. (Id.), which can cause most natural ceramic materials to become conductors. Therefore, the flexural strength, dielectric constant, and/or loss tangent of ceramic materials are factors that typically are considered in the selection of radome materials.
Hypersonic flights can lead to high temperature flows, air dissociation, and/or cumulative heating of air-frames. The dynamic range of parameters that characterize the environment is large and influenced by many factors, including altitude, velocity, duration of flight, geometry of the vehicle, airframe, and/or the heat-shielding of the material. For instance, the electron density and electrical conductivity of vehicle components can vary by several orders of magnitude due to heating/cooling cycles during the course of a flight. Some of the in-flight issues encountered include signal attenuation, communication blackout, signal distortion due to turbulent flow, radiation from heated optical windows, and emission from hot flows. These conditions can require the design and selection of radome materials for hypersonic vehicle to possess high flexural strength, low dielectric constant, and/or low loss tangent, etc.
Typical materials used in radome structures include PYROCERAM® glass-ceramic material and slip cast fused silica (SCFS). These materials, however, have one or more inherent limitations. For example, a disadvantage of PYROCERAM® glass-ceramic material is that its dielectric constant and loss tangent increase with temperature, thereby preventing its use at temperatures greater than 800° C. A disadvantage of SCFS includes the porous nature of the material and its limited mechanical properties. Also, SCFS, due to their density, can transmit water vapor readily from the atmosphere into the interior of a radome (see, e.g., Poisl, W. H. et al., Raytheon Technology Today, 2012, 2, 64-65). This shortcoming also can be experienced by traditional honeycomb radome material structures.
One desirable functional requirement of radome materials can include the ability to avoid significantly altering the amplitude and/or phase of incoming radio frequency (RF) waves that pass through the materials. The transparency of the materials to RF waves typically is assured by selecting dielectrics with a small dielectric constant (εr=1.1-4.0), low dielectric loss tangent (tan δ<0.01), and/or by suitable electrodynamic design of the layer thickness (see, e.g., Kandi, K. K. et al. International Journal of Applied Ceramics Technology, 2015, 12, 909-920).
When radome materials are poorly designed, one or more disadvantages may result. For example, when dielectric materials are used that have a positive permittivity greater than one (typically, greater than 2.1), the radome can reduce the transmitted power by reflecting energy at the material interface, and the refracted waves ultimately may corrupt the beam profile (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 8,350,777). As a further example, when an RF wave propagates from free space into a radome material, a difference in characteristic impedance between free space and the radome material may cause reflections of RF waves off of the surface of the dielectric material. This reflection also may occur as the wave propagates from the dielectric material back into free space on an other side of the radome. Both of these reflections can contribute to loss in transmitted signal power and decreased sensitivity in radar applications.
Typical RF transparent materials currently are designed to have favorable electrical properties either through chemical doping, skin coating, or intricate geometrical design (e.g., layered structure, porous structure, honeycomb structure, etc.). Such conventional dielectric materials, however, typically suffer from poor mechanical strength and/or relatively low operating temperatures, thereby limiting their use in many applications, such as hypersonic vehicle, spacecraft, or inside a gas turbine. Monolithic ceramic materials currently used normally exhibit high dielectric constants at high temperature, and are used at the cost of significant attenuation to incoming and outgoing radio signals.
Metamaterials are artificial materials engineered to provide one or more properties which may not be readily available in nature. Metamaterials may achieve the one or more properties from their structure (rather than their composition) by the inclusion of small inhomogeneities, which may permit effective macroscopic behavior. Metamaterials may have electromagnetic (EM) wave-manipulating capabilities (e.g., blocking, absorbing, enhancing, and/or bending) beyond those of conventional materials
Metamaterials typically include individual cells periodically replicated in the X and Y planes, and may be stacked in the Z plane (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 8,350,777). A wide range of phenomena, such as permittivity e and permeability μ values, can be created by varying the geometric parameters and electrical properties of the conductive portion of the structure, which may account for a very small fraction of the entire volume. For example, in 1999, a metallic magnetic resonance element was designed that included a split-ring resonator (SRR), where the volume fraction of the metallic ring was only 1:104 to the entire structure (Pendry, J. B. et al., Applied Physics Letters, 2001, 78, 298). Because the conductive portion may be so small, possible RF absorption can generally be neglected (Saini, P. et al., New Polymers for Special Applications (Chapter 3), 2012). Additionally, with such structure designs, reflection loss at the material boundary interface can be eliminated (Tanaka, T. et al., Physical Review B, 2006, 73, 125423). In general, the higher the electrical conductivity of a metallic resonator, the higher the efficiency, since the structure tends to “pull” the electric field into its interior (Ebberg, A. et al., Advances in Multifunctional Materials and Systems II: Ceramic Transactions, 2014, 245). Other structures (e.g., inductive coupled rod pairs, double-fishnet structure) have also been studied and proposed, especially for higher frequency applications (see, e.g., “Svirko, Y. et al., Applied Physics Letters, 2001, 78, 498; and Podolskiy, V. A. et al., Nonlinear Opt. Phys. Mater., 2002, 11, 65).
Computer simulations have determined that pairing an ε-negative slab with a μ-negative slab may lead to unusual features, such as zero reflection and near-perfect transparency (Alu, A. et al., IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, 2003, Vol. 51, No. 10). Therefore, a structure including a conventional dielectric slab adjacent to a metamaterial slab of the same width but of opposite material characteristics may be used as a radome structure to provide desirable transparency in normal incident angle, and reduce the reflection for oblique incidence. One advantage of such structures may be that it is independent of the phase of incoming RF waves, since the phase after propagating through the first slab of each pair is cancelled after passing through the second slab of the pair (Cory, H. et al., Microwave and Optical Technology Letters, 2004, 40, 6; and Cory, H. et al., Antennas and Propagation, 2007, 1, 1).
The so-called RF transmission in metamaterials generally is not considered transmission; instead it is typically considered to be RF signal propagation by resonance, and, therefore, is not usually based on the inherent properties of the components materials' make-up. For example, a split-ring resonator (SRR) structure, which is a representative metamaterial type, is able to create strong electrical-magnetic field coupling, and produce desired values of frequency-dependent effective permittivity εeff and permeability μeff, especially the values over a narrow frequency band around its resonance frequency for transmission purposes.
In the past, full-wave electromagnetic solvers have been used theoretically or experimentally to investigate SRR behavior, but usually require very large computer memory space and/or very long computer processing time. Sufficiently accurate equivalent lumped circuit models (ELCM), however, can now be used effectively to estimate the behavior of SRR structures in a simple, fast, and/or computationally efficient manner. Establishing explicit relationships between the physical properties (e.g., electrical properties, geometric parameters, etc.) of the SRR structure and its frequency-dependent transmission/reflection behavior is now easier to achieve. Systematic optimization can be performed with such circuit model representation as well.
When designing a metamaterial structure, e.g., the aforementioned SRR configuration, in order to achieve a theoretically-proven electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), one major task can be to eliminate the dissipation due to Ohmic losses. For example, a coupled rectangle-shaped SRR can be modeled as two damped mass-spring resonators with mass m1=m2 and spring constant κ linearly coupled by a third spring κc (Tassin, P, et al., Physical Review Letters, 2009, 102, 053901). The dissipation minimum may occur approximately at the resonance frequency, when the metamaterial exhibits a transmission window with extremely low absorption. With such modeling methods, low loss RF transmission may be achieved through electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) in coherent three-level atomic media.
Existing metamaterial designs generally include metal (copper, gold, etc.) resonators arranged on polymer dielectric substrates, and, as a result, and are typically not suitable for high temperature applications.
There remains a need for metamaterials capable of meeting the one or more requirements imposed by high-speed projectiles, such as missiles, or vehicles, including materials that are suitable for all-weather conditions and/or possess a low dielectric constant and loss tangent, both of which may have values that are desirable throughout at least a portion of a temperature range of interest (e.g., >1,000° C.).
In one aspect, metamaterials are provided. In some embodiments, the metamaterials include a first substrate including a high temperature dielectric material, and a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate, wherein the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof.
In some embodiments, the metamaterials include a first substrate including a high temperature dielectric material; a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate; a second substrate including the high temperature dielectric material; and a second array of the conductive resonators arranged on the second substrate; wherein the first substrate and the second substrate are arranged substantially parallel to each other; and wherein the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof.
In another aspect, radomes that include a metamaterial are provided. In some embodiments, the radomes include a metamaterial, wherein the metamaterial includes (i) a first substrate including a high temperature dielectric material; and (ii) a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate, wherein the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof. In some embodiments, the radomes include a metamaterial, wherein the metamaterial includes (i) a first substrate including a high temperature dielectric material; (ii) a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate; (iii) a second substrate including the high temperature dielectric material; and (iv) a second array of the conductive resonators arranged on the second substrate; wherein the first substrate and the second substrate are arranged substantially parallel to each other, and wherein the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof.
Provided herein are metamaterials and radomes that include metamaterials, which can be used in high temperature, pressure, and/or radioactive environments, while maintaining a desirable degree of radiofrequency (RF) transparency. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable, low loss transmission metamaterials suitable for use in or as hypersonic flight radomes at multiple frequency bands (e.g., 3-30 GHz).
Radomes are provided that include a metamaterial as described herein, and the metamaterials may have an effective refractive index close to unity with low losses. Not wishing to be bound by any particular theory, it is believed that having an effective refractive index close to unity can ensure that the refracted angle is the same as the incident angle, which can permit the beam profile to be maintained. Not wishing to be bound by any particular theory, it is believed that the low loss transmission may minimize the effect of reflection, absorption, and scattering when an RF signal passes through a metamaterial, thereby possibly providing near perfect transparency.
Embodiments of the metamaterials can be used as a window tile for radome applications. In some embodiments, radio communications can easily pass through the metamaterials and radomes described herein with minimum gain loss and phase distortion. In some embodiments, the metamaterials described herein are stable at temperatures in excess of at least 1400° C., while maintaining mechanical strength and/or retaining a low dielectric constant for desired RF transmission properties. Embodiments of the radomes are relatively light weight, and have high stiffness, high strength, and/or high oxidation resistance. In some embodiments, refracted and reflected EM signals (from a seeker antenna) propagate along and within the radomes' surface toward the nose cone direction, and, therefore, the boresight error εbse can be completely eliminated during a final homing period to ensure accurate engagement.
Metamaterials
Provided herein are metamaterials. In some embodiments, the metamaterials include a first substrate, and a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate.
In some embodiments, the metamaterials are substantially RF transparent. A material is “RF transparent” if an EM signal (within a certain frequency range) can pass through the material with no (i) amplitude reduction, (ii) phase distortion, or (iii) a combination thereof. When the amplitude reduction or the phase distortion changes by 10% or less, then the material has “near-perfect RF transparency”.
In some embodiments, the metamaterials include a first substrate, a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate, a second substrate, and a second array of the conductive resonators arranged on the second substrate. In some embodiments, the first substrate and the second substrate are arranged substantially parallel to each other. The substrates may be fixed in position by any known techniques or materials, particularly materials that are thermally and/or chemically stable at temperatures described herein. As used herein, two substrates are “substantially parallel” when the surfaces of the substrates are parallel to each other, or the smaller of any two distances between the surfaces of the substrates is within 5% of the larger of the two distances (e.g., 100 units and 96 units).
As used herein, the phrase “array of conductive resonators” generally refers to two or more conductive resonators that are arranged on a substrate in a pattern of any kind. Typically, the conductive resonators of an array are not in contact with each other. In some embodiments, the spacing between the conductive resonators is sub-wavelength, which can provide efficient scattering, prevent the occurrence of grating diffraction, or a combination thereof. In some embodiments, the spacing between the conductive resonators is great enough to prevent near-field coupling between neighboring conductive resonators from perturbing the designed scattering amplitudes and phases.
The two or more conductive resonators of an array may have the same or different shapes (e.g., a straight nanorod, a bent nanorod, a split circle, etc.). The pattern may include a symmetrical matrix (e.g.,
In some embodiments, the conductive resonators of the arrays are at RF range (e.g., 3-30 GHz) with sub-wavelength separation, which can make it possible to achieve the phase discontinuities phenomenon along a material's surface, thereby ensuring that the reflected and refracted signals are plane waves. Not wishing to be bound by any particular theory, it is believed that spatially tailoring the geometry of the resonators (and thereby their frequency operating range) and the shape of the functional-tunable waveguide, the phase discontinuity can be designed to propagate along a surface of an object, such as a missile body, and the wavefront of the reflected and refracted signals can be guided toward the nosecone of the object.
When a metamaterial includes more than one substrate, the substrates may be arranged so that the conductive resonators of the first array and the conductive resonators of the second array are substantially aligned in the Z direction. When a first conductive resonator of a metamaterial is viewed in the Z direction, a second conductive resonator is “substantially aligned in the Z direction” with the first conductive resonator when no more than 10% of the surface area of the second conductive resonator would be viewable (in the absence of the substrate). In some embodiments, the conductive resonators of the first array and the conductive resonators of the second array are not aligned in the Z direction.
The metamaterials provided herein may be stable at relatively high temperatures, including, for example, temperatures of at least 1,000° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,000° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,100° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,200° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,000° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,300° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,400° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,500° C. to about 1,800° C. In some embodiments, the metamaterials are thermally stable at a temperature of about 1,600° C. to about 1,800° C.
Substrates
The substrates generally may include any material that is compatible with the conductive resonators. The substrate may include materials that are good insulators at high temperatures, have desirable chemical stability at high temperatures, having desirable thermal stability at high temperatures, or a combination thereof.
In some embodiments, the substrates include a high temperature dielectric material. As used herein, the phrase “high temperature dielectric material” generally refers to dielectric materials that are thermally stable at temperatures of at least 1,000° C. When a metamaterial includes two or more substrates, each of the substrates may include the same materials, or each of the substrates may include at least one different material.
In some embodiments, the high temperature dielectric material includes alumina (Al2O3), yttria (Y2O3), silicon nitride (Si3N4), or a combination thereof. In some embodiments, the high temperature dielectric includes alumina. In some embodiments, the high temperature dielectric includes yttria. In some embodiments, the high temperature dielectric includes silicon nitride.
The substrates generally may have any dimensions, and the dimensions may be selected based on a particular application.
Conductive Resonators
The conductive resonators may generally include a conductive material. In some embodiments, the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof.
The noble metal may be selected from ruthenium (Ru), rhodium (Rh), palladium (Pd), silver (Ag), osmium (Os), iridium (Ir), platinum (Pt), or gold (Au). In some embodiments, the noble metal is platinum. In some embodiments, the noble metal is iridium. The noble metal alloy may be selected from any combination of two or more of the noble metals. In some embodiments, the noble metal alloy includes a platinum-rhodium alloy. Platinum-rhodium alloys can be stable in air at temperatures of at least 1600° C. to 1800° C.
In some embodiments, the noble metals or noble metal alloys (e.g., Pt—Rh alloy) may be deposited as conductive resonator patches on a substrate including alumina by screen printing powder slurries, followed by high temperature baking (up to 2000° C.).
As used herein, the phrase “high temperature ceramic semiconductor” generally refers to ceramic semiconductor materials that are thermally stable at temperatures of at least 1,000° C. In some embodiments, the high temperature ceramic semiconductor includes silicon carbide (SiC). SiC may be stable at temperatures of at least 1700° C.
The conductive resonators generally may have any shape and any dimensions that permit the metamaterials to achieve one or more of the features described herein.
In some embodiments, the conductive resonators include nanorod conductive resonators. As used herein, the phrase “nanorod conductive resonator” generally refers to conductive resonators having a rod- or bent rod-shape, and a longest dimension (e.g., length) of at least 10 nm; for example, a longest dimension of about 10 nm to about 4,000 nm. In some embodiments, the nanorods have a longest dimension of about 1,000 nm to about 3,000 nm, or about 1,000 nm to about 2,000 nm. Examples of nanorods having a bent rod-shape are depicted at
In some embodiments, the conductive resonators include at least one split ring conductive resonator. As used herein, the phrase “split ring conductive resonator” refers to conductive resonators that, when viewed along the Z-axis, form a “ring” having one or more gaps. The “ring” may be circular in shape (e.g.,
Other shapes are envisioned for the conductive resonators, including “H”-shaped conductive resonators, such as those depicted at
Radomes
Provided herein are radomes that include a metamaterial, as described herein. In some embodiments, the radomes have substantially zero reflection, near-perfect transparency, or both. The metamaterials, in some embodiments, are curved to accommodate the shape of an object, such as a missile or aircraft.
In some embodiments, the radomes include a metamaterial, wherein the metamaterial includes (i) a first substrate including a high temperature dielectric material; and (ii) a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate, wherein the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof.
In some embodiments, the radomes include a metamaterial, wherein the metamaterial includes (i) a first substrate including a high temperature dielectric material; (ii) a first array of conductive resonators arranged on the first substrate, wherein the conductive resonators include a noble metal, a noble metal alloy, a high temperature ceramic semiconductor, or a combination thereof, (iii) a second substrate including the high temperature dielectric material; and (iv) a second array of the conductive resonators arranged on the second substrate, wherein the first substrate and the second substrate are arranged substantially parallel to each other. In some embodiments, the radomes include an inner wall and an outer wall, wherein the first substrate and the second substrate are arranged between the inner wall and the outer wall.
Not wishing to be bound by any particular theory, it is believed that a radome having a multilayered structure may accommodate objects, such as missiles and aircraft, that operate in a wide range of conditions to maintain their electrical properties, i.e., allowing any combination of RF waves to effectively transmit through the radome.
In some embodiments, the radomes include a multilayered structure that includes a conventional dielectric slab and a metamaterial slab, as described herein. In some embodiments, the radomes include a multilayered structure that includes a conventional dielectric slab and a metamaterial slab of the same width but of one or more opposite material characteristics. Multiple slabs may be manufactured reiteratively as a sandwich structure.
The radomes provided herein may be suitable for a number of industries, including the air and space industry and energy industry. The energy industry, for example, may use the radomes on or as part of equipment used to monitor fuel cell degradation or the temperature inside nuclear reactors. The air and space industry may use the radomes on missiles, or aircraft, particularly high speed aircraft.
The terms “a,” “an,” and “the” are intended to include plural alternatives, e.g., at least one. For instance, the disclosure of “a substrate,” “a noble metal,” and the like, is meant to encompass one, or mixtures or combinations of more than one substrate, noble metal, and the like, unless otherwise specified.
In the descriptions provided herein, the terms “includes,” “is,” “containing,” “having,” and “comprises” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “including, but not limited to.” When methods or systems are claimed or described in terms of “comprising” various components or steps, the methods or systems can also “consist essentially of” or “consist of” the various components or steps, unless stated otherwise.
Various numerical ranges may be disclosed herein. When Applicant discloses or claims a range of any type, Applicant's intent is to disclose or claim individually each possible number that such a range could reasonably encompass, including end points of the range as well as any sub-ranges and combinations of sub-ranges encompassed therein, unless otherwise specified. Moreover, all numerical end points of ranges disclosed herein are approximate.
Many modifications and other implementations of the disclosure set forth herein will be apparent having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is to be understood that the disclosure is not to be limited to the specific implementations disclosed and that modifications and other implementations are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims
The present invention is further illustrated by the following examples, which are not to be construed in any way as imposing limitations upon the scope thereof. On the contrary, it is to be clearly understood that resort may be had to various other aspects, embodiments, modifications, and equivalents thereof which, after reading the description herein, may suggest themselves to one of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit of the present invention or the scope of the appended claims. Thus, other aspects of this invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein.
The metamaterials and radomes described herein may be analyzed and/or characterized according to the descriptions of this example.
i. Effective Refractive Index
The generic forms of the frequency-dependent material parameters can be determined as:
(1) effective permeability:
where ωmo is the magnetic resonance frequency (or, the low-frequency edge of the magnetic forbidden band), and ωmp is the magnetic plasma frequency.
(2) effective permittivity:
where ωeo is the electronic resonance frequency (or, the low-frequency edge of the electrical forbidden band), and ωep the electronic plasma frequency.
With a split-ring resonator (SRR) structure, the effective permeability can be calculated as:
where
i=√{square root over (−1)},
is the fractional volume of the conductive resonators occupied in the entire structure,
σ is the DC electrical resistance of the conductive resonator per unit area,
μ0 is the permeability of free space, μ0=4π×10−7 H/m,
c0 is speed of light in free space, c0=3×108 m/s,
r, a, d are the geometric dimensions of the split-ring resonator (shown in
Therefore, by manipulating the electrical properties and geometric parameters of the split-ring resonator (SRR) structure, the effective permeability μeff(ω) can be adjusted at the interested frequency band, so does the effective permittivity εeff(ω). As described by Snell's law,
ni sin θi=nr sin θr (4)
where
ni is the refractive index of the incident wave,
θi is the angle of the incident wave,
nr is the refractive index of the refracted wave,
θr is the angle of the refracted wave.
When the effective refractive index nr_eff=√{square root over (μeffεeff)} is close to the refractive index in the free space ni=1, the refracted angle θr will be equal to the incident angle θi, and therefore the beam profile of the transmitted RF wave can be maintained.
ii. Low Loss Transmission
Equation (3) describes the effective permeability of a typical split-ring resonator (SRR) structure, which is a complex number:
μeff(ω)=μ′eff(ω)−iμ″eff(ω) (5)
The ratio of the imaginary to the real part of the complex permeability is called the loss tangent:
which provides a measure of how much power is lost in a material versus how much it is stored. Similar to other properties described herein, the loss tangent (tan δ) can be adjusted by manipulating the electrical properties and geometric parameters of a split-ring resonator (SRR) structure at the interested frequency band. Therefore, a minimization of the effects of reflection, absorption and scattering can be achieved when an RF signal passes through a material, while maintaining the amplitude of the transmitted RF signal.
iii. RF Transparency
The electrical properties of ceramic materials and RF transmission of the fabricated metamaterials can be examined with a network analyzer from room temperature to high temperature, up to 2500° C., such as a PXI network analyzer: Keysight M9375A, measurement frequency from 300 kHz to 26.5 GHz.
iv. Permeability of Split Ring Resonators
and
is the magnetic resonance frequency,
is the magnetic plasma frequency.
The effective permeability μeff(ω) calculated by the equivalent lumped circuit modeling (ELCM) method was compared with that obtained from the traditional electromagnetic numerical simulation method, and the results match closely.
v. Electrical Properties
It should be noted that the electrical properties of the materials may change with elevated ambient temperature and post processing conditions. For example, SiC is a material whose conductivity increases with increasing pyrolysis temperature, while it decreases with elevated testing temperature. Therefore, the effective permittivity εeff, permeability μeff, resonance frequency ωmo(ωeo) and plasma frequency ωmp(ωep) can all shift away from their room-temperature values. The frequency-dependent RF signal transmission/reflection behavior can be examined with network analyzer at both room and high temperatures.
The interested beam frequency can be limited within a certain temperature range. With elevated application temperature, both carriers' concentration and mobility increase, which in turn can affect the constitutive parameters and can cause unwanted variations in the beam. It can be determined how much the frequency band shifts due to the changes in the electrical properties of the resonator and dielectric materials.
vi. Mathematical Modeling
Mathematical modeling can be used for structure design and property predictions of metamaterials. Modeling of metamaterials can be generally guided by effective medium theory (EMT) (Zhang, X., et al., Scientific Reports 5, Article Number 7892(2015)).
EMTs for electromagnetic metamaterials can be categorized into several approaches: (1) Obtaining effective parameters from the averaging of the computed eigenfields in the unit cell to produce inherently nonlocal parameters dependent on both frequency and block wave parameters. This method can be suitable for metamaterials with complicated unit structures, such as split rings. (2) Coherent potential approximation (CPA) method whereas effective media is taken as the background embedded with the scattered in the unit cell while implying zero scattering. (3) The multiple-scattering theory (MST) for calculating effective wave speed even with the impedance being unknown. Notable metamaterial modeling methods include Finite-difference time-domain method (FDTD) and Characteristics Basis Function Method (CBFM). For quick design of metamaterials, the LC circuit modeling can be performed together with other modeling methods such as FDTD to determine the resonance frequency and bandwidth of metamaterial emission and absorption (Bilotti, F., IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, 2007, 55, 2865-2873).
vii. Square-Shaped Split Ring Resonator
A square-shaped single-ring SRR unit cell can be modeled by the Ansoft's HFSS software over the frequency range from 30 GHz to 40 GHz, using a two-port resonant circuit representation that accounts for the conductor loss and dielectric loss effects (
When forming an SRR array by repeating the pattern of single-ring SRR unit cell, the computed transmission spectrum (e.g., magnitude of the S21 parameter as a function of frequency) can be calculated by HFSS software for various combination of material electrical properties and geometric parameters. For example, the resonance frequency of the SRR array can be adjusted from 31 GHz to 34 GHz when the periodicity DE is decreased from 1.2 mm to 0.6 mm. Similarly, when the electrical resistivity (σ) of the conductive resonator material, relative permittivity (εr), or dielectric loss tangent (tan δ) of the dielectric substrate changes, the effect on changes of resonance frequency ωmo(ωeo) and plasma frequency ωmp(ωep) can be simulated in the HFSS software.
viii. Parameter-Condition Performance Database Based on Artificial Intelligence (AI)
The relationship among resonance frequency and RF transparency efficiency at elevated ambient temperature for the high-temperature-capable metamaterial systems described herein was determined. Artificial intelligence (AI), therefore, may be used as a tool to setup a parameter-condition-performance database. Neural Networks (NN) can provide a good way to model complicated system behavior, where, in this example, the inputs are the desired working frequency band, allowable RF transparency efficiency, and the estimated working temperature. Through autonomous learning and training, the required material system can be obtained, which can indicate the applicable high temperature dielectrics and resonator materials, and the geometric parameters of the metamaterials (e.g., length, width, gap of the split-ring resonator structure). In this way, the desired RF transparency within a certain frequency band can be ensured in each temperature setting (which can correspond to specific Mach number speed).
ix. Nosecone Radome Design
For airborne nosecone radome design (e.g., for seeker antennas), the cross-section of an airborne radome can be determined based on the super-spheroids geometry profile. The radome can have sufficient flexural strength and fracture resistance to withstand the aerodynamic forces while offering minimal aerodynamic resistance.
During final engagement, as an EM signal passes through a radome, it is refracted by a certain angle which depends on the seeker look angle, β, as depicted at
may be location-dependent over the entire radome. The magnitude of boresight error εbse can depend on many factors, including, but not limited to, radome shape/thickness/material, operating frequency/temperature, etc.
In order to eliminate such a boresight error εbse and ensure accuracy during final engaging/homing, an augmented-metasurface design method can be used that is based on metamaterial theory. Metasurface concept can be used in a wide frequency range from low microwave to optical frequencies, including controllable “smart” surfaces, ultra-compact cavity resonators, novel wave-guiding structures, EM wave absorbers, etc. Metasurfaces can enable advisory control of spatial, spectral, topological, and polarization properties of light by introducing abrupt phase shifts (also denoted as phase discontinuity) over the scale of the wavelength along the optical path. In metasurface design, the Snell's law of refraction and reflection can be generalized as:
where θt is the angle of refraction, θr is the angle of reflection, Φ and Φ+dΦ are the phase discontinuities at the locations where the two paths cross the interface, dx is the distance between the crossing points, ni and nt are the refractive indices of the two media. These equations imply that the refracted and reflected beams can be controlled by properly designing and engineering the surface with a thin conductive antenna array so that the EM energy can be manipulated to propagate only along and within the surface as plane waves. Such an artificially-designed metamaterial system is referred to herein as an augmented-metasurface.
x. Testing of Nosecone Radomes
An EM signal can be sent from a seeker antenna along a radome surface toward the nose cone direction looking ahead, and the antenna array can be arranged along the longitudinal direction using conformal antenna design, as depicted at
The geometry of an augmented-metasurface device can be designed to have a pyramidal shape along an ogive curvature, and act as a function-tunable waveguide, as depicted at
Such a design can be able to provide end-fire radiation pattern (as depicted at
The concept of the pyramidal shape can be similar to that of a horn antenna (
Assuming the thickness of the overall radome wall structure is constant, similar to tapering down the dimensions of a rectangular waveguide in the direction of the H-field, while keeping the other constant, an H-plan sectoral horn (geometric illustration provided in
During hypersonic flight operations, because of the large temperature gradient across the radome wall, a pyramidal shaped waveguide (
Embodiments of antenna arrays are depicted at
By such a design, EM energy can travel through a missile's longitudinal direction and not through the thickness of the radome. The boresight error εbse can be the main indicator to quantify the success of the proposed work. A aboresight error εbse can be eliminated, thereby ensuring accuracy during final engaging/homing.
RF transmission of fabricated metasurface materials can be examined with a network analyzer (e.g., 3-30 GHz) at both ambient and high temperatures (e.g., 1000-1400° C.). Experiments can characterize the candidate materials, evaluate the metasurface design and measure RF transparency performance.
xi. Range of Critical Incident Angle
As depicted at
is introduced; and equation (2) predicts that there may always be a critical angle of incident angle
above which the reflected beam may become evanescent. Assuming that ϕ is a continuous function of the position along the interface, all of the incident energy can be transferred into the reflection/refraction which propagate(s) only along and within a radome surface.
Metasurface design can be used in a wide frequency range, from low microwave to optical frequency. Theory and implementation in RF frequency range for radome applications (e.g., 3-30 GHz) has not been explored. Optically visible and near IR wavelength metamaterial design can be technically challenging since the structural units must be in sub-micron or nanometer scale. To accommodate EM spectrum with wavelengths of 1-10 cm ( 1/100th wavelength 0.1-1 mm), complex-structured subwavelength units in millimeter and micron-size range can be with current manufacturing technologies.
“Thin” arrays of such antenna arrays can be made of silicon carbide (SiC) fiber. SiC is stable up to 1700° C. in air and becomes a semiconductor at high temperature. SiC fibers in general have good mechanical properties and are commercially available from a number of companies. Diameters in the range of a nanometer to several micrometers can be used. By patterning and fabricating such SiC fibers within radome wall structure, a desired phase change can be achieved along the interface so that both reflection and refraction beams are in the format of plane waves to propagate. Pt—Rh alloy resonator patches can be deposited on alumina by screen printing of powder slurries followed by high temperature baking (up to 2000° C.).
The building block of embodiments of the metasurface design is a sandwich structure that includes “thin” arrays (thickness and width separation are in sub-wavelength in RF frequency range) made of conductive antennas, patterned within layers of the radome wall structure (as shown, for example, at
During hypersonic flight operations, the temperature of the outer surface of the radome wall can be much higher than that of the inner surface, due to extreme aerodynamic drag. Under such conditions, the large temperature gradient existing across a radome wall can result in variations in the required dielectric properties (e.g., dielectric constant and loss tangent) of the radome wall and hence radome EM performance requirement. A possible advantage of using a layered-structural design for a radome wall can be that the concentration (and therefore the inter-spacing) among each “thin” antennas can be designed in such a way that the changes of electrical conductivity (and/or permittivity) of both the dielectrics and the resonator materials are considered to fit the metasurface design requirement at that temperature.
An entire metasurface functional device can be designed to be a pyramidal-shaped waveguide (e.g.,
For typical airborne nosecone radome design (e.g., for seeker antennas), the cross-section of an airborne radome can be determined based on the super-spheroids geometry profile. In order to fit the curvature of the radome, a thermally stable RF transparent material can be examined based on ceramic metasurface design with embedded RF antennas/resonators and a ceramic green tape compression molding process for low cost near net shape manufacturing.
The structure can be based on high-purity silicon nitride (or similar) material which is manufactured with a green tape compression molding process. This process can be performed by laminating layers of ceramic (which may have very precise thickness) in a high-pressure net shape mold. Resonators can be designed and incorporated into the tape prior to laminating. Once the resonators are incorporated into a flat tape, the material can be draped or molded to fit the shape of a conformal radome.
Using laminating and compression molding processes via pre-polymer ceramics route, thin walled net shaped green bodies of complex shapes can be fabricated to achieve high density ceramic radome structure.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/525,617, filed Jun. 27, 2017, which is incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190067806 A1 | Feb 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62525617 | Jun 2017 | US |