The present invention, in several embodiments, relates to microstrip log-periodic antennas and, more particularly, to semi-coplanar microstrip/slot log-periodic antennas and coplanar waveguide-to-microstrip line transitions.
Log-periodic antennas are typically characterized as having logarithmic-periodic, electrically conducting, elements that may receive and/or transmit communication signals where the relative dimensions of each dipole antenna element and the spacing between elements are logarithmically related to the frequency range over which the antenna operates. Log-periodic dipole antennas may be fabricated using printed circuit boards where the elements of the antenna are fabricated in, conformal to, or on, a surface layer of an insulating substrate. The antenna elements are typically formed on a common plane of a substrate such that the principal beam axis, or direction of travel for the phase centers for increasing frequency of the antenna, is in the same direction.
The invention in its several embodiments includes a log-periodic antenna having a dielectric medium such as a printed circuit board interposed between a microstrip log-periodic portion and a proximate slot log-periodic portion where the perimeter of microstrip log-periodic portion is undersized relative to the perimeter of the first slot log-periodic antenna portion and where a proximate distance between the outer perimeter of the first microstrip log-periodic antenna portion and the perimeter of the first slot log-periodic antenna portion, perpendicular to the second surface, bound a first impedance gap. The invention in its several embodiments may further include an antenna having a curvilinear, electrically conductive feed line and a substantially co-extensive curvilinear slot transmission line. Embodiments of the invention may further include an array of two or more log-periodic antennas mounted in alternating of travel for phase center versus frequency orientations.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention in its several embodiments, and for further features and advantages, reference is now made to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
As used herein, the term “exemplary” means by way of example and to facilitate the understanding of the reader, and does not indicate any particular preference for a particular element, feature, configuration or sequence.
The present invention, in its several embodiments, includes a log-periodic antenna having microstrip slot elements on a first, or top, side of a dielectric medium and a slot ground plane of the elements on a second, or bottom, side of the dielectric medium, where the radiating elements are oriented with alternating and opposing phases, e.g., 180 degrees phase differences, and where the combination may operate as a broadband log-periodic antenna. In addition, the present invention in its several embodiments may have a grounded modified semi-coplanar waveguide-to-microstrip line transition. The feed input of some embodiments typically has a transition from an unbalanced microstrip transmission line and may have a microstrip feed transmission line tapering from a base microstrip slot dipole element on a top side of the dielectric medium and a slotted ground plane under the transmission line tapering from the primary slot dipole element in a ground plane medium on the bottom side of the dielectric medium. Exemplary embodiments of the microstrip transmission line have a primary conductor strip in voltage opposition to a reference ground plane with an interceding dielectric between the two conductors. For example, the element embodiment may be fed by two slot lines in parallel that have as a common potential a main conductor. The main conductor typically tapers to a width that sets the impedance of the microstrip transmission line and along the same length, a void or slot in the ground plane is tapered to a zero width or corner point. In some embodiments, these tapered regions operate to transition the field line from being substantially between the microstrip conductor and the ground plane as in a capacitor, to being substantially fringing fields between the edges of the conductors passing through the dielectric.
Exemplary array embodiments of the present invention typically include an array of at least a pair of substantially frequency-independent planar antenna array elements where the first member of the pair of antenna array elements has a phase center travel axis substantially opposite in direction to the phase center travel axis of the second member of the pair of antenna array elements. The antenna element patterns may be aligned, i.e., top plan-form relative to bottom plan-form, which forms a microstrip log-periodic array (MSLPA) having a principal axis. Each MSLPA typically includes a slot transmission line running along the principal axis of the MSLPA that may function as feeds for the slot dipole elements, typically trapezoidal elements emanating in bilateral symmetry from the transmission line. In some embodiments, parasitic, or center, microstrip lines or slots may be interposed within the regions formed by the dipole elements and the transmission line of the combined layers. The outer perimeter of the feed side of the MSLPA typically describes a pattern or plan-form, the ground plane side of the log-periodic slot array typically then covers a pattern of the perimeter of each feed side microstrip line element of the top side and along with some additional width at an orientation substantially perpendicular to the perimeter to establish an impedance slot.
For purposes of illustrating the slot portions of the MLPSA 200, the elements of the array are numbered starting with the slot dipole element of largest wavelength 220, that is, the element having the exemplary largest transverse span. The maximal radial distance from the reference origin, O, for the first dipole may be represented as R1. The maximal radial distance from the reference origin, O, for the second dipole may be represented as R2. The minimal distance from the reference origin, O, for the first dipole may be represented as r1 less the impedance slot width. A similar relationship may be made for R2 and r2. Typically, the feeder transmission line angle of the microstrip, or top portion 2β is smaller than the angle of 2β plus the angle increment, e.g., 2δ, required for impedance slot with of the ground side of the dielectric medium, and likewise the angle 2α bottom plus the angle increments 2δ of the ground side required for impedance slot width is greater than 2α of the top side. Rather than expressed by the angle, δ, this may be expressed as the linear distance, w, when viewing the planar projections of the microstrip dipole elements and the slot dipole elements in plan view.
For each exemplary pair of top and bottom trapezoidal dipole elements, an impedance slot may be created as shown in the top view of the antenna of
Another antenna embodiment is described as follows where w represents the planar width of the impedance slot, τ represents the element expansion ratio, and ε represents a measure of tooth width in the following equations:
τ=Rn+1/Rn=rn+1/rn [1]
and
ε=rn/Rn. [2]
The “over angle” subtended by the completed antenna may be represented as 2α+2δ. Exemplary relationships include an ε of √τ, a β of αSL/3, and an αSL of (α+δ)/2.
Exemplary antenna array properties include a value for an over angle, or 2α+2δ of approximately 36 degrees, a value for 2α of approximately 33 degrees, a value for 2αSL of approximately 18 degrees, and a value for 2β of approximately 6 degrees.
Exemplary antenna array properties are illustrated in Table 1 with distances in inches for dipole teeth numbered 1-19:
The present invention, in its several embodiments, typically has the antenna structurally divided into two portions on either side of a mounting medium such as a two-sided PCB. The two-sided printed circuit board embodiment accommodates the exemplary feed described below. That is, the feed transition from microstrip to the radiating elements may be fabricated with a dielectric medium such as a two-sided printed circuit board and a tapered ground. In addition to the various feed embodiments, the two-sided PCB structure and material provide additional means by which the antenna impedance of the several antenna embodiments may be controlled, for example, by variation of material thickness and by selection of the dielectric constant of the PCB. Due to the field constraint within the dielectric material, high power, high frequency alternative embodiments of the present invention may exploit the increased breakdown characteristics of the higher frequency, i.e., the smaller wavelength, portion of the antennas.
Mounting
The antenna array elements of the several embodiments may be mounted above a grounded cavity, or other receiving element, that provides both grounding and feed lines such as the coaxial conductor example described above. Illustrated in
The antenna array element 100, an absorber layer element 620, and a low dielectric element and the antenna array element may be bonded together. For environmentally challenging environments such as for example those encountered in moisture laden atmosphere with high dynamic pressures experienced at supersonic velocities, a cover 640, skin, or radome may be used to shield, or protect, or otherwise cover all or a portion of the top 125 or outwardly directed portion of the antenna array element, a covered portion that may include the top side 125 of the dielectric material 120, thereby covering a region that could or would otherwise be in direct environmental contact with free space, for example. The microstrip line array of the top side and the ground plane slots of the bottom side of the array may be fabricated on a low loss, low dielectric substrate, e.g., RT5880 DUROID™, a substrate available from Rogers Corporation, Advanced Circuit Materials, of Chandler, Ariz., or may be fabricated of equivalently low dielectric materials at thickness of around 15 mils, for example. Other thickness ranges may be used depending on the properties of the low dielectric material and the desired gap 310 (
The substantially planar profile of the antenna array may exhibit some curvature and, whether flat or contoured, may be conformally mounted. In those geometries requiring conformal mounting about a radius of curvature, the transverse edges of the otherwise typically trapezoidal dipole elements are themselves typically curved to accommodate a curved printed circuit board surface that may then conform to a selected mounting geometry.
The several embodiments of the invention have gain and pattern properties, which are typically robust with respect to the effect of cavity depth on the elements. For example a cavity with an absorber-lined bottom surface and metal back negligibly affects the antenna gain and pattern properties where cavity depth is at a minimum of 0.1 lambda, i.e., one-tenth of a wavelength of the frequency in question. Put another way, the exemplary embodiments may be configured to experience a slight loss of antenna gain or antenna gain-angle pattern distortion for cavities shorter than one-tenth lambda with a corresponding change in the input voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR).
Microstrip Feed Structure
Some high power, high frequency applications of the several embodiments may experience an increase in the breakdown characteristics of the high frequency portion of the elements. The exemplary feed structure embodiments readily accommodate elements operating from frequencies below X-band through well into the Ka-band. In order to accommodate structures into the upper Ka-band, micro-etching techniques are typically applied. At these higher frequencies, material thicknesses are typically reduced from those accommodating X-band antenna embodiments.
Each of the antenna array elements typically includes a microstrip feed structure that splits and feeds to the two-sided antenna array element. Some embodiments of the feed structure combine microstrip feed lines with a tapered ground transition and the two-sided antenna element. Typically the feed structure includes a microstrip feed line having a tapered ground transition.
Receiving, Transmitting and Transceiving
The antenna array embodiments of the present invention may provide substantially constant forward directivity, typically with only subtle or otherwise operationally negligible changes in beam-width, and afford an antenna array of forward and aft facing elements of equal or nearly equal performance. For purposes of illustrating the performance of an embodiment of the present invention, the antenna array of forward-oriented and aft-oriented element arrays where the MSLPAs have fifteen trapezoidal dipole elements, i.e., teeth, and one base tapered trapezoidal dipole element were tested.
Some antenna embodiments of the present invention may be used to send, receive or transceiver RF signals. Accordingly, an array of at least a pair of substantially frequency independent planar antenna array elements may function as a receiving array and may alternatively function as a transmitting array or a transmitting and receiving, that is, the array may function as a transceiver array.
Many alterations and modifications may be made by those having ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, it must be understood that the illustrated embodiments have been set forth only for the purposes of example and that it should not be taken as limiting the invention as defined by the following claims.
The definitions of the words or elements of the following claims are, therefore, defined in this specification to include not only the combination of elements which are literally set forth, but all equivalent structure, material or acts for performing substantially the same function in substantially the same way to obtain substantially the same result. In addition to the equivalents of the claimed elements, obvious substitutions now or later known to one with ordinary skill in the art are defined to be within the scope of the defined elements.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/617,454 filed Oct. 8, 2004, to Mark Russell Goldberg and Harold Kregg Hunsberger, entitled “MICROSTRIP LOG PERIODIC ANTENNA ARRAY HAVING GROUNDED WAVEGUIDE-TO-MICRO-STRIP LINE TRANSITION”, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3369243 | Greiser | Feb 1968 | A |
3696438 | Ingerson | Oct 1972 | A |
4594595 | Struckman | Jun 1986 | A |
6703975 | Freeman | Mar 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070103376 A1 | May 2007 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60617454 | Oct 2004 | US |