1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a probe for testing components of an electromagnetic radiating system. More specifically, the present invention relates to a near field probe in an antenna coupler that is designed to test installed components of an electromagnetic radiating system by coupling from the system to perform the test.
2. Description of the Prior Art
There is currently a need for a near field probe for use in testing installed components of an electromagnetic radiating system on the SM-1 missile. Specifically, the probe should be designed to provide an accurate voltage response as a function of frequency for the radiating system on the SM-1 missile when the probe is positioned in the SM-1 DC coupler.
The probe previously used to test the components of the radiating system for the SM-1 missile had serious reliability problems in that the probe's diode detectors would fail and were very expensive to replace. Further, there is no longer a manufacturer for the probe, necessitating a more reliable but less costly replacement for the probe.
The present invention overcomes some of the disadvantages of the prior art in that it comprises an inexpensive, highly reliable and very accurate near field probe for testing installed components of an electromagnetic radiating system on the SM-1 missile. The probe design comprises a dipole antenna with a balun. The probe utilizes a dual diode arrangement which provides approximately twice the output voltage as compared to the previous probe. The probe may then be placed further away from the antenna under test to achieve the same voltage output so that manufacturing tolerances are not critical. Since the output voltage is doubled, the previous probe's problem of providing a marginal voltage output is alleviated.
Referring first to
The near field probe 10 includes a dipole antenna 14 having a balun 16. Balun 16, which is a transmission line transformer, is connected to header connector J1(H) of circuit board 12, pins 1 and 2, as shown in
A diode detector 17 consisting of a pair of Schottky diodes D1A and D1B is integrated into near filed probe 10. The anode of diode D1A is connected to antenna element/dipole 20 of dipole antenna 14 and the cathode of diode D1A is connected to antenna element/dipole 18 of dipole antenna 14. The anode of diode D1B is connected to antenna element 18 of dipole antenna 14 and the cathode of diode D1A is connected to balun 16.
By utilizing diodes D1A and D1B configured as shown in
The near field probe 10 also includes a load resistor R1 mounted on printed circuit board 12 which eliminates two printed circuit boards by the connectors J1 and J2 (
The probe diode antenna length is approximately a half wavelength consisting of antenna elements 18 and 20 with each antenna element approximately a quarter wavelength as shown in
A ground cannot be placed on either side of diodes D1A and D1B which necessitates the use of balun 16 to isolate the RF signal from a grounding position. Balun 16 has an efficiency of 98 to 99% which insures high signal strength for near filed probe 10. Capacitor C4 is positioned at the electrical signal output or the end of balun 16 to function as an AC short circuit.
The ground for the probe is placed at the connectors J1 and J2 in the manner illustrated in
Referring to
Referring to
The probe 10 is fabricated using conventional and well known printed circuit board technology. A one ounce copper single side printed circuit mounted on a 0.062 inch thick FR4 epoxy fiberglass board.
Table I below sets forth the configuration for the probe verses position in the SM-1 DC coupler 26 with the positions being illustrated in
To test the near field probe, three models of the probe antenna were fabricated. The only difference in the probes was the height dimension of antenna which as shown in
Two different dual diode models were used in the probe antennas. Models Numbers HSMS-2822 and HSMS-2862 dual diodes, commercially available from Hewlett-Packard of Palo Alto, Calif. were used in the design of the near field probe. The specifications for the dual diodes were similar except that the HSMS-2822 dual diode has a minimum breakdown voltage of 4 volts with a maximum capacitance of 1 picofarad while the HSMS-2862 dual diode has a minimum breakdown voltage of 4 15 volts with a maximum capacitance of 0.35 picofarads. High breakdown voltage is very desirable because of problems associated with diode failure. However, a lower breakdown voltage yields a smaller capacitance to minimize detected voltage variations versus frequency. It was found that the smaller capacitance of the HSMS-2862 dual diode did yield a little more detected voltage but did not significantly minimize voltage variation versus frequency when compared to the HSMS-2822 dual diode.
Accordingly, the HSMS-2822 dual diode was used in the design of near field probe 10 since there was more than sufficient voltage detected and the 15 volt breakdown voltage provides at least a seven times reliability margin over other diodes used. The HSMS-2822 dual diode were tested at power levels exceeding 10 watts with detected voltages in excess of 12 volts without any failures.
The following tuning test results are provides as to the tuning response at each probe position illustrated in
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J1-A (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J1-B (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J1-C (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J1-D (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J2-D (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J2-C (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J2-B (
Probe 10 electrically connected to connector J2-A (
In addition, it was found that the probe (untrimmed) in free space yields a broad response that is centered at the frequency being measured.
The probe tests were run and the data taken is set forth in Tables II and III below with Table II being a test of the SM-1 DC coupler 26 without a dielectric cover and Table III being a test of the SM-1 DC coupler 26 with a dielectric cover. As is evident the test run with the dielectric cover is better, both in output voltage and in flatness across the frequency band.
The desired performance for the probe is to obtain a minimum of 1 volt at 1.7 watts. In general this was accomplished. The minimum voltage is significantly above 1 volt because the Coupler was tuned from 2.2 to 2.3 GHz and the 0.6 dB loss in the input cable was not added to the power output. The SM-1 DC coupler has a requirement that the antenna under test be measured at 4 watts and the data provided is set forth in Tables IV and V below.
Referring to
From the foregoing, it is readily apparent that the present invention comprises a new, unique and exceedingly useful near field probe which constitutes a considerable improvement over the known prior art. Many modifications and variations of the invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims that the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.