Embodiments of the invention may relate to feed networks for phased array antennas, particularly optical feed networks.
Success in the development of high-quality and ultra-wideband radio frequency (RF) sources has led to the exploration of applications of such technology, such as ultra-wideband phased-antenna arrays. An example of this may be found in G. J. Schneider et al., “Optical Generation of Narrow-Line RF by Injection Locking of Modulated DFB Lasers” CLEO Conference, 2011, incorporated herein by reference. In a proposed approach of this paper, two laser outputs having a frequency difference corresponding to a frequency of an RF signal may be fed into an optical interleaving and feeding network consisting of two 1-to-N beam splitters, N electro-optic phase modulators, N2-to-1 beam combiners and fiber couplers. The beam splitting, phasing, and recombining can be achieved through typical fiber-based components.
The proposed approach, however, imposes some technical difficulties in the practical implementation. Due to thermal and mechanical stresses in each channel, the relative phases between channels may drift over time, thereby resulting in significant distortion in RF beamforming.
Various embodiments of the present invention may address the above-noted phase-drift issues. In particular, various embodiments of the invention may present an optical feed network for phased array antennas by providing a phased-based feed network.
Various embodiments of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Various embodiments of the invention may include an optically addressed phase-based feed network for, for example, an ultra-wideband RF phased array that may include techniques designed to compensate the phase fluctuations induced in optical fibers, e.g., due to thermal and mechanical stresses. One may use polarization maintaining (PM) fibers to encode two coherent optical tones in two orthogonal states and to transmit them to a high-speed photomixer at the antenna head for RF signal transmission. Co-propagation in the same fiber may enable two optical signals to experience the same environmental impact, thereby significantly minimizing phase fluctuations. To phase the antenna array, a phase-shifting element may be used, which may, e.g., comprise an electro-optic phase shifter and true time delay line (which may be optically-based), in which phase shift may be dominated at one of the polarizations, consequently leading to an electrically addressed phase shift at the mixer. The electro-optic phase shifter may be implemented in the form of an electro-optic modulator. The combination of an electro-optic modulator and true time delay line may serve, to provide both narrow and ultra-wide band instantaneous bandwidth, which may be applicable, e.g., to phased-array radars, multi-beamforming, multi-in-multi-out (MIMO) systems, and/or communication systems. In addition, dynamic polarization control may also be used to compensate for polarization fluctuation that may be induced, e.g., by bending, thermal, and mechanical stresses.
Following splitters 105, the respective channels may be fed into a phase-shifting block, which may, e.g., be implemented by an electro-optical (EO) phase modulation (PM) and/or true time delay line feed network, shown as block 14 in
Many optical components, such as the polarization combiner 105 and EO phase modulators 107, may be polarization sensitive. The state of polarization in the PM fiber may be altered as the light propagates along the fiber due to a variety of reasons, such as alignment mismatch in the fiber connectors, birefringence due to thermal, and mechanical stress, and/or integration and fabrication defects in each component. Furthermore, if polarization states are not preserved, amplitude modulation may be introduced into the system due to coupling of the optical signals into both TE and TM polarizations of the EO phase modulators 107. Polarization management may, therefore, be needed to precisely control the state of polarization of the two optical signals. This may be done, for example, by means of a polarization controller (polarization control module) 113 coupled to control electrically-addressed polarization controllers 106, which may be placed, for example, between the splitters 105 and the EO phase modulators 107. The polarization controller 113 may receive feedback, e.g., in the form of signals from photodetectors 110, which may be controllers 106. In particular, the feedback may be in the form of direct-current (DC) components detected in the outputs of the photodetectors 110.
It is noted that, while the discussion in the immediately-preceding paragraph focuses on an embodiment using EO phase modulators, the same applies to other phase shifting schemes and/or embodiments using true time delay lines.
In an example implementation, the inventors have implemented a 1×2 optically addressed phased, array. To demonstrate phase sweeping, a saw-tooth waveform with a period of 1 second and a magnitude of 7 volts (2Vπ) was used to drive the phase modulation. A repeatable and steady RF response was observed, as shown in
Various embodiments of the invention have now been discussed in detail; however, the invention should not be understood as being limited to these embodiments. It should also be appreciated that various modifications, adaptations, and alternative embodiments thereof may be made within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
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Byung-Min Jung; Yao, J., “A Two-Dimensional Optical True Time-Delay Beamformer Consisting of a Fiber Bragg Grating Prism and Switch-Based Fiber-Optic Delay Lines,” Photonics Technology Letters, I EEE, vol. 21, No. 10, pp. 627,629, May 15, 2009. |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150303986 A1 | Oct 2015 | US |