The present invention relates to the field of antennas and is more particularly concerned with a parasitic element for helical antennas for improving the electric parameters thereof.
It is well known in the art to use helical antennas mounted on a structure to allow communication with equipment located at a distance away. More specifically in the aerospace industry, helical antennas such as global coverage antennas are conventionally mounted on spacecraft structure to allow specific communications to and from the ground through a ground station on Earth. Accordingly, spacecraft mounted global coverage antennas are usually located on the conventionally called earth-facing panel of the spacecraft, but can also be mounted on side panels, depending on the respective antenna size and the available room on the panels.
With continuously increasing required antenna gain or other antenna parameters on spacecrafts, the global coverage antennas get larger, such as in the order of a few feet or meters, and depending on their signal frequency range. These large size antennas generate significant mechanical and electrical problems that need to be solved; especially when considering the complex and stringent mechanical and electrical environments the antennas encounter or need to survive. The solution to these problems often requires some trade-offs to be made with the antenna gain, or any other specific requirement the antennas need to meet.
The same concerns apply to large Earth-based helical antennas.
One of the solution known in the art to increase the signal gain of helical antennas is to add a capacitive parasitic element in the form of a tube inserted into the helix formed by the antenna conductor(s) and extending from the free end toward the opposite base end, as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 5,754,146 granted to Knowles et al. on May 19, 1998. Alternatively, the parasitic element can be in the form of a disjointed conductive helix surrounding the conductive helix. This type of parasitic element works generally well for relatively small size helical antennas and cannot realistically be considered for large antennas because of significant problems it would generate.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,923,305 granted to Sadler et al. on Jul. 13, 1999 discloses a dual-band helix antenna with parasitic element positioned either inside or outside of the helix, and may be parallel to the major-axis of the helix, or diagonally relative thereto (when located inside) so as to only be adjacent to two or more windings of the helix. The parasitic element allows the antenna to transmit and receive electrical signals in two widely separated frequency bands.
All known parasitic elements would be cumbersome in large scale applications by adding mass for the parasitic element and its support, and therefore complexity of the overall mechanical and/or electrical design of the antenna, especially if the antenna must be deployed in orbit to be functional.
Accordingly, there is a need for an improved parasitic element for helical antenna.
It is therefore a general object of the present invention to provide an improved parasitic element for helical antenna.
An advantage of the present invention is that the parasitic element improves the antenna electrical parameters from a few tenths of a decibel (dB) up to a few dBs, such as increasing the antenna gain, increasing the antenna cross-polarization, reducing the antenna back lobe (and PIM, passive inter-modulation, risks in the antenna components located behind the back plane of the antenna), and the like.
Another advantage of the present invention is that the parasitic element is relatively small relative to the antenna helix, adding only little mass thereto, and is simple to implement.
A further advantage of the present invention is that the parasitic element can be weight relieved without significantly affecting its electrical efficiency.
Still another advantage of the present invention is that the parasitic element can serve as structural reinforcement for tie-down purposes.
Another advantage of the present invention is that the parasitic element helps reducing the overall length (or height) of the helical antenna, for a same antenna gain.
According to an aspect of the present invention there is provided a parasitic element for a helical antenna, the antenna including at least one helix conductor extending from a secured first longitudinal end of the antenna to an opposite free second longitudinal end thereof around an antenna major-axis, the parasitic element comprising an electrically conductive ring defining a ring axis and an inner and an outer wall thereof, the ring being adjacent and spaced apart from the second end in a direction leading away from the first end with the ring axis being substantially parallel to and collinear with the antenna major-axis, the ring outer wall having a diameter substantially equal to a diameter of the helix conductor at the second end.
Conveniently, the parasitic element includes a plurality of electrically conductive arms extending radially inwardly from the ring, the arms being generally angularly equidistantly spaced from each other, and preferably connecting to each other at the ring axis.
In one embodiment, the ring inner wall has a diameter being substantially smaller than the ring outer diameter, whereby the ring has an annular disc shape. Eventually, the ring inner diameter could be generally equal to zero such that the ring has a full disc shape.
Conveniently, the ring and the arms are of irregular cross-section so as to be weight relieved.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from a careful reading of the detailed description provided herein, with appropriate reference to the accompanying drawings.
Further aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the description in association with the following Figures, in which similar references used in different Figures denote similar components, wherein:
a is an enlarged broken section view taken along line 4a-4a of
b is a view similar to
a and 7b are pictorial antenna simulation results, showing the electrical current mapping on the helix of a helical antenna with and without the parasitic element of
a and 8b are pictorial antenna simulation results, showing the electrical field distribution on a plane passing through the free end of the helix of a helical antenna with and without the parasitic element of
a and 9b are pictorial antenna simulation results, showing the electrical field distribution on a plane above the free end of the helix of a helical antenna with and without the parasitic element of
With reference to the annexed drawings the preferred embodiment of the present invention will be herein described for indicative purpose and by no means as of limitation.
It is to be noted that although the following description essentially refers to a large global coverage antenna of a generally truncated conical shape, the parasitic element of the present invention can be used with different types and sizes of helical antennas having any number of conductive helices (single, dual, quadrafilar, etc.) of different shapes such as cylindrical, tapered (trunco-conical) and the like.
Referring first to
The parasitic element 40 includes an electrically conductive ring 42 that defines a ring axis 44. The ring 42 is generally continuous or closed, without any electrical discontinuities along its circumference or any open ends. The ring 42 that defines inner 46 and outer 48 walls thereof is generally adjacent and spaced apart from the upper end 28 in a direction leading away from the lower end 24 with the ring axis 44 being essentially parallel to and collinear with the antenna major-axis 30. The ring 42 is typically spaced a few millimeters, centimeters or inches from the electrically opened end 28 of the helix 22 such that it is electrically conductively decoupled therefrom. The ring 42 typically mounts on an axial extension 32a of the support 32 and has a diameter of its outer wall 48 substantially equal to the diameter of the helix 22 at the second end 28.
Depending on the antenna requirements, the parasitic element 40a can also include a plurality of electrically conductive arms 50 extending radially inwardly from the ring inner wall 46 to essentially lay within the plane of the ring 42, as shown in
As shown in
As the electrical directivity or gain of the antenna 20 is dependent on the length or height of the antenna (of the helix 22), one skilled in the art would understand that the longer the antenna is the better gain is. Also, a longer antenna means more mass and more mechanical loads induced during movement of the antenna (especially when the antenna length is in the order of about two to three meters (2-3 m or 7-10 feet). The parasitic element 40 of the present invention allows increasing the electrical directivity on the antenna, by perturbing the electrical open circuit condition at the free end of the helix 22, or a reduction of the antenna length (height) for a same directivity gain, as further detailed hereinbelow. For example, in a satellite based helical antenna designed to provide global coverage of the Earth in the UHF frequency range, the addition of the parasitic element 40 would allow a reduction in antenna height of 10% to 15% for a similar antenna electrical directivity efficiency and a significant improvement in axial ratio, or cross-polarization performance, even compared with the longer antenna. The arms 50 further help to increase at least the cross-polarization performance of the antenna 20, as well as the tuning capabilities.
Although not illustrated in the Figures, the ring 42 and/or the arms 50 could include small protrusions (in any direction) and/or holes in any orientation to serve as either temporary or permanent tie-down points to help securing the antenna 20 and carry some mechanical loads there through, during transportation and/or spacecraft launch, for example.
Similarly, to minimize any mass impact due to the parasitic element 40, 40a, 40b (when mass in an important factor as in the aerospace industry, especially when large scale antennas are concerned), the ring 42 and/or the arms 50 could eventually be of non-uniform or irregular cross-section and weight relieved without affecting the efficiency of the parasitic element 40, 40a, 40b, as exemplified in
The following example is provided for illustrative purposes and by no means as of limitation. This example describes in details the impact of the parasitic element 40a on the helical antenna performance. The selected configuration is a 2350 mm (7 feet and 9 inches) long helical antenna 20 mounted into a ground cup. Antenna performances are evaluated for a 9-degree coverage (Edge-of-Coverage, or EOC). The helical antenna 20 provides a high gain axial mode.
The improvement of performance comes from the capacitive coupling between the parasitic element 40a and the free end 28 of the helical antenna 20. The electrical load provided by the parasitic element 40a changes the impedance at the end of the helix 22 and reduces the impact of the electrical open circuit. This has the effect of reducing the standing electromagnetic wave at the free end 28 of the helix 22, as shown by the electrical current shaded mapping (dark pattern represents strong current while light pattern represents weak current) of
A smoother current distribution has a direct impact on the electrical field distribution on a plane perpendicular to the antenna axis 30 around the antenna free end 28 with the parasitic element 40a, as shown by
Although the present invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is to be understood that the disclosure has been made by way of example only and that the present invention is not limited to the features of the embodiments described and illustrated herein, but includes all variations and modifications within the scope and spirit of the invention as hereinafter claimed.
Priority of U.S. Provisional Application for Patent Ser. No. 60/816,891, filed on Jun. 28, 2006, is hereby claimed.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60816891 | Jun 2006 | US |