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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates in general to radar systems, and more particularly pertains to the field of dual-band radars, which can operate on two different frequency carriers, which in turn correspond to different waveguides as well, for instance, on the X band (8-12.4 GHz, WR90 waveguides) and on Ka (26-40 GHz, WR28 waveguides). The first lower frequency is used for the detection of Ion g distance obstacles. The higher frequency is used for the focalization of the obstacle, when it is approaching. For such systems, the rotary joint is an essential component, as it connects the transmitters to the antennas which are on a rotating support, in such a way that it can perform an azimuth scanning of the surrounding space.
The rotary joint must connect two couples of rectangular waveguides of different cross-sections and, correspondingly, working frequency, in a way that each couple can rotate with respect to the other, without affecting the return loss on each band (higher than 20 dB, on both bands), guaranteeing high isolation between waveguides operating at different frequencies (Isolation higher than 60 dB), small insertion loss (lower than 1 dB on both bands), immunity of the performance with respect to rotation angle (WOW smaller than 0.5 dB) and, finally high peak power capability (in excess of 72 dBm).
2. Description of Related Art Including Information Disclosed Under 37 CFR 1.97 and 37 CFR 1.98.
There are a lot of single-band rotary joints available on the market:
All these devices are formed by a couple of junctions (otherwise called transducers) between a cylindrical and a rectangular waveguide connected through a bearing mechanism in such a way that a junction can rotate with respect to the other. The two parts are called stator and rotor, respectively. The junction is conceived in such a way that only the lower order mode with a azimutal symmetry is excited in the cylindrical waveguide, and the transmission does not depend on the reciprocal angle between the two junctions.
This is also the simplest case, as the coaxial waveguide works in mononiodal region. On the other hand, a millimeter frequency, coaxial waveguide presents high losses and expensive manufacturing costs. In addition, when specifications on power handling capability are more stringent, solutions other than coaxial waveguides must be chosen [1]. A great improvement is achieved by using a circular waveguide as the rotating part. In that case, however, the waveguide must operate under symmetrical modes, exploiting for example TM01 or TE01, which are the lowest order ones. Such a requirement is needed to obtain a structure that is symmetrical not only mechanically but also electrically. The issue is, of course, to prevent the fundamental modes TE11. (with vertical and horizontal polarization, V and H) from being excited, since that would make transmission sensitive to rotation angle. [1] D. G. de Mesquita, A. G. Bailey, “A Symmetrically Excited Microwave Rotary joint.” IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory and Tech., vol. 18. No. 09, pages 654-656, September 1970;
For this reason, on the basis of symmetry, many transducers were invented, aimed at exciting only one mode (TM01 [2]-[5] or TE01 [6]), though not the fundamental one, or, alternatively the TE11 mode, circularly polarized: [2] Smimov. A. V., Yu, D. U. L., “Symmetrized coupler converting circular waveguide TM01 mode to rectangular waveguide TE10 mode”, US Patent No 20080068110, 2008;[3] Tavassoli Maui, Behzad, “Mode transducer structure”, U.S. Pat. No. 7,446,623, 2008;[4] Fisher W. Clifford, “Radar rotary joint”, U.S. Pat. No. 4,654,613, 1987;[5] Ching-Fang Yu and Tsun -Hsu Chang, “High-Performance Circular TEO1-Mode Converter”, IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory and Tech., vol. 53, No. 12, pages 3794-3798, December 2005;[6] Y. Aramaki, N. Yoneda, M. Miyazaki, Moriyasu, A. lida, I, Naito, T. Horie, Y. Yutaka, “Rotary joint”, U.S. Pat. No. 7,091,804, 2006.
In order to achieve this goal, there are the following alternatives:
An alternative solution is the use of a circular waveguide, oversized in such a way that at least two modes with azimuthal symmetry can propagate (circularly polarized TE11 and TM01
The two modes are separated, being mutually orthogonal, thus providing connection for the two bands. Even in this case, one of the main issues concerns the choke, which has to work at frequency 1 for mode 1 and at frequency 2 for mode 2.
The two TE11 V and H circular waveguide lower order modes are prevented by a suitable choice of the symmetry of the transducers.
It must be noted that in both cases, the azimuthal symmetry waveguide cannot be mechanically continuous: a break is necessary to make possible the rotation of the rotor with respect to the stator. On the other hand, the cut must be designed in a way that it does not permit field leakage. As a matter of fact, this circumstance would increase the insertion loss. The electrical continuity is restored by the insertion, at the level of the cut, of a suitable microwave device called a ‘choke’, formed. by a combination of coaxial and λ/4 radial lines. The impedance transformation is designed in such a way that even though there is a cut there is in fact a electromagnetic continuity.
The closest prior art to the present invention is considered:
The subject matter claimed by the present invention differs from this known rotary joint in that the waveguides operate on different frequency bands.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,026,513 does also not mention the chokes integrated in the nested waveguides and the other technical details present in claim 1 with regard to the nested coaxial waveguide, which improve the electrical properties of the dual-band rotary joint.
The power dual-band rotary joint of the present invention simultaneously operates on two frequency bands, A and B, made up of several transducers, each between two rectangular waveguides, respectively operating on bands A and B, and a nested coaxial waveguide. The nested coaxial waveguide is made up of two concentric cylindric waveguides. The transducers are conceived in such a way that only modes with azimuthal symmetry are excited. The nested coaxial waveguide dimensions are chosen so that, on band B, the TM01 mode can propagate in the circular waveguide delimited by the internal surface of the smaller cylinder. The external surface of the smaller cylinder is the internal conductor of the coaxial working on band A, while the internal surface of the bigger cylinder is the external conductor of the same coaxial. The two transducers are connected through the nested waveguide. This connection system also contains a mechanism making possible that each transducer can rotate with respect to the other, as well as two chokes necessary to restore the electromagnetic continuity cut-off by the breaks. As the symmetry of the modal transducers makes possible the excitation of the only TM01 modes on band B and TEM modes on band A and that other modes, though above cutoff, are not excited at all, it allows that the electromagnetic behaviour is quite independent from the rotation angle of the rotary joint.
The present invention would like to overcome the issues discussed above, by using a dual band rotary joint, operating on the bands A and B (X and Ka, in a preferred embodiment) made up of two transducers T1 (11) and T2 (12). each connecting two rectangular waveguides to a cylindrical waveguide supporting modes with azimuthal symmetry. The internal part of the whole rotary joint, including the two transducers (rectangular waveguide-nested waveguide) and two chokes for the bands A and B, is shown in the
The rectangular waveguide ports are labelled by the numbers (101) and (102), for band A, (103) and (104), for band B.
The cylindrical part is indeed a double coaxial waveguide, made up of two concentric cylindrical waveguides, also called ‘coaxial nested waveguide’. The internal surface of the first cylindrical shell defines a circular waveguide, where the mode TM01 can propagate, on band B (105). The external surface of the first cylindrical shell is the internal conductor of the coaxial working on band A (106), whose external conductor is given by the internal pan of the second cylindrical conductor. This kind of nested waveguide has been mainly used in some double-band antenna feeds:
Very recently, it been used in the rotary joint developed for the antenna designed for the Bepi-Colombo mission:
In addition, there are two chokes restoring the electromagnetic continuity at the two cut planes of the ‘nested coaxial’, necessary to make rotation possible.
In fact there are two breaks. The first (107) cuts only the external cylinder of the nested waveguide, thus producing a discontinuity only for the TEM mode propagating within the coaxial waveguide formed by the external surface of the internal cylinder and the internal surface of the external cylinder, while the electromagnetic wave propagating within the inner of the internal cylinder (105) is not affected at all. The electrical continuity takes place through the choke A (108), which, for the above reasons, has to work just on band A. The bearing mechanism permitting rotation is also installed at the level of this break. There is then a second break (109) of the internal cylinder of the ‘nested ’ waveguide placed below the transducer working on band A (at the bottom of the figure).
Even in this case, the electromagnetic continuity is restored on band B, through the insertion of the choke B (110), designed in such a way that no leakage occurs between the waveguides operating on band B toward the waveguides operating on band A. The transducer between circular and rectangular waveguides on band B is seen by the waveguides operating on band A as a reactive load.
In order to make more clear the working principles,
More in detail, with reference to the two bands X and Ka, the transducer is formed by two distinct transitions: the transition operating on Ka band, uses a circular waveguide fed in such a way that only the TM01 mode is excited. Such a transition is similar to the one proposed in [1] D. G. de Mesquita, A. G. Bailey, “A Symmetrically Excited Microwave Rotary Joint” IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory and Tech., vol. 18, No. 09. pages 654-656, September 1970.
Half of the transition rectangular waveguide (WR28)—circular waveguide (WC) (H-plane section) is shown in
The transition on X band between rectangular-coaxial waveguide employs a coaxial waveguide, whose internal conductor is just the external surface of the circular waveguide (of radius Ri) used on Ka band. The diameter of the internal conductor is therefore 2Ri+2*t, t being the thickness of the WC wall. In practice, for mechanical reasons, it is difficult to obtain values thinner than 0.8 mm. The internal diameter of the external conductor is chosen in such a way that the coaxial waveguide operates under monomodal propagation, or, when the electric field is too strong, such a diameter can be increased up to a limit where the TM01 mode is below cut-off. In such a case the X-band transition must have the same symmetry of the Ka-band transition in such a way that modes TE11 V and H are not excited, thus guaranteeing the independence of the response with respect to the rotation.
The transition between coaxial and rectangular waveguide on band A appears as shown in
The signal incoming in port (401) is split into two identical parts through the bifurcation in the H plane. The steps (402) and the septum (403) are used for matching. There is a further matching step (404), used to compensate the mismatch generated by the transition between coaxial waveguide rectangular waveguide (405).
The main advantages of the proposed solution with respect to the more traditional ones, are:
Materials and dimensions of the above-described invention, illustrated in the accompanying drawings and later claimed, may be varied according to requirements. Moreover, all the details may be replaced by other technically equivalent ones without, for this reason, straying from the protective scope of the present invention patent application.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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AP2010A000011 | Aug 2010 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/003800 | 7/28/2011 | WO | 00 | 5/3/2013 |