This application claims priority of European Patent Office Application No. 08013545 EP filed Jul. 28, 2008, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a pulse radar ranging system according to the preamble of the claim.
Such a pulse radar ranging system is known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,521,778 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,132,991.
Pulse radar ranging systems provide distance or level measurement based on the direct measurement of the running time of microwave pulses transmitted to and reflected from a target, e.g. the surface of a fill material in a container. As the running time for distances of a few meters is in the nanosecond range, a special time transformation procedure is required to enable these short time periods to be measured. The microwave pulses are transmitted to the target at a repetition rate or transmit clock frequency which is given by a transmit clock generator. In a signal mixer, the received echo pulses reflected from the target are sampled by cross-correlation with sampling pulses of the same shape as the transmit pulses but at a sampling clock frequency slightly lower than the transmit clock frequency. The cross-correlation and subsequent integration or low-pass filtering leads to an intermediate frequency (IF) signal corresponding to the received echo pulses but time-expanded relative thereto by a factor T1/(T1−T2), where T1 is the transmit pulse repetition period and T2 is the sampling period. The time-expansion allows for amplifying, digitizing and further processing of the echo pulses with standard techniques.
One of the sources of errors in pulse radar ranging systems is the temperature drift. Due to variation of the parameters of the semiconductor devices of the pulse radar, the level measurement result will change over the specified temperature range without a real change of the measured level.
From US 2008/0036649 A1 a pulse radar ranging system is known, where a controllable switch, depending on a control signal, either conveys the transmit pulses to the antenna to be transmitted to the target or to a calibration module, preferably a delay line of known delay and terminated with a pulse reflecting impedance mismatch. Thus, the known pulse radar ranging system has two operating modes, wherein a measuring mode is periodically interrupted by a calibration or diagnostic mode. In the calibration or diagnostic mode the equivalent of a reference distance, given by the delay line, is measured. For calibrating the pulse radar, corrections are calculated from the measured reference and are applied to the target measurement results. For diagnostic purposes, the value measured from the reference is checked against an acceptable range. The performance of the switch may impose limitations with respect to frequency range or noise on the measurement function and the calibration or diagnostic function.
It is therefore an object of the invention to overcome these drawbacks.
According to the invention this object is achieved by the pulse radar ranging system defined in the claim.
Thus, the subject of the invention is a pulse radar ranging system comprising:
The invention advantageously uses imperfection of a real circulator, such as cross talk and leakage, to embed the reference measurement into the target measurement. Furthermore, no additional switch is required to switch between the antenna and the reference line.
The invention will be now described by way of a preferred example and with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
Reference is first made to
The transmit pulses TX are transmitted through the circulator 6 and an antenna 8 coupled to a third port 6c of the circulator 6 to a target 9, e.g. the surface of a fill material in a container. The target 9 reflects the transmit pulses TX back as echo pulses RX which are received by the antenna 8. The received echo pulses RX are guided through the circulator 6 via a fourth port 6d to the second one, 10b, of two signal inputs 10a, 10b of a signal mixer 10. The time base control circuit 1 further contains a sampling clock generator 11 for generating a sampling clock CLKS at a sampling clock frequency fS which is slightly lower (for instance by a few kHz) than the transmit clock frequency fTX. The sampling clock CLKS triggers a local oscillator 12 for generating sampling pulses S of the same shape and frequency as the transmit pulses TX and with a pulse repetition rate equal to the sampling clock frequency fS. The sampling pulses S are conducted to the first signal input 10a of the signal mixer 10 which generates an intermediate frequency signal IF by multiplying the received echo pulses RX by the sampling pulses S. As the pulse repetition rate of the sampling pulses S is slightly lower than that of the transmit pulses TX, the sampling pulses S will sweep in small increments per measuring cycle over the transmit or echo pulse interval so that the received echo pulses RX are sampled by cross-correlation with the sampling pulses S. The cross-correlation and subsequent integration and amplification by an IF amplifier 14 lead to a signal SRX which is expanded in time and in shape corresponds to the received echo pulses RX. This signal SRX is further processed in the microcontroller 2 for determining the running time of the transmit pulses TX to the target 9 and thus the distance d of the target 9 from the antenna 8.
The circulator 6 splits the transmit pulses TX such that a portion TX′ thereof is propagated through the second port 6b in the reference line 7 and another portion TX″ leaks to the next port 6c to which the antenna 8 is connected. The transmit pulse portion TX′ travels through the reference line 7, gets reflected and appears as a reference echo pulse RX′ at the port 6b of the circulator 6 from where it is propagated to the antenna 8 at port 6c. Thus, the leaking transmit pulse portion TX″ and the reference echo pulse RX′ are both sent out to the target 9 and received back (combined signal RX).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
08013545 | Jul 2008 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3460067 | Burnsweig, Jr. | Aug 1969 | A |
3962705 | Jamison | Jun 1976 | A |
4118703 | Williams | Oct 1978 | A |
4132991 | Wocher | Jan 1979 | A |
4224622 | Schmidt | Sep 1980 | A |
4315260 | Kupfer | Feb 1982 | A |
4443792 | Pidgeon et al. | Apr 1984 | A |
4521778 | Knepper | Jun 1985 | A |
4737791 | Jean et al. | Apr 1988 | A |
4847623 | Jean et al. | Jul 1989 | A |
5819164 | Sun et al. | Oct 1998 | A |
6097329 | Wakayama | Aug 2000 | A |
20080036649 | Lyon | Feb 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
42 40 491 | Jun 1994 | DE |
1 770 409 | Apr 2007 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100019953 A1 | Jan 2010 | US |