The present invention relates to a radar sensor for motor vehicles, having a source for radar radiation and a lens situated in front of the source and made of a material refractive for radar radiation, having a convex surface on at least one side.
Radar sensors are used in motor vehicles in conjunction with driver assistance systems, for example, distance warning systems and regulating systems, for location of objects, in particular other vehicles in the surroundings of the host vehicle. For example, long-range radar (LRR) sensors, which operate at a frequency of approximately 77 GHz as well as short-range radar sensors (SRR) at a frequency of 24 GHz are customary. If the radar sensor is installed in the vehicle and functions to measure the distance to preceding vehicles, the lens has the purpose of bundling the emitted and/or received radar radiation to form at least one radar lobe directed forward, so that the maximum intensity and sensitivity are achieved in the angle range in which preceding vehicles are normally located, whereas objects farther away from one's lane cause little or no radar echo. In the case of an angular resolution radar sensor, a plurality of radar lobes fanning out in azimuth is generated so that the azimuth angle of the object having been located may be deduced from amplitude and phase ratios between the signals obtained from the different lobes.
In the case of a customary design of radar sensors for motor vehicles, a spherical lens or, more generally, a lens in the form of a rotational body is used, this lens being made of a plastic having a high refractive index for the particular frequency of the radar radiation and bundling the radiation like a converging lens. Essentially the same directional characteristics are achieved in azimuth (in the horizontal) and in elevation (in the vertical). However, in the case of angular resolution radar sensors having a plurality of antenna elements situated side by side in the focal plane of the lens, a certain modification of the directional characteristic in azimuth may occur due to interference between these antenna elements.
Frequently, however, in particular in the case of long-range radar sensors, it would be desirable to bundle the radiation in elevation to a greater extent than in azimuth, so that on the one hand a sufficiently wide field of vision is achieved in azimuth, but on the other hand, due to stronger bundling in elevation, unnecessary power losses are avoided and at the same time interference signals due to reflection from the road surface (ground clutter) or the like are suppressed better. One possible method of achieving such an anisotropic directional characteristic, i.e., differing in elevation and in azimuth, is to use complicated lens systems having a plurality of lenses. In the case of radar sensors for motor vehicles, however, this is not practical for reasons of cost and because of the great amount of space required for the lens systems.
German Patent No. DE 10 2007 036 262 describes a radar sensor whose lens is composed of two plane-convex cylindrical lenses situated back to back, their cylinder axes running at right angles to one another and having different focal distances.
An object of the present invention is to create a radar sensor having a compact lens and an improved antenna characteristic in both elevation and azimuth.
This object is achieved by the fact that the convex surface has a greater curvature in elevation than in azimuth.
In the case of the radar sensor according to the present invention, the refraction behavior in azimuth and in elevation is determined by one and the same convex surface of the lens, so the lens may be designed as a plano-convex lens or as a concave/convex lens, which results in a compact design of the lens and thus of the entire radar sensor. The lens may be designed here in such a way that it has an aperture of approximately the same size in azimuth and in elevation, which contributes towards suppressing unwanted side lobes in the antenna diagram.
The lens preferably has a concave cylindrical lens structure on the side opposite the convex surface and thus facing the radiation source, its cylinder axis running vertically. Therefore the lens whose convex surface must have a relatively strong curvature on the whole in order for the required beam bundling to be achieved in elevation causes only a relatively weak bundling of the radar radiation in azimuth or none at all, so that a large angular range may be covered accordingly. The surface having a concave cylindrical curvature may have the shape of a circle in the horizontal section or may optionally also be in the form of an ellipse or a hyperbola.
The complex surface of the lens preferably is in the form of a conical section in both elevation and azimuth, having an elliptical shape, for example. In elevation, the lens is preferably designed as an aplanatic lens.
Arrows Y1 and Y2 in
In this sectional diagram, convex surface 14 has an elliptical shape.
The distance from lens 12 to the plane containing antenna patches 26 is selected in such a way that the combined effect of cylindrical surface 24 and convex surface 14 of the lens, which has only a weak curvature 15′ in azimuth, results only in weak bundling of the radar radiation, so that the radiation from all four antenna patches is emitted in a relatively wide angle range on both sides of optical axis 30.
Curves 30, 32, 34 and 36 in
Curves 30′, 32′, 34′ and 36′ in
Since antenna patches 26 also function to receive the reflected radar signals, the antenna diagrams in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2009 027 433 | Jul 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/055967 | 5/3/2010 | WO | 00 | 1/17/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/000607 | 1/6/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5264859 | Lee et al. | Nov 1993 | A |
5680139 | Huguenin et al. | Oct 1997 | A |
20070268198 | Marshall et al. | Nov 2007 | A1 |
20080048921 | Rebeiz et al. | Feb 2008 | A1 |
20100265589 | Bowers et al. | Oct 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
10 2007 036 262 | Feb 2009 | DE |
2 044 006 | Oct 1980 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120146882 A1 | Jun 2012 | US |