The present invention relates to a source of radiation, preferably but not necessarily radio frequency radiation. The source may be a phased source in which the phase of the output radiation can be adjusted. One possible application of the invention is as a source for feeding a phased antenna array. It may be particularly advantageous when used for beam steering.
Phased antenna arrays typically comprise a group of antennas in which the relative phases of the respective signals feeding the antennas are varied. The phases of the antennas may be arranged in such a way that the effective radiation pattern of the array is reinforced in a desired direction and suppressed in undesired directions. If the phases supplied to the respective antennas can be varied, then the direction of a beam transmitted by the array may be steered.
The beam forming characteristics of phased array antennas make them attractive in the fields of radar, wireless communications, RFID etc.
There are various ways of controlling the phase supplied to each antenna. One popular technique is to use micro-electromechanical systems (MEMs) to vary the phase delay on a capacitor diode loaded transmission line. The general arrangement is shown in
This arrangement has several disadvantages. Firstly, the signal energy from the oscillator is put through a power divider and thus the output signal 40, 50 delivered to each antenna decreases as the number of antennas increases. Furthermore power dividers tend to be complicated and lossy and thus add to the expense and further decrease the power delivered. Secondly, as the output signal itself passes through the phase shifters, insertion loss and noise are introduced. Thus, amplifiers are required to compensate the power loss and this makes the system complex and expensive.
Another solution is to use a DDS (Direct Digital Synthesizer) to produce signals having the desired phase directly, at a lower frequency, and then up-converting to a higher frequency.
Accordingly, at its most general, the present invention proposes altering the signal phase indirectly by changing the phase of the phased locked loop's reference signal. Preferably the reference signal has a lower frequency than the output signal. As the reference signal usually has much lower frequency than the output signal, the phase shift control can be achieved easily and cheaply. Another advantage is that in an array each element can be controlled independently and it is not necessary to use a complicated high frequency power dividing system. It may be possible to integrate the low frequency parts of the phase locked loop onto an integrated chip.
A first aspect of the present invention provides a source of radiation comprising
Preferably the frequency of the reference signal provided by the first oscillator is less than the frequency of the signal output by the VCOs.
The reference signal may have any suitable frequency. The frequency of the reference signal may normally be lower than 200 MHz, however the present invention is not limited to this. A reference signal having a frequency of 100 MHz or less, 15 MHz or less, or 10 MHz or less may be used. Usually the reference signal will have a frequency of 100 kHz or higher, although the present invention is not limited to this.
The frequency or range of frequencies for the signal output by each VCO may be any appropriate frequency and will be chosen according to the requirements of the system and its intended use. For example, the output frequency of the VCO may be 800 MHz or greater, 900 MHz or greater, 1 GHz or greater, 1.8 GHz or greater, 1.9 GHz or greater, up to 2.4 GHz or ever higher. It would also be possible to have a VCO outputting a frequency less than 800 MHz. Usually, however, the output frequency of each VCO will be greater than the frequency of the reference signal.
Preferably the phase shifters are adjustable phase shifters for adjustably shifting said phase of said reference signal of said first oscillator. The adjustable phase shifters may comprise a variable capacitor, a variable inductor, other components of variable reactance, a delay line of variable length, a switched line configuration, a reflection configuration, and/or any other components or configurations for variable adjusting the phase, as will be apparent to a person skilled in the art.
Preferably each phase shifter has an output for outputting a phase shifted reference signal, each phased locked loop has a phase detector having an input for receiving a phase shifted reference signal and wherein said outputs of said phase shifters are coupled to said inputs of said phased locked loops. There may be a frequency divider positioned between the phase shifter and the phase locked loop and/or a frequency divider positioned on a feedback line between the output of the VCO an input of the phase locked loop. Such frequency dividers enable the frequency to be adjusted to a lower level which can be easily processed by the phase detector. For example, in one preferred embodiment, the frequencies input to the phase detector may be 2 MHz or less.
A second aspect of the present invention provides a phased antenna array comprising a source of radiation according to the first aspect and an array of antennas, each antenna being coupled to a respective one of said VCOs.
A third aspect of the present invention provides a source of radio frequency radiation having adjustable phase, comprising
a radio frequency VCO for outputting a radio frequency signal,
a low frequency oscillator for producing a low frequency reference signal having a phase,
an adjustable phase shifter for adjustably shifting said phase of said low frequency reference signal and outputting a phase shifted reference signal, and
a phased locked loop for receiving said phase shifted reference signal and phase locking said radio frequency VCO to said phase shifted reference signal.
Here the term ‘low frequency’ means that the oscillator outputs a signal having a frequency less than the frequency of the signal output by the VCO. Preferably the low frequency oscillator is arranged for producing a reference signal having a frequency less than 200 MHz, more preferably less than 100 MHz, may be less than 15 MHz and may be less than 10 MHz.
The adjustable phase shifter may comprise any of the components or configurations mentioned above under the first aspect of the present invention.
A fourth aspect of the present invention provides an antenna coupled to a source of radio frequency radiation according to the third aspect of the present invention, said antenna being arranged to transmit said radio frequency output by said VCO.
A fifth aspect of the present invention provides a method of phase shifting a radio frequency signal, comprising the steps of providing a phase locked loop which receives a reference signal and has a radio frequency VCO for outputting a radio frequency signal having a phase, locking said phase of said radio frequency signal output by said VCO to a phase of said reference signal and controllably adjusting said phase of said reference signal so as to give a desired change in phase of said radio frequency signal output by said VCO.
Preferably the reference signal has a frequency less than the frequency output by the VCO. Regarding the frequencies chosen, the same comments apply as for the first aspect of the present invention, discussed above.
As shown in
As shown in
Where ωref is the frequency of reference signal, and ωrf is the frequency of the VCO, and N and R are constants that represent the divide ratio of the two frequency dividers 120 and 170 in
Similarly, the phase of the VCO output, θrf and the phase of the reference signal, θref, are related with each other according to the equation:
Where M is the phase shift relation factor between VCO signal and the reference signal. M should be a constant.
From the above, it can be seen that the phase of the VCO output can be controlled by the PLL indirectly, while we control the phase of reference signal, in case of the frequency synthesizer system locked at steady state.
A source of radio frequency radiation for supplying a phased antenna array is shown in
Each phase shifter 210A, 210B, 210C outputs a phase shifted reference signal to a respective phase locked loop 220A, 220B or 220C. The phase locked loop 220A outputs a voltage through to loop filter 230A in order to control VCO 240A which outputs a radio frequency signal, ωref to an antenna 250a. The phase of the radio frequency signal output by the VCO is shifted by Mθ with respect to the reference signal ωref, where M is the phase shift relation factor defined above. Phase locked loop 220B, loop filters 230B, 230C and VCOs 240B and 240C are arranged in a similar fashion and output radio frequency signals phase shifted by amounts Mβ and Mφ respectively to antennas 250b and 250c of array 260.
The circuits labelled PLL 220A, 220B and 220C in
As mentioned above, the phase shifters may be configured to adjust the phase by a pre-determined fixed amount. The phase shifters may for example be loaded coaxial lines, components having a certain reactance, or any other arrangement for shifting phase as will be apparent to a person skilled in the art.
Alternatively, each phase shifter may be adjustable so that it is capable of varying the amount by which it shifts the phase of a signal passing through it. There are many possible arrangements of phase shifter which will be apparent to a person skilled in the art—for example, switched line phase shifters, mirror phases shifters, phase shifters with variable inductors, variable capacitors or other components having a variable reactance. An example of one suitable type of adjustable phase shifter is shown in
The phase shift generated by the particular adjustable phase shifter shown in
where,
β=initial phase
R0=input impedance of the PLL
fRF=ICPS output frequency
fLF=LF reference oscillator frequency
C=the capacitance of the capacitor
L=the inductance of each inductor
and where φLF is the phase shift of the low frequency phase shifter and φRF is the phase of the indirect-controlled-phased-source output.
The present invention will be especially useful when it is used as a source of radio frequency signals for a phased antenna array. However, it may also be used to provide a single radio frequency signal having a highly controllable phase. An example of such an arrangement is shown in
A 4-element phased array antenna according to an embodiment of the present invention was developed to test the idea of a PLL controlled phase shifter. The set up was simulated by computer and then carried out in practice. In the experimental system, the low frequency phase shifter comprised a high temperature stability inductor and a variable capacitor comprising a set of high temperature stability capacitors with different values in the order of binary increment connected to a DIP switch. This arrangement could be easily controlled by a microcontroller and is suitable for use with a compact smart antenna.
The overall set up of the system was the same as that shown in
The experimental results of scan patterns with a 4-element phased array antenna are shown in
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