Antennas are used in a wide variety of applications to guide vehicles, such as drones, missiles, planes and other aircraft, or track (e.g., tanks) other wheeled vehicles, from one point to another. Radiofrequency transmissions from the antenna as well as the vehicle on which it is mounted can be detected by third parties not intended to possess this information. This invention pertains to a configuration of the vehicle with one or more antennas thereon (radiating elements) where the detectable radio cross-section of the vehicle is reduced.
In military applications, there is a desire to produce vehicles which are difficult to detect using radars. This is accomplished by configuring the vehicle in a shape that is less detectable, or by covering the surface of the vehicle with radar absorbing materials. However, antennas are often used to guide military vehicles for homing, sensing, and communications, and the antennas themselves cannot be covered with radar absorbing materials without adversely affecting the performance of the antenna. When an antenna is used on a military vehicle such as a missile or drone, it is desirable to reduce the radar cross-section (RCS) of the vehicle/antenna combination as much as possible.
A common approach to reducing RCS is to modify the ground plane using a metasurface which either absorbs or diffuses incoming radiation so as to reduce the RCS. For example, Zhou-IEEE (Aug. 27, 2020) describes the configuration of a frequency selective rasorber (FSR) for low frequency diffusion and high frequency absorption where a metasurface is used to cover the ground plane of the antenna, and Joozdani-ICEE 2019 describes a mantle cloak for an antenna where a metasurface covers the ground plane of the antenna.
In an application where an antenna is on a vehicle such as an aircraft (e.g., drone, plane, missile, etc.) or other vehicles (e.g., ship, tank or other track vehicle, or a wheeled vehicle), the antenna is mounted to the vehicle, and the vehicle itself is a major contributor to the RCS of the vehicle/antenna combination. With this insight, embodiments of the invention employ a ground plane of reduced size surrounded be a frequency selective surface (FSS) that is transparent at out-of-band frequencies and reflective at one or more operating frequencies of the antenna (radiating element).
The contribution to the RCS of from the ground plane can be significantly reduced by reducing the size of the ground plane, and this can be done without affecting the performance of the antenna, even when the ground plane is approximately the same size or only slightly larger than the footprint of the antenna. The body of the vehicle, which is not used in communications, homing or sensing, will produce less undesirable vibrations radiations because it does not receive reflections from the ground plane, which is of reduced size, and because the area surrounding the smaller ground plane incorporates an FSS which permits out-of-band frequencies to be passed to an absorber where they are absorbed and reflection is reduced or eliminated. However, the FSS is designed to reflect the one or more operating frequencies of the antenna, thus, the FSS can enhance the transmissions from the antenna which are desired, while effectively allowing the undesirable transmissions to be absorbed. The net effect of the invention is to significantly reduce the RCS of the combined vehicle/antenna combination.
In order to be operational, the radiating element 12 must be connected to a ground 14. In order better conform to the shape of the substrate, as well as to reduce the impact of the ground 14 on RCS, the ground 14 is made be approximately the same size, in terms of its foot print in the x and y dimensions as the radiating element 12. This can be done without adversely impacting the performance of the radiating element 12 (antenna). As will be discussed below, the area defined by the x and y dimensions of the ground 14 are the same size or slightly larger (e.g., within 5%) of the x and y dimensions of the radiating element 12. Thus, the ground 14, being smaller in size than it is in prior applications, contributes very little to the RCS and only reflects transmissions which are directed straight through the substrate 10 from the radiating element 12.
On the outer periphery of the ground 14, is one or more frequency selective surfaces (FSS). Having the FSS 16 have approximately the same thickness as the ground 14 enhances the conformal nature of the present design, as it will fit curve shapes, etc. of the substrate 10. The FSS 16 may sometimes be referred to as a metasurface. The FSS 16 will be designed to reflect only the one or more operating frequencies of the antenna or antennas in array on the radiating element 12, and will be designed to permit out-of-band frequencies to be passed to an absorber 18 where they are absorbed and reflection is reduced or eliminated. The absorber is preferably a multilayer absorber made from the commercial material “ECCOSORB” (a polyurethane foam material for RF absorption, examples of which are available from Laird Technologies of Cleveland Ohio).
In operation, transmissions from the radiating element 12 are reflected by the FSS 16, but vibrations and other transmissions generated by the radiating element and the vehicle 10 to which it is attached which are not intended to be transmitted, are passed by the FSS 16 to the multilayer absorber 18 and are either reduced or eliminated such that the vehicle/antenna combination has a much lower RCS than if the ground plane 14 was not reduced in size and no FSS 16 was provided. Having the radiating element 12 on opposite sides of the vehicle substrate 10 from the ground 14 and FSS 16 and absorber 18, allows for the radiating element 12 to have no or only limited impact on the aerodynamics of the vehicle.
The construction of the FSS 16 can take a variety of forms and is dependent on the transmissions to be passed and the operating transmissions to be reflected.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20160011782 | Kurotsuchi et al. | Jan 2016 | A1 |
20190305436 | Legay | Oct 2019 | A1 |
20210249787 | Schuss | Aug 2021 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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104934715 | Sep 2015 | CN |
109713457 | May 2019 | CN |
111430903 | Jul 2020 | CN |
Entry |
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M Joozdhani, “Radar Cross Section Reduction of Conformal Patch Antenna Using Mantle Cloak”, 27th Iranian Conference on Electrical Engineering (ICEE2019). |
L Zhou, “Hybrid Frequency-Selective Rasorber with Low-Frequency Diffusion and High-Frequency Absorption”, IEEE, Aug. 27, 2020. |