The present invention relates generally to wireless systems, and specifically to a reflectarray antenna system.
Communications terminals, radar sensors, and other wireless systems with antennas can be employed for a wide variety of applications. The associated platforms can be space-based (e.g. satellite), airborne, or terrestrial. Some radar and communication system applications require large antennas, and can thus occupy a large volume on the platform on which they are implemented. Some radar and communication systems can employ multiple frequency bands to provide enhanced sensing, such as for radar, or increased data capacity, such as for communications. For example, separate frequency bands can be employed for communicating with different transceivers, or can be employed for separate uplink and downlink communications. Different frequency bands are typically accommodated by using additional hardware, i.e. separate antennas and RF electronics for each band.
One embodiment describes a reflectarray antenna system. The system includes an antenna feed configured to at least one of transmit and receive a wireless signal occupying a frequency band. The system also includes a reflector comprising a reflectarray. The reflectarray includes a plurality of reflectarray elements, where each of the reflectarray elements includes a dipole element. The dipole element of at least a portion of the plurality of reflectarray elements comprises a crossed-dipole portion and a looped-dipole portion. The plurality of reflectarray elements can be configured to selectively phase-delay the wireless signal to provide the wireless signal as a coherent beam.
Another embodiment includes a method for providing dual-band wireless transmission via a reflectarray antenna system. The method includes one of transmitting and receiving a first wireless signal occupying a first frequency band between a first antenna feed and a reflector comprising a plurality of reflectarray elements selectively distributed on the reflector. The plurality of reflectarray elements can have a geometry that is substantially transparent with respect to the first frequency band. The method also includes one of transmitting and receiving a second wireless signal occupying a second frequency band between a second antenna feed and the reflector. The geometry of the plurality of reflectarray elements can provide selective phase-delay of the second wireless signal to provide a coherent beam associated with the second wireless signal.
Another embodiment includes a reflectarray antenna system. The system includes a first antenna feed configured to at least one of transmit and receive a first wireless signal occupying a first frequency band. The system also includes a second antenna feed configured to at least one of transmit and receive a second wireless signal occupying a second frequency band. The system further includes a reflector comprising a reflectarray and being configured to provide the first wireless signal and the second wireless signal as a first coherent beam and a second coherent beam, respectively. The reflectarray can be configured to selectively phase-delay at least one of the first and second wireless signals to provide the respective at least one of the first and second coherent beams.
The present invention relates generally to wireless systems, and specifically to a reflectarray antenna system. A reflectarray antenna system can include an antenna feed that is configured to transmit and/or receive a wireless signal that occupies a first frequency band, and a reflector that includes a reflectarray. The reflectarray includes a plurality of reflectarray elements that is configured to provide selective phase-delays of the wireless signals to provide a collimated beam corresponding to the wireless signal. The reflector can be configured as a flat surface, or can be curved (e.g., parabolic) along a single dimension or two dimensions, such that the reflectarray elements can provide selective phase-delays of the wireless signal to substantially emulate various types of single or multi-reflector systems, such as Cassegrain or Gregorian antenna architectures. At least a portion of the reflectarray elements can each include a dipole element that includes a crossed-dipole portion and a looped-dipole portion, such that the reflectarray elements can provide phase delays of greater than 360°, and can achieve significant gain and pattern performance improvements relative to typical reflectarrays.
In providing the selective phase delays, the reflectarray elements can provide the wireless signal as a coherent beam. As an example, the plurality of reflectarray elements can each have a variable dimension and geometry with respect to each other, such that the reflectarray elements can be transparent to wireless signals of certain wavelengths and can provide the selective phase-delays to wireless signals of other wavelengths. Accordingly, the reflectarray antenna system can provide dual-band wireless transmission substantially concurrently in each of a first frequency band and a second frequency band, such as in a satellite communication platform, with substantially reduced hardware to provide a more compact and more cost effective communication platform.
For example, the reflectarray antenna system can include a second antenna feed that is configured to transmit and/or receive a second wireless signal that occupies a second frequency band. As an example, the first frequency band can be Ka-band (e.g., approximately 35 GHz) and the second frequency band can be W-band (e.g., approximately 94 GHz). The reflectarray can be configured to provide selective phase-delays of at least one of the first and second wireless signals to provide a coherent beam for the first and/or second wireless signal. For example, the reflectarray elements can be transparent with respect to the first wireless signal and can provide the selective phase delays to the second wireless signal.
The wireless signal SIG is provided to a reflector 14, such that the reflector 14 reflects the wireless signal SIG to or from the antenna feed 12. As an example, the wireless signal SIG can be provided from the antenna feed 12 to be reflected from the reflector 14 to form a collimated beam BM that is provided in a prescribed angular direction. As another example, the beam BM can be received and reflected from the reflector 14 to the antenna feed 12 as the signal SIG. The reflection of the wireless signal SIG between the reflector 14 and the antenna feed 12 can occur via a sub-reflector (not shown), such that the energy of the wireless signal SIG can be optimally distributed on the reflector 14 to provide the collimated beam BM as a coherent beam for the wireless signal SIG at the reflector 14, as described herein.
In the example of
Additionally, such distribution of reflectarray elements 18 can have a state (i.e., dimensional size and/or geometric characteristics) distribution that is provided in a substantially uniform state pattern distribution (e.g., as partial or full loops). As described herein, “substantially uniform state pattern distribution” describes a distribution of the states of the reflectarray elements 18 in a manner that is provided as patterns of approximate uniformity with respect to the states of individual reflectarray elements 18, such as with respect to multiple types of dipole elements associated with each of the reflectarray elements 18, over the surface of the reflector 16. Thus, the reflectarray elements 18 can provide a coherent beam for the wireless signal SIG between the reflector 14 and the antenna feed 12, regardless of the geometry of the reflector 14. For example, the surface of the reflector 14 can be a flat surface or can be curved in one or two dimensions. Therefore, the reflectarray 16 can provide the wireless signal SIG as the collimated beam BM with a desired wavefront, or can provide the received beam BM as the wireless signal SIG to the antenna feed 12, such that the antenna feed 12 can be located off-focus (i.e., offset-fed) from the reflector 14.
The reflectarray element 52 includes a dipole element 58 disposed on a substrate 60 that is layered over a ground plane 62. As an example, the dipole element 58 and the ground plane 62 can each be formed of a conductive material (e.g., copper), and the substrate 60 can be a dielectric material. The conductive material can thus be deposited onto the dielectric 60 using any of a variety of processing techniques and can be etched to form the dipole element 58.
The reflectarray element 54 includes a dipole element 64 disposed over a substrate 66. The reflectarray element 54 can correspond to the reflectarray element 52, such that the substrate 66 can overlay a conductive ground plane. The substrate 66 can correspond to a unit cell for the reflectarray element 54, such that each reflectarray element can be fabricated on an area of substrate that is approximately equal with respect to each other, such as all reflectarray elements that are fabricated together on a wafer during a fabrication process. The dipole element 64 is demonstrated in the example of
The reflectarray element 56 includes a dipole element 72 disposed over a substrate 74. The reflectarray element 56 can correspond to the reflectarray element 52, such that the substrate 74 can overlay a conductive ground plane. Similar to the reflectarray element 56, the substrate 74 can correspond to a unit cell for the reflectarray element 56. The dipole element 72 is demonstrated in the example of
Based on including a distribution of both the reflectarray elements 54 (i.e., each including the dipole element 64) and the reflectarray elements 56 (i.e., each including the dipole element 72) on a given reflector, the distribution of the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 can exhibit substantially improved performance characteristics with respect to incident radio frequency (RF) radiation relative to a distribution of other types of reflectarray elements. As one example, based on a set of dimensions of the dipole elements 64 and 72, the distribution of the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 can exhibit greater than 360° of phase-shift over a wide range of incident angles for both transverse electric (TE) and transverse magnetic (TM) polarizations. In addition, the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 can be fabricated on a single substrate layer, and can exhibit improved (i.e., less) absorption and phase error losses relative to other types of reflectarray elements fabricated with multiple layers. For example, the state pattern distribution of the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 can achieve substantially improved gain and bandwidth relative to traditional reflectarray element designs, and can be more robust to fabrication tolerance variations with respect to the dipole elements 64 and 72 over the surface of the associated reflector.
As demonstrated by the first graph 102, the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 can provide greater than 360° of phase excursion for both TE and TM polarizations across a broad range of incidence angles, demonstrated in a legend 106 as between 0° and 40°. Because short phase-shifts can be realized by the reflectarray element 54, and larger phase shifts can be realized by the reflectarray elements 56, the reflectarray (e.g., the reflectarray 16) can incorporate a selective distribution of both the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 to provide a selected reflection phase distribution across the surface of the associated reflector to form a prescribed beam. In addition, as demonstrated by the second graph 104, the reflectarray element 56 can exhibit substantially lower losses relative to traditional reflectarray elements (e.g. single element designs such as crossed-dipoles, rings, and/or microstrip patches), such as based on having a substantially uniform dipole element state pattern distribution across the reflector, as opposed to having a distribution of one type of reflectarray element across an associated reflector.
Referring back to the example of
It is to be understood that the reflectarray elements 54 and 56 are not intended to be limited to the example of
The antenna reflector 152 includes a reflectarray 154 disposed on the reflection surface, such as corresponding to the reflectarray 16 in the example of
In the example of
The arrangement of the reflectarray elements 156 regarding the type of dipole portions and the dimensions of the dipole portions with respect to the loops 158 can be set to provide a selected reflection phase distribution across the surface of the reflector to form a prescribed beam. For example, the surface of the antenna reflector 152 can be a flat surface or can be curved in one or two dimensions. Therefore, the arrangement of the reflectarray elements 156 can provide coherent beam formation for a wireless signal (e.g., the wireless signal SIG) using the reflectarray 154 and an associated antenna feed (e.g., the antenna feed 12). In addition, the dipole portions of the reflectarray elements 156 can be dimensioned such that the dipole portions of the reflectarray elements 156 are transparent to a set of frequency bands, such that a given wireless signal occupying the frequency band does not experience phase-delays. Accordingly, the reflectarray 154 can be configured in a variety of ways to also provide dual-band wireless operation, as described in greater detail herein.
The antenna feed 202 can be configured to transmit and/or receive a wireless signal 206, such that the reflector 204 reflects the wireless signal 206 to or from the antenna feed 202. As an example, the wireless signal 206 can be provided from the antenna feed 202 to be reflected from the reflector as a collimated beam that is provided in a prescribed angular direction. As another example, the received beam can be reflected from the reflector 204 to the antenna feed 202 as the wireless signal 206. In the example of
As described previously, the reflectarray antenna system can be implemented to provide dual-band wireless functionality.
Each of the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2 are provided to a reflector 256, such that the reflector 256 reflects both of the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2 to or from the first and second antenna feeds 252 and 254, respectively. As an example, the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2 can be provided from the respective first and second antenna feeds 252 and 254 to form respective first and second collimated beams BM1 and BM2, which can be provided from the reflector 256 substantially concurrently. As another example, received first and second beams BM1 and BM2 can be received and reflected from the reflector 256 to the respective first and second antenna feeds 252 and 254 as the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2. The reflection of the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2 between the reflector 256 and the respective first and second antenna feeds 252 and 254 can occur via respective first and second sub-reflectors (not shown), such that the energy of the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2 can be optimally distributed on the reflector 256 to provide at least one of the first and second wireless signals SIG1 and SIG2 as a respective coherent beam, as described herein.
In the example of
As an example, the reflectarray elements 260 of the reflectarray 258 can have respective dimensions and geometry that are selected to be transparent to the first wireless signal SIG1 and to provide the selective phase delays to the second wireless signal SIG2. Therefore, the first antenna feed 252 can be dimensioned and configured differently with respect to the second antenna feed 254 while still providing for common reflection from the reflector 256. For example, the first antenna feed 252 can be located at an approximate focal point of the reflector 256, while the second antenna feed 254 is located off-focus from the reflector 256. As another example, the first antenna feed 252 can be configured as an AESA and the second antenna feed 254 can be configured as a horn antenna, and the reflector 256 can be configured as curved in one dimension. Thus, the first wireless signal SIG1 can be scanned across the reflector 256 (e.g., via a sub-reflector that is curved in one dimension) to provide a coherent beam for the first wireless signal SIG1. However, based on the geometry and distribution of the reflectarray elements 260 of the reflectarray 258, the second wireless signal SIG2 can be provided incident on the reflector 256 (e.g., via a sub-reflector that is curved in two-dimensions), such that the reflectarray elements provide the selective phase-delay at respective portions of the reflector 256 to provide a coherent beam for the second wireless signal SIG2.
The reflectarray that is disposed on the surface of the reflector 306 can be transparent with respect to the first wireless signal 308. As an example, the first antenna feed 302 can be configured as an AESA that scans the first wireless signal 308 across the curved first sub-reflector 312 to reflect the first wireless signal 308 onto the reflector 306 in a sequence to form a first collimated beam in a prescribed angular direction. As another example, the second antenna feed 304 can be configured as a horn antenna feed to provide the second wireless signal 310 onto a curved (e.g., convex) sub-reflector to provide the second wireless signal 310 onto the reflectarray disposed on the surface of the reflector 306. Thus, the reflectarray can provide selective phase-delays of the respective portions of the second wireless signal 310 to form a second collimated beam in a prescribed angular direction substantially concurrently with the first collimated beam. Thus, the second antenna feed 304 can be located off-focus from a focal point (or focal axis) 316 of the reflector 306. Therefore, despite the offset of the antenna feed 304 from the focal point 316 of the reflector 306, the reflectarray can provide a coherent beam for the wireless signal 310. While the first and second sub-reflectors 312 and 314 are demonstrated as curved, the first and second sub-reflectors 312 and 314 can likewise include a reflectarray that is configured substantially similar to the reflectarray 154 in the example of
Therefore, based on the arrangement of the reflectarray on the reflector 306, the reflector 306 can operate to concurrently reflect both the first wireless signal 308 and the second wireless signal 310, regardless of the arrangements of the respective first and second antenna feeds 302 and 304. Therefore, the reflectarray antenna system 300 in the example of
In-view of the foregoing structural and functional features described above, a methodology in accordance with various aspects of the present invention will be better appreciated with reference to
What have been described above are examples of the invention. It is, of course, not possible to describe every conceivable combination of components or methodologies for purposes of describing the invention, but one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that many further combinations and permutations of the invention are possible. Accordingly, the invention is intended to embrace all such alterations, modifications, and variations that fall within the scope of this application, including the appended claims.
This application is a divisional application of, and claims priority to, co-pending U.S. nonprovisional patent application Ser. No. 14/054,267, filed 15 Oct. 2013, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
This invention was made with Government support. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20190165485 A1 | May 2019 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14054267 | Oct 2013 | US |
Child | 16264272 | US |