The present disclosure relates generally to methods and apparatuses for providing antennas conforming to three-dimensional surfaces.
Significant research and development have been invested in the development of high performance, dual-polarized planar arrays that realize ultra-wide bandwidths (UWB), low cross-polarization, wide-angle scanning, low profile, and optimal element spacing. These arrays employ tightly coupled elements arranged in a uniform lattice to realize a small active reflection coefficient over a wide operational bandwidth. The Vivaldi array is a notable, conventional design for an UWB planar array that has been extensively utilized due to its simple operation and ability to cover greater than one decade of bandwidth. Planar arrays are attractive because they maximize antenna gain for a given number of elements; however, planar arrays suffer from a limited field-of-view since projected area falls off as cos(θ), wherein θ is the angle from a broadside of the array. The field-of-view can be extended using a gimbal; however, use of gimbals is less desired because the mechanical systems are slow, bulky, and wear out over time. Some examples include tightly coupled dipole and slot arrays, Planar Ultrawideband Modular Antenna (PUMA) arrays, Balanced Antipodal Vivaldi Antenna (BAVA) arrays, and Frequency-scaled Ultra-wide Spectrum Element (FUSE) arrays. These arrays are generally optimized to maximize radiation efficiency and impedance bandwidth across wide scan angles while simultaneously minimizing thickness and cross-polarization.
Various arrays on singly curved surfaces (such as a cylinder or a cone) have been developed to enable wider fields-of-view. One notable example includes three separate, narrowband cylindrical or conical arrays combined to provide a directivity greater than 17 dB over a 4π steradian field-of-view. Because it is conceptually straightforward to wrap an UWB planar array around a singly curved surface (e.g., a cylinder), placing arrays on singly curved surfaces leads to an easier design and build the placing of arrays on doubly curved surfaces. For example, a cylindrical array is periodic such that an infinite array, that accounts for mutual coupling between neighboring elements, can be exactly simulated with periodic boundary conditions. Therefore, array performance can be optimized through computationally inexpensive unit cell simulations. By contrast, it is unclear how to rigorously simulate periodic tiling a doubly curved surface and to account for mutual coupling between adjacent elements. It is this aperiodicity and mutual coupling between antennas to achieve a good active impedance match that renders UWB array design particularly problematic.
Conformal arrays employ narrowband elements with less than one octave of bandwidth. Narrowband radiators can be designed to have low mutual coupling and such that the aperture shape has minimal impact on element performance. Yet, most conformal arrays also have relatively large inter-element spacing between antennas (more than 0.75λ). This large inter-element spacing results in low aperture efficiency since grating lobes or sidelobes carry substantial power. One particular attempt included hemispherical arrays may include 64 circularly polarized helix or waveguide antennas designed to operate from 8 GHz to 8.4 GHz with roughly 0.75λ element spacing. These arrays were fed with 16 T/R modules and 4:1 power splitters for efficient utilization of resources. The aperture efficiency was roughly 30% but could likely be increased if more T/R modules are employed. Another example is the use of large inter-element spacing is the UWB array of quad-ridge horn antennas pointing spherically outwards.
Spherical arrays of patch antennas have also been demonstrated. Some of these arrays have relatively wideband microstrip patches with 25% bandwidth distributed along the surface of a sphere. The minimum spacing between elements was 1.5λ, so grating lobes and low aperture efficiencies was as expected. A spherical patch antenna array with reduced height has also been used; however, the aperture efficiency was still only 25% due to large inter-element spacing.
An alternative approach to realizing a wide field-of-view has been to fabricate planar subarrays integrated into a three-dimensional frame; however, the seams between the planar subarrays limited the performance.
A common challenge for developing conformal antenna arrays has been fabrication. Conventionally, every element is individually fabricated and then combined, which requires a fair amount of undesirable touch labor. Some automated techniques for fabricating conformal antennas by selectively patterning metal on curved surfaces have been developed; however, these fabrication capabilities are best suited for building narrowband antenna arrays. One particularly promising process for fabricating conformal antenna arrays has been 3D printing because it has enabled printing of complicated UWB antenna geometries both quickly and cheaply.
Thus, there remains a need for improved antenna array designs, and methods of fabricating the same, that are suitable for curved platforms with UWB radiating elements that maximize available gain and field-of-view at all frequencies of interest.
The present invention overcomes the foregoing problems and other shortcomings, drawbacks, and challenges of designing and fabricating suitable antenna arrays. While the invention will be described in connection with certain embodiments, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to these embodiments. To the contrary, this invention includes all alternatives, modifications, and equivalents as may be included within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Various deficiencies in the prior art are addressed below by the disclosed systems, methods and apparatus providing an ultra-wide band (UWB) antenna configured to conform to a doubly curved surface and having an operating wavelength λ, the UWB antenna comprising: an array of electrically cooperating antennas emanating outward from a base region to respective locations of an outer surface region conforming to the doubly curved surface, the area of the outer surface region being divided in accordance with a mesh of unit cells defining thereby a plurality of edges and vertices, each of the unit cells having a unit cell minimum area selected in accordance with a desired array gain; wherein for each antenna the respective location of the outer surface region to which the antenna extends is associated with a respective one of the plurality of edges defined by the mesh of unit cells.
Additional objects, advantages, and novel features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows, and in part will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate embodiments of the present invention and, together with a general description of the invention given above, and the detailed description of the embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the present invention.
It should be understood that the appended drawings are not necessarily to scale, presenting a somewhat simplified representation of various features illustrative of the basic principles of the invention. The specific design features of the sequence of operations as disclosed herein, including, for example, specific dimensions, orientations, locations, and shapes of various illustrated components, will be determined in part by the particular intended application and use environment. Certain features of the illustrated embodiments have been enlarged or distorted relative to others to facilitate visualization and clear understanding. In particular, thin features may be thickened, for example, for clarity or illustration.
The following description and drawings merely illustrate the principles of the invention. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements that, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the invention and are included within its scope. Furthermore, all examples recited herein are principally intended expressly to be only for illustrative purposes to aid the reader in understanding the principles of the invention and the concepts contributed by the inventor(s) to furthering the art and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions.
Various embodiments provide an ultra-wide band (UWB) antenna configured to conform to a doubly curved surface and having an operating wavelength λ, the UWB antenna comprising: an array of electrically cooperating antennas emanating outward from a base region to respective locations of an outer surface region conforming to the doubly curved surface, the area of the outer surface region being divided in accordance with a mesh of unit cells defining thereby a plurality of edges and vertices, each of the unit cells having a unit cell minimum area selected in accordance with a desired array gain; wherein for each antenna the respective location of the outer surface region to which the antenna extends is associated with a respective one of the plurality of edges defined by the mesh of unit cells.
Various embodiments provide a conformal ultra-wide band (UWB) array on a doubly curved surface configured for wide angle electronic scanning. A quadrilateral mesh or other mesh structure used as a basis for systematically arraying UWB radiators on arbitrary surfaces.
C. PFEIFFER et al., “An UWB Hemispherical Vivaldi Array,” IEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, Vol 70/10 (2022) 9214-9224 and C. PFEIFFER et al., “A UWB low-profile hemispherical array for wide angle scanning,” IEEE Transaction on Antennas and Propagation,” Vol. 71/1 (2022) 508-517 are both incorporated herein by reference, each in its entirety.
Referring now to the figures, and in particular to
While not wishing to be bound by theory, the hemispherical model 100 was selected from other arrangements for various reasons. Comparing the model 100 having a radius, r, to a planar array on a circular disk of the same radius, both oriented such that the z-axis is the symmetrical axis of revolution, it may be assumed that the array is large enough such that the gain is proportional to the projected area. It is well known that the projected area of the planar array pointing in a direction, θ0, from normal is given by:
πr2 cos(θ0) Equation 1
It is easy to then show that the projected area of a hemispherical array is given by:
where θ0 is the angle between the scan direction and the z-axis. The field-of-view, FOV, is the solid angle at which the projected area is above some threshold, and is given by:
FOV=2π(1−cos(θmax)) Equation 3
for azimuthally symmetric antennas, such as the planar disc and hemisphere. Here, θmax is the maximum scan angle at which the projected area is equal to some threshold (e.g., 3 dB below the peak). By setting the projected areas to be equal for the planar and hemispherical cases, it is straightforward to show that:
FOVhemisphere=2FOVplanar Equation 4
In other words, if the required gain is to be above an arbitrary threshold, then the field-of-view of the hemispherical array will always be twice as large as the field-of-view of the planar array with the same radius. However, the surface area of the hemispherical array is also twice as large. Therefore, for a given number of radiating elements, a planar array will offer twice the gain but half the field-of-view as a hemisphere.
The peak gain of a hemispherical array is a function of the radius and number of antenna elements An. The hemispherical array with 100% aperture efficiency has gain equal to:
where λ is the operating wavelength. A maximum array gain occurs when the unit cell area is λ2/4 for square lattice arrays. Reducing the wavelength further creates grating lobes such that the gain remains constant. The minimum wavelength for grating lobe free operation is, therefore:
λmin=r√{square root over (8π/N)} Equation 6
g
where N is the number of dual-polarized elements (i.e., An) covering a hemisphere with surface area of 2πr2. Thus, a hemispherical array with 100% aperture efficiency operating at λmin will have a maximum gain (Ghemispheremax) equal to:
G
hemisphere
max
=Nπ/2=Gplanarmax/2 Equation 7
where (Gplanarmax) is the gain of a planar array with N elements.
In considering distribution of the antenna elements An of the hemispherical surface, one conceptual design was to evenly distribute the antenna elements An in elevation (θ) and azimuth (ϕ) according to a spherical coordinate system. According to this conceptual design, the antenna elements An are relatively uniform near θ=90°, but as θ approaches the poles (0° and 180°), the spacing between elements approaches 0, which is not practical. An alternative conceptual design was to evenly distribute the antennas along elevation. A unique azimuth spacing may be chose for each elevation angle to help make element spacing more uniform.
Given the quadrilateral mesh model 100 of
In use, and with reference now to
Each element 120 may be fabricated using metal 3D printing processes. While fabrication as a unitary structure may be desired, printing with a modular design may be beneficial. According to one embodiment, the radiating arms 132, 134 may be separately printed, coupled to a bottom ground plane with the shorting posts 124, 126, so that each module comes out as a single part.
Finally, the conical vertices are hollowed out to reduce weight.
The SMP connector 122 feeds the radiating arms 132, 134 using a self-supporting tapered transmission line balun in contrast to a traditional Marchand balun. As shown, each radiating arm 128, 130 may be gridded to reduce weight and cost; however, this is not required nor is the particular gridded pattern illustrated herein required.
A detent in the connector helps ensure a good connection is maintained if there is some vibration or stress on the input cables. Three-dimensional printing of RF push-on-connectors may be in accordance with known methods and procedures.
While Vivaldi antennae provide good solution to the problem addressed, there still remain certain deficiencies. For instance, Vivaldi antennae are significantly longer than recently reported low profile UWB antenna designs, which impacts a minimum radius of curvature on conformal arrays. Vivaldi antennae also have notoriously high cross-polarization when scanning in the diagonal plane. Vivaldi antenna arrays do optimize modularity since every element is electrically connected to its neighbor. Combining multiple subarrays together typically requires hand soldering or placement of conductive grease and epoxy, which many be expensive and labor intensive. Furthermore, the Vivaldi antenna elements do not have an optimized impedance match at different scan angles across the operating bandwidth.
Therefore, and expanding Equation 7, the theoretical gain limit (Gmax) of a hemispherical array based on projected area and number of elements equals:
where
is the projected area for a given scan direction (θ), r0 is the array radius, and N is the number of dual-polarized antenna elements. The maximum gain of Nπ/2 occurs when the average inter-element spacing equals λ/2. At smaller wavelengths, the array is sparsely sampled and sidelobes contain a larger percentage of radiated power such that the gain is roughly constant.
While square and triangular lattices are commonplace for planar arrays, there are no periodic methods for covering a doubly curved surface such as a hemisphere with antennas. The conceptually simplest approach is to evenly distribute the elements in elevation (θ) and azimuth (ϕ) in the spherical coordinate system. However, the spacing between antenna elements approaches 0 at the poles, which is impractical.
Leveraging quadrilateral meshing tools, an array lattice on an arbitrary contoured surface is shown in
The BAVA element may be fabricated using a 3D printing process, such as by direct metal laser sintering (DMLS). Some geometrical features are specifically implemented to be compatible with the fabrication process. All features have a swept angle less than 50° from normal so that the part is self-supporting. Therefore, rather than a traditional ground plane, we use a ground plane skirt. In addition, we add shorting posts to the dipole arms that are connected to the coax center conductor to ensure the antenna comes out of the printer as a single part. The segmented cylinders attached to the dipole ends help ensure uniformity of the capacitance between adjacent antenna elements in the hemispherical array. This is important because antennas on doubly curved surfaces all have distorted geometries.
The aperiodicity of conformal arrays leads to variation in the size and shape of each antenna element. An approximation that the radius of curvature is made sufficiently large such that the hemispherical BAVA array may be modelled as an infinite planar array. An optimized planar array unit cell is shown in
A ridged radome atop the antenna. The radome consists of a thin 1 mm thick ULTEM sheet that is supported by 0.8 mm wide and 2 mm tall quadrilateral ridges. From an RF perspective, the radome perturbs the antenna performance. Therefore, the radome is included in design/simulations to realize an optimized performance. However, it is thin enough such that its presence does not significantly impact the main design principles of the BAVA element.
Methods for designing or defining an UWB antenna configured to conform to a doubly curved surface and having an operating wavelength A may include defining a planar mesh comprising a plurality unit cells, each unit cell having a minimum area between approximately λ2/4 and approximately λ2/2. The planar mesh is then conformed to the doubly curved surface to represent thereby a conformed mesh of unit cells having edges therebetween. The number of antennae, N, for use in an array of electrically cooperating antennas, wherein each antenna emanates outward from a base region of the UWB antenna to a respective planar mesh edge may then be determined. The number, N, may be an integer less than a total number of edges in the conformed planar mesh representation of the doubly curved surface. The antennae may be Vivaldi, BAVA or other radiator types, or combinations thereof, having a proximal portion and a distal portion separated by a respective length, l, the proximal portion configured to include a balun enabling electrical cooperation with adjacent Vivaldi radiators in the array of antennas, the respective length, l, being selected to cause the respective distal portion to extend from the base region of the UWB antenna to the respective planar mesh edge.
The following examples illustrate particular properties and advantages of some of the embodiments of the present invention. Furthermore, these are examples of reduction to practice of the present invention and confirmation that the principles described in the present invention are therefore valid but should not be construed as in any way limiting the scope of the invention.
The antenna illustrated in
The array had 104 ports corresponding to 52 dual polarized antenna elements, 181.5 mm in diameter corresponding to a minimum wavelength of λmin=126 mm (4.75 GHz). The calculated maximum gain was found to be 19.1 dB.
The active reflection coefficient and orthogonal port isolation are graphically shown in
The unit cell of
The simulated radiation efficiency was found to be greater than 95% across the band (1 GHz to 21 GHz) even though the metal conductivity was 30 times lower than that of copper. The Vivaldi antenna has a high radiation efficiency because it is not resonant, has low peak current density, and a moderate electrical length of 3.8λH at the maximum operating frequency.
The reflection and transmission coefficients (
To evaluate radiation patterns, the array was excited to generate a right-handed circularly polarized beam. The weights feeding each port were calculated by illuminating the array with an incident right-handed circularly polarized plane wave and noting the received complex voltage at each element.
The array was excited with a complex conjugate of the received voltages, and the resulting the radiation patterns were calculated. The array may also radiate linear polarization, but circular was chosen it has a more intuitive definition when scanning over a very wide field of view. Other beamforming approaches applicable to conformal arrays may also be utilized but were not specifically simulated here.
The loss in
A prototypical array according to an embodiment of the present invention was fabricated and shown in
The array was mounted to a roll over an azimuth far field antenna measurement system to enable characterizing of the entire 3D radiation pattern. The measurements were calibrated using a gain transfer method, i.e., by measuring the gain of a known reference horn antenna. The measurement system was calibrated to the antenna connectors which removes the loss of the RF cables and switches. The array was characterized by measuring the complex embedded element pattern of the 104 antenna ports and using digital beamforming to post process the antenna array patterns. Each low-gain antenna element was measured in azimuth from ϕ=0° to 360° with 7.5° spacing and in elevation from θ=0° to 180° every 7.5°. Time domain gating with a 500 mm (1.7 ns) wide window was employed to reduce an impact of reflections from the antenna positioner, the feed cables, and the chamber walls. A spatial filtering routine decomposing the far field into the spherical harmonics that are supported by the 185 mm diameter sphere was used to filter out unphysical far field oscillations that cannot be excited by the finite sized hemispherical antenna. Decomposing the far field into spherical harmonics allowed for accurate interpolation of the far field on a grid with 2° spacing in azimuth and elevation. Measuring the 3D radiation patterns of all 104 ports within a timely manner was made possible by an absorptive single pole, 36 throw switching matrix measuring 36 antenna ports at every angular position. Therefore, three scans were necessary to measure every antenna port. All antenna ports not connected to the switching matrix were terminated with 50Ω loads.
Each element was fed with an SMP connector printed with the antenna. These connectors are precisely fabricated so that a commercially available female SMP connector may mechanically snap into the SMP connection or other suitable means to ensure there is good electrical contact.
Beamforming at a given angle was accomplished by complex conjugating the received complex voltages at every port, which required measuring and storing the complex far field at every angle. This corresponds to 104 ports by 101 frequencies by 49 azimuth angles by 25 elevation angles for a total of 13×106 complex values. This could be a challenging amount of data to deal with for applications requiring real-time beamforming, so other beamforming techniques may be developed using an analytic model for the embedded element patterns. Additionally or alternatively, the stored data using a coupling matrix model may be accurately compress.
To illustrate the large field of view of the array,
The co- and cross-polarized 3D radiation patterns at 2 GHz, 5 GHz, and 10 GHz are plotted in
Table I summarizes simulated (Example 2) and measured (Example 3) array performance metrics. The operating frequencies were defined to be when the total loss (product of mismatch loss and radiation efficiency) averaged over all azimuth angles was less than 2 dB. The maximum operating frequency was larger than measured (greater than 18 GHz) or simulated (greater than 13 GHz) and could not be exactly determined. The loss and cross-polarization are averaged over all azimuth angles and frequencies on a linear scale within the operating bandwidth, and then converted to dB. The diameter of the simulated array is 9% smaller than the fabricated array. The 1 dB difference between the measured and simulated peak gain is likely due to a combination of measurement error and the inaccuracy in the approximate array model for simulation.
The array and unit cell of
Beamforming was performed by employing time reversal symmetry to calculate the antenna port excitations. The array was illuminated with an incident right-handed circularly polarized plane wave from a desired direction and the received complex voltages are noted. The port excitations for forming a beam in the desired direction are the complex conjugate of the received voltages. The antenna beamforming weights were calculated using this approach in both simulation and measurement. Once the excitations were determined, it is straightforward to calculate the radiation patterns and gain.
It should be noted that significant computational resources were required to simulate this finite array. The array ere simulated with ANSYS HFSS using the finite element method and a mesh comprised of roughly 8×105 tetrahedra. Simulations require roughly 35 GB of random-access memory (RAM) for each frequency point.
The simulated antenna performance was plotted in
The loss vs. frequency at the various scan angles is plotted in
The radiation patterns at 2.5 GHz, 7 GHz, and 18 GHz are plotted in
A BAVA prototype of the BAVA model of
The array was calibrated using the gain transfer method using a reference horn antenna with known gain. The measurement system was calibrated to the 3D printed SMP connectors at the antenna elements which removes the loss of the RF cables and switches. The complex embedded element patterns of all 104 antenna ports are measured and stored, and then digital beamforming is employed to generate beamformed patterns in post processing. As in simulation, beamforming at a given angle is accomplished by complex conjugating the received complex voltages at every port. Each low-gain antenna element is measured in azimuth from ϕ=0° to 360° with 5° spacing and in elevation from θ=0° to 180° every 5°. Time domain gating with a 500 mm (1.7 ns) wide window helped to reduce the impact of reflections from antenna positioner, feed cables, and chamber walls. Furthermore, a spatial filtering routine was utilized to decompose the far field into the spherical harmonics that are supported by the 106 mm diameter sphere. This decomposition helps filter out unphysical far field oscillations that cannot be excited by the finite sized hemispherical antenna. In addition, decomposing the far field into spherical harmonics allows us to accurately interpolate the far field on a grid with 2° spacing in azimuth and elevation.
The measured cross-polarization in the scan direction agreed much better with simulation than the above discussed Vivaldi array prototype. This may be due to improved cross-polarization response to the more accurate fabrication of BAVA elements compared to Vivaldi elements. The previous Vivaldi array had decreased electrical connection between neighboring elements, whereas the BAVA array is more accurately fabricated because neighboring antenna elements do not need to physically touch.
The co- and cross-polarized 3D radiation patterns at 2.5, 7, and 18 GHz are plotted in
Table 2 compares the measured spherical BAVA performance and the spherical Vivaldi array. The max scan loss at θ=90° is the maximum difference between the realized gain at θ=0° and θ=90° across all operating frequencies and azimuth angles. The frequency range is defined as the region where the product of the mismatch loss and radiation efficiency averaged over all azimuth angles is less than 3 dB. Overall, the performance of the hemispherical BAVA array is comparable to that of the hemispherical Vivaldi array. One of the primary differences between the two antenna arrays in Table 2 is the height of a BAVA element is roughly a third of the Vivaldi antenna element which translates into a 1.7× smaller radius of curvature, a smaller array diameter, lower cost, and lower weight. Furthermore, the BAVA element height reduction also results in a larger maximum frequency with grating lobe free operation. For both arrays, the minimum operating frequency is around 2 GHz and the peak gain is 19 dB. The patterns and cross-polarization are very similar between the two arrays even though BAVA elements have significantly reduced D-plane cross-polarization levels. The similar cross-polarization is likely due to the spherical symmetry of the array, which ensures that most power radiates close to the normal direction at all scan angles. There is also a very similar mismatch loss between the BAVA and Vivaldi arrays.
Table 3 compares the performance of our array to previously published planar and conformal arrays. There are countless planar arrays that have multi-octave operating bandwidths, and we list just a few. The peak antenna efficiency of these arrays is generally 100% to within measurement error. However, their field of view is limited. The field of view was defined to be solid angle (in steradians) over which the array's realized gain is within 50% of its maximum value. In contrast, previously developed conformal arrays have demonstrated wide fields of view but narrow bandwidths and low antenna efficiencies. Our array achieves both a high bandwidth and wide field of view.
The various embodiments provide the first UWB antenna array on a doubly curved surface for wide angle scanning. Employing a quadrilateral meshing technique that generates a relatively uniform square lattice geometry. This geometry also supports the high coupling between antenna elements that is required for multi-octave bandwidths. The mapping approach is very general and can be applied to an arbitrary geometry. The Vivaldi antenna element geometry that may be fabricated using a metal 3D printer. SMP connectors are integrated into the antenna elements, which significantly simplifies assembly. A proof-of-concept UWB array covering the surface of a hemisphere is then demonstrated. Simulations and measurements show the array can generate well-formed beams at scan angles out to 120° from the z-axis (i.e., 3π steradians) from 2 GHz to 18 GHz. The measured gain is within 2 dB of the simulated and theoretical values at all frequencies and scan angles.
This work is intended to serve as a baseline estimate for the performance of future UWB, wide scan arrays employing tightly coupled antenna elements. The current hemispherical prototype is only 52 elements in size. Larger arrays will generally have larger radii of curvature and more uniform lattices that make optimizing their performance more straightforward. Another issue with the current prototype is there is an imperfect electrical contact between the 20 modules that comprise the array. It is contemplated that these seams between modules may degrade cross-pol and impedance match to some extent. A natural extension of this work is to consider more advanced UWB radiating elements such as a tightly coupled dipole array. The dipole array could achieve a similar impedance bandwidth as Vivaldi elements while reducing cross-polarized radiation. In addition, the dipole array has a significantly lower profile than a Vivaldi array, which would allow for realizing a smaller radius of curvature. The various embodiments are discussed within the context of a relatively crude beamforming approach based on complex conjugation. In other embodiments, more elaborate pattern synthesis techniques may be considered to control parameters such as cross-polarized radiation, sidelobe level, and null placement. Developing accurate analytic models for the embedded element patterns would also aid beamforming. This further motivates development of low-profile conformal antenna elements because they have a simpler and more accurate analytic model than electrically large Vivaldi elements.
While the disclosure has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the disclosure. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular system, device, or component thereof to the teachings of the disclosure without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the disclosure not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed for carrying out this disclosure, but that the disclosure will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims. Moreover, the use of the terms first, second, etc. do not denote any order or importance, but rather the terms first, second, etc. are used to distinguish one element from another.
Pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 1.78(a)(4), this application claims the benefit of provisional patent Application Ser. No. 63/342,833, filed on May 17, 2022, and entitled UWB HEMISPHERICAL VIVALDI ARRAY, and Application Ser. No. 63/343,128, filed May 18, 2022, and entitled TECHNIQUE FOR BUILDING UWB CONFORMAL ARRAYS USING A QUADRILATERAL MESH AND MODIFIED ANTENNA ELEMENTS. The contents of these provisional patent applications are incorporated herein by reference, each in its entirety.
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States for all governmental purposes without the payment of any royalty.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63342833 | May 2022 | US | |
63343128 | May 2022 | US |