Wide band planar radiator

Communications: radio wave antennas – Antennas – Microstrip

Reexamination Certificate

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

C343S770000, C343S767000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06456241

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention concerns a planar array antenna for receiving and transmitting linearly polarized waves having two parallel radiator planes, each with several radiator elements arranged in rows and columns, with the radiator elements of each radiator plane being coupled over a coupling network to a central point having the same amplitude and phase, and the two radiator planes receive or emit waves polarized perpendicular to one another.
2. Description of Related Art
The planar array antenna is designed as a radiator system for directional reception of extra-high frequency electromagnetic radiation fields on the basis of a planar invention concept by means of which directional information transmission systems can be operated, preferably in the areas of satellite-supported data transmission, audio transmission and video transmission. This invention primarily concerns the design of the individual radiators and their coupling to the network.
The scope of this invention also includes stationary and mobile telephone and information transmission based on satellite-supported communications transmission and the sector of terrestrial information transmission on the basis of defined point-to-point connections. Primary targeted application areas here include in particular the field of satellite-supported analog and digital signal transmission, preferably within the spectral range between 10.70 GHz and 12.75 GHz, as well as the field of terrestrial point-to-point transmission, preferably within the spectral range between 10.00 GHz and 10.40 GHz.
Planar radiator designs known at the present for reception of high-frequency electromagnetic radiation fields are based on electromagnetic excitation of slot fields with rectangular, square, circular or rhombic slot borders which are supplied electromagnetically by means of striplines with defined geometric dimensions.
The combination of an alternating arrangement of excited strip transmission lines or excited slots and the respective design of the slot contour determines the characteristics of the electromagnetic radiation field that can be generated. The known arrangements are based on generation of circularly polarized electromagnetic radiation fields by means of groups of slots energized in phase, with the individual slots being energized with a mutual offset of 90° in space and time by means of pair of striplines with defined geometric dimensions, or they are based on generation of linearly polarized electromagnetic radiation fields by means of groups of slots energized in phase, with the individual slots being energized by means of a stripline with defined geometric dimensions, whose geometric arrangement determines the direction of vibration of the electric field vector. Known implementations of the design of the radiator elements have also been based on the use of conductor surfaces with defined geometric dimensions, consisting of one or more of the same or different surface elements galvanically linked or linked in a field-supported manner and having area edges in the form of a square, rectangle, circle or trapezoid, leading to energization of the slot fields, with the polarization being determined on the basis of the location of the signal input.
Implementations going beyond this have been based on the configuration of surface resonators in microstrip technology or coplanar technology having a square, rectangular or circular surface bordering. Both galvanic and field-supported embodiments of signal input are known here. Additional known implementations have been based on microstrip configurations in ring designs or frame designs with a resonant geometric ring length or frame length. The known implementations of the excitation networks for the case of the group arrangement are based on parallel power supply to the radiator elements or parallel power supply to series-supplied radiator subgroups. Microstrip technology, slotline technology, triplate technology or coplanar technology may be used for the implementation of these coupling networks.
Generation of two orthogonal polarizations is based on the known status of the manner of arranging the radiator elements along the surface normals of the slots or surface resonators. Known planar directional radiator arrangements with a high directional effect are configured exclusively as narrow band systems or, for the case of satellite-supported information transmission, they are configured as single-band systems. Signal input and output take place in a known manner by way of a hollow conductor with a capacitive probe, with the hollow conductor geometry imaging the propagation condition of the type of field of the highest cut-off wavelength.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The goal of this invention is the configuration of planar transmission and reception modules by means of which directional information transmission links, both direct and transponder-supported, can be designed within the framework of the mobile terrestrial telecommunications and information transmission sector using satellite-supported telecommunications lines.
The object of the present invention is therefore to provide a planar array antenna whose geometric dimensions are as small as possible, with the antenna having the broadest possible spectral band with a high surface efficiency and a high directional effect.
This object is achieved according to this invention by a planar array antenna having the features of claim
1
. Additional advantageous embodiments are derived from the features of the subordinate claims.
The planar array antenna according this invention advantageously has square slots which have a much greater broad-band effect and a greater polarization purity in comparison with round slots. However, square slots have the disadvantage that they require more electromagnetic coupling plus the fact that adjacent radiator elements mutually influence one another. Furthermore, square slots take up more space, which has a negative effect on implementation of the power supply system. This is due to the fact that only the striplines of the coupling network energizing the slots can extend into the slot space, and the coupling network which connects the excited striplines to the coupling point cannot extend into the slot space. Therefore, a square slot with rounded corners is used as the optimum between electric broad band properties and the required geometric space requirements. Square or rectangular slots with other conceivable shaping of the corners or sides are also possible.
The individual radiator is energized by means of a piece of conductor projecting into the slot. The shape of the conductor, the shape of the borders of the slots and the position of the conductor relative to the slot determine the base point impedance of the “slot-conductor” radiator element. The radiator elements are connected at the proper impedance and in the same phase and amplitude by a power supply or coupling network which is also planar, and they are led to a common summation point (coupling point) . A parallel power supply between individual radiators is generally used here. However, this is not appropriate with individual radiators having a square slot shape due to the lack of space. Due to the need for coupling of individual radiators at the proper impedance and with low reflection and the need for impedance transformation, this yields corresponding conductor widths that largely rule out the practical implementation options. Therefore in the state of the art, at least two power supply lines must be provided between two slots, which leads to considerable electrical and mechanical problems and makes practical implementation virtually impossible.
This fundamental problem is solved with the present invention by using a new serial power supply technology between two adjacent radiator elements. Due to the serial power supply, it is possible to design the entire power supply system in a mechanically simplified manner while also solving the space problem in providing power to square slots. Furthermore, th

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Wide band planar radiator does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Wide band planar radiator, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Wide band planar radiator will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-2902967

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.