Multi-element antenna conformed to a conical surface
11367948 · 2022-06-21
Assignee
Inventors
- Jared Williams Jordan (Raleigh, NC, US)
- Timothy Amis Smith (Durham, NC, US)
- Freddy Pinero (Durham, NC, US)
- Brian Michael Kerrigan (Cary, NC, US)
Cpc classification
H01Q1/28
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q1/28
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Antenna integrated into a compact conical nosecone.
Claims
1. An antenna integrated into a compact conical nosecone, comprising a plurality of leaky dielectric-filled waveguides circumferentially spaced about an outer surface of the nosecone and embedded therein, with the plurality of leaky dielectric-filled waveguides having an outer surface disposed flush with an outer surface of the conical nosecone, the outer surfaces of the waveguide and nosecone configured to provide a continuous surface.
2. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the nosecone has a tip at an apex of the cone and has an opposing aft end and a longitudinal axis extending therebetween, and wherein the plurality of leaky dielectric-filled waveguides taper towards the tip along the direction of the longitudinal axis.
3. The antenna of claim 2, wherein the plurality of leaky dielectric-filled waveguides taper in the circumferential direction from a widest circumferential dimension at the aft end and narrowest circumferential dimension proximate the tip.
4. The antenna of claim 1, comprising a slot transition electronically coupled to a respective one of the plurality of leaky dielectric-filled waveguides to provide electromagnetic energy to a respective waveguide.
5. The antenna of claim 4, wherein the slot transition is filled with a dielectric.
6. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the plurality of leaky dielectric-filled waveguides are configured to leak energy therefrom at an orientation which collimates the energy leaked therefrom along the longitudinal axis extending away from a tip.
7. The antenna of claim 1, comprising a transmit antenna disposed at a nosecone tip.
8. The antenna of claim 7, comprising a circular dielectric waveguide disposed in the nosecone and electromagnetically coupled to the transmit antenna.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The foregoing summary and the following detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the present invention may be further understood when read in conjunction with the appended drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(18) Referring now to the figures, wherein like elements are numbered alike throughout, an exemplary antenna 190 integrated into a compact conical-, ogive-, Von Karman-, etc. shaped nosecone assembly 100 is illustrated,
(19) The leaky dielectric-loaded waveguides 114 may extend from an aft end 117 of the nosecone 110 towards an opposing tip 111 disposed along the longitudinal axis of the assembly 100. The waveguides 114 may extend a distance less than the length of the nosecone 110 so that the nosecone tip 111 does not contain the leaky dielectric-loaded waveguides 114, but rather the tip 111 comprises the material of the nosecone 110, such as metal. The dielectric-loaded waveguides 114 and nosecone 110 are designed to fit together such that when assembled with the waveguides 114 in place, the exposed surface of the waveguides 114 form a continuous smooth surface without gaps or openings with the adjacent surfaces of the nosecone 110,
(20) The waveguides 114 are designed such that energy leaks out of the top surface of the dielectric-loaded waveguides 114 and a single antenna (waveguide) element radiates energy to predominately towards a boresight, which utilizes a feed structure to transition the energy from a beamformer assembly 120 or other RF array processing to the leaky dielectric-loaded waveguides 114. The dielectric filling can be homogenous or a heterogenous mixture of multiple dielectrics. The dielectric waveguides can be constructed from multiple dielectric materials which can be stratified/pixelated in any orientation.
(21) Regarding the illustrated configurations of the dielectric-loaded waveguides 114, the dielectric waveguide 114 may have an approximately rectangular shape with four sides having conductive walls, one side open to free space and one side connected to the feed structure. At the input, the waveguide 114 may be approximately 1.5 lambda wide and 0.5 lambda thick, with respect to a free-space wave in a homogenous dielectric of 9.4. The waveguide may taper down in size to approximately 0.6 lambda and 0.3 lambda, respectively. The exact shape can have tapered/shaped walls to better support physical integration. Exact dimensions and the rate of taper may be optimized to achieve desired properties. All surfaces of the waveguides 114 may be metallized, excluding the outer surface exposed to the environment and the aft surface coupled to the beamformer assembly 120 or other RF array processing,
(22) The beamformer assembly 120 may include a plurality (e.g., eight) individual feed transitions 124 each having a coupling slot 122 monolithically integrated therein and may be fabricated using PolyStrata® technology. (Examples of PolyStrata® processing/technology are illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,948,335, 7,405,638, 7,148,772, 7,012,489, 7,649,432, 7,656,256, 7,755,174, 7,898,356 and/or U.S. Application Pub. Nos. 2010/0109819, 2011/0210807, 2010/0296252, 2011/0273241, 2011/0123783, 2011/0181376, 2011/0181377, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in their entirety). The disclosed conformal antenna is not limited to 8 radiating antenna elements. The simplest embodiment would likely possess two radiating elements, i.e. leaky dielectric-loaded waveguide radiators 114, and the upper end is limited by the number of radiating elements that can be packaged around the nosecone 110. The feed concept can be seen in
(23) Near-field and far-field directivity plots associated with a single radiating dielectric-loaded waveguide 114 at 35 GHz is shown in
(24) In one of its aspects the present invention takes the single waveguide 114 result and arrays 8 of waveguides 114 in phi with the proper phasing to create circular modes 1, 2, and 3,
(25) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Phasing of Antenna Elements Ring Array Element # Mode 1 Mode 2 Mode 3 1 0 0 0 2 45 90 135 3 90 180 270 4 135 270 405 5 180 360 540 6 225 450 675 7 270 540 810 8 315 630 945
(26) Table 2 captures the antenna and beamformer goals. An electromagnetic (EM) prototype of an antenna in accordance with the present invention as designed, fabricated and validated with measurements,
(27) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Design Targets - Electrical Type Value Units Target Frequency Nominal 35 GHz Total Frequency Bandwidth Range 34-36 GHz Antenna: Return Loss Greater than 10 dB Insertion Loss Less than 1 dB
(28) A PolyStrata® implementation of the waveguide slot transition can be seen in
(29) Fullwave simulation indicates the loss of a single dielectric-loaded waveguide 114 is between 0.6 and 0.7 dB. S-parameter results capturing full coupling between the eight dielectric-loaded waveguides 114 of
(30) Two designs were created and prototyped: one aimed at a low temperature and a second design aimed at high temperature capability.
(31) First (Electromagnetic (EM)) Prototype Nosecone Fabrication
(32) The low temperature version termed “EM prototype” uses an engineered thermoplastic, PREPERM® L900HF from Premix Group, which is a moldable thermoplastic that has controlled dielectric properties. This design was intended to more quickly enable having a test vehicle for the beam forming network and antenna. The mechanical design utilized machined aluminum prototype metal cone tips which were subsequently insert molded with the PERPERM® L900HF thermoplastic. The nosecone 110 was machined to achieve the desired ogive cone shape and precise surface flatness to ensure good mating to the beam-former feed network 120,
(33) Second Prototype Nosecone Fabrication
(34) In addition to fabricating the EM prototype nosecones 110, an alternate manufacturing path to fabricate a “live-fire-like” prototype nosecone 110 that could survive the aerothermal structural/heating environment. The goal of the second metal/dielectric nosecone prototype is a drop-in replacement for the EM prototype nosecone 110, demonstrating progress towards an antenna nosecone which can survive increased projectile speeds and higher temperature.
(35) Two ideas were researched for live-fire prototypes for elevated temperature use. The first idea was to use machined alumina pieces for the dielectric material of the waveguides 114 which would be metalized using evaporation or deposition techniques, enabling the ceramic to subsequently braze to a metal nosecone 110. The nosecone 110 could be made using PM (Powder Metallurgy) technology to provide the necessary shape or be machined to the desired shape. The second idea was to use a ceramic slurry which is a thick film dielectric ceramic paste and to fill the nosecone recesses 112 with the slurry to provide the waveguides 114. The ceramic slurry material is liquidus at room temperature and becomes solid after firing at 850 C. An advantage to using paste is that it can maintain the internal recess 112 shape, and once fired it will fuse directly to metal surface without the need to metalize or braze it. The ceramic dielectric constant (7.5-9.5) is consistent with what is needed to implement the dielectric-loaded waveguides 114. To get an ogive external form, the ceramic metal hybrid may require final post grinding. The ceramic firing temperature of 850 C is below the melt point of metals such as Kovar; however, the temperature should be selected to avoid any PM phase transformations or elevated temperature issues.
(36) The two leading candidate metals identified for nosecone fabrication were Kovar® ASTM F15 nickel-iron alloy & Copper Tungsten (15/85). Table 3 captures some relevant properties along with ceramic candidate materials alumina and MACOR® machinable glass ceramic (Corning, Inc.).
(37) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Second (Live Fire) Prototype Material Candidates Thermal CTE Elec. Cond. Conductivity Materials [10−6/K] Density [%] [W/m-K] Alumina 8.1 3.9 31.7 MACOR 9.3 2.52 1.46 Tungsten 4.5 19.3 173 Kovar 5 8.36 17 Copper 16.5 8.96 100 385 W—Cu alloys 6-16 Cu 90% W <7.5 16.5 <30 170 Cu 80% W 8.8 15 38-45 180 Cu 75% W 9.5 14.3 41-48 190
(38) TABLE-US-00004 Bending Composition Density Hardness Resistivity IACS strength wt. % g/cm.sup.3≥ HB Kgf/mm.sup.2≥ μΩ .Math. cm≤ %≥ Mpa≥ W50/Cu50 11.85 115 3.2 54 — W55/Cu45 12.30 125 3.5 49 {grave over ( )}—.sup. W60/Cu40 12.75 140 3.7 47 — W65/Cu35 13.30 155 3.9 44 — W70/Cu30 13.80 175 4.1 42 790 W75/Cu25 14.50 195 4.5 38 885 W80/Cu20 15.15 220 5.0 34 980 W85/Cu15 15.90 240 5.7 30 1080 W90/Cu10 16.75 260 6.5 27 1160
(39) Possible fabrication methods for the metal nosecone 110 were identified as 1) machining 2) direct metal laser sintering printing, and 3) metal injection molding. Ultimately, for the second prototype we decided to machine both the copper-tungsten nosecone 110 and the alumina waveguides 114. The waveguides 114 were machined from alumina and then brazed into the copper tungsten nosecone 110 and ground to provide the waveguides 114 in the nosecone 110.
(40) In yet a further exemplary configuration, an antenna 210 in accordance with the present invention may include a cone-shaped dielectric-loaded waveguide tip 240 as the tip of the projectile which, with the waveguide tip 240 operating in conjunction with the leaky dielectric-loaded waveguides 114 to provide another antenna element,
(41) These and other advantages of the present invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing specification. Accordingly, it will be recognized by those skilled in the art that changes or modifications may be made to the above-described embodiments without departing from the broad inventive concepts of the invention. It should therefore be understood that this invention is not limited to the particular embodiments described herein, but is intended to include all changes and modifications that are within the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth in the claims.