Horn antenna
20230352844 · 2023-11-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01Q17/001
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/42
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q1/52
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A horn antenna including a ground plane delimiting an upper half-space, a horn forming one end of a waveguide, the horn crossing through the ground plane so that a mouth of the horn is arranged at a predetermined height above the ground plane in the upper half-space. The antenna is characterized in that it includes at least one resistive film arranged around the horn, parallel to an upper face of the ground plane, the resistive film having an electrical resistance suitable for limiting creeping waves.
Claims
1. A horn antenna comprising: a ground plane, delimiting an upper half-space; a horn, forming one end of a waveguide, the horn crossing through said ground plane so that a mouth of the horn is arranged at a predefined height above said ground plane in the upper half-space; and at least one resistive film, arranged around said horn, parallel to an upper face of said ground plane, the at least one resistive film having an electrical resistance suitable for limiting creeping waves.
2. The horn antenna according to claim 1, wherein said at least one resistive film is supported by said ground plane.
3. The horn antenna according to claim 1, further comprising at least one support layer suitable for supporting said at least one resistive film, the support layer being arranged around said horn, parallel to the upper face of said ground plane.
4. The horn antenna according to claim 3, wherein said support layer is comprised of a material apt to attenuate creeping waves.
5. The horn antenna according to claim 3, wherein said support layer results from assembly of a plurality of elementary layers.
6. The horn antenna according to claim 3, comprising: a first resistive film supported by an upper surface of said support layer; and a second resistive film supported by a lower surface of said support layer.
7. The horn antenna according to claim 3, comprising a radome covering the mouth of said horn.
8. The horn antenna according to claim 7, wherein said at least one resistive film is supported by a lower face of said radome, oriented towards said ground plane.
9. The horn antenna according to claim 7, wherein said radome has an outer contour and wherein said at least one resistive film extends to the vicinity of the outer contour of said radome.
10. The horn antenna according to claim 9, wherein said ground plane has a raised peripheral edge for receiving said radome, the peripheral edge of said ground plane coinciding with the outer contour of said radome.
11. The horn antenna according to claim 1, wherein said at least one resistive film includes one or a plurality of solid angular sectors.
12. The horn antenna according to claim 1, wherein said at least one resistive film includes one or a plurality of concentric ring arcs.
13. The horn antenna according to claim 1, wherein said at least one resistive film includes at least two concentric rings with different electrical resistances.
14. The horn antenna according to claim 1, wherein said at least one resistive film is made of a material compatible with manufacturing by screen printing.
15. The horn antenna according to claim 1, suitable for operating over a wide range of working frequencies above the X-band.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0039] The invention and the advantages of the invention will be better understood upon reading the detailed description of the different embodiments of the invention, given only as examples and not limited to, the description being made with reference to the enclosed drawings, wherein:
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043]
[0044]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0045] With reference to
[0046] A horn antenna 11 includes a ground plane 12 and a horn 13 along a so-called vertical axis Z.
[0047] Ground plane 12 has, e.g., a rectangular parallelepiped external shape, with a square base and of reduced thickness, e. In a variant, the ground plane has a cylindrical shape.
[0048] Ground plane 12 has a central recess 21 of cylindrical shape, of radius R0 and of depth p. Recess 21 has a bottom 22 and a peripheral edge 23. Bottom 22 is the upper face of ground plane 12 where creeping waves develop.
[0049] Ground plane 12 is provided with a central opening 24 letting through horn 13.
[0050] Horn 13 has, e.g., a constant cross-section (i.e., in a plane orthogonal to axis Z), e.g., with a rectangular shape. In a variant, the section of the horn may have other shapes, e.g., flared and/or circular.
[0051] Horn 13 is arranged in such a way that a mouth 31 thereof is placed above bottom 22 of recess 21 of ground plane 12, at a height h above ground plane 12.
[0052] Horn antenna 11 includes a radome 14 closing recess 21 of ground plane 12 and covering mouth 31 of horn 13.
[0053] Radome 14 has essentially the form of a disk with radius R1, smaller than R0.
[0054] A lower face 41 of radome 14, oriented towards bottom 22 of ground plane 12, is advantageously provided with a central housing 42, shaped so as to receive mouth 31 of horn 13.
[0055] According to the invention, horn antenna 11 incorporates at least one resistive film 15.
[0056] Resistive film 15 is arranged so as to surround horn 13 and be received in recess 21 of ground plane 12.
[0057] In the present embodiment, resistive film 15 is arranged in a transverse plane. Resistive film 15 is inscribed in a disk of radius R1.
[0058] Resistive film 15 is thin. Resistive film 15 has a thickness, k, typically between 10 μm and 20 μm. Such a thickness makes integration possible without increasing total thickness, e, of horn antenna 11.
[0059] Resistive film 15 has a central opening 54, the cross-section of which preferably corresponds to the thickness of horn 13, so that resistive film 15 is positioned as close as possible to horn 13 (along a transverse plane), in order to maximize effectiveness thereof in reducing creeping waves.
[0060] Different variant embodiments of the resistive film are presented hereinafter in relation to
[0061] In the embodiment shown in
[0062] In the present embodiment, layer 16 is arranged in a transverse plane. Layer 16 is inscribed in a disk of radius R1.
[0063] Layer 16 has a thickness enabling resistive film 15 to be positioned slightly set back from mouth 31 of horn 13 along the vertical direction. Layer 16 also fills recess 21 of ground plane 12.
[0064] The material of layer 16 is preferentially a dielectric or (magneto)dielectric material. The material has a low dielectric constant, typically less than or equal to 2. The material is a low-loss material. The choice of such a material contributes to attenuation of creeping waves, in particular by not enhancing propagation of creeping waves at lower face 41 of radome 14.
[0065] In the present embodiment, resistive film 15 is bonded over layer 16. The adhesive layer is referenced by number 17 in
[0066] Radome 14 and the assembly consisting of resistive film 15 and of layer 16 are held in position on ground plane 12 by a series of screws, one of which is shown in
Other Embodiments
[0067] Other embodiments are conceivable.
[0068] In particular, the radome, the central recess, the resistive film, and the support layer may have a rectangular parallelepiped shape.
[0069] The resistive film may, e.g., be directly supported on the upper face of ground plane 12. The film, e.g., is bonded on the upper face.
[0070] The resistive film may, e.g., be directly supported on lower face 41 of radome 14. The resistive film, e.g., is bonded on the lower face.
[0071] Other ways of attaching the resistive film onto a support layer, the ground plane or the radome are known to the person skilled in the art, and attachment by bonding is only an example particularly easy to implement.
[0072] A plurality of resistive films may, e.g., be provided, arranged vertically one on top of the other. Two successive resistive films are advantageously separated by an intermediate layer similar to support layer 16, but the thickness of which is reduced so that the laminate thereby produced does not have a negative impact on the total thickness of the horn antenna.
[0073] A layer, such as support layer 16, may be produced by overlaying a plurality of elementary layers.
[0074] If appropriate, the horn antenna may be non-planar. In such case, the or each resistive film (and, where appropriate, each support layer) are shaped so as to follow the curvature of the ground plane.
[0075] Instead of bonding, other ways of attaching the resistive film (onto the ground plane, the support layer and/or the radome) are possible.
Variant Embodiments of the Resistive Film
[0076]
[0077] In a first variant of embodiment (a), resistive film 115 is solid. Resistive film 115 forms a circular continuous surface of radius R1 with a central opening 154 matching the outer contour of the horn. A resistive film is made of one material having only one resistive value, e.g., between 100 and 10,000 Ω/sq.
[0078] In order to have additional degrees of freedom for adapting radio frequency performance of the horn antenna, the resistive film may have other configurations.
[0079] Thereby, in a second variant (b), a resistive film 215 results from combination of two materials with different resistive values. The first material forms a disk 221 with a central opening 254 and a plurality of concentric annular grooves 222 and 223. The second material fills the grooves. The radius of a groove, the depth thereof and/or the thickness thereof may be varied so as to adapt properties of the antenna. It is possible to opt for more than two materials with different resistive values. Instead of annular grooves, polygonal grooves may be provided.
[0080] In a third variant (c), a resistive film 315 consists of association of a plurality of concentric rings, 321-329, the outer radius of one ring corresponding to the inner radius of the next ring and the material of each ring being chosen for generating a radial resistive gradient with a minimum resistive value at the center, and a maximum resistive value at the periphery. In this way, the impact of a high resistive value in the vicinity of the radiating mouth of the horn is limited, in particular on the flanks of the radiation pattern in plane E. Moreover, in this way it is possible to provide optimum attenuation of creeping waves in the vicinity of the edge of the structure and, thereby, to limit associated edge effects.
[0081] In a fourth variant (d), a resistive film 415 does not form a continuous surface, but a partial surface. Resistive film 415 does not completely cover the transverse plane around the mouth of the horn. In
[0082] In a fifth variant of embodiment (e), a resistive film 515 does not form a continuous surface, but a partial surface. Resistive film 515 does not completely cover the transverse plane around the mouth of the horn. In
[0083] Finally, in a sixth variant (f), a resistive film 615 results from combination of variants (d) and (e) with two solid angular sectors 631 and 632 along plane E and two perforated angular sectors 633 and 634 along plane H. In such a variant, addition of resistive ring arcs forming the junction between the continuous angular sectors, enhances trapping of creeping waves and reduction of edge effects of the structure, in particular along plane H. The width of the resistive addition is preferentially chosen to be less than or equal to λ/4 (with λ the wavelength chosen, usually, at the central operating frequency). The sixth variant is preferable because it has the advantages of the fifth variant (e) while keeping advantages of the solid solution in plane E (fourth variant (d)). It is this sixth variant which has been chosen for the embodiment shown in
[0084] It should be noted that resistive films may be optimized by electromagnetic simulation.
[0085] A resistive film may advantageously be produced by using a conventional screen-printing method. In a variant, it may be produced by an equivalent process: aerosol printing, 3D printing, etc.
[0086] The resistive film is, e.g., made with a carbon-enriched polymer ink, a material suitable for screen printing manufacturing. Alternatively, the resistive film is a carbon-enriched thermoplastic, e.g., an ESD (Electrostatic Discharge) thermoplastic, a material suitable for production by 3D printing.
Results
[0087]
[0088] In general, with the invention, it was found, in particular: [0089] stabilization of the frequency dependence of the gain along the radio axis; [0090] at a given frequency, clear reduction of gain ripples in the main lobe of the radiation pattern; [0091] stabilization of the angular aperture of the main lobe of the radiation pattern; and, [0092] control of the rise of the secondary lobes of the radiation pattern.