ANTENNA SYSTEM FOR A TOPOLOGY-CAPTURING RADAR METER
20230223704 · 2023-07-13
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01Q19/08
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/225
ELECTRICITY
H01Q5/40
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q19/08
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/06
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A radar measuring device with an array antenna for topology detection and a level measurement antenna for fill level measurement. The array antenna is arranged around the level measurement antenna.
Claims
1. An antenna system configured for a radar measuring device detecting a topology of a product surface, comprising: a first antenna configuration configured to detect the topology of the product surface; and a second antenna configuration configured to detect a fill level, wherein the first antenna configuration is an array antenna having an array of radiator elements arranged around the second antenna configuration.
2. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein the second antenna configuration is a horn antenna.
3. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration are horn antennas or waveguide apertures which are filled with a dielectric material.
4. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein a diameter or edge length of the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration is smaller than the diameter or edge length of the second antenna configuration.
5. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein the radiating surfaces of the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration and the radiating surface of the second antenna configuration are arranged on the same plane.
6. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein the radiating surfaces of the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration and the radiating surface of the second antenna configuration are arranged in a form of filled or unfilled holes in a metallic plate.
7. The antenna system according to claim 6, wherein the metallic plate is round.
8. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration form a rectangle or a hexagon.
9. The antenna system according to claim 1, wherein the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration include a group of transmitting elements and a group of receiving elements.
10. A radar measuring device comprising the antenna system according to claim 1.
11. The radar measuring device of claim 10, wherein the device is configured to transmit an FMCW radar signal with the first antenna configuration and a pulse signal with the second antenna configuration.
12. The radar measuring device of claim 11, wherein the pulse signal is a radar signal or an ultrasonic signal.
13. The radar measuring device of claim 10, wherein an overall diameter of the antenna system is smaller than a diameter of a container opening through which the radar measuring device is inserted and/or to which the radar measuring device is attached.
14. A method for measuring a topology of a product surface, comprising: detecting the topology of the product surface with a first antenna configuration; and detecting a fill level with a second antenna configuration, wherein the first antenna configuration is an array antenna having an array of radiator elements arranged around the second antenna configuration.
15. A non-transitory computer readable medium having stored thereon a program element which, when executed on a processor of a level meter, directs the processor of the level meter to implement a method for measuring a topology of a product surface, comprising: detecting the topology of the product surface with a first antenna configuration array; and detecting a fill level with a second antenna configuration, wherein the first antenna configuration is an array antenna having an array of radiator elements arranged around the second antenna configuration.
16. (canceled)
17. The antenna system according to claim 2, wherein the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration are horn antennas or waveguide apertures which are filled with a dielectric material.
18. The antenna system according to claim 2, wherein a diameter or edge length of the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration is smaller than the diameter or edge length of the second antenna configuration.
19. The antenna system according to claim 3, wherein a diameter or edge length of the radiator elements of the first antenna configuration is smaller than the diameter or edge length of the second antenna configuration.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0045]
[0046] In fill level radar technology, different types of antennas have proven to be reliable and useful, depending on the location and purpose of use. For example, parabolic mirrors are used for applications where very high directivity is required. These can achieve a very high antenna gain with a relatively small installation depth.
[0047] Another very established antenna design is the horn antenna. In addition to a high gain, this very widely used antenna can also be constructed very robustly at low cost. Horn antennas often also contain a lens in the front area, which has various advantages. On the one hand, the horn antenna can be constructed more compactly due to the shortening factor that the electromagnetic wave experiences in the plastic. Furthermore, the lens can create a process seal with respect to the process measuring device (radar measuring device 100). Horn antennas are usually fed by waveguides.
[0048] The horn antennas are often round or rotationally symmetrical. Since container openings are very often round in the process industry, rotationally symmetrical antennas can be adapted very well to the containers. Container openings are often also provided with threads into which the antenna can be screwed. Round antennas are also advantageous here. Horn antennas can also be manufactured inexpensively as turned parts.
[0049]
[0050] The radar level measuring device 105 shown in
[0051] In addition to systems in which the antenna is mechanically pivoted, systems that can electronically pivot the main beam direction of the antenna can also be used. Also, semi-mechanical systems can be used that pivot one direction of the antenna's main lobe mechanically and the other direction electronically. Antenna systems with electronically pivotable antenna lobes are described below.
[0052] Electronically panned antennas are antennas whose main radiation and main reception direction (main lobe) can be pivoted electronically or digitally. They have a large number of transmission and/or reception channels. These radar measuring devices are often referred to as MIMO (multiple input multiple output) radar devices. The various options for changing the main beam and main receive directions on the transmission and reception sides will not be described below.
[0053] The positions of the antenna elements play an important role. The antenna elements 103 (see for example
[0054] It is advantageous to have the same distance d1 between more than two antenna elements (see
[0055] With correct dimensioning, the overall directional characteristic also has a smaller beam angle in addition to a higher antenna gain. If these transmit signals are now assigned a specified phase shift, it is possible to change the direction of the main radiation pattern (see
[0056] The antenna spacing of the individual radiators affects the main radiation direction. If the antenna spacing d2 (cf.
[0057] One such grating lobe 501 is shown in
[0058] This can be avoided either by designing the antenna array with an antenna spacing ≤half the wavelength so that no grating lobes are created, or by logically masking out the false targets created by the grating lobes.
[0059] Another aspect in the design of an antenna array is the total area covered, which is also known as the antenna aperture and will also be referred to as the radiation area in the following. In general, the larger the aperture, the smaller the antenna aperture angle.
[0060] One goal is to achieve an antenna aperture that has a small aperture angle but as few grating and side lobes as possible. This can be achieved with a large number of radar channels, which in turn results in increased costs and energy consumption. At this point, it is necessary to find an optimum.
[0061] The antenna diagrams in
[0062] If the main radiation direction is now to be pivoted in two spatial directions (dimensions), the array must also be extended in two spatial directions, as can be seen in
[0063] By appropriately assigning the antenna elements as transmitters and/or receivers and controlling them accordingly, as well as the associated signal processing, transmission-side and reception-side beamforming can be operated with such an array. A possible assignment of the antenna elements 103 in this case would be that the horizontal antenna elements are configured and operated as transmitters and the vertical elements as receivers.
[0064] An important aspect regarding energy consumption is the subsequent calculation especially for digital beamforming. Digital beamforming is a way to vary the main receive direction of the receiver array, or to measure the received energy from any direction. This can be done using a fast Fourier transform (FFT). This can be calculated in a particularly energy-saving way in digital arithmetic units in microcontrollers or FPGAs (Field Programmable Gate Array).
[0065] It is advantageous if the array to be calculated is linear (see
[0066] Only one FFT is needed to calculate one spatial dimension. For other antenna configurations, such as hexagonal arrays, more than one FFT is then required to calculate a spatial dimension, which is detrimental to the energy balance of the overall device because the calculation time is higher when evaluating the measurement data.
[0067] The energy balance plays an important role especially for the two-wire interface widely used in process automation in the industrial environment. Here, only a very limited amount of power is available to the measuring device, which can be used for measurement data acquisition and evaluation. Using an appropriately slow measuring cycle, these specified amounts of energy can be utilized for fill level and topology measurement.
[0068] Since the topology of a product often changes only slowly, and the formation of buildup is also a slow process, slow measurement cycles can be accepted. In principle, however, level measurements are important for some areas in the process industry with a high measuring cycle (as in relatively fast succession). In order to combine these two measuring techniques in one device, taking into account the limited energy available, a combination of a conventional level measuring device and a topology sensing measuring device is proposed.
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[0070] The antenna configuration 705 for fill level measurement can be designed as a horn antenna with a lens and is arranged in the center of the side of the antenna system facing the process. The antenna gain of the fill level antenna 705 is greater than the antenna gain of a single radiator of the topology sensing array 706a to f.
[0071] It is also possible that the fill level antenna 705 is designed for a different frequency range than the antenna array for topology measurement. For example, the antenna array may be designed for a frequency of 80 GHz and the fill level antenna for a frequency of 180 GHz.
[0072] The antenna elements 706a to f of the array antenna can be designed, for example, as waveguide apertures, horn radiators, as a waveguide aperture filled with a dielectric, or horn radiators. Patch antennas, rod radiators or other antennas are likewise possible.
[0073] In one embodiment, the openings of the horn array antennas, as well as the opening of the level horn antenna, are recessed on one level in a metallic plate 802 (see
[0074] Furthermore, the arrangement of the antennas 706a to f of the array with the fill level antenna 705 is relevant. For example, the transmission and reception arrays of the topology-detecting antenna configuration each have a linear configuration. In this regard, the transmission antenna array may comprise one or more lines. Similarly, the reception antenna array may comprise one or more columns. In this embodiment, the transmission and reception rows are orthogonal to each other.
[0075] In an embodiment, the fill level horn antenna 102 sits in the center of the antenna system 105 and is surrounded by transmission and reception line antennas of the topology sensing antenna configuration 101. The rectangular antenna array configuration of the topology sensing array antenna allows energy efficient beamforming algorithms to be applied. Likewise, the fill level antenna can then be made as large as possible.
[0076] According to another embodiment, the antennas 103 of the array are arranged in a hexagon (cf.
[0077] According to a further embodiment, the number of transmission antenna elements is not equal to the number of reception antenna elements.
[0078] According to a further embodiment, the antenna system 105 has one or more anti-attachment devices. Here, for example, a radome, purge air or a bag or cover made of flexible PTFE material may be mentioned.
[0079] According to a further embodiment, the fill level measurement and the topology sensing measurement make use of different measurement principles, in particular different radar measurement principles. For example, the fill level measurement can be carried out as a pulse radar method and the topology-detecting measurement as an FMCW method.
[0080] Furthermore, the polarization of the fill level antenna can be different with respect to the array antennas to suppress interfering reflections.
[0081] Likewise, the measurements can run in parallel or sequentially. Advantageously, in the case of a simultaneous measurement, the radar methods or frequencies are selected so that the two measurements do not interfere with each other.
[0082] It is also possible for the fill level measurement to be based on a different measurement principle, such as ultrasonic-based or optical fill level measurement.
[0083] According to another embodiment, the fill level antenna is designed as a rectangular horn antenna. In combination with a rectangular antenna array, the rectangular horn antenna allows optimum use of the area within the antenna array and maximum gain.
[0084] The antenna system comprises a single fill level antenna and an independent antenna array for topology detection. The diameter of the antenna system is usually smaller than the vessel opening. The fill level antenna is surrounded by the antenna array. For example, the linear sub-arrays may have same orientation with respect to each other. For example, the linear sub-arrays may have the same orientation, as shown in
[0085] The subarrays can also be aligned identically to the fill level antenna. Different frequency ranges can be used for the fill level antenna and the array antenna. A common attachment avoidance device may be provided. In particular, different radar methods can be used for the fill level measurement and the topology measurement. Also, different polarizations of the fill level antenna and the array antenna can be applied.
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[0087] Additionally, it should be noted that “comprising” and “comprising” do not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite articles “one” or “a” do not exclude a plurality. It should further be noted that features or steps that have been described with reference to any of the above embodiments may also be used in combination with other features or steps of other embodiments described above. Reference signs in the claims are not to be regarded as limitations.