High Gain Reflectarray Antenna for Satellite Applications

Author(s):  
S Venkatraman ◽  
R. Aswanth ◽  
Harish Kumaran ◽  
Lakshet Sehgal ◽  
H UmmaHabiba ◽  
...  
Electronics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 654 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Greco ◽  
Luigi Boccia ◽  
Emilio Arnieri ◽  
Giandomenico Amendola

Cylindrical parabolic reflectors have been widely used in those applications requiring high gain antennas. Their design is dictated by the geometric relation of the parabola, which relate the feed location, f, to the radiating aperture, D. In this work, the use of reflectarrays is proposed to increase D without changing the feed location. In the proposed approach, the reflecting surface is loaded with dielectric panels where the phase of the reflected field is controlled using continuous metal strips of variable widths. This solution is enabled by the cylindrical symmetry and, with respect to rectangular patches or to other discrete antennas, it provides increased gain. The proposed concept has been evaluated by designing a Ka-band antenna operating in the Rx SatCom band (19–21 GHz). A prototype has been designed and the results compared with the ones of a parabolic cylindrical reflector using the same feed architecture. Simulated results have shown how this type of antenna can provide higher gain in comparison to the parabolic counterpart, reaching a radiation efficiency of 65%.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 230-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shunichi Futatsumori ◽  
Kazuyuki Morioka ◽  
Akiko Kohmura ◽  
Nobuhiro Sakamoto ◽  
Tomio Soga ◽  
...  

Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 961
Author(s):  
Eduardo Martinez-de-Rioja ◽  
Jose A. Encinar ◽  
Giovanni Toso

This paper presents a novel multibeam transmitting dual-reflectarray antenna able to generate a complete multiple spot coverage from a geostationary satellite in Ka-band (20 GHz). The bifocal design technique has been exploited for the first time to reduce by 50% the beam deviation factor with respect to the equivalent monofocal antenna, allowing to produce adjacent beams separated by only 0.56° in the antenna offset plane. In order to guarantee an acceptable spillover, the main reflectarray has been oversized in the same plane where the beams are compressed, resulting in an elliptical reflectarray of 3.5 m × 1.8 m. The interleaved beams required to provide the complete multi-spot coverage are produced in the orthogonal polarization, using the same aperture and feeds. The proposed antenna requires a smaller main aperture (about half of the area) and a lower number of feeds than other configurations that use a single oversized reflector to generate a complete multi-spot coverage, showing promising results for communication satellite applications in the Ka-band.


Electronics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 2181
Author(s):  
Ziyang Wang ◽  
Xiaotian Pan ◽  
Fan Yang ◽  
Shenheng Xu ◽  
Maokun Li

A reconfigurable electromagnetic surface has been studied to realize the adjustable orbital angular momentum (OAM) beams for real-time wireless communication and dynamic target detection in the future. OAM mode switching realized by many previous designs suffers from low gains without OAM beam scanning. In this article, a 1-bit reconfigurable reflectarray antenna is designed, fabricated, and tested for the real-time control of OAM mode switching and large-angle vortex beam scanning in three-dimensional space. The proposed reflectarray surface is composed of 1-bit electronically reconfigurable cells, and the size is 24 λ × 24 λ with 2304 units. The reconfigurable element is designed by using a radiation patch loading a PIN diode with effective control of two states, “ON” and “OFF”, for the demand of 180° phase difference. The reflectarray surface can be assigned to a code sequence of 0 or 1 by the Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) in real time. Henceforth, the coding surface can dynamically control the generation of high-gain OAM beams, where only the optimized phase distributions on the surface need to be changed according to demand. To verify the concept, a large-scale reflectarray surface is fabricated and measured with an oblique feed at 15°. Different OAM-carrying phase distributions for different OAM beam states are calculated and tested. The test results show that the OAM mode switching between l = 1 and l = 2 is realized, and other variable modes such as l = 3 or l = 5 can also be achieved by modifying the phase encoding sequence. Furthermore, the direction of the vortex beams can be accurately controlled with gains over 20 dBi, and the large-angle vortex beam scanning is verified. Therefore, all results demonstrate that the proposed 1-bit reconfigurable reflectarray is efficient for the regulation and control of OAM-carrying beams for the demand of real-time dynamic wireless communications in the future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 68 (2) ◽  
pp. 805-812 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geng-Bo Wu ◽  
Yuan-Song Zeng ◽  
Ka Fai Chan ◽  
Bao-Jie Chen ◽  
Shi-Wei Qu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Karim Mazouni ◽  
Christian Pichot ◽  
Jérôme Lantéri ◽  
Jean-Yves Dauvignac ◽  
Claire Migliaccio ◽  
...  

In designing a Foreign Object Debris (FOD) detection system on airport runways, this paper deals with the performance of a 77 GHz reflectarray antenna (RA). Debris may be very small and have low radar cross section (RCS), leading to design a high gain primary-fed offset RA. To minimize the aperture blockage, the main radiation lobe is in the specular direction. The antenna has a maximum gain of 40 dBi and aperture efficiency of 50% over the frequency band 76–77 GHz. First measurements using a 77 GHz radar module were carried out on pavement.


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