Title :
Prototype Design of a Modular Ultrawideband Wavelength-Scaled Array of Flared Notches
Author_Institution :
Naval Res. Lab., Washington, DC, USA
fDate :
3/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A prototype modular ultrawideband wavelength- scaled array of flared notches has been designed, built, measured and validated with full-wave modeling tools. Wavelength-scaled arrays operate over ultrawide bandwidths with significantly-reduced element counts, maintaining a relatively-constant beam size by utilizing phased-array radiators of different size. The prototype phased array presented here is designed to operate over an 8:1 bandwidth (1-8 GHz), demonstrating a 12-degree beam capacity at 2 GHz, 4 GHz, and 8 GHz. The architecture achieves a reduction in element count by a factor of 6.4-only 160 elements per polarization as compared to a conventional 1024-element phased array of the same aperture size-at the cost of reduced beamwidth capacity in the higher frequency range. Performance metrics (active VSWR and radiation characteristics) of the wavelength-scaled array are measured and validated against full-wave simulations. The technology is presented as a viable alternative to more expensive conventional ultrawideband arrays with dense uniform element layouts.
Keywords :
UHF antennas; antenna phased arrays; antenna radiation patterns; microwave antenna arrays; ultra wideband antennas; 1024-element phased array; 12-degree beam capacity; VSWR; aperture size; beamwidth capacity reduction; element count reduction; flared notches; frequency 1 GHz to 8 GHz; full-wave modeling tools; modular ultrawideband wavelength-scaled array; phased-array radiators; prototype design; radiation characteristics; relatively-constant beam size; Apertures; Arrays; Bandwidth; Computational modeling; Finite element methods; Frequency measurement; Prototypes; Domain decomposition; Vivaldi array; finite element method; phased arrays; tapered-slot; thick flared-notch element; ultra wideband (UWB) arrays; wavelength-scaled;
Journal_Title :
Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TAP.2011.2180340