Abstract

This work discusses an alternative geometrical optics (GO) technique to synthesize omnidirectional dual-reflector antennas with uniform aperture phase distribution together with an arbitrary main-beam direction for the antenna radiation pattern. Sub- and main reflectors are bodies of revolution generated by shaped curves defined by local conic sections consecutively concatenated. The shaping formulation is derived for configurations like ADC (axis-displaced Cassegrain) and ADE (axis-displaced ellipse) omnidirectional antennas. As case studies, two configurations fed by a TEM coaxial horn are designed and analyzed by a hybrid technique based on mode matching and method of moments in order to validate the GO shaping procedure.

1. Introduction

The spectral congestion in urban centers and large data rates required by the next generation technology (5G) of broadband mobile communication have forced the development of systems operating at higher frequencies [1]. For radio channels between 28 and 38 GHz, highly efficient-shaped omnidirectional reflector antennas can be suited to provide broadband communications with a compact design.

For high-gain or omnidirectional antennas, several works have dealt with the shaping of circularly symmetric dual-reflector for prescribed equiphase field distribution at the aperture by solving an ordinary differential equation derived from geometrical optics (GO) principles [24]. For collimated beam, [5] presents an alternative GO shaping technique based on the representation of the reflector generatrices by concatenated local conic sections. There, the authors employ rectangular coordinates to describe the local conic sections representing the reflectors’ generatrices, leading to a set of nonlinear algebraic equations. It represented an improvement over traditional methods, although biparabolic sufaces have already been employed to locally represent the reflector in the GO synthesis of offset dual-reflector antennas [6]. Further improvements were presented in [7], where, alternatively, the authors use polar coordinates to represent the conic sections, leading to a one-step iterative procedure with simple linear algebraic equations. In [8], this alternative technique was applied to shape the main reflector of omnidirectional dual-reflector antennas to control power distribution along the vertical plane, while in [9], it was applied to shape both reflectors for maximum directivity along the horizon. When compared to the techniques based on the solution of differential equations, the combination of confocal conic sections proved to be simpler and more efficient for many circularly symmetric dual-reflector arrangements.

The present work generalizes the formulation presented in [9] to attain an arbitrary main-beam direction in the elevation plane. The GO synthesis technique is described in Section 2. To illustrate the procedure, Section 3 presents design examples of ADE (axis-displaced ellipse) and ADC (axis-displaced Cassegrain) configurations, shaped for uniform phase and amplitude distribution at conical apertures. Besides the uniform power distribution for maximum gain, a tapered amplitude distribution is explored to control the side lobe levels behind the main reflector. A rigorous analysis combining the mode matching technique (MMT) and the method of moments (MoM) [10] is employed to validate the synthesis.

2. GO Shaping Technique

The shaped dual-reflector configurations are composed of two circularly symmetric (bodies of revolution) reflectors with a common symmetry axis (the z-axis). The subreflector is generated by a combination of local conic sections , sequentially concatenated to each other. Each has a (common) focus at the origin () and the other at a caustic region, as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2 for ADE- and ADC-like configurations, respectively. The focus , after rotation around the symmetry axis, defines a ring caustic. For the ADE configuration, is an ellipse and its ring caustic is real (Figure 1), while for the ADC configuration, is a hyperbola and the ring caustic is virtual (Figure 2). The main reflector is generated by parabolas with a focus at and a common axial tilt angle in the elevation plane. The feed horn, with its phase center at , has a circularly symmetric radiation pattern , where is the angle between the feed ray and the z-axis. From a GO perspective, the rays emanating from are reflected by toward . After the second reflection, the rays arrive at a conical aperture, parallel to each other (in the elevation plane), which provides an aperture illumination with a uniform phase distribution and a prescribed circularly symmetric power density , where and are the aperture coordinates in the auxiliary system (see Figures 1 and 2).

Each pair of conics and are determined by an iterative process where the feed ray direction is uniformly varied from up to the subreflector edge angle . The initial condition () is imposed by the locations of the subreflector vertex (at the symmetry axis, at a known distance from ) and the corresponding main reflector point (for the ADE) or (for the ADC), which must be specified a priori. At each th step, the subreflector section , which is limited by the tube of rays within , is uniquely determined by its interfocal distance (i.e., the distance between and ), eccentricity , and axial tilt angle with respect to the z-axis. The corresponding main reflector section is solely determined by its focal distance , as its axis tilt angle is known a priori. Essentially, defines the antenna main-beam direction in the elevation plane, being an input parameter. Consequently, four equations are required to determine , , , and .

The iterative process closely follows that of [7]. The first equation comes from the polar representation of , which gives (the distance from to ) as function of : where

Equation (1) is general and may represent an ellipse () or a hyperbola (). Notice that sections and share a common point at their junction. So, with known from the previous step , the first equation of the th step is

To obtain a uniform phase distribution over the conical aperture, the optical path from to the aperture (at , as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2) must be constant (equal to and known a priori). With the help of the conic equations of and , one obtains the second shaping equation:

The constant optical path also provides a simpler mapping relation between the feed ray and the corresponding aperture coordinate : where

So, observing once more that consecutive conic sections share a common point, the third shaping equation is obtained from (5) at : where is known from the previous step .

The fourth equation also comes from (5), but at . But first, the corresponding aperture coordinate must be defined using the conservation of energy inside the bundle of rays departing from with and arriving at the conical aperture with (see Figures 1 and 2): where is a normalization factor. Once is calculated from (8), the fourth shaping equation is then given by By substituting (3) and (4) into (7) and (9), one obtains where

After and are obtained from (10), is directly calculated from (3): where from (2) and (6),

Then, , , and are immediately determined from (2). Finally, is then obtained from (4). The shaping technique presented here assumes omnidirectional ADE or ADC configurations, as illustrated in Figures 1 and 2, respectively. However, the technique can be extended to the other omnidirectional configurations [11].

3. Design Analysis

To illustrate the GO shaping technique described in Section 2, the first case study is an ADE-like configuration designed with uniform amplitude distribution () over the conical aperture, in order to increase the directivity of the omnidirectional antenna. The feed is a TEM coaxial horn with its radiation pattern described in [8] and modelled as follows in the present synthesis procedure: where is a normalization factor, is the Bessel function of order 0, and μe and μi were adjusted to match the radiation pattern provided by the electromagnetic analysis (μe = 1.1𝜆 and μi = 0.3𝜆). Figure 3 shows a comparison of the feed radiation pattern given by the MoM analysis and by the model of (14).

The initial shaping parameters are defined with the help of a classical ADE configuration, established from the design procedure of [11] with , , , , , and . The beam direction was chosen to explore the potentialities of the configurations as base station antennas in point-to-multipoint microwave and millimeter wave radio links. From these input parameters, the elliptical classical subreflector generatrix is obtained with eccentricity , interfocal distance , and axial tilt angle [11]. Consequently, the projected diameter of the classical subreflector is with an edge angle , as depicted in Figure 4. The main reflector parabolic generatrix has a focal distance and axial tilt angle . This classical configuration was used to establish the initial shaping parameters: subreflector vertex at and , edge angle , main reflector point at and , and aperture width . The iterative procedure started () with the principal optical path with . Consequently, , and from the initial geometry, the constant path length from to the conical aperture is for .

Figures 4 and 5 show the classical and shaped reflectors’ generatrices, respectively, where one can observe the apparent caustic region between the sub- and main reflectors of the shaped configuration (Figure 5). When the ray tracing in Figures 4 and 5 are compared to each other, it is possible to observe the larger density of rays around the main reflector edges of the shaped antenna (Figure 5) to compensate for the lower horn illumination (see Figure 3) toward the subreflector vertex and edge .

A full-wave analysis based on the MoM/MMT technique [10] was conducted to validate the shaping procedure. To access the performance of the technique, Figure 6 compares the radiation patterns of the classical ADE configuration provided by the MoM/MMT scheme and by a full-wave commercial simulator (CST Microwave Studio). Figure 7 presents the far-field radiation patterns of the classical (Figure 4) and shaped (Figure 5) configurations. As expected, both antennas have their main-beam peaks at . The shaped configuration (D0 = 12.79 dBi, 95% efficiency) is more directive than the classical one (D0 = 11.67 dBi, 73% efficiency), as it was designed to have a uniform field distribution over its conical aperture (from a GO perspective). When compared to the classical omnidirectional ADE configuration, the aperture uniform illumination rises the side lobes close to the main beam, and, due to the increase of the density of rays toward the main reflector edge (see Figure 5), it increases the main reflector spillover and rises the side lobe level behind the main reflector, particularly at 140° < θ < 180° (see Figure 7).

In the second case study, an ADC-like configuration is shaped to provide a uniform aperture illumination, as in the previous case. The initial parameters are established for a classical ADC configuration [11] with dimensions similar to those of the previous classical omnidirectional ADE antenna: , , , , , and . These input parameters lead to an elliptical subreflector generatrix with eccentricity , interfocal distance , and axial tilt angle . Consequently, the projected subreflector diameter is with edge angle , as illustrated in Figure 8. The parabolic generatrix of the classical main reflector has a focal distance and an axial tilt angle . As mentioned in [11], the negative focal distance F is associated to a main reflector parabola with reversed curvature and a subreflector with elliptical generatrix (see Figure 8). The classical configuration was employed to establish the initial shaping parameters: subreflector vertex at and , edge angle , main reflector point at and , and aperture width . The iterative procedure started () with the principal optical path with . Consequently, and the constant path length from to the conical aperture is , for .

Figures 8 and 9 show the sub- and main reflector generatrices of the classical and shaped configurations, respectively, where one may observe the increase in the density of rays around the main reflector edges to compensate for the lower feed illumination at and . Again, to access the performance of the MoM/MMT technique, Figure 10 compares the radiation patterns of the classical ADC configuration provided by the MoM/MMT scheme and by a full-wave commercial simulator (CST Microwave Studio). Figure 11 presents the far-field radiation patterns of the classical and shaped configurations obtained from the MoM/MMT technique [10]. Once more, both antennas have their main-beam peaks at and the shaped configuration (D0 = 12.58 dBi, 90% efficiency) is more directive than classical one (D0 = 11.94 dBi, 78% efficiency), as the former was shaped to provide a uniform aperture GO illumination. Once more, one observes the increase of the side lobe level of the shaped antenna due to the increase of the main reflector spillover.

To investigate the numerical convergence of the proposed technique, surface RMS errors as a function of the number of steps () used in the iterative shaping process were simulated. For both sub- and main reflectors, the errors were calculated from the distances between and the reflector points shared by adjacent generating conics ( and for subreflectors, and for main reflectors), with the reference being a surface shaped with , a number large enough to ensure the proper convergence of the reference solution [7]. Figure 12 shows the maximum errors for the shaped sub- and main reflectors of Figures 5 (ADE) and 9 (ADC) as a function of . Due to the cumulative effect, the maximum errors occur for reflector points associated to , that is, at the edge of the subreflector and at one of the main reflector extremes. Designs with show maximum error of 0.004λ and RMS error of 0.002λ for the ADE-like configuration and maximum error of 0.005λ and RMS error of 0.003λ for the ADC-like configuration.

To illustrate the usefulness and versatility of the shaping technique, the ADE and ADC geometries were shaped once more, now to reduce the side lobe levels observed in Figures 7 and 11 for , while maintaining a desirably large main-beam directivity. As mentioned before, such high side lobe levels are mainly due to the spillover from the main reflector. So, instead of shaping the reflectors with uniform amplitude at the conical aperture, an alternative amplitude distribution was tailored to reduce the illumination toward the main reflector edge: where is at the aperture center, , , and are the constants that control the aperture power density, and is a normalization factor. Both configurations, ADE and ADC, were resynthesized with , , and to provide an edge attenuation of −30 dB at . Figure 13 illustrates the power distribution at the aperture for the several cases investigated in this work. Besides the change in the aperture amplitude , the input parameters used in the previous (uniform amplitude) ADE and ADC shaping cases were kept the same.

Figures 14 and 15 show the reflectors’ generatrices of the shaped ADE and ADC configurations, respectively, with G(x′) given by (15), together with ray tracings. Comparing these results with those from Figures 5 and 9, one readily observes the significant reduction in the density of rays toward the main reflector edge, as desired. Figures 16 and 17 show MoM/MMT radiation patterns for all the ADE (Figure 16) and ADC (Figure 17) antennas investigated in this work. From these figures, one observes that the synthesis yielded designs with high gains, close to those obtained by the uniform distribution (12.68 dBi for the ADE and 12.59 dBi for the ADC). Besides, as desired, a reduction in the side lobe levels in the region below the main reflector was attained, especially for the ADC case.

Figure 18 shows the maximum errors for the shaped sub- and main reflectors of Figures 14 (ADE) and 15 (ADC) as a function of . Again, due to the cumulative effect, the maximum errors occur at reflector points associated to . Designs with show maximum error of 0.004λ and RMS error of 0.003λ for the ADE-like configuration and maximum error of 0.018λ and RMS error of 0.005λ for the ADC-like configuration.

4. Conclusions

A method for the GO synthesis of omnidirectional dual-reflector antennas with equiphase field in a conical aperture has been presented. The sub- and main reflector generatrices were represented by the consecutive concatenation of local conic sections, and, by imposing geometrical optics principles, their shapes were obtained by solving liner equations. Omnidirectional ADE- and ADC-like configurations were successfully designed for uniform and tapered power distributions at the equiphase conical aperture. The concatenation of conic sections allowed an efficient representation of the shaped reflectors, with numerical convergence similar to that observed in [7]. The antenna design examples were fed by a coaxial TEM horn, and their performance were validated by employing a rigorous analysis technique that combines the mode matching technique (MMT) and the method of moments (MoM), which account for all electromagnetic effects present on the reflector and horn structure.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

This work was partially supported by FINEP/FUNTTEL Grant no. 01.14.0231.00, under the Radio Communications Reference Center (CRR), CAPES-PROCAD Grant 068419/2014-01, CNPq, and FAPEMIG.