US3832716A - Radio frequency slot antenna - Google Patents

Radio frequency slot antenna Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3832716A
US3832716A US00363238A US36323873A US3832716A US 3832716 A US3832716 A US 3832716A US 00363238 A US00363238 A US 00363238A US 36323873 A US36323873 A US 36323873A US 3832716 A US3832716 A US 3832716A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
radiating
antenna
center conductor
face
slot
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00363238A
Inventor
T Plunk
R Laramee
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Raytheon Co
Original Assignee
Raytheon Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Raytheon Co filed Critical Raytheon Co
Priority to US00363238A priority Critical patent/US3832716A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3832716A publication Critical patent/US3832716A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q21/00Antenna arrays or systems
    • H01Q21/06Arrays of individually energised antenna units similarly polarised and spaced apart
    • H01Q21/061Two dimensional planar arrays
    • H01Q21/064Two dimensional planar arrays using horn or slot aerials
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q13/00Waveguide horns or mouths; Slot antennas; Leaky-waveguide antennas; Equivalent structures causing radiation along the transmission path of a guided wave
    • H01Q13/10Resonant slot antennas
    • H01Q13/106Microstrip slot antennas

Definitions

  • a stripline slotted array antenna wherein the radiating efficiency and bandwidth are improved by including in each radiating element a pair of adjacent radiating slots.
  • the antenna includes center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna.
  • the pair of slots is formed in the radiating face of the antenna.
  • the pair of radiating slots is disposed adjacent to an end portion of the center conductor circuitry, one being coupled to an electric field existing between the end of such circuitry and the back plate and the other one of such pair of radiating slots being coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
  • This invention relates generally to radio frequency antennas and more particularly to stripline slotted array antennas.
  • stripline antennas are sometimes used in place of waveguide antennas because of their relatively lighter weight and compactness.
  • Such stripline antennas generally include center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements (one the radiating face of the antenna and the other the back plate of the antenna) by a dielectric material.
  • the radiating face of such an antenna generally includes an array-of radiating slots. The radiating slots are coupled to the electric field existing between end portions of the center conductor circuitry of the stripline and the ground plane elements.
  • One such stripline antenna is described in US. Pat. No. 3,701,158, issued to Robert H. Johnson, Oct. 24, l972.
  • the electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face is not balanced with the electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the back plate.
  • Such unbalance causes energy to be reflected within the stripline, thereby reducing the radiating efficiency of the antenna by about 50 percent.
  • One technique used to reduce reflections and thereby improve the radiating efficiency has been to electrically enclose the radiating slot within a high Q resonant cavity.
  • Such a cavity may be formed by using known mode suppression posts, or pins, of conducting material adjacent to each radiating slot.
  • a high Q resonant cavity of such nature while improving the radiating efficiency of the antenna, reduces the operating bandwidth of the antenna so that, generally, only a -15 percent variation in operating frequency may be attained.
  • a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plate elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna), an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and including a pair of adjacent radiating slots formed in the radiating face, one thereof being adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate and the other one being coupled to an electric fieldexisting between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face.
  • FIG. 1 is a plane frontal viewof a radio frequency an-. tenna according to the invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of one of the radiating elements of the antenna of FIG. 1.
  • a stripline antenna 10 is shown to include center conductor circuitry 11 separated from a pair of ground plane elements l2, 14 by a dielectric material 16.
  • Ground plane elements 12, 14 are herein sometimes referred to as the radiating face of the antenna and the back plate of the antenna, respectively.
  • such antenna 10 is here fabricated from two slabs of dielectric material, one having plated or deposited thereon a conducting material, here copper, to form the back plate 14 of the antenna and the other one having plated or deposited on portions of such side thereof a conducting material, here copper, to form the radiating face of the antenna 10 and center conductor circuitry 11.
  • the two slabs are secured together by any suitable conventional means, such as epoxy, not shown.
  • Antenna 10 includes an array of radiating elements 18 48 Each one of the radiating elements is identical in construction and each terminates an end portion of center conductor circuitry 11 (only the end portion 19, which terminates radiating element 18 being numbered).
  • An exemplary one of such radiating elements, here 18 includes a pair of radiating slots 20, 22, here formed in the radiating face 12 by conventional etching of portions of the conducting material making up such face.
  • the pair of radiating slots 20, 22 is surrounded by mode suppression pins 24.
  • mode suppression pins 24 are formed by drilling holes through the radiating face 12 and dielectric material 16 to the back plate 14, and by filling such holes with a conducting material, here copper.
  • the mode suppression pins 24 are secured to the radiating face and to the back plate by any suitable means, here solder, not shown.
  • mode suppression pins 24 may be formed by providing holes through the antenna 10 and by electroplating the walls of such holes.
  • the mode suppression pins 24 form a relatively low Q resonant cavity around the radiating slots 20, 22. Because such a cavity forms no part of the present invention, the mode suppression pins 24 may be omitted.
  • Included intermediate the pair of radiating slots 20, 22 is a pair of additional pins, 26, 28.
  • Also included is an additional pin 29.
  • Such pins 26, 28, 29 are formed by drilling holes through the radiating face 12 and the dielectric material 16 of the upper dielectric slab to the center conductor circuitry 11 and by filling such holes with a conducting material, here copper, as shownin FIG. 2'or by the electroplating process mentioned above in connection with pins 24.
  • the radiating elements 18 18 are here arranged in four sectors, or quadrants A, B, C, D, to configure antenna 10 as a monopulse antenna.
  • the four quadrants are separated along dotted lines 30, as shown.
  • Each one of the four sectors includes seven radiating elements.
  • quadrants A-D include radiating elements 181-187, lay-1814, 18 5-18 and 1822-1823, respectively.
  • center conductor circuitry 11 may be seen to be connected with a terminal 32A, with seven branch lines (not numbered), the end portion of each one of such branches being adjacent to, and terminated by, a different one of radiating elements as shown. It follows, therefore, that each radiating element in quadrant A is coupled to terminal 32A.
  • radio frequency energy from an external source (not shown) irradiating the radiating elements 18 -18 in quadrant A is passed to terminal 32A.
  • quadrants B-D and terminals 32B 32D respectively. It follows then that by coupling terminals 32A 32D to a conventional monopulse arithmetic unit (not shown), the conventional sum and difference channels of a monopulse antenna may be obtained.
  • an electric field may exist between the center conductor circuitry 11 and the radiating face 12 (as indicated by arrows 34), and also an electric field may exist between such circuitry and the back plate 14 (as indicated by arrows 36). It may further be observed that radiating slot is coupled to the electrical field existing between the radiating face 12 and the center conductor circuitry 11 and radiating slot 22 is coupled to the electric field existing between center conductor circuitry 11 and back plate 14.
  • pin 26 and portions of center conductor circuitry 11 and radiating face 12 may be viewed as being a feed for radiating slot 20 whereas pins 28, 29, back wall 14 and the end of center conductor circuitry 11 may be viewed as being a feed for radiating slot 22. Therefore, the electric fields in the pair of dielectric slabs are balanced. Reflections within the antenna, which normally result without such radiating slot 22, are reduced. By separating the radiating slots 20, 22 by an integral multiple (half wavelength) N2 (where A is the nominal operating wavelength of the antenna 10 in the dielectric material 16) radio frequency energy fed to such slots will be in phase. On the other hand, by separating such slots by a distance equal to an integral multiple of A in the dielectric material 16, such energy will be 180 out of phase" along the boresight axis of the antenna.
  • the shape of radiating slots 20, 22 may take other forms to provide proper impedance matching.
  • the shape of such slots as herein shown provides a capacitive impedance matching.
  • a monopulse antenna has been shown it is understood that other antenna configurations, as a beacon antenna, may use the inventive concepts herein described.
  • the separation between the pair of radiating slots 20, 22 may be selected to provide for one of a variety of desired radiation patterns. It is felt, therefore, that this invention should not be restricted to its disclosed embodiments but rather should be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
  • a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating anend portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising:
  • a second radiating slot formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to, and totally separated from, the first slot by a portion of the radiating face, such second radiating slot being coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
  • the radiating element recited in claim 1 including a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and
  • a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
  • a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising:
  • a second radiating slot formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to the first slot and coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna;
  • a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor Circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
  • a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising:
  • a second radiating slot formed in the radiating face, disposed an integral multiple of M2, where A is the operating wavelength of the antenna, from the first slot and coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
  • the radiating element recited in claim 8 including conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conducting circuitry.
  • the radiating element recited in claim 9 including an additional conducting material disposed outside the first radiating slot and extending from the radiating face to the back plate of the antenna.
  • a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.

Abstract

A stripline slotted array antenna is disclosed wherein the radiating efficiency and bandwidth are improved by including in each radiating element a pair of adjacent radiating slots. The antenna includes center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna. The pair of slots is formed in the radiating face of the antenna. The pair of radiating slots is disposed adjacent to an end portion of the center conductor circuitry, one being coupled to an electric field existing between the end of such circuitry and the back plate and the other one of such pair of radiating slots being coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.

Description

United States Patent [191 Plunk et a]. i
[451 Aug. 27, 1974 RADIO FREQUENCY SLOT ANTENNA Inventors: Troy E. Plunk, Bedford; Richard J.
Laramee, Dedham, both of Mass.
Assignee: Raytheon Company, Lexington, Mass. 7
Filed: May 23, 1973 A ,ppl. No.: 363,238
vs. C]. 343/770, 343/846, 333/84 M 1m. (:1. H0lq 13/10 Field of Search 343/769, 770, 771, 846;
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS Joseph D. Pannone; Philip J. McFarland [57] ABSTRACT A stripline slotted array antenna is disclosed wherein the radiating efficiency and bandwidth are improved by including in each radiating element a pair of adjacent radiating slots. The antenna includes center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna. The pair of slots is formed in the radiating face of the antenna. The pair of radiating slots is disposed adjacent to an end portion of the center conductor circuitry, one being coupled to an electric field existing between the end of such circuitry and the back plate and the other one of such pair of radiating slots being coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
11 Claims, 2 Drawing Figures PAIENTEU Y H F I G. 2
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION This invention relates generally to radio frequency antennas and more particularly to stripline slotted array antennas.
As is known in the art, stripline antennas are sometimes used in place of waveguide antennas because of their relatively lighter weight and compactness. Such stripline antennas generally include center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements (one the radiating face of the antenna and the other the back plate of the antenna) by a dielectric material. The radiating face of such an antenna generally includes an array-of radiating slots. The radiating slots are coupled to the electric field existing between end portions of the center conductor circuitry of the stripline and the ground plane elements. One such stripline antenna is described in US. Pat. No. 3,701,158, issued to Robert H. Johnson, Oct. 24, l972.
In the vicinity of each one of the radiating slots of known stripline antennas the electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face is not balanced with the electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the back plate. Such unbalance causes energy to be reflected within the stripline, thereby reducing the radiating efficiency of the antenna by about 50 percent. One technique used to reduce reflections and thereby improve the radiating efficiency has been to electrically enclose the radiating slot within a high Q resonant cavity. Such a cavity may be formed by using known mode suppression posts, or pins, of conducting material adjacent to each radiating slot. A high Q resonant cavity of such nature, while improving the radiating efficiency of the antenna, reduces the operating bandwidth of the antenna so that, generally, only a -15 percent variation in operating frequency may be attained.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION With this backgroundof the invention in mind, it is an object of this invention to provide a stripline slotted array antenna having improved radiating efficiency and bandwidth.
The foregoing and other objects of the invention are attained generally by providing, in a stripline slotted array antenna (including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plate elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna), an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and including a pair of adjacent radiating slots formed in the radiating face, one thereof being adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate and the other one being coupled to an electric fieldexisting between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS i The foregoing features of this invention, as well as the invention itself, may be more fully understood from the following detailed description read together with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a plane frontal viewof a radio frequency an-. tenna according to the invention; and
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of one of the radiating elements of the antenna of FIG. 1.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 2, a stripline antenna 10 is shown to include center conductor circuitry 11 separated from a pair of ground plane elements l2, 14 by a dielectric material 16. Ground plane elements 12, 14 are herein sometimes referred to as the radiating face of the antenna and the back plate of the antenna, respectively. In particular, such antenna 10 is here fabricated from two slabs of dielectric material, one having plated or deposited thereon a conducting material, here copper, to form the back plate 14 of the antenna and the other one having plated or deposited on portions of such side thereof a conducting material, here copper, to form the radiating face of the antenna 10 and center conductor circuitry 11. The two slabs are secured together by any suitable conventional means, such as epoxy, not shown.
Antenna 10 includes an array of radiating elements 18 48 Each one of the radiating elements is identical in construction and each terminates an end portion of center conductor circuitry 11 (only the end portion 19, which terminates radiating element 18 being numbered). An exemplary one of such radiating elements, here 18 includes a pair of radiating slots 20, 22, here formed in the radiating face 12 by conventional etching of portions of the conducting material making up such face. The pair of radiating slots 20, 22 is surrounded by mode suppression pins 24. Such mode suppression pins 24 are formed by drilling holes through the radiating face 12 and dielectric material 16 to the back plate 14, and by filling such holes with a conducting material, here copper. The mode suppression pins 24 are secured to the radiating face and to the back plate by any suitable means, here solder, not shown. However, such mode suppression pins 24 may be formed by providing holes through the antenna 10 and by electroplating the walls of such holes. The mode suppression pins 24 form a relatively low Q resonant cavity around the radiating slots 20, 22. Because such a cavity forms no part of the present invention, the mode suppression pins 24 may be omitted. Included intermediate the pair of radiating slots 20, 22 is a pair of additional pins, 26, 28. Also included is an additional pin 29. Such pins 26, 28, 29 are formed by drilling holes through the radiating face 12 and the dielectric material 16 of the upper dielectric slab to the center conductor circuitry 11 and by filling such holes with a conducting material, here copper, as shownin FIG. 2'or by the electroplating process mentioned above in connection with pins 24.
The radiating elements 18 18 are here arranged in four sectors, or quadrants A, B, C, D, to configure antenna 10 as a monopulse antenna. The four quadrants are separated along dotted lines 30, as shown.
Each one of the four sectors includes seven radiating elements. Here quadrants A-D include radiating elements 181-187, lay-1814, 18 5-18 and 1822-1823, respectively. Considering any one of the quadrants, say exemplary quadrant A, center conductor circuitry 11 may be seen to be connected with a terminal 32A, with seven branch lines (not numbered), the end portion of each one of such branches being adjacent to, and terminated by, a different one of radiating elements as shown. It follows, therefore, that each radiating element in quadrant A is coupled to terminal 32A. Thus, when antenna is used as a receiving antenna, radio frequency energy from an external source (not shown) irradiating the radiating elements 18 -18 in quadrant A is passed to terminal 32A. The equivalent is true for quadrants B-D and terminals 32B 32D respectively. It follows then that by coupling terminals 32A 32D to a conventional monopulse arithmetic unit (not shown), the conventional sum and difference channels of a monopulse antenna may be obtained.
Referring again to FIG. 2, now in more detail, it may be observed that an electric field may exist between the center conductor circuitry 11 and the radiating face 12 (as indicated by arrows 34), and also an electric field may exist between such circuitry and the back plate 14 (as indicated by arrows 36). It may further be observed that radiating slot is coupled to the electrical field existing between the radiating face 12 and the center conductor circuitry 11 and radiating slot 22 is coupled to the electric field existing between center conductor circuitry 11 and back plate 14. To put it another way, pin 26 and portions of center conductor circuitry 11 and radiating face 12 may be viewed as being a feed for radiating slot 20 whereas pins 28, 29, back wall 14 and the end of center conductor circuitry 11 may be viewed as being a feed for radiating slot 22. Therefore, the electric fields in the pair of dielectric slabs are balanced. Reflections within the antenna, which normally result without such radiating slot 22, are reduced. By separating the radiating slots 20, 22 by an integral multiple (half wavelength) N2 (where A is the nominal operating wavelength of the antenna 10 in the dielectric material 16) radio frequency energy fed to such slots will be in phase. On the other hand, by separating such slots by a distance equal to an integral multiple of A in the dielectric material 16, such energy will be 180 out of phase" along the boresight axis of the antenna.
Having described a preferred embodiment of this invention, it is now evident that other embodiments incorporating the concepts may be used. For example, in reference to FIG. 1, the shape of radiating slots 20, 22 may take other forms to provide proper impedance matching. For example, the shape of such slots as herein shown provides a capacitive impedance matching. Further, while a monopulse antenna has been shown it is understood that other antenna configurations, as a beacon antenna, may use the inventive concepts herein described. Further, the separation between the pair of radiating slots 20, 22 may be selected to provide for one of a variety of desired radiation patterns. It is felt, therefore, that this invention should not be restricted to its disclosed embodiments but rather should be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. In a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating anend portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising:
a. a first radiating slot, formed in the radiating face,
disposed adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate of the antenna; and
b. a second radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to, and totally separated from, the first slot by a portion of the radiating face, such second radiating slot being coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
2. The radiating element recited in claim 1 including a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and
b. a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
5. The radiating element recited in claim 1 wherein the first radiating slot and the second radiating slot are separated by an integral number of )t/2 where A is the operating wavelength of the antenna.
6. In a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising: i
a. a first radiating slot, formed in the radiating face,
disposed adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate of the antenna;
b. a second radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to the first slot and coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna; and,
c. a conducting material disposed outside the first radiating slot and extending from the radiating face to the back plate of the antenna.-
7. The radiating element recited in claim 6 including:
a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and
b. a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor Circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
8. In a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising:
a. a first radiating slot, formed in the radiating face,
disposed adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate of the antenna; and
b. a second radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed an integral multiple of M2, where A is the operating wavelength of the antenna, from the first slot and coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
9. The radiating element recited in claim 8 including conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conducting circuitry.
10. The radiating element recited in claim 9 including an additional conducting material disposed outside the first radiating slot and extending from the radiating face to the back plate of the antenna.
11. The radiating element recited in claim 8 includmg:
a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and
b. a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.

Claims (11)

1. In a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising: a. a first radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate of the antenna; and b. a second radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to, and totally separated from, the first slot by a portion of the radiating face, such second radiating slot being coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
2. The radiating element recited in claim 1 including conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conducting circuitry.
3. The radiating element recited in claim 2 including an additional conducting material disposed outside the first radiating slot and extending from the radiating face to the back plate of the antenna.
4. The radiating element recited in claim 1 including: a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and b. a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
5. The radiating element recited in claim 1 wherein the first radiating slot and the second radiating slot are separated by an integral number of lambda /2 where lambda is the operating wavelength of the antenna.
6. In a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising: a. a first radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate of the antenna; b. a second radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to the first slot and coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna; and, c. a conducting material disposed outside the first radiating slot and extending from the radiating face to the back plate of the antenna.
7. The radiating element recited in claim 6 including: a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and b. a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
8. In a stripline slotted array antenna including center conductor circuitry separated from a pair of ground plane elements, one of which is the radiating face of the antenna and one of which is the back plate of the antenna, an array of radiating elements, each one thereof terminating an end portion of the center conductor circuitry and comprising: a. a first radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed adjacent to the end of the center conductor circuitry and coupled to an electric field existing between such circuitry and the back plate of the antenna; and b. a second radiating slot, formed in the radiating face, disposed an integral multiple of lambda /2, where lambda is the operating wavelength of the antenna, from the first slot and coupled to an electric field existing between the center conductor circuitry and the radiating face of the antenna.
9. The radiating element recited in claim 8 including conducting material disposed intermediate the first aNd second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conducting circuitry.
10. The radiating element recited in claim 9 including an additional conducting material disposed outside the first radiating slot and extending from the radiating face to the back plate of the antenna.
11. The radiating element recited in claim 8 including: a. a first conducting material disposed intermediate the first and second radiating slots and extending from the radiating face to the center conductor circuitry, such first conducting material, center conductor circuitry and radiating face being arranged to form a feed for the second radiating slot; and b. a second conducting material disposed outside both the first radiating slot and the end of the center conductor circuitry and extending from the radiating face to the back plate, such second conducting material, center conductor circuitry, first conducting material, and back plate being arranged to form a feed for the first radiating slot.
US00363238A 1973-05-23 1973-05-23 Radio frequency slot antenna Expired - Lifetime US3832716A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00363238A US3832716A (en) 1973-05-23 1973-05-23 Radio frequency slot antenna

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US00363238A US3832716A (en) 1973-05-23 1973-05-23 Radio frequency slot antenna

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3832716A true US3832716A (en) 1974-08-27

Family

ID=23429396

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00363238A Expired - Lifetime US3832716A (en) 1973-05-23 1973-05-23 Radio frequency slot antenna

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3832716A (en)

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4035807A (en) * 1974-12-23 1977-07-12 Hughes Aircraft Company Integrated microwave phase shifter and radiator module
FR2345825A1 (en) * 1976-03-22 1977-10-21 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M RECEIVING OR TRANSMITTING ANTENNA FOR RADAR
US4180818A (en) * 1978-02-13 1979-12-25 The Singer Company Doppler navigation microstrip slanted antenna
US4360813A (en) * 1980-03-19 1982-11-23 The Boeing Company Power combining antenna structure
US4371877A (en) * 1980-04-23 1983-02-01 U.S. Philips Corporation Thin-structure aerial
US4672386A (en) * 1984-01-05 1987-06-09 Plessey Overseas Limited Antenna with radial and edge slot radiators fed with stripline
US4912482A (en) * 1986-07-24 1990-03-27 The General Electric Company, P.L.C. Antenna
US4929959A (en) * 1988-03-08 1990-05-29 Communications Satellite Corporation Dual-polarized printed circuit antenna having its elements capacitively coupled to feedlines
US5144239A (en) * 1989-08-16 1992-09-01 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Circularly polarizing rf antenna for an mri apparatus
US5187490A (en) * 1989-08-25 1993-02-16 Hitachi Chemical Company, Ltd. Stripline patch antenna with slot plate
US5278569A (en) * 1990-07-25 1994-01-11 Hitachi Chemical Company, Ltd. Plane antenna with high gain and antenna efficiency
US5451969A (en) * 1993-03-22 1995-09-19 Raytheon Company Dual polarized dual band antenna
US6081728A (en) * 1997-02-28 2000-06-27 Andrew Corporation Strip-type radiating cable for a radio communication system
US10186784B2 (en) 2014-03-21 2019-01-22 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Antenna apparatus
WO2020221671A1 (en) * 2019-04-29 2020-11-05 Uhland Goebel Apparatus radiating and receiving microwaves with physically preset radiation pattern, and radar apparatus comprising such an apparatus
US11043727B2 (en) * 2019-01-15 2021-06-22 Raytheon Company Substrate integrated waveguide monopulse and antenna system

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2877427A (en) * 1955-10-11 1959-03-10 Sanders Associates Inc Parallel transmission line circuit
US3665480A (en) * 1969-01-23 1972-05-23 Raytheon Co Annular slot antenna with stripline feed

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2877427A (en) * 1955-10-11 1959-03-10 Sanders Associates Inc Parallel transmission line circuit
US3665480A (en) * 1969-01-23 1972-05-23 Raytheon Co Annular slot antenna with stripline feed

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4035807A (en) * 1974-12-23 1977-07-12 Hughes Aircraft Company Integrated microwave phase shifter and radiator module
FR2345825A1 (en) * 1976-03-22 1977-10-21 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M RECEIVING OR TRANSMITTING ANTENNA FOR RADAR
US4180818A (en) * 1978-02-13 1979-12-25 The Singer Company Doppler navigation microstrip slanted antenna
US4360813A (en) * 1980-03-19 1982-11-23 The Boeing Company Power combining antenna structure
US4371877A (en) * 1980-04-23 1983-02-01 U.S. Philips Corporation Thin-structure aerial
US4672386A (en) * 1984-01-05 1987-06-09 Plessey Overseas Limited Antenna with radial and edge slot radiators fed with stripline
US4912482A (en) * 1986-07-24 1990-03-27 The General Electric Company, P.L.C. Antenna
US4929959A (en) * 1988-03-08 1990-05-29 Communications Satellite Corporation Dual-polarized printed circuit antenna having its elements capacitively coupled to feedlines
US5144239A (en) * 1989-08-16 1992-09-01 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Circularly polarizing rf antenna for an mri apparatus
US5187490A (en) * 1989-08-25 1993-02-16 Hitachi Chemical Company, Ltd. Stripline patch antenna with slot plate
US5278569A (en) * 1990-07-25 1994-01-11 Hitachi Chemical Company, Ltd. Plane antenna with high gain and antenna efficiency
US5451969A (en) * 1993-03-22 1995-09-19 Raytheon Company Dual polarized dual band antenna
US6081728A (en) * 1997-02-28 2000-06-27 Andrew Corporation Strip-type radiating cable for a radio communication system
US10186784B2 (en) 2014-03-21 2019-01-22 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Antenna apparatus
EP3109940B1 (en) * 2014-03-21 2019-05-15 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Antenna apparatus
US11043727B2 (en) * 2019-01-15 2021-06-22 Raytheon Company Substrate integrated waveguide monopulse and antenna system
WO2020221671A1 (en) * 2019-04-29 2020-11-05 Uhland Goebel Apparatus radiating and receiving microwaves with physically preset radiation pattern, and radar apparatus comprising such an apparatus

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3832716A (en) Radio frequency slot antenna
US4063246A (en) Coplanar stripline antenna
Howell Microstrip antennas
US5581266A (en) Printed-circuit crossed-slot antenna
US3713167A (en) Omni-steerable cardioid antenna
US4443802A (en) Stripline fed hybrid slot antenna
US3887925A (en) Linearly polarized phased antenna array
US4827266A (en) Antenna with lumped reactive matching elements between radiator and groundplate
KR101056310B1 (en) Single or double polarized molded dipole antenna with integral supply structure
US3524192A (en) Scanning apparatus for antenna arrays
US5973644A (en) Planar antenna
US5086304A (en) Flat phased array antenna
US4792810A (en) Microwave antenna
CN106532256B (en) A kind of broadband circular polarisation substrate integration wave-guide antenna
US4087822A (en) Radio frequency antenna having microstrip feed network and flared radiating aperture
US5444452A (en) Dual frequency antenna
US5717410A (en) Omnidirectional slot antenna
JPH04223705A (en) Patch antenna provided with polarization uniform control
US5568159A (en) Flared notch slot antenna
US4451830A (en) VHF Omni-range navigation system antenna
US3348228A (en) Circular dipole antenna array
JP2001168637A (en) Cross dipole antenna
US6154175A (en) Wideband microstrip antenna
CN114284738A (en) Antenna structure and antenna package
US4015263A (en) Dual polarized blade antenna