WO2007072066A1 - Transmission of underwater electromagnetic radiation through the seabed - Google Patents

Transmission of underwater electromagnetic radiation through the seabed Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2007072066A1
WO2007072066A1 PCT/GB2006/004937 GB2006004937W WO2007072066A1 WO 2007072066 A1 WO2007072066 A1 WO 2007072066A1 GB 2006004937 W GB2006004937 W GB 2006004937W WO 2007072066 A1 WO2007072066 A1 WO 2007072066A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
seabed
antenna
underwater
transmitter
electrically insulated
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB2006/004937
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Mark Rhodes
Brendan Hyland
Derek Wolfe
Original Assignee
Wireless Fibre Systems Ltd
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
Priority claimed from GBGB0526303.3A external-priority patent/GB0526303D0/en
Application filed by Wireless Fibre Systems Ltd filed Critical Wireless Fibre Systems Ltd
Priority to GB0810980A priority Critical patent/GB2447582B/en
Publication of WO2007072066A1 publication Critical patent/WO2007072066A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B13/00Transmission systems characterised by the medium used for transmission, not provided for in groups H04B3/00 - H04B11/00
    • H04B13/02Transmission systems in which the medium consists of the earth or a large mass of water thereon, e.g. earth telegraphy

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to an underwater communications system that uses an electromagnetic propagation path through the seabed, lake bed or bed of any other body of water. This provides system performance advantages compared to a direct path through water.
  • WO01/95529 describes an underwater communications system that uses electromagnetic signal transmission. This system has a transmitter and a receiver, each having a metallic aerial that is surrounded by a waterproof electrically insulating material. Underwater communications systems are also described in GB0511939.1 and US60/690,966. These use magnetically coupled antennas for the transmission and reception of electromagnetic signals. Whilst employing electromagnetic (EM) radiation for underwater communications offers significant advantages over traditional acoustic techniques such as immunity to acoustic noise and higher bandwidth, the attenuation of EM radiation through water is significant.
  • EM electromagnetic
  • an underwater communication method comprising transmitting EM signals via a seabed using an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna.
  • seabed means the bed of any body of water, such as a loch, lake, or ocean.
  • the underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna may be located within the body of water or may be buried in the seabed.
  • the method may further involve receiving the EM signals at an underwater, electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna.
  • the underwater receiver antenna may be located within the water or buried in the seabed.
  • the EM signal could be any information carrying communication signal for use in, for example, a an underwater communication system for allowing communication between two divers, a navigation system and a remote sensing system for identifying objects or any other system that requires the exchange of EM signals.
  • an underwater communication system comprising a transmitter having an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna that is operable to transmit EM signals through the seabed.
  • the system may be bi-directional, employing a transmitter and receiver at both ends of the communications system.
  • the transmitting and receiving stations may have an antenna at each such that the radiation is preferentially directed into the seabed.
  • the seabed then acts as a lower loss transmission path for the radiation compared to the direct path through water.
  • At least one of the antennas may be buried in the seabed to maximise coupling to the lower loss medium.
  • One of the antennas may be based on land.
  • the land-based station optimally comprises a buried, magnetic coupled antenna.
  • Figure 1 is a block diagram of an underwater transceiver
  • Figure 2 is a block diagram of a transmitter for the transceiver of Figure 1 ;
  • FIG 3 is a block diagram of a receiver for use in the transceiver of Figure 1;
  • Figure 4 illustrates two communicating stations placing antennas in close proximity to the seabed;
  • Figure 5 illustrates a magnetic field pattern from a solenoid antenna
  • Figure 6 illustrates a float design to ensure optimal vertical alignment of a magnetic coupled loop antenna
  • Figure 7 illustrates two communicating stations implementing buried antennas to optimise the transmission path.
  • Figure 1 shows an antenna configuration that is optimised for the transmission and reception of electromagnetic signals underwater. This has a transmitter and a receiver coupled to a waterproof, electrically insulated, magnetic coupled antenna. This type of antenna is needed because water is an electrically conducting medium, and so has a significant impact on the propagation of electromagnetic signals. Any suitable transmitter/receiver arrangements could be used.
  • FIG. 2 shows an example of a suitable transmitter in more detail.
  • This has a data interface that is connected to each of a processor and a modulator.
  • the modulator is provided to encode data/information from the interface onto a carrier wave.
  • a frequency synthesiser that provides a local oscillator signal for up-conversion of the modulated carrier and a transmit amplifier, which is connected to the antenna.
  • the transmitter processor is operable to cause information carrying electromagnetic communication signals to be transmitted via the antenna at a selected carrier frequency.
  • FIG 3 shows an example of a receiver for use in the transceiver of Figure 1.
  • the receiver antenna is operable to receive magnetic field signals from a transmitter.
  • a tuned filter that is in turn connected to a receive amplifier.
  • a signal amplitude measurement module that is coupled to a de-modulator and a frequency synthesiser, which provides a local oscillator signal for down conversion of the modulated carrier.
  • a processor and a data interface which is also connected to the processor.
  • the data interface is provided for transferring data/information received and decoded by the receiver to a control or monitoring means, such as another on-board processor, which may be located in the mobile device or at another remote location.
  • Figure 4 shows first and second mobile stations, for example un-manned underwater vehicles, each of which includes a transceiver of the type shown in Figure 1.
  • the electrically insulated, magnetic coupled antenna of both mobile stations is positioned so that the EM signals can be injected into the seabed and subsequently detected when they re-emerge.
  • the mobile stations In use, the mobile stations have to be close enough to the seabed to allow signal injection to occur.
  • the transmitter and receivers should be moved or held in position as close to the seabed as is practical.
  • the EM signal transmission path has a first, relatively short part that is through water, a second longer path that is via the seabed and a final part that is again through water.
  • EM loss through the seabed varies depending on local geological composition, but is universally much lower than seawater.
  • Seabed conductivity ranges from around 0.01 S/m to 1.0 S/m while seawater is typically 4 S/m (2 S/m to 6 S/m at its global extremes). This lower conductivity is primarily because of the non-conductive nature of sand, stone and other particles that typically form the bed of bodies of water.
  • the communication range would be 25m.
  • both antennas were situated one meter above the seabed, aligned for optimal coupling into the seabed, the transmission range would be around 40 m. This is a significant improvement.
  • the mobile stations should be positioned so that the antenna height is less than half the antenna separation.
  • the magnetically coupled antenna should be positioned to maximise the signal that is injected into the seabed.
  • the antenna is a magnetic solenoid antenna
  • the signal is at a maximum in a direction perpendicular to the solenoid, as shown in Figure 5.
  • Figure 6 illustrates an arrangement for ensuring the solenoid is held in a fixed orientation relative to the vertical. This has a float that is constructed of a low-density material, for example polyester foam. The float will be placed to move the antenna housing's centre of mass away from its centre of volume such that the antenna is held in a stable orientation parallel to the seabed. For a typical horizontal seabed this will optimise signal coupling into the seabed material.
  • Figure 7 shows another arrangement that reduces through water attenuation.
  • this has two communication stations, each having a transceiver having substantially the same form as that of Figure 1.
  • the electrically insulated, magnetic coupled antennas of both stations are provided at the end of extended connections and are buried in the seabed.
  • the EM signal transmission path is solely through the seabed, with no through water part.
  • the communication stations may be in a substantially fixed position or may be able to move. This depends on the nature of the connection between the stations and their buried antennas.
  • the seabed path also offers reduced signal distortion for a given range. This is because the lower conductivity compared to water reduces phase dispersion.
  • a further advantage is that the seabed potentially provides a covert path for communications, thereby minimising the ability of other parties to intercept or detect communications compared to the more conventional lower loss approach of using through air transmission at the air-water interface using surface penetration of the antenna.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Near-Field Transmission Systems (AREA)

Abstract

An underwater communication system comprising a transmitter having an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna that is operable to transmit EM signals through the seabed. Preferably, the transmitter antenna is arranged so that radiation is directed into the seabed. Optionally, the system also includes an underwater receiver having an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna. At least one of the transmit and/or receive antennas is buried in the seabed.

Description

Transmission of Underwater Electromagnetic Radiation through the Seabed
The present invention relates to an underwater communications system that uses an electromagnetic propagation path through the seabed, lake bed or bed of any other body of water. This provides system performance advantages compared to a direct path through water.
Background of the Invention WO01/95529 describes an underwater communications system that uses electromagnetic signal transmission. This system has a transmitter and a receiver, each having a metallic aerial that is surrounded by a waterproof electrically insulating material. Underwater communications systems are also described in GB0511939.1 and US60/690,966. These use magnetically coupled antennas for the transmission and reception of electromagnetic signals. Whilst employing electromagnetic (EM) radiation for underwater communications offers significant advantages over traditional acoustic techniques such as immunity to acoustic noise and higher bandwidth, the attenuation of EM radiation through water is significant.
Summary of the Invention
According to the present invention, there is provided an underwater communication method comprising transmitting EM signals via a seabed using an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna.
By making use of the low loss properties of the seabed, EM signal attenuation can be reduced and consequently the transmission range can be increased. It should be noted that in the context of this application "seabed" means the bed of any body of water, such as a loch, lake, or ocean.
The underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna may be located within the body of water or may be buried in the seabed. W
The method may further involve receiving the EM signals at an underwater, electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna. The underwater receiver antenna may be located within the water or buried in the seabed.
The EM signal could be any information carrying communication signal for use in, for example, a an underwater communication system for allowing communication between two divers, a navigation system and a remote sensing system for identifying objects or any other system that requires the exchange of EM signals.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an underwater communication system comprising a transmitter having an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna that is operable to transmit EM signals through the seabed.
The system may be bi-directional, employing a transmitter and receiver at both ends of the communications system. The transmitting and receiving stations may have an antenna at each such that the radiation is preferentially directed into the seabed. The seabed then acts as a lower loss transmission path for the radiation compared to the direct path through water.
At least one of the antennas may be buried in the seabed to maximise coupling to the lower loss medium. One of the antennas may be based on land. The land-based station optimally comprises a buried, magnetic coupled antenna.
Brief Description of Drawings
Various aspects of the invention will now be described by way of example only and with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Figure 1 is a block diagram of an underwater transceiver; Figure 2 is a block diagram of a transmitter for the transceiver of Figure 1 ;
Figure 3 is a block diagram of a receiver for use in the transceiver of Figure 1; Figure 4 illustrates two communicating stations placing antennas in close proximity to the seabed;
Figure 5 illustrates a magnetic field pattern from a solenoid antenna; Figure 6 illustrates a float design to ensure optimal vertical alignment of a magnetic coupled loop antenna, and
Figure 7 illustrates two communicating stations implementing buried antennas to optimise the transmission path.
Detailed Description of Drawings Figure 1 shows an antenna configuration that is optimised for the transmission and reception of electromagnetic signals underwater. This has a transmitter and a receiver coupled to a waterproof, electrically insulated, magnetic coupled antenna. This type of antenna is needed because water is an electrically conducting medium, and so has a significant impact on the propagation of electromagnetic signals. Any suitable transmitter/receiver arrangements could be used.
Figure 2 shows an example of a suitable transmitter in more detail. This has a data interface that is connected to each of a processor and a modulator. The modulator is provided to encode data/information from the interface onto a carrier wave. At an output of the modulator are a frequency synthesiser that provides a local oscillator signal for up-conversion of the modulated carrier and a transmit amplifier, which is connected to the antenna. In use, the transmitter processor is operable to cause information carrying electromagnetic communication signals to be transmitted via the antenna at a selected carrier frequency.
Figure 3 shows an example of a receiver for use in the transceiver of Figure 1. As with the transmitter, this has an electrically insulated magnetic antenna adapted for underwater usage. As shown in Figure 1, this is shared with the transmitter antenna. However, it will be appreciated that this could be provided separately. The receiver antenna is operable to receive magnetic field signals from a transmitter. Connected to the antenna is a tuned filter that is in turn connected to a receive amplifier. At the output of the amplifier are a signal amplitude measurement module that is coupled to a de-modulator and a frequency synthesiser, which provides a local oscillator signal for down conversion of the modulated carrier. Connected to the de-modulator are a processor and a data interface, which is also connected to the processor. The data interface is provided for transferring data/information received and decoded by the receiver to a control or monitoring means, such as another on-board processor, which may be located in the mobile device or at another remote location.
Figure 4 shows first and second mobile stations, for example un-manned underwater vehicles, each of which includes a transceiver of the type shown in Figure 1. The electrically insulated, magnetic coupled antenna of both mobile stations is positioned so that the EM signals can be injected into the seabed and subsequently detected when they re-emerge. In use, the mobile stations have to be close enough to the seabed to allow signal injection to occur. To optimise the benefits of the lower seabed conductivity, the transmitter and receivers should be moved or held in position as close to the seabed as is practical.
Signals transmitted from the first mobile station enter the seabed, traverse it and emerge to be detected by the second station. Hence, the EM signal transmission path has a first, relatively short part that is through water, a second longer path that is via the seabed and a final part that is again through water. EM loss through the seabed varies depending on local geological composition, but is universally much lower than seawater. Seabed conductivity ranges from around 0.01 S/m to 1.0 S/m while seawater is typically 4 S/m (2 S/m to 6 S/m at its global extremes). This lower conductivity is primarily because of the non-conductive nature of sand, stone and other particles that typically form the bed of bodies of water. By minimising the through water portions of the transmission path, attenuation can be reduced.
As an example, consider the situation where the seawater has a conductivity of 4 S/m and the seabed has a conductivity of 1 S/m. For through water transmission only, the communication range would be 25m. However, in accordance with the invention, if both antennas were situated one meter above the seabed, aligned for optimal coupling into the seabed, the transmission range would be around 40 m. This is a significant improvement.
As will be appreciated, for the arrangement of Figure 4, as the height of the antennas above the seabed increases the direct signal path through water dominates and the benefit of the seabed path component diminishes. In practice, the length of the through water path will vary. However, whatever the conditions, geometrically there is no benefit once the antenna height is equal to half the antenna separation since the water path length is equal for both routes. Hence, in use the mobile stations should be positioned so that the antenna height is less than half the antenna separation.
To optimise the performance of the arrangement of Figure 4, the magnetically coupled antenna should be positioned to maximise the signal that is injected into the seabed. Where the antenna is a magnetic solenoid antenna, the signal is at a maximum in a direction perpendicular to the solenoid, as shown in Figure 5. By holding the solenoid substantially horizontally, signal injection can be optimised. Figure 6 illustrates an arrangement for ensuring the solenoid is held in a fixed orientation relative to the vertical. This has a float that is constructed of a low-density material, for example polyester foam. The float will be placed to move the antenna housing's centre of mass away from its centre of volume such that the antenna is held in a stable orientation parallel to the seabed. For a typical horizontal seabed this will optimise signal coupling into the seabed material.
Figure 7 shows another arrangement that reduces through water attenuation. As before, this has two communication stations, each having a transceiver having substantially the same form as that of Figure 1. However, in this case, the electrically insulated, magnetic coupled antennas of both stations are provided at the end of extended connections and are buried in the seabed. Hence, in this case, the EM signal transmission path is solely through the seabed, with no through water part. It should be noted that in this case, the communication stations may be in a substantially fixed position or may be able to move. This depends on the nature of the connection between the stations and their buried antennas. In this case, for seawater with a conductivity of 4 S/m and a seabed with a conductivity of 1 S/m, a radio system that could operate over a 120 dB link loss budget would have a 50m range for the seabed path, whereas the through water range would be 25m. Hence, for the embedded antenna arrangement of Figure 7, the effective signal range is doubled.
The system and method in which the invention is embodied provide numerous advantages, not least a significantly improved range. However, in addition to range benefits the seabed path also offers reduced signal distortion for a given range. This is because the lower conductivity compared to water reduces phase dispersion. A further advantage is that the seabed potentially provides a covert path for communications, thereby minimising the ability of other parties to intercept or detect communications compared to the more conventional lower loss approach of using through air transmission at the air-water interface using surface penetration of the antenna.
A skilled person will appreciate that variations of the disclosed arrangements are possible without departing from the invention. For example, although the specific implementations of Figures 4 and 7 are described separately, it will be appreciated that these could be combined, e.g. one of the mobile stations could have the antenna arrangement of Figure 4 and the other could have an embedded antenna arrangement of Figure 7. Alternative configurations are clearly available, for example, the communication stations may be fixed in position, not mobile, and one of the communication stations could be on land. In this case, preferably the land station has a magnetic coupled antenna that is buried underground. Accordingly the above description of the specific embodiment is made by way of example only and not for the purposes of limitation. It will be clear to the skilled person that minor modifications may be made without significant changes to the operation described.

Claims

Claims
1. An underwater communication method comprising transmitting an electromagnetic or magnetic signal via a seabed using an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna is located within the body of water or is buried in the seabed.
3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 further involve receiving electromagnetic or magnetic signals at an underwater, electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna.
4. A method as claimed in claim 3 wherein the underwater receiver antenna is located within the water or buried in the seabed.
5. A method as claimed in claim 4 comprising locating the underwater transmitter antenna and the underwater receiver antenna above the seabed at a height that is less than half the separation of the antennas.
6. A method as claimed in any of the preceding claims wherein the electromagnetic or magnetic signal is any information carrying communication signal for use in, for example, at least one of an underwater communication system for allowing communication between two divers, a navigation system and a remote sensing system for identifying objects or any other system that requires the exchange of EM signals.
7. A method as claimed in any of the preceding claims comprising aligning the antenna to optimise signal coupling through the seabed path.
8. An underwater communication system comprising a transmitter having an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna that is operable to transmit EM signals through the seabed.
9. A system as claimed in claim 8 including a receiver having an underwater electrically insulated magnetically coupled antenna.
10. A system as claimed in claim 8 or claim 9 wherein the transmitter and receiver share the same antenna.
11. A system as claimed in any of claims 8 to 10 wherein the transmitter antenna is arranged so that radiation is preferentially directed into the seabed.
12. A system as claimed any of claims 8 to 11 wherein at least one of the antennas is buried in the seabed.
13. A system as claimed in any of claims 8 to 12 wherein at least one antenna is based on land, preferably underground.
14. A system as claimed in any of claims 9 to 11 wherein the transmitter antenna and receiver antenna are located above the seabed at a height that is less than half of their separation.
15. A mobile station, such as an un-manned underwater vehicle, that includes a system as claimed in any of claims 9 to 14.
16. A fixed station that includes a system as claimed in any of claims 9 to 14.
PCT/GB2006/004937 2005-12-23 2006-12-22 Transmission of underwater electromagnetic radiation through the seabed WO2007072066A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0810980A GB2447582B (en) 2005-12-23 2006-12-22 Transmission of underwater electromagnetic radiation through the seabed

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0526303.3 2005-12-23
GBGB0526303.3A GB0526303D0 (en) 2005-12-23 2005-12-23 Transmission of underwater electromagnetic radiation through the seabed
US11/339,336 US7742007B2 (en) 2005-12-23 2006-01-24 Transmission of underwater electromagnetic radiation through the seabed
US11/339,336 2006-01-24

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WO2007072066A1 true WO2007072066A1 (en) 2007-06-28

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Cited By (6)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1891457A2 (en) 2005-06-13 2008-02-27 Wireless Fibre Systems LTD Underwater navigation
GB2457581A (en) * 2008-02-25 2009-08-26 Mark Rhodes An array of subsea radio modems is distributed on the seabed to provide a radio communications network
GB2467224A (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-28 Wireless Fibre Systems Ltd Underwater data transfer between a cable and a client transceiver using electromagnetic (preferably inductive) wireless communication through water
CN109462444A (en) * 2018-12-05 2019-03-12 上海交通大学 A kind of seabed ground sound communication device, system and installation method
CN110146925A (en) * 2019-05-15 2019-08-20 北京大学 A kind of underwater metal detecting system and method based on electric field communication
CN110612676A (en) * 2017-05-01 2019-12-24 Wfs科技有限公司 Communication network

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WO2001095529A1 (en) * 2000-06-08 2001-12-13 Qinetiq Limited Underwater communications system using electromagnetic signal transmission

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Cited By (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1891457A2 (en) 2005-06-13 2008-02-27 Wireless Fibre Systems LTD Underwater navigation
GB2457581B (en) * 2008-02-25 2012-11-28 Wfs Technologies Ltd Shallow water radio communications network
GB2457581A (en) * 2008-02-25 2009-08-26 Mark Rhodes An array of subsea radio modems is distributed on the seabed to provide a radio communications network
US8326220B2 (en) 2009-01-21 2012-12-04 Wfs Technologies Ltd. Underwater data transfer system
US8219024B2 (en) 2009-01-21 2012-07-10 Wfs Technologies Ltd. Underwater data transfer system
GB2467224B (en) * 2009-01-21 2012-04-04 Wfs Technologies Ltd Underwater data transfer system
GB2467224A (en) * 2009-01-21 2010-07-28 Wireless Fibre Systems Ltd Underwater data transfer between a cable and a client transceiver using electromagnetic (preferably inductive) wireless communication through water
US8417183B2 (en) 2009-01-21 2013-04-09 Wfs Technologies Ltd. Underwater data transfer system
CN110612676A (en) * 2017-05-01 2019-12-24 Wfs科技有限公司 Communication network
CN109462444A (en) * 2018-12-05 2019-03-12 上海交通大学 A kind of seabed ground sound communication device, system and installation method
CN109462444B (en) * 2018-12-05 2020-05-12 上海交通大学 Submarine earth sound communication device, system and installation method
CN110146925A (en) * 2019-05-15 2019-08-20 北京大学 A kind of underwater metal detecting system and method based on electric field communication
CN110146925B (en) * 2019-05-15 2020-07-03 北京大学 Underwater metal detection system and method based on electric field communication

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