A novel low radar cross-section (RCS) design method is proposed, and its application on Vivaldi antenna that covers the entire X band is investigated. According to the difference of the current distribution on the radiator when the antenna radiates or scatters, the shape of the metal radiator is modified, so that maximally 19.2 dBsm RCS reduction is achieved which satisfied radiation performance. Simulated and measured results about gain, S11, and RCS are presented. As a result, the effectiveness of the presented low RCS design method is validated.
1. Introduction
The nose cone of an aircraft is the most threating area for radar detection, but the electromagnetic scattering of antenna array belongs to the fire control system in this area is usually very strong, which result in the importance of stealth design of antenna. Vivaldi antennas [1–3] are widely used in fire control system due to broad bandwidth and small physical dimension. Therefore, the stealth design of Vivaldi antenna is highly desirable in many prospective airborne applications.
Many methods [4–11] have been proposed to reduce the radar cross-section (RCS) of microstrip antennas. Usually, RCS reduction will increase the complexity of the antenna system or degrade the radiation performance of the antenna. Typical performance-degradation effects include gain decreasing, resonant frequency shifting, and bandwidth narrowing. Li and Liu [4, 5] proposed a stealth method with maximally 27 dBsm RCS reduction at a specific frequency with two short-circuit pins loaded on each microstrip unit and two H-shaped slots cut. However, the RCS reduction occurred only at a relatively narrow frequency band and angle range. Another effective method, investigated by Jang et al. [6, 7], uses the electromagnetic band gap (EBG) structure and achieves a 10 dBsm RCS reduction out of the working band while keeping the RCS within the operating band almost unchanged. The same effect can also be acquired with frequency-selective surface (FSS) on radomes. Other methods [8–10] such as Fractal slots, defected ground structures (DGSs), or holly-leaf-shaped designs, also can reduce RCS in angle scope vertical to the antenna in the operating band, but all the methods are hard to be applied to Vivaldi antenna for its threating direction is almost parallel to the antenna.
Several RCS reduction schemes have also been developed for Vivaldi antennas. Zhang et al. [11] introduced a phase-switched screen (PSS) boundary, which enables the dynamic control of RCS. Jiang fu et al. [12] investigated RCS a dual-index Vivaldi antenna which achieves a maximally of 25 dBsm RCS reduction, but the dispersion of the measured gain is decreased.
In this paper, we propose a novel low RCS design method that specifically applies to the X-band Vivaldi antenna. The design is based on the analysis of the antenna current distribution in the radiating and scattering status, respectively. Then we modify the configuration of the metal patch to achieve maximally 19.2 dBsm RCS reduction. Simulation and measurement results are provided to demonstrate the excellent radiation and stealth performance that are achieved with this design.
2. Stealth Design Scheme
A typical Vivaldi antenna [13–15] without any low RCS design is shown in Figure 1. The antenna is printed on the two sides of a TF-2 (εr=10.2) substrate with a thickness of 0.635 mm. On one side of the substrate is the metal patch consisting of a tapered slot line and a transmission line as illustrated by the solid lines of in Figure 1(a). On the other side, there is a feeding structure as illustrated by the solid lines of in Figure 1(b). For better illustration, dotted lines are employed in both views to indicate the position of the structures on the opposite side. The parameters marked in the figure are optimized with HFSS to match the feeding port to 50 Ω. The photograph of the fabricated original antenna is shown in Figure 1(c).
Structure of original Vivaldi antenna.
The front view
The back view
Fabricated original antenna
Generally speaking, the scattering of an antenna can be divided into two parts [16, 17]. One part is the so-called structural mode scattering that excludes the effect of the antenna’s receiving channel. This part of scattering is almost the same as the scattering of a common scatterer. The other part is the mode scattering that is caused by the reradiation of the reflected power from the receiving channel due to the impedance mismatching. Nevertheless, the mode scattering of a well-matched antenna is usually much smaller than the structural mode scattering. Take the Vivaldi antenna in Figure 1 as an example, the total RCS is about −33 dBsm at 10 GHz as simulated with HFSS while the mode scattering RCS is estimated to be about −75 dBsm [18] which is negligibly small. Therefore, in this paper, we mainly focus on the structural mode stealth design of the Vivaldi antenna.
The purpose of a stealth design is to decrease RCS of an antenna while maintaining the antenna’s radiation performance, which is usually conflict and should be balanced between scattering model and radiation model. In our stealth design method, the balance is well achieved by utilizing the difference between the current distributions of the antenna in the two modes. At 10 GHz, the induced current distribution due to scattering and radiation are shown in Figures 2(a) and 2(b), respectively. It can be seen from Figure 2(a) that the current distributes throughout the entire metal patch when the antenna is incident by a plane wave from θi=0° and ϕi=0°. On the other hand, when the antenna is in the radiating mode, the current is mainly along the feeding structure and transmission line as is seen in Figure 2(b). Consequently, it can be found that there are large areas of the metal patch have no contribution to the radiation but play an important role in the scattering. The main idea of the stealth design is to, therefore, remove these metal areas in a way that decreases the RCS without sacrificing the radiation characteristics.
Current distribution of metal patch.
Scattering mode
Radiation mode
Based on the aforementioned idea, two ellipses are symmetrically cut out from the metal patch to ensure the maximum metal reduction to reduce RCS. However the large area cutdown on the metal patch will unavoidably result in slight current distribution changing in the radiation model, which will lead to high side lobe and dispersive gain in a wide frequency range. To prevent the lateral radiation, a rectangle strip is placed within the area of the two cut ellipses and connected to the remaining part of the metal patch. The rectangle strip’s length is 7.8 mm and its resonant frequency is nearly 3 GHz, and then we can have two higher harmonics at 9 GHz and 12 GHz. Through HFSS simulation and optimization, we arrive at a final design of the stealth antenna as shown in Figure 3. The stealth antenna is fabricated and shown in Figure 4.
Structure of stealth design.
View of the fabricated stealth antenna.
3. Result and Discussion
To validate the stealth design method presented in the previous section, we first evaluate the radiation performance of our stealth antenna compared with the original one. Figure 5 shows the measured and simulated return loss of the stealth antenna. The associated date of original Vivaldi antenna are also presented. The measured and simulated results of the stealth antenna coincide with each other from 6 to 18 GHz and for comparison are below −10 dB over the entire X-band from 8 GHz to 12 GHz. The return loss of the stealth antenna in X-band is only slightly larger than that of the original one, which is due to the impedance mismatch and can be further improved. In this paper, we will not focus on the feed matching design as long as the measured and simulated S11 are acceptable. There are two resonant frequency points at nearly 9 GHz and 12 GHz which coincide the previous design.
Return loss of the antenna.
By using the outdoor measurement method in [19], the gain and return loss of the stealth design is obtained with the transmitting and receiving antennas separated by 50 cm. The measured and simulated antenna gains over the X-band are given in Figure 6. About 4 dBi gain is achieved in both designs. From Figure 6 we can also observe that our stealth design method has flatter gain versus frequency as compared to the original one, which leads to a better dispersion and group delay performance.
Gain of the antenna.
The previous results show that our stealth design maintains good radiation performance. In the following, we will show the low observation characteristics of the stealth design. As the antenna RCSs are too low to be accurately measured in an ordinary chamber with common background noise, only simulation results are provided.
Consider a plane wave incident from the direction θi=0 and ϕi=0. As the polarization of the antenna is along the Y axis, the X-polarized RCS is very small in both antenna designs as shown in Figure 7(a). However, for the copolarization in Figure 7(b), a much higher RCS is observed. As is seen in the figure, the RCS is significantly reduced by using our stealth design. Within the X band, the maximum RCS reduction is about 19.2 dBsm at 11.3 GHz, and the minimum reduction is about 4.6 dBsm at 10.1 GHz. According to the radar range equation [20], a 19.2 dB reduction in RCS decreases the radar detection range by 68%, whereas a 4.6 dB reduction in RCS also can decrease the detection range by 24%, which is very important in stealth design of associate platform. Meanwhile, after stealth design, the mode scattering RCS is also improved and is estimated to be about −90 dBsm. So our stealth design method is very effective.
RCS with the change of frequency.
X polarized
Y polarized
Figure 8 shows the bistatic RCS patterns versus scattering angle θ for 10.1 GHz and 11.3 GHz, respectively. In both figures, the incident angle is fixed to be θi=0 and ϕi=0. It can be seen that our stealth antenna maintains much lower RCS in a wide scattering range from 0° to 60° and from 300° to 360° which are most threatening scope for stealth design. Similar RCS reduction effects are also observed at other frequencies. Compared to the scattering of dual-index Vivaldi antenna studied by Jiang fu et al. [12], our method achieves a more stable gain and wider-angle range RCS reduction.
RCS with the change of angle.
At 10.1 GHz
At 11.3 GHz
4. Conclusion
In this paper, we proposed a novel low RCS design method and applied it to Vivaldi antennas. An excellent stealth performance in the entire X-band and wide angle range is achieved. With the proposed design method, the RCS is reduced up to 19.2 dBsm with satisfactory radiation characteristic maintained, which shows that the proposed design is effective and potential for other microstrip antenna stealth design.
Acknowledgments
This paper is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (no. 61102032), funding of State Key Laboratory of Millimeter Waves in China (Grant: K201005), the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (no. 20110491423), the NUAA Research Funding (no. NS2011014), and the NUAA Innovation Base Fund for Postgraduates.
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