Litcius/Paper detail

Calibration-Based Phase Coherence of Incoherent and Quasi-Coherent 160-GHz MIMO Radars

André Dürr, Raphael Kramer, Dominik Schwarz, Martin Geiger, Christian Waldschmidt

2020IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Imaging radars are usually realized fully coherently. However, the distribution of one common radio frequency signal to all transmit and receive paths requires a high degree of hardware complexity. In order to reduce the hardware effort significantly, a novel phase synchronization method for incoherent and quasi-coherent frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) imaging radars with individual signal synthesis per channel is presented. The quasi-coherent setup uses one common oscillator for all frequency synthesizers. It is shown that in the case of the quasi-coherent system, only a phase difference between the calibration and the measurement has to be corrected to achieve coherence. In comparison, an incoherent system causes additional time, frequency, and FMCW ramp slope errors due to the different behavior of the oscillators. In order to achieve phase coherence and to correct the error sources, a calibration-based method using a defined signal path as part of the radar system is proposed. The imaging radar used for verification of the theory consists of individual single-channel radar monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs) at 160 GHz; each MMIC fed by an individual frequency synthesizer. As shown by measurements, it is possible to achieve phase coherence for both system approaches and to perform angle estimation.

Topics & Concepts

Coherence (philosophical gambling strategy)Electronic engineeringRadarContinuous-wave radarComputer scienceCoherence timeSIGNAL (programming language)CalibrationSynchronization (alternating current)Local oscillatorPulse-Doppler radarPhase-locked loopPhase modulationFrequency synthesizerPhase noiseChannel (broadcasting)Radar imagingPhysicsEngineeringTelecommunicationsProgramming languageQuantum mechanicsRadar Systems and Signal ProcessingAdvanced SAR Imaging TechniquesMicrowave Imaging and Scattering Analysis