Reconfigurable Transmitarray With Near-Field Coupling to Gap Waveguide Array Antenna for Efficient 2-D Beam Steering
Artem R. Vilenskiy, Mikhail Makurin, Chongmin Lee, Marianna Ivashina
Abstract
A novel array antenna architecture is proposed that can enable 2-D (full-space) radiation pattern control and efficient beam steering. This solution is based on a gap waveguide array antenna and a reconfigurable transmitarray (TA) that are coupled in the radiative near field. An equivalent two-port network model of the coupling mechanism is presented and validated numerically. The desired TA reconfiguration capability is realized by an 8 × 8 array of cavity-backed patch resonator elements, where two AlGaAs p-i-n diodes are integrated inside each element providing a 1-bit phase shift. The TA is implemented in an eight-layer printed circuit board (PCB), which includes radiating elements, fixed phase-shifting innerstripline sections, impedance matching, and biasing circuitry. The combined antenna design is low profile (~1.7 wavelength) owing to the small separation between two arrays (~0.5 wavelength), as opposed to conventional TAs illuminated by a focal source. The design procedure of the proposed architecture is outlined, and the measured and simulated results are shown to be in good agreement. These results demonstrate 23.5-25.2 GHz -10-dB impedance bandwidth and 23.3-25.3 GHz 3-dB gain bandwidth, a beam-steering range of ±30° and ±40° in the E- and the H-planes with the gain peak of 17.5 dBi, scan loss ≤ 3.5 dB, and TA unit cell insertion loss ≤ 1.8 dB, respectively.