Bodehou, Nounagnon
[UCL]
Monnoyer de Galland de Carnières, Gilles
[UCL]
Drouguet, Maxime
[UCL]
Alkhalifeh, Khaldoun
[UCL]
Vandendorpe, Luc
[UCL]
Craeye, Christophe
[UCL]
Two planar metasurface (MTS) antennas are designed to produce a pattern with optimal illumination in a radar scenario, given the a priori known path of the targets. The antennas are extremely flat, thin, with a monopole feed integrated in the plane of the structure. The monopole serves as a surface-wave (SW) launcher illuminating the slab. The excited SW progressively leaks after interacting with the MTS, forming a radiation pattern designed to cover uniformly a portion of road in a given scenario. The realized antennas radiation patterns are experimentally validated. The MTSs are then deployed in a frequency-modulated continuous wave (FMCW) radar system. The experiments showed that the echo of the targets in the range-Doppler map does not statistically depend on the distance between the target and the radar, while a clear range dependence is observed when classical patch array antennas are used. That means, given the capability to engineer a particular shape for the radiation pattern and the interest for simultaneously detecting small and big targets, the MTS antennas allow one to better resolve a small and distant target, next to a big and close one.
Bibliographic reference |
Bodehou, Nounagnon ; Monnoyer de Galland de Carnières, Gilles ; Drouguet, Maxime ; Alkhalifeh, Khaldoun ; Vandendorpe, Luc ; et. al. Metasurface Antennas for FMCW Radar. In: Metasurface Antennas for FMCW Radar, p. 1-5 (2023) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/273454 |