Millimeter wave VAlidation STandard (mm-vast) antenna. Executive Summary Report.

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Downloaded from orbit.dtu.dk on: Apr 23, 2018 Millimeter wave VAlidation STandard (mm-vast) antenna.. Kim, Oleksiy S. Publication date: 2015 Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Link back to DTU Orbit Citation (APA): Kim, O. S. (2015). Millimeter wave VAlidation STandard (mm-vast) antenna.:. Technical University of Denmark, Department of Electrical Engineering. General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim.

Millimeter wave VAlidation STandard (mm-vast) antenna ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH (issue 2) Oleksiy S. Kim Department of Electrical Engineering, Electromagnetic Systems Technical University of Denmark September 2015 R784

Millimeter wave VAlidation STandard (mm-vast) antenna ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH Issue 2 Oleksiy S. Kim Department of Electrical Engineering, Electromagnetic Systems Technical University of Denmark September 2015 R784 Department of Electrical Engineering, Electromagnetic Systems Technical University of Denmark Ørsteds Plads, Building 348 DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark Phone: +45 4525 3800, Fax: +45 4593 1634, Homepage: www.elektro.dtu.dk

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 2 DOCUMENT CHANGE RECORD Issue Date Affected section Reason 1 11.09.2015 All First Issue 2 30.09.2015 Caption to Fig.1, Fig.3 added, Section 7 Published Papers added MOM FR from 30.09.2105

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 3 CONTENTS 1. Introduction... 4 1.1 Scope... 4 1.2 Applicable documents... 4 1.3 Reference documents... 4 1.4 Abbreviations... 4 1.5 Background... 4 2. Requirements... 6 3. Electrical Design... 7 4. Mechanical Design and Manufacturing... 9 4.1 Mechanical Stability Requirements... 9 4.2 Structural Design... 10 4.3 Fabrication, Assembly and Alignment... 10 5. Testing... 13 6. Conclusions... 17 7. Published Papers... 17

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 4 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 Scope This document summarizes the main results of the project Millimeter wave VAlidation STandard (mm-vast) antenna completed by the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) in collaboration with Danish company TICRA for the European Space Agency (ESA) under ESA contract no. 4000109866/13/NL/MH. 1.2 Applicable documents [AD1] ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH, Appendix 2: Statement of Work. 1.3 Reference documents [RD1] S. Pivnenko et al., Comparison of antenna measurement facilities with the DTU-ESA 12 GHz validation standard antenna within the EU antenna centre of excellence, IEEE Trans. Antennas Propagat., vol. 57, no. 7, pp. 1863 1878, 2009. 1.4 Abbreviations AD CFRP CNC CP CTE DTU EES EMS ESA FE LP MCS OCS PNF RD RF SNF SoW VAST Applicable Document Carbon Fiber Reinforced Plastic (Polymer) Computer Numerical Control Circular Polarization Coefficient of Thermal Expansion Technical University of Denmark Equivalent Error Signal Electromagnetic Systems European Space Agency Finite Element Linear Polarization Mechanical Coordinate System Optical Coordinate System Planar Near-Field Reference Document Radio Frequency Spherical Near-Field Statement of Work Validation Standard 1.5 Background Inter-comparisons of antenna test ranges serve the purpose of validating the measurement accuracy of a given range before it can be qualified to perform certain measurements, which is particularly important for space applications, where antenna specifications are very stringent. Moreover, by verifying the measurement procedures and

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 5 identifying sources of errors and uncertainties, inter-comparison campaigns improve our understanding of strengths and limitations of different measurement techniques, which, in turn, leads to further improved measurement accuracies. The lesson learned from early comparison campaigns executed by the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) in the mid-1980s on some readily available antennas is that the proper inter-comparisons can only be done on dedicated antennas, whose design is driven by stringent requirements on their rigidity and mechanical stability. Furthermore, well-defined reference coordinate systems are essential. These principles have convincingly been proven valid by the VAST-12 antenna designed by DTU in the late 1980s, which in more than 20 years has demonstrated its usefulness and long-term value [RD1]. Currently, the satellite communication industry is actively commercializing the mmwave frequency bands (K/Ka-bands) in its strive for wide frequency bandwidth and higher bit-rates. The next step is the exploration and exploitation of the Q/Vband. In this scenario, the European Space Agency (ESA) is expanding its portfolio of VAlidation STandard antennas (VAST) into mm-waves to ensure accurate measurements of the next generation communication antennas. This time, ESA demands all four bands (K/Ka/Q/Vbands) to be covered by a single VAST antenna. In response to this demand the Technical University of Denmark represented by two departments Department of Electrical Engineering and Department of Wind Energy in collaboration with TICRA has developed a new precision tool for antenna test range qualification and inter-comparisons at mm-waves the DTU-ESA mm-vast antenna. This ESA project involved four major tasks: 1) critical review and formalization of general requirements outlines in the Statement of Work (SoW) [AD1]; 2) electrical design of the antenna, 3) mechanical design and manufacturing, 4) antenna testing. The main results of these tasks are summarized in this report.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 6 2. REQUIREMENTS To be able to serve as a measurement standard the mm-vast antenna must be stable under various operational conditions, that is, under any orientation in gravity and within the temperature range of 20±5 C. Along with the required multi-band capability, this constituted the major challenge of the project. More specifically, any deformities of the mm-vast antenna during tests, under rotations and temperature variations, should introduce an error less than 1/10 of the measurement accuracy being sought. With the typical measurement accuracy for the peak directivity at the DTU-ESA Spherical Near- Field Antenna Test Facility of 0.03 db (1σ), the stability requirement translates into the measurement uncertainty, which can be introduced by mm-vast, of 0.003 db (1σ). In combination with a short wavelength (6 mm) at the highest operational frequency, this requirement results in maximum acceptable deformations of the antenna structure of the order of microns. Main electrical requirements are summarized in Table I. It should be noted that the mm-vast antenna is not required to cover all frequencies in each of the four bands. One frequency per band is enough; the selected ones are shown in parentheses. Besides that, the antenna shall have well-defined mechanical and optical coordinate systems (MCS and OCS, respectively). Table I. Requirements to the mm-vast antenna Operational frequencies Gain Polarization Co-polar pattern Cross-polar pattern Return loss Frequency 1 within 17.5 20.2 GHz (19.8 GHz) Frequency 2 within 27.5 31.0 GHz (30 GHz) Frequency 3 within 37.5 40.5 GHz (38 GHz) Frequency 4 within 47.2 50.2 GHz (48 GHz) Frequency 1 and 2: 30 35 dbi Frequency 3 and 4: 33 38 dbi Reconfigurable between linear and circular at all operational frequencies Challenging to measure: near-sidelobes (1st-3rd) in the range 18 25 db below peak deep nulls far-out sidelobes (θ > 20 ) at least 30 db below peak an asymmetry different beamwidths in the orthogonal planes flat-top or split main beam > 20 db below the co-polar peak in the main beam region null in the main beam region 10 20 db

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 7 3. ELECTRICAL DESIGN The mm-vast is a single offset reflector antenna (Figure 1), whose design was done by the Danish company TICRA. Having made an extensive parametric investigation, TICRA identified antenna parameters optimal with respect to the requirements. The reflector surface is chosen to be an astigmatic parabola with different focal lengths in the orthogonal planes, which produces the desired elliptical beam as well as reduces the variation of the directivity over the large frequency span from Frequency 1 to Frequency 4. More specifically, the reflector is defined by the following equation 2 2 x y z = + 4Fx 4F y where Fx = 167 mm and Fy = 220 mm are focal lengths in the xz- and yz-planes, respectively. The square aperture facilitates the near-sidelobes in the specified range (18 25 db below peak) and moderate spill-over loss. The main geometrical parameters of the antenna are provided in Table II. Figure 1. mm-vast antenna, weight 9.5 kg, dimensions 53 x 23 x 44 cm 3.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 8 Table II. Geometrical parameters of the mm-vast antenna Aperture 230 230 mm Focal lengths Fx = 167 mm Fy = 220 mm Offset 200 mm Offset angle 57.6 The antenna is fed by a feed cluster of four Pickett-Potter horns, one for each frequency. This kind of horns was chosen for its extremely low cross-polarization. The horn axes are aligned in the antenna symmetry plane to ensure a deep null of the linear cross-polarization, while the apertures are kept in one plane to ease the manufacturing. Such a large feed requires a large offset distance leading to increase in linear crosspolarization. Nevertheless, TICRA managed to keep it below 20 db. The sizes of the input circular waveguides of the feed horns were selected so that only the fundamental TE11 mode can propagate. This was done to improve reproducibility of the results, when the antenna is manually reconfigured between the operational frequencies and the polarization modes. The reconfiguration is done by mounting to the relevant horn a dedicated component either a transition for linear polarization (LP) or an LP-to-CP polarizer for circular polarization (CP). Other horns are terminated with well-defined loads short-circuits in our case. The feed cluster and all waveguide components were designed and manufactured at the Electromagnetic Systems (EMS) group of the Department of Electrical Engineering (DTU).

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 9 4. MECHANICAL DESIGN AND MANUFACTURING 4.1 Mechanical Stability Requirements The maximum measurement uncertainty that can be introduced by the mm-vast antenna due to its deformations in the gravity force and temperature variations of ±5 C is 0.003 db (1σ) for the peak directivity (see Section 2). This uncertainty corresponds to 60 db equivalent error signal (EES) level, that is, the difference between magnitude patterns of a reference and a deformed antenna should not exceed 60 db. Numerous simulations of various distortions of the antenna, such as displacement and rotation of the feed and the reflector as well as distortions of the reflector surface, have been made in GRASP. For every deformation, the resulting complex pattern at 48 GHz (the highest operational frequency) was compared against the reference. The maximum acceptable variation for each deformation parameter was then obtained such that the complex difference did not exceed 60 db. Even though we are interested in a variation of magnitude patterns, the complex difference was taken to identify parameters producing large phase errors, as the phase errors may contribute to the far-field magnitude pattern via near-to-far-field transformations in SNF or PNF measurements. The most critical parameters are listed in Table III. It was verified by taking the respective magnitude pattern differences that the phase errors are dominating in the complex differences for these parameters. Table III. Maximum acceptable variations of the most sensitive antenna parameters Parameter Maximum variation Relaxed Simulation Movement of feed cluster along zf 1μm 5μm 1.5μm Movement of reflector along x 1μm 5μm 3μm Movement of reflector along z 0.5μm 2.5μm 2μm Movement of the entire antenna along z 1μm 5μm 2.6μm Rotation of the entire antenna around y-axis 0.0003 0.0012 0.0007 It is seen that the maximum deviations in the second column of Table III are very tough and next to impossible to meet. Fortunately, the phase errors in the near-field do not translate 1-to-1 into the far-field. The actual effects of the phase errors on the farfield magnitude pattern depend on the measurement technique used (SNF or PNF) and the scanning scheme utilized. These effects were simulated and the resulting acceptable phase variations are summarized in Table IV. These values translate in significantly relaxed maximum acceptable deviations given in the third column of Table III. Table IV. Acceptable phase variations in SNF and PNF measurements Model SNF, phi-/theta-scan PNF, hor./ ver. scan Total phase shift, deg. 9 / 0.3 1.5 / 2.5

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 10 4.2 Structural Design The structural design of the antenna was done by the Department of Wind Energy at DTU, taking outset in the department s unique experience in composite materials and structures. The design involves such materials as carbon fiber reinforced plastic (CFRP) for the antenna frame and the reflector, and Invar for the reflector mounting brackets and the flange (see Figure 1). Invar was chosen for its coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) nearly matching that of CFRP. The material for the feed cluster was selected to be aluminum. A detailed solid CAD model was created in Pro/ENGINEER consisting of the main parts of the antenna. A simplified version of this solid CAD model was then imported into MSC.Patran for finite element (FE) simulations. The analysis results for the critical antenna parameters summarized in the fourth column of Table III show that the actual deviations are within the limits set by the mechanical stability requirements. The mechanical coordinate system of the mm-vast antenna is defined by the normal to the mounting flange with orientation defined by a permanently attached precision level. The optical coordinate system is defined by a mirror cube placed behind the reflector. 4.3 Fabrication, Assembly and Alignment Operational wavelengths at millimeter waves impose strict requirements not only to the stability of the mm-vast antenna, but also to the fabrication and alignment tolerances. To meet these tight tolerances all metal parts of the antenna as well as the moulds for the frame and the reflector were made on computer numerical control (CNC) machines. The CFRP frame and the reflector were made via the vacuum infusion process with a wind energy grade infusion epoxy as matrix material, which allows for a lowexothermic cure process to minimize the residual strains. A moderate post cure was applied to ensure thermal stability. The completed reflector was not demoulded, as the mould plays a key role in the antenna alignment. The assembly and alignment were integrated into a unique procedure to achieve the highest precision (see Figure 2). 1) The mould with reflector on it is mounted to a base plate via precision holes and guiding pins. 2) The antenna mounting flange is attached to a dedicated alignment plate, which is then mounted to the base plate via precision holes and guiding pins. 3) Guiding rods are inserted into the first and second horns of the feed cluster and then attached to a dedicated alignment plate, which is then mounted to the base plate via precision holes and guiding pins. 4) The antenna frame is mounted on the antenna mounting flange without adhesive. Distance blocks are used to ensure correct distance between the frame and the base plate. 5) A mirror cube is attached to a dedicated alignment plate, which is then mounted to the base plate via precision holes and guiding pins. At this point all key components of the antenna the reflector, the feed, the frame, the mounting flange, and the mirror cube become perfectly aligned with respect to each other and can be glued together. Once the glued connections are fully hardened, all the alignment tools can be removed and the reflector demoulded. The reflector surface is then coated with silver paint and finished with white protective paint.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 11 Since the mm-vast antenna is meant to be sent around to different measurement facilities, a dedicated flight case with an integrated toolbox for the waveguide components has been designed and procured (Figure 3). Figure 2. Assembly and alignment setup for the mm-vast antenna.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 12 Figure 3. The transport and storage container for the mm-vast antenna.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 13 5. TESTING The manufactured mm-vast antenna passed a series of tests to check its mechanical and thermal stability, its environmental survivability, and to provide a set of accurate reference results for all configurations at all frequencies. Initially, it was expected to perform mechanical and thermal tests under the normal operation conditions. However, the design process revealed that the deformations of the structure were so small that it was not possible to measure them in the normal operation mode. Instead, the mechanical and thermal tests were carried out to validate the FE analyses with applied loads 100 times larger than the nominal; only then the deformations were detectable. These test were done not on the actual antenna, but on a test antenna manufactured according to the same procedure and using the same materials. The mechanical tests have shown that the deformations of the antenna support structure under load are approximately twice larger as compared with the results of the FE analysis, but even with double deformations the antenna still meets the strict stability requirements. The actual antenna was first tested at the DTU-ESA Antenna Test Facility at the DTU Department of Electrical Engineering, then it undergone a survivability environmental test in a climate chamber, and finally, at the DTU-ESA Facility it was measured again for the final verification and accurate calibration for establishing the reference results. The RF measurements revealed a good performance of the fabricated antenna. In all bands, the values of the measured reflection coefficient around the nominal frequencies satisfy the requirements. The stability was verified by checking the orientation of the OCS in MCS as well as the LP patterns at Frequency 1 (Figure 4) before and after the survivability environmental test. It was concluded that the observed differences were much smaller than the measurement uncertainties and thus the electrical stability of the mm-vast antenna is very high, beyond the detection level. Figure 4. LP radiation pattern cuts at Frequency 1: comparison of the results before (reference) and after (final) the environmental tests.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 14 The full-sphere near-field measurements were carried out at 10-15 frequencies in each frequency band and for each polarization configuration. The near-field data were then transformed to the far field properly taking into account characteristics of the dualpolarized measurement probes. The measurements were made with scan in ϕ and step in θ, since with this scanning scheme the effects of the phase variations are minimized (see Table IV). Depending on the frequency band, each full-sphere measurement took between 6 and 11 hours. The mm-vast antenna during the measurements is shown in Figure 5 together with the mechanical coordinate system. Figure 5. The mm-vast antenna during the radiation measurements at the DTU-ESA Facility. The final operational frequencies for the mm-vast antenna were slightly adjusted to correspond to the minimum CP axial ratio found in each band (see Table V). These frequencies are the same for LP and CP in each band. An example of the surface plot of the LP radiation pattern in the forward hemisphere at Frequency 3 (37.80 GHz) is shown in Figure 6. Since the feed horns for Frequencies 1-3 are offset from the focal point, the main beam at these frequencies is shifted from the z-axis by a few degrees. In order to compensate for this shift, the radiation pattern was appropriately rotated before taking cuts for plotting. Examples of the CP radiation pattern cuts at Frequency 4 (48.16 GHz) are shown in Figure 7. Thorough analysis of the results of the electrical tests has shown that the mm-vast antenna is fully compliant to the most of the requirements with only minor nonconformances on a few parameters, which were deemed acceptable. Table V. Final operational frequencies of the mm-vast antenna Frequency 1 Frequency 2 Frequency 3 Frequency 4 19.76 GHz 30.04 GHz 37.80 GHz 48.16 GHz

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 15 Figure 6. Surface plot of the LP radiation pattern at Frequency 3: co-polar (top) and cross-polar (bottom).

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 16 Figure 7. CP radiation pattern cuts at Frequency 4: full range (top), ϕ = 0º cut (middle) and ϕ = 90º cut (bottom) within θ = [-30, 30]º.

mm-vast, ESA Contract No. 4000109866/13/NL/MH 17 6. CONCLUSIONS A new antenna test range verification tool at millimeter waves the mm-wave VAlidation STandard antenna (mm-vast) has been designed, manufactured and tested at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) in collaboration with Danish company TICRA under an ESA project. The mm-vast is a multiband offset reflector antenna fabricated of composite materials for extreme mechanical and thermal stability. The antenna operates at 20/30/40/50 GHz bands and is LP/CP reconfigurable. The antenna will facilitate inter-comparison and validation of antenna measurement ranges at mmwaves addressing the on-going deployment of satellite communication services at 20/30 GHz (K/Ka-band) as well as future commercial use of the 40/50 GHz bands (Q/Vband). The single offset reflector antenna scheme has proven to be a configuration of choice for VAST antennas. Its structural simplicity eases the assembly and alignment, while still providing enough flexibility for shaping the radiation pattern to achieve desirable features. Both VAST-12 [RD1] and mm-vast utilize this configuration and it can be recommended for future VAST antennas at higher frequencies. The project has been completed and all goals were successfully accomplished. 7. PUBLISHED PAPERS 1. S. Pivnenko, O. S. Kim, O. Breinbjerg, K. Branner, C. Markussen, R. Jørgensen, N. V. Larsen, and M. Paquay, DTU-ESA millimeter-wave validation standard antenna requirements and design, in Proc. 36 th Symp. Ant. Meas. Tech. Assoc. (AMTA), Tucson, Arizona, USA, 12-17 October 2014. 2. O. S. Kim, S. Pivnenko, O. Breinbjerg, R. Jørgensen, N. V. Larsen, K. Branner, P. Berring, C. Markussen, and M. Paquay, DTU-ESA millimeter-wave validation standard antenna detailed design, in Proc. 9 th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EuCAP 2015), Lisbon, Portugal, 12-17 April 2015. (Best Measurement Paper Award). 3. K. Branner, P. Berring, C. Markussen, O. S. Kim, R. Jørgensen, S. Pivnenko, and O. Breinbjerg, Structural design of the DTU-ESA millimeter wave validation standard antenna, in Proc. 20 th International Conference on Composite Materials (ICCM20), Copenhagen, Denmark, 19-24 July 2015. 4. O. S. Kim, S. Pivnenko, O. Breinbjerg, R. Jørgensen, N. Vesterdal, K. Branner, P. Berring, C. Markussen, and M. Paquay, DTU-ESA millimeter-wave validation standard antenna manufacturing and testing, in Proc. 37 th Antenna Meas. Techn. Assoc. (AMTA) Symp., Long Beach, CA, USA, 11-16 October, 2015. 5. S. Pivnenko, O. S. Kim, O. Breinbjerg, R. Jørgensen, N. Vesterdal, K. Branner, P. Berring, C. Markussen, and M. Paquay, DTU-ESA millimeter-wave validation standard antenna performance verification, in Proc. 36 th ESA Antenna Workshop on Antennas and RF Systems for Space Science, ESTEC, Noordwijk, The Netherlands, 06-09 October 2015.