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Phased array

About: Phased array is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 19428 publications have been published within this topic receiving 229231 citations. The topic is also known as: Phased Array Radar, PAR.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a directional modulation (DM) technique using a phased array to produce the modulation is presented, where the desired amplitude and phase of each symbol in a digital modulation scheme can be produced in a given direction with data rates determined by the switching speed of the phase shifters.
Abstract: A directional modulation (DM) technique using a phased array to produce the modulation is presented. By phase shifting each element correctly, the desired amplitude and phase of each symbol in a digital modulation scheme can be produced in a given direction with data rates determined by the switching speed of the phase shifters. Because this signal is direction-dependent, the technique offers security, as the signal can be purposely distorted in other directions. DM also enables an array to send independent data in multiple directions. When using an array with driven elements, the phase shifts can be determined from simple calculations rather than time-consuming simulations or measurements. Mathematical analysis and experimental results are presented.

383 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
19 May 2009
TL;DR: Multiple nonmechanical steering approaches are developing that will allow high-efficiency steering, excellent steering accuracy, and wide fields of view, similar to microwave radar phased arrays.
Abstract: Nonmechanical steering of optical beams will enable revolutionary systems with random access pointing, similar to microwave radar phased arrays. An early approach was birefringent liquid crystals writing a sawtooth phase profile in one polarization, using 2pi resets. Liquid crystals were used because of high birefringence. Fringing fields associated with voltage control required to implement the 2pi resets have limited the efficiency and steering angle of this beam steering approach. Because of steering angle limitations, this conventional liquid crystal steering approach is usually combined with a large angle step-steering approach. Volume holograms, birefringent prisms or sawtooth-profile birefringent phase gratings, and circular-type polarization gratings are the large angle step steering approaches that will be reviewed in this paper. Alternate steering approaches to the combined liquid crystal and step-steering approach exist. Microelectromechanical system mirrors, lenslet arrays, electrowetting, and a variable birefringent grating approach will be reviewed and compared against the conventional liquid crystal and step-steering approaches. Step-steering approaches can also be combined with these approaches. Multiple nonmechanical steering approaches are developing that will allow high-efficiency steering, excellent steering accuracy, and wide fields of view.

383 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The receiver and the on-chip antenna sections of a fully integrated 77-GHz four-element phased-array transceiver with on- chip antennas in silicon are presented.
Abstract: In this paper, we present the receiver and the on-chip antenna sections of a fully integrated 77-GHz four-element phased-array transceiver with on-chip antennas in silicon. The receiver section of the chip includes the complete down-conversion path comprising low-noise amplifier (LNA), frequency synthesizer, phase rotators, combining amplifiers, and on-chip dipole antennas. The signal combining is performed using a novel distributed active combining amplifier at an IF of 26 GHz. In the LO path, the output of the 52-GHz VCO is routed to different elements and can be phase shifted locally by the phase rotators. A silicon lens on the backside is used to reduce the loss due to the surface-wave power of the silicon substrate. Our measurements show a single-element LNA gain of 23 dB and a noise figure of 6.0dB. Each of the four receive paths has a gain of 37 dB and a noise figure of 8.0 dB. Each on-chip antenna has a gain of +2 dBi

383 citations

PatentDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an electronically phased array is used for controlling the focal point of an ultrasound beam and the ultrasound beam produced by the transducer elements can also be electronically steered.
Abstract: Ultrasound applicators able to both image a treatment site and administer ultrasound therapy include an array of transducer elements that can be focused. In several embodiments, an electronically phased array is used for controlling the focal point of an ultrasound beam. The ultrasound beam produced thereby can also be electronically steered. To reduce the quality factor or Q of the array when the array is used for imaging, an electronic switch is selectively closed, placing a resistance in parallel with each of the array elements. A flexible array is employed in several embodiments and is selectively bent or flexed to vary its radius of curvature and thus control the focal point and/or a direction of focus of the array. In another embodiment, each of the transducer elements comprising the array are individually mechanically pivotable to steer the ultrasonic beam produced by the transducer elements.

382 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An investigation into methods of modeling the radiation patterns of phased arrays that include the effects of radiative mutual coupling that accurately predicts the patterns of small and medium-size arrays of equally spaced elements is presented.
Abstract: Results from an investigation into methods of modeling the radiation patterns of phased arrays that include the effects of radiative mutual coupling are presented. The approaches are based on either the principle of pattern multiplication or the use of active element patterns. Theoretical derivations of the various active element pattern methods are presented. A new method, the hybrid active element pattern method, is introduced. It accurately predicts the patterns of small and medium-size arrays of equally spaced elements. Example arrays of center-fed dipoles are analyzed to verify and illustrate the representations. The results are general and can be applied to arrays of any type of element. The array patterns computed using both the classical pattern multiplication approach and the methods based on active element patterns are compared to those computed using accurate numerical codes based on the method of moments. >

376 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023373
20221,052
2021661
2020979
20191,266
20181,066