| Literature DB >> 29958465 |
Peter W Moo1, David J DiFilippo2.
Abstract
The evolving role of modern navies has required increasingly higher levels of capability in the Radio Frequency (RF) shipboard systems that provide radar, communications, Electronic Attack (EA) and Electronic Support (ES) functions. The result has been a proliferation of topside antennas and associated hardware on naval vessels. The notion of MultiFunction RF (MFRF) systems has drawn considerable interest as an approach to reversing this trend. In a MFRF system, RF functions are consolidated within a shared set of electronics and antenna apertures that utilize Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) technology. This paper highlights a number of issues to be considered in the design and implementation of a naval MFRF system. Specifically, the key requirements of the RF functions of interest are first reviewed, and MFRF system design trade-offs resulting from costs and/or performance limitations in existing hardware technology are then discussed. It is found that limitations in hardware technology constrain the implementation of practical MFRF systems. MFRF system prototype development programs that have been conducted in other countries are described. MFRF resource allocation management is identified as an important future research topic.Entities:
Keywords: active electronically steered arrays; communications; electronic attack; electronic support; multifunction RF systems; naval systems; radar
Year: 2018 PMID: 29958465 PMCID: PMC6068503 DOI: 10.3390/s18072076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Conceptual diagram for MFRF system.
Comparison of transmit/receive requirements for naval RF functions.
| RF Function | Frequencies of Operation (GHz) * | Signal Bandwidth (MHz) | Dynamic Range (dB) | EIRP (dBW) | One-Way Beamwidth (deg) | Duty Cycle (%) | Signal Polarization |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radar–volume search | L-band or S-band | 2 | 90 | S-band: 90 L-band: 75 | 2 | 20 | Linear (V) |
| Radar–horizon search | S-band or X-band | 5 | 90 | 90 | 2 | 20 | Linear (V) |
| Radar–target illumination | X-band | negligible | N/A | 90 | N/A | ≤100 | Linear (V) |
| Electronic support | 0.5–40 | 1000 | 60 | N/A | 1 | N/A | All |
| Electronic attack | 0.5–40 | 1000 | N/A | 50 | N/A | ≤100 | All |
| Comms–X-band SATCOM | 7.3–7.8 (Rx) | 125 | 70 | 55 | 2 | ≤100 | Circular (Tx/Rx orthogonal) |
| Comms–Ku-band SATCOM | 10.7–12.8 (Rx) | 55 | 70 | 65 | 1 | ≤100 | Linear (Tx/Rx orthogonal) |
| Comms–Ka-band SATCOM | 19.2–21.2 (Rx) | 125 | 70 | 65 | 0.5 | ≤100 | Circular (Tx/Rx orthogonal) |
| Comms–TCDL | 14.4–14.8 (Rx) | 300 (Rx) | 70 | 45 | 2 | ≤100 | Circular |
* See more details on frequency band designations in Table A1.
Figure 2Block diagram of a single Tx and Rx channel in an idealized MFRF system.
Figure 3Dual polarized AESA element based on flared notches.
Figure 4Geometry of dual-band array.
Figure 5Wavelength-scaled array concept.
Representative specifications for HPAs [37,38].
| Device | Frequency (GHz) | Gain (dB) | Output Power (W) | PAE (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Analog Devices HMC930A | 0–40 | 13 | 0.25 | 10 |
| Analog Devices HMC1087F10 | 2–20 | 11 | 7 | 20 |
| Analog Devices HMC8205 | 0.3–6 | 26 | 40 | 38 |
| Qorvo TGA2590 | 6–12 | 35 | 30 | 25 |
| Qorvo TGA2813 | 3.1–3.6 | 22 | 100 | 55 |
| Qorvo TGM2635-CP | 8–11 | 26 | 100 | 35 |
| Qorvo TGA2595 | 27.5–31 | 23 | 9 | 24 |
Representative specifications for ADCs.
| Device | Number of Bits | Sampling Rate (GSPS) |
|---|---|---|
| Texas Instruments ADC12DJ3200 | 12 | 6.4 |
| Texas Instruments ADC32RF45 | 14 | 3.0 |
| Texas Instruments ADS54J60 | 16 | 1.0 |
| Texas Instruments ADS1675 | 24 | 0.004 |
Figure 6Subarray-level digitization and waveform generation.
Figure 7Simplified block diagram of M-AESA T/R module.
Specifications for M-AESA HPAs.
| Device | Frequency (GHz) | Gain (dB) | Output Power (W) | PAE (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HPA 1 | 4.5–18 | 19 | 2 (CW and pulsed) | 25–30% |
| HPA 2 | 5–12 | 20 | 4 (pulsed) | 25–30% |
IEEE frequency band designations.
| Band | Frequency Range |
|---|---|
| HF | 3–30 MHz |
| VHF | 30–300 MHz |
| UHF | 300–1000 MHz |
| L | 1–2 GHz |
| S | 2–4 GHz |
| C | 4–8 GHz |
| X | 8–12 GHz |
| Ku | 12–18 GHz |
| K | 18–27 GHz |
| Ka | 27–40 GHz |
| V | 40–75 GHz |
| W | 75–110 GHz |
| mm | 110–300 GHz |