Category: Antennas

  • Fix the Future Now with Signal Simulators

    Sponsored by: NavCom
    Broadcast date: Thursday, March 19, 2015
    Moderator: Alan Cameron, Group Publisher, GPS World and Geospatial Solutions
    Speakers: Mark Wilson, Vice President, Sales, IFEN Inc.; Neal Fedora, Director, Engineering, Spirent Federal Systems Inc.; Julian Thomas, Founder, Racelogic; Darren Fisher, GNSS Market Manager, Spectracom
    Summary: More signals (e.g., GPS + Galileo + BDS) and special techniques that are well-adapted to mobile users (gentle antenna motion, use of cameras) allow one to get away with using less expensive antennas and yet still resolve the ambiguities needed for centimeter-accurate positioning.

  • Innovation: Evolutionary and revolutionary

    Innovation: Evolutionary and revolutionary

    The development and performance of the VeraPhase GNSS antenna

    By Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther

    INNOVATION INSIGHTS with Richard Langley
    INNOVATION INSIGHTS with Richard Langley

    ANTENNAS MATTER. Often overlooked by the casual user of a GNSS receiver, its antenna is a critical component of the system. In the case of consumer equipment such as handheld receivers, satellite navigation units and embedded devices inside smartphones, cameras and fitness monitors, the antenna might not even be visible. Nevertheless, a GNSS antenna must be carefully designed and constructed to maximize the transfer of the electromagnetic energy of the weak GNSS signals into an electrical current that can be fed to the receiver. Typically, this means that the antenna has to be designed for reception of the right-hand circularly polarized signals transmitted by the satellites on their particular frequency or frequencies. Some mass-produced embedded devices might use less efficient linearly polarized antennas coupled with a high-sensitivity receiver simply to shave a few cents off the cost of the units or to fit them into a limited volume. But the pros and cons of such antennas is a discussion for another time.

    A GNSS antenna must also be omnidirectional, being able to receive signals arriving from any azimuth and elevation angle with acceptable gain in the hemisphere above the antenna while rejecting those signals arriving from below the antenna that, in most cases, are undesirable reflections off the ground and which have a large left-hand circularly polarized component. Reflected signals from the ground or other surfaces combine with the line-of-sight signals from the satellites resulting in multipath interference, which contaminates pseudorange and carrier-phase measurements. The first line of defense against multipath is a multipath-resistant antenna. Signals from non-GNSS transmitters on nearby frequencies should also be rejected so as not to cause interference to the receiver or overload its front end.

    An important characteristic for precision GNSS applications is stable electrical phase centers—the locations in three-dimensional space to which GNSS measurements are referenced. Ideally, they would be perfectly fixed with respect to the antenna housing but, in reality, they will vary with the direction of the arriving GNSS signals. The variation, however, should be small, repeatable and calibrated with the calibration values available for data-processing software.

    It was about 40 years ago when the first GPS receiving antennas were developed and there have been many significant advances in antenna design and fabrication since then. You might be tempted to think that there is nothing new in the research and development of GNSS antennas. You would be wrong.

    In this month’s column, we take a look at a revolutionary design of a multi-frequency multi-GNSS antenna. Our authors discuss how the antenna evolved from a research project in academia to a commercial product about to enter the market. And, like a number of GNSS advances, it’s Canadian, eh?


    The use of GNSS technology has permeated many aspects of life today. With each advancement in the technology, new applications become possible as a result of lowered costs, smaller size, greater capabilities, and higher precision and accuracy. In particular, advances in antenna technology can provide greater capabilities to GNSS receiving equipment.

    In this article, we report on the research and commercial development of a high-performance GNSS antenna that can cover all of the GNSS frequency bands, that has high purity circularly polarized radiation, high phase-center stability and high radiation efficiency. Early numerical simulations showed that the turnstile/cup antenna was a good starting point for this research. For GNSS applications, this antenna type required much further research to extend the impedance bandwidth, to reduce cross-polarization and to reduce backward radiation. Many thousands of electromagnetic (EM) computer simulations and optimizations of various circular waveguide (or cup) structures led to a high-performance circularly polarized antenna.

    This antenna has excellent axial ratios in all theta and phi directions, low backward radiation, excellent phase-center stability and a compact design. Intermediate and final antenna designs were extensively tested in the anechoic chamber of the Schulich School of Engineering at the University of Calgary. Our company subsequently signed a license agreement with the University of Calgary’s University Technologies International Inc. and undertook further development of the antenna for commercial production. In this article, we present measured results for the resulting commercial antenna known as the Tallysman VeraPhase VP6000 antenna.

    Early Circularly Polarized Antennas. One of the first circularly polarized antenna designs (1948) can be attributed to Sichak and Milazzo (see Further Reading), who introduced the turnstile or crossed-dipole circular polarization (CP) antenna. The crossed dipoles must have current flows that are 90 degrees out of phase with each other. This phase difference can be achieved feeding the two dipoles 90 degrees out of phase by a phase-shifting signal splitter or by changing the impedance of each of the dipoles. The turnstile antenna produces highly pure CP only in the two directions normal to the two dipoles. If the dipoles are normal to each other and lie in the horizontal plane, they can radiate right-hand circular polarization (RHCP) upwards while left-hand circular polarization (LHCP) is radiated downwards. At the horizon, they will radiate only a linear horizontally polarized wave. For GNSS applications, this is a serious limitation. By 1973, it was known that a horizontal dipole placed near the open face of a “cup” or shorted waveguide would radiate a linear horizontally polarized wave sideways and a vertically polarized wave in its direction of alignment. These properties were utilized by Epis (see Further Reading) to build a broadband CP antenna.

    RESEARCH OBJECTIVE

    The university research project began with the objective of developing a high-precision GNSS antenna that would cover all of the frequency bands being considered by the various national GNSS satellite systems, whether launched or under development. It was decided at the onset of the research that computer simulation and optimization methods would be an important part of the research endeavor. Many antenna structures were evaluated using EM simulation tools. Various structures were constructed in software and then simulated. Early simulations indicated that the crossed dipole placed in a cup offered the best possibility for producing a high-performance GNSS antenna. To obtain the best RHCP with minimal LHCP, it became necessary to place the dipoles somewhat within the cup. Nevertheless, the impedance bandwidth of this configuration is insufficient to handle the upper and lower GNSS frequency bands at the same time.

    Extending the Antenna Bandwidth. The first structure that was used to handle both the L1 and L2 GNSS bands was a second set of dipoles connected in parallel to the first set. This arrangement provided an adequate match to frequencies close to the L1 band (1575 MHz) and the L2 band (1227 MHz) but it gave a rapidly changing reflection coefficient close to and below the L1 band. The two dipole sets were fed by an appropriate surface-mount 90-degree hybrid coupler designed for the required broad frequency band. The dipoles are fed by microstrip via “grounded legs” that are built on printed circuit board (PCB) technology. Good performance was achieved with this structure, but further improvements in the performance were actively sought. The two dipoles connected directly together cause a deep notch in the radiated signal at a frequency close to and below the L1 band. This was considered to be undesirable. It was decided to use a coupled resonant radiating structure tuned to L1 while the main dipoles would be tuned to L2 (see FIGURE 1).

    FIGURE 1. An extended bandwidth GNSS antenna. The lower and connected dipoles are tuned to L2 and the upper coupled shorted dipoles are tuned to L1. Current flow in the circular waveguide of the GNSS antenna is shown. Strong circumferential currents flow at the top of the waveguide. Red indicates large currents and the arrows show the directions of the current flow.
    FIGURE 1. An extended bandwidth GNSS antenna. The lower and connected dipoles are tuned to L2 and the upper coupled shorted dipoles are tuned to L1. Current flow in the circular waveguide of the GNSS antenna is shown. Strong circumferential currents flow at the top of the waveguide. Red indicates large currents and the arrows show the directions of the current flow. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    It is well known that resonant circuits can be broadbanded by choosing the correct coupling between them. This was tried in software and found to give an excellent wideband response.

    Circumferential Current Reduction. Through many EM simulations of the antenna structure, it was found that the LHCP could be suppressed substantially by making the aperture of the cup serrated. The EM wave simulation package allows the user to look at the currents in the structure. The results are shown in FIGURE 2.

    FIGURE 2. An antenna with a tapered base and a sawtooth aperture, which reduces circumferential current flow.
    FIGURE 2. An antenna with a tapered base and a sawtooth aperture, which reduces circumferential current flow. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    The strong circumferential currents (horizontal linear currents) produce radiation with linear horizontal polarization. It is important to reduce the size of these currents to minimize the linearly polarized radiation. The horizontal currents flowing in the top of the waveguide wall are effective in setting up horizontal polarization (HP) radiation in the direction of the horizon. For high-quality CP radiation, the horizontal radiation must be matched by vertical radiation (with a 90-degree phase shift), but the waveguide wall does not permit the required vertical current to flow to produce the vertical polarization (VP) radiation component. Clearly, a serrated waveguide aperture reduces the circumferential current flow. It was also found, through many simulations, that the unwanted polarization components can be reduced by tapering the cup towards the bottom end (see Figure 2).

    The sawtooth aperture antenna was chosen for further development. The fed dipoles are constructed using PCB technology and are given shapes that vary from the wire dipole case. The radiating resonator is also constructed using PCB material and is given a different shape from the pure straight-wire case. The software antenna was constructed and tested and found to have good performance with regard to low cross polarization in all directions, low backward radiation and high radiation efficiency.

    Further Waveguide Development. It was decided that another way of achieving vertical currents and horizontal currents that would be balanced in magnitude and have a 90-degree phase difference might be obtained by constructing the waveguide walls from a combination of thin conductors connected in a grid. The grid consists of a combination of vertical and horizontal conductors. Simulations with EM software showed the antenna is exceptionally efficient when it uses wires. The wire grid waveguide model of the GNSS antenna was simulated with many, many topological variations. Each variation was optimized for low back (nadir) radiation and high-purity RHCP in all directions. The results were unexpected. The best results were obtained when only one circumferential wire conductor is used and, furthermore, the vertical wire conductors are not connected to the circumferential conductor nor to the base of the antenna. This structure was simulated and optimized many times to derive the best possible topological configuration and component dimensions for a GNSS antenna. A PCB model of the GNSS antenna was then numerically constructed, simulated and optimized as a more practical construction technology for the antenna (see FIGURE 3).

    FIGURE 3. The conducting plate waveguide model of the GNSS antenna. The blue plates are conducting sheets and the yellow plates are the dielectric of the PCB.
    FIGURE 3. The conducting plate waveguide model of the GNSS antenna. The blue plates are conducting sheets and the yellow plates are the dielectric of the PCB. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    Note that the vertical strip conductors do not contact the conducting antenna base. Also note the serrated antenna base, as seen on the inside of the antenna. This design feature reduces excessive circumferential current flow in the base of the antenna. The antenna was tested in the University of Calgary anechoic chamber and in the high-quality Simon Fraser University anechoic chamber (a Satimo SG64), and it was found to have well-suppressed LHCP radiation, very low back radiation and very stable phase centers.

    The unique topology of this last antenna provides suppression of the expected downward LHCP radiation that most CP antennas exhibit. Radiation tends to “spill over” from the aperture and travel downwards. Downward radiation also emerges from the gap between the antenna base and the vertical conductors. These two sources of downward radiation are largely out of phase and tend to cancel each other out. This reduced downward LHCP radiation largely removes the need for a choke ring to block the reflections from the ground. This in turn means that the antenna can be compact and light.

    ANTENNA DEVELOPMENT

    Tallysman's VeraPhase 6000 high-precision GNSS antenna.
    FIGURE 4.  Tallysman’s VeraPhase 6000 high-precision GNSS antenna. (Photo: Tallysman)

    We undertook the project of converting the research prototype antenna described above into a commercially viable product. The research prototype antenna was modified to achieve optimized gain at lower GNSS frequencies, high mechanical robustness, adaptation for efficient manufacturability and for use of different materials. This antenna is known as the VeraPhase VP6000 antenna and is shown in FIGURE 4.

    The topology of the antenna follows that of the research prototype with dimensional adjustments so as to function correctly with the new materials and circuitry being used. It is light and compact with a diameter of 157 millimeters, a height of 137 millimeters and a weight of less than 670 grams.

    VeraPhase Measurements. Anechoic chamber tests were conducted at the Satimo facility in Kennesaw, Georgia, to determine the gain pattern, axial ratio, phase-center offset and variation in multipath-free conditions. Data were collected from 1160 MHz to 1610 MHz to cover all the GNSS frequencies.

    Antenna Gain, Efficiency and Roll-off. The chamber measurements show that the VP6000 exhibits a gain at zenith from 4.9 dBic at 1164 MHz to 7.05 dBic at 1610 MHz (see FIGURE 5). This high gain in combination with a wideband pre-filtered low-noise amplifier (LNA) with a noise figure of 2 dB provides for high carrier-to-noise density (C/N0) ratios for all GNSS frequencies. Furthermore, the VP6000 exhibits gain at the horizon from –4.4 dBic at 1164 MHz to –6.8 dBic at 1610 MHz (see Figure 5).

    FIGURE 5. RHCP gain of the VP6000 at zenith and the horizon at all GNSS frequencies.
    FIGURE 5. RHCP gain of the VP6000 at zenith and the horizon at all GNSS frequencies. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    Thus, the gain roll-off from zenith to horizon is between 10.1 dB and 13.6 dB, providing for good tracking at low elevation angles. The radiation efficiency of the VP6000 is 70 percent to 80 percent, corresponding to an inherent (“hidden”) loss of just 1 dB to 1.5 dB, which includes all feedline, matching circuit and 90-degree hybrid coupler losses. In contrast, spiral antennas usually exhibit an inherent efficiency loss of close to 4 dB in the lower GNSS frequencies. Thus, with a high performance LNA, high values of gain translate into higher C/N0 ratios.

    FIGURE 6. Normalized radiation patterns of the VP6000 on 60 phi cuts of the GPS frequency bands.
    FIGURE 6. Normalized radiation patterns of the VP6000 on 60 phi cuts of the GPS frequency bands. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    Radiation Patterns. The radiation pattern of an idealized antenna would have pure CP and constant high gain from zenith down to the horizon and then roll off rapidly for elevation angles below the horizon. In a realizable antenna, the gain should be close to constant over all azimuths for each elevation angle, with strong cross-polarization rejection over that frequency range. The phase-center offset should be stable with minimal phase-center variation. In the upper hemisphere, the greater the difference between the RHCP and LHCP antenna gain, the greater the resistance of the antenna to cross-polarized signals, usually associated with odd order reflections, and hence improved multipath signal rejection. The measured radiation patterns at GPS frequencies are shown in FIGURE 6.

    The radiation patterns are normalized to enable direct comparison of the patterns and show the RHCP and LHCP gains on 60 azimuth cuts three degrees apart. The radiation patterns show excellent suppression of the LHCP signals in the upper hemisphere. Similar results were found for all the other GNSS frequencies. The difference between the RHCP gain and the LHCP gain at zenith ensures an excellent discrimination ranging from 31 dB to 53 dB. Also, for the other elevation angles the LHCP signals usually stay 25 dB below the maximum RHCP gain and even 30 dB from 1200 MHz to 1580 MHz. The antenna shows a constant amplitude response to signals coming at a constant elevation angle regardless of the azimuth or bearing angle. This illustrates the excellent multipath mitigation characteristics of the VP6000 at every elevation angle and every GNSS frequency.

    Down-Up Ratio. When a direct satellite signal is reflected from the ground, the reflected signal polarization tends to convert, at least partially, from RHCP to LHCP for most soil types. If the terrain underneath the antenna is homogeneous, then the ground surface acts as a mirror, thus providing a reflected signal coming from below the horizon at the negative of the angle of the direct signal above the horizon. Depending on the angle, in part, the field of the inverted and reflected wave adds to the direct wave, which is undesirable. This is the reason, when characterizing the multipath reflection capabilities of an antenna, it is common to use a down-up ratio between antenna gain for LHCP signals for a given angle below the horizon as that for the RHCP signals at the same angle above the horizon. The down-up ratios at L2 and L1 are –25 dB at zenith and they stay under –20 dB for the upper hemisphere, which is usually not the case for standard GNSS antennas. Similar results have been measured over the whole range of GNSS frequencies and confirm the excellent multipath rejection capabilities of the VP6000.

    Axial Ratio. The axial ratio (AR) is a measure of an antenna’s ability to reject the cross-polarized portion of a composite signal with both RHCP and LHCP components. Physically, this is an elliptical wave, typically being the combination of the direct and reflected signals from the satellite. The lower the ratio of the major axis to the minor axis of the polarization ellipse, the better the multipath rejection capability of the antenna. To meet operational standards for a multi-band antenna, the axial ratio should meet these requirements at the following elevation angles:

    • 45–90 degrees: not to exceed 3 dB
    • 15–45 degrees: not to exceed 6 dB
    • 5–15 degrees: not to exceed 8 dB.

    The worst AR ratio values of the VP6000 at different elevation angles have been plotted in FIGURE 7. The graph shows an AR of less than 0.5 dB at zenith for all GNSS frequencies, and the ARs stay low at all elevation angles down to the horizon. A maximum value of 1.5 dB has been measured for elevation angles above 30 degrees, increasing to just 2 dB at the horizon (0 degree elevation angle) for the worst case azimuth. This performance contributes to the excellent multipath rejection capability of the VP6000.

    FIGURE 7. Worst case of axial ratios of the VP6000 at different elevation angles: 90 degrees (zenith), 30 degrees, 10 degrees and 0 degrees (horizon).
    FIGURE 7. Worst case of axial ratios of the VP6000 at different elevation angles: 90 degrees (zenith), 30 degrees, 10 degrees and 0 degrees (horizon). (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    Phase-Center Offset / Phase-Center Variation and Absolute Calibration. For use as a measurement instrument, the antenna must have a precise origin, equivalent to a tape measure zero mark. Thus, it is important that the phase of the waves received by the antenna “appear” to arrive at a single point that is independent of the elevation angle and azimuth of the incoming wave. This point is known as the phase center of the antenna, which should remain fixed for all operational frequencies and for all azimuth and elevation angles of incoming waves, otherwise dimensional measurement is compromised.

    In an ideal GNSS antenna, the phase center would correspond exactly with the physical center of the antenna housing. In practice, it varies with the changing azimuth and elevation angle of the satellite signal. The difference between the electrical phase center and an accessible location amenable to measurement on the antenna is described by the phase-center offset (PCO) and phase-center variation (PCV) parameters and their values are determined through antenna calibration.

    These corrections are only effective if the predicted phase-center movement is repeatable for all antennas of the same model. The PCO is calculated for each measured elevation angle by considering the signal phase output for all phi (azimuth) values at a specific theta (elevation) angle, and mathematical removal of the normal phase-windup effect in this type of antenna.

    A Fourier analysis is then conducted on this resulting data. The fundamental output gives the variation of the horizontal position of the antenna as it is rotated about the z axis. The apparent position normally varies somewhat as the antenna is viewed from various theta angles. The PCV measurement of the VP6000 showed the variation of the phase center in the horizontal plane for elevation angles of 18 to 90 degrees in 3-degree steps at different frequencies. The variations for the different GNSS signals are typically less than 1 millimeter from the x and y axes. Repeatability of the PCO and PCV over several VP6000 antennas has been measured and is also less than 0.5 millimeters.

    Five copies of the antenna were sent for absolute calibration by Geo++ in Germany where the VP6000 has been calibrated at GPS L1/L2 and GLONASS G1/G2 signal frequencies. The PCV for the upper hemisphere of the VP6000 at L1 and L2 are plotted in FIGURES 8 and 9. These results confirm a ±1-millimeter PCV at L1 and a ±1-millimeter PCV at L2. Also the standard deviation of the PCV over the five measured antennas stayed under 0.2 millimeters, which represents excellent repeatability. The same results have been observed at G1 and G2.

    FIGURE 8. Phase-center variation at L1. The same results have been observed at G1.
    FIGURE 8. Phase-center variation at L1. The same results have been observed at G1. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)
    FIGURE 9. Phase-center variation at L2. The same results have been observed at G2.
    FIGURE 9. Phase-center variation at L2. The same results have been observed at G2. (Image: Julien Hautcoeur, Ronald H. Johnston and Gyles Panther)

    LNA and Optional Circuitry. The best achievable C/N0 for signals with marginal power flux density is limited by the efficiency of each antenna element, the gain and the overall receiver noise figure. This can be quantified by a ratio parameter, usually referred to as G/T, where G is the antenna gain (in a specific direction) and T is the effective noise temperature of the receiver — usually dominated by the noise figure of the input LNA.

    In the VP6000 LNA, the received signal is split into the lower GNSS frequencies (from 1160 MHz to 1300 MHz) and the higher GNSS frequencies (from 1525 MHz to 1610 MHz) in a diplexer connected directly to the antenna terminals and then pre-filtered in each band. This is where the high gain and high efficiency of the basic VP6000 antenna element provides a starting advantage, since the losses introduced by the diplexer and filters are offset by the higher antenna gain, thereby preserving the all-important G/T ratio.

    That being said, GNSS receivers must accommodate a crowded RF spectrum, and there are a number of high-level, potentially interfering signals that can saturate and desensitize GNSS receivers. These include, for example, the Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) band signals and mobile phone signals, particularly Long-Term Evolution (LTE) signals in the newer 700-MHz band, which are a hazard because of the potential for harmonic generation in the GNSS LNA. Other potentially interfering signals include Globalstar (1610 MHz to 1618.25 MHz) and Iridium (1616 MHz to 1626 MHz) because they are high-power uplink signals and particularly close in frequency to GLONASS signals. The VP6000 LNA is a compromise between ultimate sensitivity and ultimate interference rejection.

    A first defensive measure in the VP6000 LNA is the addition of multi-element bandpass filters at the antenna element terminals (ahead of the LNA). These have a typical insertion loss of 1 dB because of their tight passband and steep rejection characteristics. Sadly, there is no free lunch, and the LNA noise figure is increased approximately by the additional filter-insertion loss.

    The second defensive measure in the VP6000 LNA is the use of an LNA with high linearity, which is achieved without any significant increase in LNA power consumption, by use of LNA chips that employ negative feedback to provide well-controlled impedance and gain over a very wide bandwidth with considerably improved linearity.

    Bear in mind that while an installation might initially be determined to have an uncluttered environment, subsequent introduction of new services may change this, so interference defenses are prudent even in a clean environment. A potentially undesirable side effect of tight pre-filters is the possible dispersion that can result from variable group delay across the filter passband. Thus it is important to include these criteria in selection of suitable pre-filters. The filters in the VP6000 LNA give rise to a maximum variation of 2 nanoseconds in group delay over the lower GNSS frequencies (from 1160 MHz to 1300 MHz) and 2.5 nanoseconds over the higher GNSS frequencies (from 1525 MHz to 1610 MHz). Also, the difference in group delay between the lower GNSS frequencies and the higher GNSS frequencies stays less than 5 nanoseconds.

    The VP6000 series antennas are available with either a 35-dB gain LNA or with a 50-dB gain LNA for installations with long coaxial cable runs. The VP6000 is internally regulated to allow a supply voltage from 2.7 volts to 26 volts.

    An interesting feature of the VP6000 is that the physical housing includes a secondary shielded PCB that is available for integration of custom circuits or systems within the antenna. This allows the addition of L1/L2 receivers for real-time kinematic operation, for example. A pre-filtered, 15-dB pre-amp version of the LNA is also available to provide RF input for OEM systems embedded within the antenna housing.

    The VP6000 is available with a variety of connectors and with a conical radome to shed ice and snow and to deter birds for reference antenna installations. A precise and robust monument mount is also available.

    CONCLUSION

    In this article, we have described a research program that developed a series of CP antennas, which have increasingly improved performances directed towards GNSS applications. The resulting research CP prototype antenna has a very low cross-polarization, very low back radiation, very high phase-center stability and a compact structure. We have converted the research prototype into a commercially viable GNSS antenna with the superior electrical properties of the research prototype while building into the antenna the required physical ruggedness and manufacturability required of the commercial antenna.

    With emerging satellite systems on the horizon, a new high-performance antenna is needed to encompass all GNSS signals. Our new antenna has sufficient bandwidth to receive all existing and currently planned GNSS signals, while providing high performance standards. Testing of the antenna has shown that the new innovative design (crossed driven dipoles associated with a coupled radiating element combined with a high performance LNA) has good performance, especially with respect to axial ratios, cross-polarization discrimination and phase-center variation.

    These improvements make the antenna an ideal candidate for low-elevation-angle tracking. The reception of the proposed new signals along with additional low-elevation-angle satellites will bring new levels of positional accuracy to reference networks, and benefits to the end users of the data. With its compact size and light weight, the antenna has been designed and built for durability and will stand the test of time, even in the harshest of environments.

    ACKNOWLEDGMENT

    This article is based, in part, on the paper “The Evolutionary Development and Performance of the VeraPhase GNSS Antenna” presented at the 2016 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation held in Monterey, California, Jan. 25–28, 2016.


    JULIEN HAUTCOEUR graduated in electronics systems engineering and industrial informatics from the Ecole Polytechnique de l’Université de Nantes, Nantes, France, and received a master’s degree in radio communications systems and electronics in 2007 and a Ph.D. degree in signal processing and telecommunications from the Institute of Electronics and Telecommunications of Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France, in 2011. From 2011 to 2013, he obtained postdoctoral training with the Université du Québec en Outaouais, Gatineau, Canada. In 2014, he joined Tallysman Wireless Inc. in Ottawa, Canada, as an antenna and RF engineer.

    RONALD H. JOHNSTON received a B.Sc. from the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada, in 1961 and the Ph.D. and D.I.C. from the University of London and Imperial College (both in London, U.K.) respectively, in 1967. In 1970, he joined the University of Calgary, Canada, and has held assistant to full professor positions and was the head of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering from 1997 to 2002. He became professor emeritus in the Schulich School of Engineering in 2006.

    GYLES PANTHER is a technology industry veteran with more than 40 years of engineering, corporate management and entrepreneurial experience. He spent the first 20 years of his career in the semiconductor industry, first with Plessey in the U.K., then in Canada with Microsystems International. Panther co-founded and acted as engineering vice president and chief technology officer (CTO) for Siltronics, followed by SilCom and SiGem. In 2002, he founded startup Wi-Sys Communications, acting as president and CTO. He is now president and CTO of Tallysman Wireless, his fourth successful start-up, which was founded in 2009. Panther holds an honours degree in applied physics from City University, London, U.K.


    FURTHER READING

    • Authors’ Conference Paper

    “The Evolutionary Development and Performance of the VeraPhase GNSS Antenna” by J. Hautcoeur, R.H. Johnston and G. Panther in Proceedings of ITM 2016, the 2016 International Technical Meeting of The Institute of Navigation, Monterey, California, Jan. 25–28, 2016, pp. 771–783.

    • Early Circularly Polarized Antenna Designs

    Broadband Cup-Dipole and Cup-Turnstile Antennas” by J.J. Epis, United States Patent No. 3,740,754, June 19, 1973.

    “Antennas for Circular Polarizations” by W. Sichak and S. Milazzo in Proceedings of the Institute of Radio Engineers, Vol. 36, No. 8, Aug. 1948, pp. 997–1001, doi: 10.1109/JRPROC.1948.231947.

    • Antenna Modeling

    Electromagnetic Modeling of Composite Metallic and Dielectric Structures by B.M. Kolundzija and A.R. Djordjevi, published by Artech House, Norwood, Massachusetts, 2002.

    WIPL-D: Electromagnetic Modeling of Composite Metallic and Dielectric Structures – Software and User’s Manual by B.M. Kolundzija, J.S. Ognjanovic and T.K. Sarkar, published by Artech House, Norwood, Massachusetts, 2000.

    • Measurement of Phase Center and Other Antenna Characteristics

    “Determining the Three-Dimensional Phase Center of an Antenna” by Y. Chen and R.G.Vaughan in Proceedings of the XXXIth General Assembly and Scientific Symposium of the International Union of Radio Science (URSI), Beijing, Aug. 16–23, 2014, doi: 10.1109/URSIGASS.2014.6929023.

    Calibrating Antenna Phase Centers: A Tale of Two Methods” by B. Akrour, R. Santerre and A. Geiger in GPS World, Vol. 16, No. 2, Feb. 2005, pp. 49–53.

    Characterizing the Behavior of Geodetic GPS Antennas” by B.R. Schupler and T.A. Clark in GPS World, Vol. 12, No. 2, Feb. 2001, pp. 48–55.

    • The Basics of GNSS Antennas

    GNSS Antennas: An Introduction to Bandwidth, Gain Pattern, Polarization, and All That” by G.J.K. Moernaut and D. Orban in GPS World, Vol. 20, No. 2, Feb. 2009, pp. 42–48.

    A Primer on GPS Antennas” by R.B. Langley in GPS World, Vol. 9, No. 7, July 1998, pp. 73–77.

  • Harxon releases new GNSS + L-band antenna

    Harxon releases new GNSS + L-band antenna

    Harxon, a high-precision GNSS antenna manufacturer in China, has released a new GNSS + L-band antenna.

    The GPS1000 receives GPS L1/L2/L5, BDS B1/B2/B3, GLONASS L1/L2, Galileo E1/E2/E5a/E5b and L-band frequencies, which can be used in land survey, marine survey, channel survey, seismic monitoring, bridge survey, container operation and agriculture applications. Customers can use the same antenna for GPS only or dual-constellation applications.

    It has high gain and wide beam width to ensure the signal receiving performance of satellite at low elevation angle. The phase center of this antenna remains constant as the azimuth and elevation angle of the satellites change. Signal reception is unaffected by the rotation of the antenna or satellite elevation, so placement and installation of the antenna can be completed with ease.

    The GPS1000 is housed in a IP67 waterproof enclosure for permanent installation, and maintains good performance in a variety of harsh environments. Plus, it can be customized by Harxon for the best solution for customers. Orders can be placed at www.harxon.com.

    The new Harxon GPS1000 antenna.
    The new Harxon GPS1000 antenna.
  • Tallysman expands geodetic antenna line

    Tallysman, a manufacturer of high-performance GNSS antennas, has introduced two additions to its VeraPhase line of precision antennas.

    TW6000-tallysmanThe VP6300 is a triple-band antenna for reception of GPS L1/L2/L5, GLONASS G1/G2/G3, BeiDou B1/B2 and Galileo E1/E5a+b (1165MHz to 1254MHz + 1560MHz to 1610MHz).

    The VP6200 is a dual-band antenna for reception of GPS L1/L2, GLONASS G1/G2, BeiDou B1/B2, Galileo E1 and the L-Band correction services (1195MHz to 1254MHz + 1525MHz to 1610MHz).

    Both antennas have been calibrated by the U.S. National Geodetic Survey (NGS) and are designed for high-precision applications such as real-time kinematic (RTK), precise point positioning (PPP) and other applications where precision matters.

    For OEM manufacturers, the antennas feature an available, uncommitted printed circuit board (PCB) for integration of custom electronics such as precision GNSS receivers.

    According to Tallysman, these antennas fill out the VP6x00 product family with precision at a cost-effective price point. Both of these new products feature the same patented VeraPhase technology as in the VP6000 all-band reference antenna.

    VeraPhase technology is proven to have the lowest axial ratios from horizon to horizon across all frequencies, very tight Phase Centre Variations (PCV), superior gain and extremely high efficiency.

    The new antennas feature a highly linear LNA with robust pre-filtering to minimize desensing from high-level out-of-band signals such 700MHz LTE and other cellular band signals.

     

  • Cobham displays antenna system at AUVSI’s Xponential 2016

    Cobham‘s Sunita Shah discusses the company’s AESA (actively electronically scanned array) antenna system at the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International’s Xponential show, held May 2-5 in new Orleans.

  • Topcon announces new geodetic antenna

    Topcon Positioning Group announces the release of a new full wave geodetic antenna — the G5-A1.  The portable antenna is designed to provide improved multipath mitigation for use with a mobile base station site or network reference station.

    “When paired with the Topcon NET-G5 receiver, the zero-centered geodetic antenna provides a powerful and cost-effective entry-level solution” said Charles Rihner, vice president of the Topcon GeoPositioning Solutions Group.

    The G5-A1 is optimized for geospatial industries and designed to track all globally available and developing satellite constellations. The antenna weighs approximately 1 pound (.5 kg) and is 7 inches (17.9 cm) wide.

    “With its portability and geodetic level performance, the new G5-A1 antenna provides an excellent choice for mobile base system and economy reference station system,” Rihner said.

  • Taoglas opens IoT design center in San Diego

    Antenna maker Taoglas USA has opened a facility in San Diego for its North American customers.

    In the midst of explosive wireless device growth in the Internet of Things (IoT) market,  the company has quadrupled the original size of its local facility — now more than 16,000 square feet.

    The new Taoglas IoTx Center offers a fully equipped design and test location that supports companies seeking a competitive, time-to-market advantage for machine to machine (M2M) and IoT applications.

    According to Taoglas, the location offers support for customers at all stages of their product design cycle — from concept to certification readiness.

    “This kind of open-door policy is rare in the antenna and wireless device testing business,” explained Dermot O’Shea, president of Taoglas USA. “We have expanded our engineering team, added more test equipment, and now have two chambers here to increase design and test capacity. As well as being able to prototype antennas and PCBs, we can test the antenna and devices in operation on site to ensure they work reliably in the real world.

    “We have also now added an antenna and cable assembly operation so we can quickly produce antenna and custom RF cable orders here in San Diego,” O’Shea said. “Quite often customers require products in a few days rather than weeks and we have now facilitated that demand with this new move.”

    Taoglas has dedicated the facility to support it’s North American customer base. San Diego was chosen due to the strong, experienced talent pool in the areas of antenna and hardware design.

    In addition to the site’s two CTIA calibrated anechoic chambers, the campus includes a custom antenna and RF cable assembly facility, expanded development and office space as well as a well-equipped, sound-proofed customer lounge area with workspaces and other features to accommodate customers while testing and product development are in process. Taoglas will increase its San Diego staff by 50 percent this year and expects to double that in the next three years.

    “Our enlarged San Diego facility reflects our growth rate last year of almost 100%,” explained O’Shea. “We’re bullish about the potential in the Internet of Things (IoT) market, which is key for us. The vendors in this space who we support not only need the off-the-shelf or custom antennas we offer, they need design services and assistance.  All our services have clear explanations and fast deliverables, all available on our website.  You just select your service code, or call our sales, and we will book you in for work on your device immediately. No waiting around or complicated contractual discussions.

    “First time certification is also critical so wireless OEMs can avoid the hardware failures that are so common in the IoT sector. Having two anechoic testing chambers means we can work on multiple devices in real time, helping customers get successful products into the market first time and on time.”

    According to International Data Corp., the IoT market will grow to $1.7 trillion by 2020, with a compound annual growth rate of 16.9 percent. “We’re currently shipping millions of antennas per month into the IoT market,” O’Shea said. “Our larger campus here will be well utilized.” Taoglas also has offices in Minneapolis, Ireland, Taiwan and Germany.

    According to Rory Moore, a prominent San Diego technology company founder and investor, in addition to being CEO of Southern California startup incubator EvoNexus, “The enlarged Taoglas campus is another sign of success in the local innovation economy.  San Diego already has a strong base in IoT growth and this large new Taoglas IoTx facility cements San Diego as an IoT hub in a very hot sector. I also like the fact that Taoglas has been collaborating with SDSU (San Diego State University), building useful bridges between the business and educational communities.”

  • Innovation: Null-steering antennas

    Innovation: Null-steering antennas

    Assessing the performance of multi-antenna interference-rejection techniques

    Several factors affect the levels of signal rejection using antenna arrays. Our authors describe experiments to assess the bounds the factors impose on its signal rejection capability.

    By James T. Curran, Michele Bavaro and Joaquim Fortuny-Guasch

    INNOVATION INSIGHTS with Richard Langley
    INNOVATION INSIGHTS with Richard Langley

    IT’S ALL PHYSICS. How things work, that is. Well, maybe a little chemistry too in some cases. But I might be a little biased in my opinion given that I’m an applied physicist by training. Radio? Satellite navigation? Yes, the principles of their operation are all governed by physics. Many physicists of my generation started out as radio tinkerers. I’ve recounted in this column before that I built my first radio (from a kit) when I was 14 (not counting the crystal radio that my father helped me to put together when I was 9). Built a few more during high school, got into radio astronomy as an undergraduate, and did a Ph.D. in the application of very long baseline (radio) interferometry to geodesy.

    The great American physicist Richard Feynman was also a radio tinkerer in his youth. He recounts in one of his autobiographical books how he used to fix radios. And because he would approach the task of repairing each non-functioning set by first contemplating why it wasn’t working, he got the reputation of fixing radios by thinking!

    One of Feynman’s special abilities was in explaining how things worked. In fact, he has been called “The Great Explainer.” He authored what is arguably the best physics textbooks ever produced: The Feynman Lectures on Physics. The three-volume set, developed from his Caltech lectures to undergraduates between 1961 and 1964, covers mechanics, radiation, electromagnetism, matter and quantum mechanics. Many students and practicing physicists have learned or re-learned aspects of physics from the famous “red books.” Many more will now thanks to Caltech, which recently put the Lectures on line for anyone to read (feynmanlectures.caltech.edu).

    In this month’s column, we are going to learn about the development of a microprocessor-controlled multi-element GNSS antenna array for interference rejection. While there are many textbooks that describe how multi-element antennas work, Feynman explains their operation in his Lectures from first principles — from the principles of physics.

    The phenomenon governing the behavior of antennas with multiple elements is called interference. If we combine two electromagnetic waves, they will interfere with each other with a result that depends on the phase difference of the waves. The waves might reinforce each other leading to a larger net amplitude, called constructive interference, or partially or fully null each other out, called destructive interference. When we apply this concept to the signals received by a pair of antennas making up an array, we find that the array has directionality and we can have a null in the reception pattern in the directions parallel to the antenna baseline and will be insensitive to signals arriving from those directions. And as Feynman describes in his Lectures, by adding more antennas to the array and “some cleverness in spacing and phasing our antennas,” we can have a fairly narrow pattern null in a chosen direction. In the case of a GNSS antenna array, that direction might be that of a jamming signal and so we can null out the jammer and maintain a positioning capability.

    Several factors affect the levels of signal rejection using antenna arrays. In this article, our authors describe these factors and the experiments they conducted with their microprocessor-controlled array to assess the bounds the factors impose on its signal rejection capability.


    Directional antennas offer a powerful means of achieving signal selectivity when various signal sources observed by a receiver are separated spatially. In the context of GNSS, which must accommodate a mobile receiver observing many moving transmitters, adaptive antennas — or controlled radiation pattern antennas—are an attractive option. The benefits of antenna arrays have been demonstrated both for signal rejection, such as interference and multipath mitigation or anti-spoofing; and for the purposes of gain enhancement, angle-of-arrival, or attitude estimation.

    A number of different factors can influence the achievable levels of signal rejection using antenna arrays. These factors include: the gain and phase stability of the analog radio-frequency (RF) and intermediate-frequency (IF) stages, the linearity of the active analog stages, and the fidelity of the signal-combining stages. Seeking to identify the bound imposed by each of these limiting factors, we have carefully examined the signal rejection capability of an antenna array in our work. The study considers a circular antenna array, consisting of seven passive dual-polarized (right-hand circularly polarized [RHCP] and left-hand circularly polarized [LHCP]) L1-L2 elements. Although signal rejection can be performed both in the analog and in the digital domain, this article focuses only on the analog combination of signals at RF, using a bank of controllable phase shifters and attenuators. We conducted broadcast experiments in a large-diameter anechoic chamber, housing a rotatable central pillar upon which the array is mounted, and two broadcast antennas mounted on movable sleds.

    The results presented here include a precise three-dimensional phase and gain calibration of the antenna array using a network analyzer to explore the properties of antenna elements when placed in close proximity on a common ground plane. Further results include an investigation of the nulling depth achievable by the array via the synchronous broadcast of two GNSS-like code-division multiple access (CDMA) signals from different broadcast antennas. We then extrapolated these results to infer the relative degradation in nulling capability when the receiver’s estimate of the amplitude and phase of the signal to be rejected is poor. Finally, a comparison of analog and digital element combining is explored, with emphasis on the rejection of strong jamming signals.

    This experiment sought to illustrate and quantify the unique benefits and limitations of each technique. In particular, we note that analog combining enjoys high linearity and can accommodate high interference power, but is typically restricted to the use of coarse phase and gain coefficients when combining elements. In contrast, digital combining can offer notably higher gain and phase resolution, but is limited by the dynamic range of the digitizer.

    Antenna Characterization

    The work reported in this article has focused on the use of a seven-element circular antenna array, consisting of dual-polarized (RHCP and LHCP), dual-frequency (L1 and L2) elements. The antenna elements are mounted on a single circular aluminum ground plane 2 millimeters thick and 50 centimeters in diameter, and placed in a hexagonal arrangement at a spacing of 12.5 centimeters, as depicted in FIGURE 1. Because the antennas are passive, and can be used both for transmission and for reception, characterization tests were performed in broadcast mode while the typical receive-mode operation of the array is performed using an in-line low-noise amplifier (LNA) after the antenna.

    The experiments described here were conducted in an anechoic chamber, hemispherical in shape with a diameter of 20 meters, as depicted in FIGURE 2. The array was mounted on a surveyor’s tripod and placed at a known position on a rotatable pillar at the center of the chamber. The chamber contains two sleds, Sled A and B, which can be precisely positioned along an arc through the zenith at positions between ±115° either side of the vertical. These antennas include 1.0 to 6.0 GHz vertically and horizontally polarized standard-gain horn antennas.

    Source: GPS world staff
    FIGURE 2. Antenna array and digitizing front end in the anechoic chamber during broadcast tests.

    Because the characteristics of the antenna array itself are central to the ultimate performance of beamforming or null-steering techniques, a thorough characterization of the gain and phase properties of each of the seven antenna elements was conducted.

    To do so, a network analyzer was used to observe the gain and phase response of the antenna under test from a range of observation angles. The array was operated in transmit mode, broadcasting a signal sourced from Port A of the network analyzer, which was received by an antenna mounted on one of the movable sleds, and fed to Port B of the network analyzer.

    The network analyzer was configured to broadcast a series of 201 equally spaced tones spanning 20 MHz centered at 1575.42 MHz at a power of -7 dBm from the antenna array.

    A mechanical RF multiplexer was used to implement a time-division multiplexing of this broadcast measurement signal across each of the seven elements, such that the series of tones were transmitted once per antenna element. By performing the scan for each antenna element, for a range of positions of Sled A, and repeating this for different rotations of the central pillar, a precise frequency response could be calculated for a large set of points across the entire upper hemisphere of the antenna. The scan was computed on signals received by both the horizontal and vertical elements on Sled A, such that both the RHCP and LHCP response could be computed. The vertical cuts of this gain pattern were measured with resolution of 2°, while the horizontal cuts were measured with a resolution of 5°.

    The average gain response, calculated across the 20-MHz band, for each of the seven elements is depicted in FIGURE 3. The elevation cut of the peripheral element is taken such that the -90° direction of the cut aligns with a radial line pointing away from the center of the array. The azimuth cuts are oriented such that the 0° direction aligns with a radial line extending from the center of element number 1 to the center of element number 2.

    Source: GPS world staff
    FIGURE 3. The measured gain pattern of the central element, number 1, (blue lines) and one of the peripheral elements, number 2, (red lines). The gain of the peripheral element is deflected inwards toward the center of the array because of the asymmetry of its positioning on the ground plane. (a) Elevation angle cut at an azimuth of 0°; (b) Azimuth cut at an elevation angle of 40°.

    It is interesting to note that the gain pattern exhibited by each element is sensitive to its position on the ground plane and its position relative to other elements. Because of the rotational symmetry of the array, the gain patterns of all of the peripheral elements are similar, differing only in orientation, each one exhibiting a deflection of the maximum gain towards the center of the array. The central element is circularly symmetric with a single lobe in the direction of the zenith, while gain of the peripheral elements is deflected inwards, having lower gain away from the center of the array and an increased gain for high elevation angles from the center of the array. The difference in gain pattern across elements is stark and should, perhaps, influence the choice of elements to be used when forming a beam or null in a given direction. One or other of the signals should be scaled to compensate for this gain difference.

    Measuring Signal Rejection

    Before exploring factors that influence signal rejection, this section details the figure of merit, which might quantify the achievable performance of the array. We examined the nulling performance of the system in terms of its rejection capability: assessed as the relative received power of the signal of interest, b(t), that is to be preserved, and an unwanted signal, a(t), which is to be rejected, before and after the nulling combination. If sj(tdenotes some signal as received at antenna j, then the combination of signals received at antennas j and k can be denoted by:

    Source: GPS world staff   (1)

    where κ and ϕ, respectively, represent a unitless scaling gain and a phase rotation in radians applied in the combination. When intending to form a beam in the direction of the source of s(t), then this phase might be chosen to bring sk(tinto alignment with sj(t), and the gain may be determined as a function of the signal-to-noise ratio at each antenna, or simply set to unity. In contrast, when it is intended to reject s(t) then eiϕ must be chosen to place sk(t) in antiphase with sj(t) and must be chosen to scale the amplitude of sk(t) to be exactly equal to that of sj(t).

    In this case, we consider the problem of placing a null in the direction of signal a(t) while preserving signal b(t). If the relative received power of a(t) and b(t) at antenna j is taken as a reference, then the rejection of a(t) with respect to b(t), denoted Ra,, can be assessed by examining the change in relative power after the null has been placed:

    Source: GPS world staff    (2)

    where denotes the expected value of x. Note also that this convention implies that a value of Ra,greater than unity corresponds to signal rejection.

    Analog Null Steering at RF

    This section explores some of the receiver-side factors that can limit nulling performance. The performance of an analog RF-combining circuit is examined, wherein the combining function was implemented using controllable analog attenuators and phase shifters.

    The received signal from each of two antennas, j and k, was fed to a custom RF circuit board hosting a controllable phase shifter and attenuator chips. The output of two of these boards was then combined using a passive power combiner, filtered by an analog RF filter, limiting the band to the range 1530–1620 MHz, and finally fed to a power detector, which produced a signal voltage that was proportional to the total observed power. The experimental setup is depicted in FIGURE 4. The attenuators and phase shifters were controlled digitally via a microcontroller board, which also sampled the output of the power detector.

    Source: GPS world staff
    FIGURE 5. A simplified example of the steering constellation of an analog gain and phase shifter, having 3-bit phase and gain control and a gain step-size of ~1 dB.

    The attenuators accept a 6-bit control, providing a dynamic range of 30 dB in steps of approximately 0.5 dB, while the phase shifters accept a 4-bit control traversing the unit circle in steps of 22.5°.

    A simplified example of the finite resolution achievable using such a phase and gain shifter is shown by the steering constellation depicted in FIGURE 5, taking the case of 3-bit gain and phase control and assuming a gain step size of 1 dB. Note that the gain is displayed on a logarithmic scale. Each of the circular markers represents a possible gain and phase coefficient for a received signal, which would be used to steer one signal, a, to be approximately equal in amplitude and in anti-phase with the second signal, b.

    Source: GPS world staff
    FIGURE 4. A custom-built programmable analog phase shifter and attenuator pair used for the analog null-steering configuration.

    The residual misalignment between the signals stems from the finite constellation of steering points and results in a reduced nulling performance, whereby a portion of the interference signal remains. The relative magnitude of the remaining interference signal is maximum when the true relative phase and amplitude of the signals a and b lies equidistant from the four nearest steering vectors. This is depicted in Figure 5, where the cross marker lies equidistant from the four vertices located at the corners of {0°,45°} and {7,8} dB. Note that as the gain is depicted on a logarithmic scale, the relative error is equal for points centered in any of the quadrants.

    To investigate the performance of the system, we broadcast a continuous-wave interference toward the array, while the signal from one antenna was manipulated by all possible gain and phase combinations, keeping the signal from the second antenna at a fixed zero phase shift and –15 dB attenuation. For each of the 1,024 possible gain and phase combinations, the power detector was sampled and logged. A trace of the measured signal rejection as a function of the gain and phase is depicted in FIGURE 6, wherein a sharp peak is observable at approximately {–15 dB, 210°}, corresponding to the point at which the unwanted signal is most rejected — in this particular case, to a level of approximately 29 dB.

    Source: GPS world staff
    FIGURE 6. The measured interference rejection for a broadcast jamming scenario, where a brute-force search through all possible combinations of phase shift and attenuation was conducted. In this case, the maximum rejection happens to occur at an attenuation of 16.5 dB and a phase shift of 225°.

    Estimating the Achievable Rejection Level. In this particular experiment, because all 1,024 possible gain and phase combinations were examined in a brute-force search, the signal rejection was not limited by inaccuracies in the estimation of the steering variables κ and ϕ. Rather, it was limited by how accurately the steering variables can be applied. A residual error exists between the phase and gain that would perfectly align and null the signal and the nearest values of phase and gain that the circuit can produce. This error is a function of the distribution of the true steering parameter and the resolution with which it is rendered. In this case, as the range and angle to the unwanted signal source is arbitrary and the distance between antenna elements is comparable to the carrier wavelength, then it is reasonable, perhaps, to assume that the residual error in the steering parameters is zero mean and uniform over the discrete control steps. To model this effect, similar to the previous section, the combining function, inclusive of these errors, can be expressed as:

    Source: GPS world staff   (3)

    where U denotes a uniform distribution, δϕ denotes the step size of the phase shifter control and δA denotes the attenuator step size. Note that as κ is in units of amplitude and δA represents the discrete steps in power gain, which corresponds to discrete steps of Eq-4a  in amplitude, then the residual error will be distributed over a region extending Eq-4b in either direction. In this case, if a B-bit phase shifter is used, then:

    Source: GPS world staff  .  (4)

    From this model, the minimum expected rejection level can be estimated as a function of the phase and attenuator resolution. Considering first the rejection expression given by Equation (2), we note that the variation of the power signal of interest, b(t), is a function only of the relative angles between each of a(t) and b(t) and the antenna array. When the signals are well separated, a gain of 3 dB is observed on b(t), and when a(t) and b(t) are located nearby or in exact opposite directions, then the rejection of a(t) will also reject b(t). As this power variation is a function of geometry and not of the particular nulling technique, for simplicity it is assumed that b(t) experiences no power variation. What remains is the relative power variation of a(t) with respect to and δϕ.

    To find the minimum expected rejection level, we must examine the following metric:

    Source: GPS world staff  (5)

    Source: GPS world staff  (6)

    where the two variables, and eϕ, respectively represent the residual errors in amplitude and phase between the perfect steering vector, and that which can be attained by the combiner. Examining Equations (3) and (6), it is clear that the minimum rejection will be achieved when the residual phase error is equal to eϕ = 1/2δϕ and the amplitude mismatch is given by eκ = Eq-4b. Substituting these values yields the minimum expected rejection, as given in Equation (7):

    Source: GPS world staff.(7)

    Determination of the average expected rejection level requires the averaging of Equation (6) over the distributions of the two error variables, eκ and eϕ. As these errors are assumed to be uniform in this particular case, this reduces to the following:

    Source: GPS world staff(8)

    which, after some manipulation, admits the closed form expression of Equation (9):

    Source: GPS world staff.
    (9)

    Inserting the specifications of the experimental setup used here, we find that the minimum rejection that can be expected is equal to approximately 14 dB with an average value equal to 18.8 dB. Further exploring this result, it is possible to predict the minimum performance that can be achieved given some arbitrary, but finite, resolution in gain and phase rotation. A portion of the surface defined by Equation (9) is presented in FIGURE 7. One useful application of this result is that it may be used by a designer to ensure that the resolution in gain and in phase are commensurate. This can be inferred by examining the gradient of the surface, noting that optimal choices of gain and phase step size will lie along the line of steepest gradient of this surface. A flattening of the surface in one dimension indicates that the performance is limited by the other dimension. For example, it can be seen that an increase in phase resolution beyond 6 bits yields no improvement in rejection when the gain step size is greater than 0.5 dB.

    Source: GPS world staff
    FIGURE 7. Minimum achievable rejection of analog nulling-combiner as a function of phase-shifter resolution (bits) and attenuator step size (dB).

    Conclusion

    Early results from this study suggest that the achievable signal rejection using a controlled radiation pattern GNSS antenna, under ideal conditions, is in excess of 70 dB, and is primarily limited by the accuracy with which the angle of incidence of the interference can be estimated. Accounting for typical estimation errors, the nominal rejection levels of the order of 20 to 40 dB can be expected. However, it is observed that other aspects limit the signal rejection performance. In a practical receiver, these factors stem from component selection for the signal-combining circuitry.

    For analog combining schemes, this is the resolution of the controlled attenuators and phase shifters used. The results here attempt to characterize the relationship between the minimum expected performance and the component properties. Results suggest that the choice of analog combining components should be chosen such that the phase and gain resolution are commensurate and such that resolution in one parameter is not rendered useless by a lack of resolution in the other. These results may form useful guidelines when designing analog RF null-steering antennas.

    Acknowledgments

    This article is based, in part, on the paper “Analog and Digital Nulling Techniques for Multi-Element Antennas in GNSS Receivers” presented at ION GNSS+ 2015, the 28th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation held in Tampa, Fla., Sept. 14–18, 2015.

    Manufacturers

    The equipment used in our study included an Agilent, now Keysight Technologies E8361A PNA network analyzer, Antcom Corporation 2DG1215A-MNS-4 GPS L1/L2 antennas, an Arduino LLC (www.arduino.cc) Arduino Uno microcontroller, a MACOM MAPS-010143 4-bit digital phase shifter, a Skyworks Solutions  SKY12347-362LF 6-bit digital attenuator and a Tallysman Wireless TW127 in-line amplifier.


    Further Reading

    Authors’ Conference Paper

    “Analog and Digital Nulling Techniques for Multi-Element Antennas in 
GNSS receivers” by J.T. Curran, M. Bavaro and J. Fortuny in Proceedings of ION GNSS+ 2015, the 28th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The 
Institute of Navigation, Tampa, Fla., Sept. 14–18, 2015, pp. 3249–3261.

    Adaptive GNSS Antennas for Interference Suppression

    “Advances in the Theory and Implementation of GNSS Antenna Array Receivers” by P. Arribas, C. Closas, M. Fernández-Prades, M. Cuntz, M. Meurer and A. Konovaltsev, Chapter 9 in Microwave and Millimeter Wave Circuits and Systems: 
Emerging Design, Technologies, and Applications, edited by A. Georgiadis, H. Rogier, L. Roselli and P. Arcioni and published by Wiley, 2012, pp. 227–273.

    “Mitigation of Continuous and Pulsed Radio Interference with GNSS Antenna Arrays” by A. Konovaltsev, D.S. De Lorenzo, A. Hornbostel and P. Enge in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2008, the 21st International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Savannah, Ga., Sept. 16–19, 2008, pp. 2786–2795.

    “Navigation Accuracy and Interference Rejection for an 
Adaptive GPS Antenna Array” by D.S. De Lorenzo, J. Rife, P. Enge and D.M. Akos in Proceedings of ION GNSS 2006, the 19th International Technical Meeting of the Satellite Division of The Institute of Navigation, Fort Worth, Texas, Sept. 26–29, 2006, pp. 763–773.

    “A Novel Interference Suppression Scheme for Global Navigation Satellite Systems Using Antenna Array” by M.G. Amin and W. Sun in IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, Vol. 23, No. 5, May 2005, pp. 999–1012, doi: 10.1109/JSAC.2005.845404.

    “Wideband Cancellation of Interference in a GPS Receive Array” by R.L. Fante and J. Vaccaro in IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems, Vol. 36, No. 2, April 2000, pp. 549–564, doi: 10.1109/7.845241.

    GNSS Antennas

    GNSS Antennas: An Introduction to Bandwidth, Gain Pattern, Polarization, and All That” by G.J.K. Moernaut and D. Orban in GPS World, Vol. 20, No. 2, February 2009, pp. 42–48.

    A Primer on GPS Antennas” by R.B. Langley in GPS World, Vol. 9, No. 7, July 1998, pp. 50–54.


    JAMES T. CURRAN received a B.E. in electrical and electronic engineering in 2006 and a Ph.D. in telecommunications in 2010 from the Department of Electrical Engineering, University College Cork, Ireland. He worked as a senior research engineer with the Position, Location and Navigation group at the University of Calgary between 2011 and 2013 and is currently a grant holder at the Joint Research Center (JRC) of the European Commission (EC), Ispra, Italy. His main research interests are signal processing, information theory, cryptography and software-defined radios (SDRs) for GNSS.

    MICHELE BAVARO received his master’s degree in computer science in 2003 from the University of Pisa, Italy. Shortly afterwards, he started his work on SDR technologies applied to navigation. First in Italy, then in The Netherlands and in the United Kingdom, he worked on several projects directly involved with the design, manufacture, integration, and test of GNSS equipment and supporting customers in the development of their applications. Today he is appointed as a grant holder at the EC JRC.

    JOAQUIM FORTUNY-GUASCH received the engineering degree in telecommunications from the Technical University of Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain, in 1988, and the Dr.- Ing. degree in electrical engineering from the Universität Karlsruhe, Germany, in 2001. Since 1993, he has been working for the EC JRC as a senior scientific officer. He is the head of the European Microwave Signature Laboratory and leads the JRC research group on GNSS and wireless communications systems.

  • ION GNSS+ 2015: NovAtel debuts new antennas

    Neil Gerein, segment manager of defense and NAVWAR for NovAtel, talks about the company’s newest antenna technology at ION GNSS+ 2015 in Tampa, Fla. Learn about NovAtel’s receiver technology and SPAN technology, which were also presented at the show.

  • Tallysman Introduces High-Gain, High-Rejection Timing Antennas

    Tallysman Introduces High-Gain, High-Rejection Timing Antennas

    Photo: Tallysman Antenna maker Tallysman announces the availability of a family of high-gain (50 dB) and high-rejection timing antennas.

    The antennas are specifically designed for timing applications in high-density cell/telecommunications tower applications where high levels of near-out-of-band interfering signals can be expected. They feature a 50-dB LNA gain to handle long cable runs often associated with installation on telecommunications towers.

    The TW3150/52 antennas cover the GPS L1 and SBAS (WAAS, EGNOS and MSAS) frequency band and employ Tallysman’s unique Accutenna technology to provide excellent cross-polarization rejection and greatly enhanced multipath rejection.

    The TW3150 antenna features a four-stage dual-filtered LNA, while the TW3152 antenna includes an additional SAW pre-filter to provide exceptional rejection of close out-of-band signals and additional protection against saturation by high-level sub-harmonic and L-Band signals. This provides better than 80-dB of signal rejection above 1610 MHz and below 1545 MHz, Tallysman said.

    The antennas have a permanent mount, IP67 and MIL-STD-801F Section 509.4 compliant housing with metal base and an extended temperature range plastic radome, and is specifically designed to withstand the most challenging environmental conditions.

    Two options for mounting are available: an L-bracket (P/N#23-0040-0) or a pipe mount (P/N#23-0065-0).

    The new antennas are REACH and ROHS compliant.

  • Highlights from the Grand-Daddy of All GNSS Technical Conferences

    Highlights from the Grand-Daddy of All GNSS Technical Conferences

    Tony Murfin
    Tony Murfin

    The ION GNSS+ 2015 Conference once again fielded a jam-packed agenda of papers on subjects  from world-wide constellation updates, through GNSS integrity, indoor navigation demonstrations, multi-constellation/function chipsets, interference mitigation and jamming detection, privacy issues, and many other very interesting subjects.   That’s GNSS+ in the conference name, as in “plus,” denoting the many other positioning, navigation, and timing technologies it covers.

    Most papers contained advanced academic research, but there were also several new industrial releases. This year ION divided and clearly differentiated sessions between “System and Application Tracks,” that is, those with more direct industry content, and “Peer-Reviewed Tracks,” the so-called “pure” research.

    As always, some of the most valuable takeaways of attending ION come from the numerous unrelated, off-the-record corridor conversations: an essential element, always spontaneous and much anticipated, but something that cannot be clearly identified nor put into the program.

    The conference seemed to have around the same number attendees as last year with about the same number of exhibitors, even though a few of the big booths were missing. Paradoxically, some exhibitors privately said they did better and more business this year, even with fewer attendees, according to their estimates.

    SPIRIT Navigation from Moscow did not have a booth, but Ruslan Budnik made sure to fill my notepad with lots about their technology, products and initiatives. They are among several companies working to add indoor navigation capability to smartphones, using existing onboard sensors and new intelligent software. Their solution concurrently uses multiple technologies including geomagnetic fingerprinting, pedestrian dead reckoning, and map matching, but does not rely on an installed beacon infrastructure. A Spirit app allows store operators to quickly map Wi-Fi and Bluetooth signals and collect a Magnetic field map which matches the floor plan of the store’s venue. Spirit claims an accuracy of around 1 meter, which Ruslan proceeded to demonstrate to me in the corridors around the ION meeting rooms.

    The plenary session on Tuesday night was very interesting with a presentation on the results of NASA’s planetary exploration over the last several decades, by Dr. James Green, NASA Director or Planetary Science. I learned a lot about our solar system; much more out there than one suspects, and much to be revealed in the next few years!

    GPS World editor Alan Cameron once again led a preview of the planned sessions for the week, with each session chair constrained to a 5-minute rapid-fire presentation aimed at enticing as many attendees as possible. Interesting and somewhat humorous at the same time; we still got a flavor of what was to come in each track.

    On Wednesday I was fortunate to be able to interview several show exhibitors.  Some of these you will also find in video footage on the magazine’s website, speaking to you straight from the show floor.

    Photo: Skydel

    Skydel is a relatively new exhibitor, working with Averna, both from Montreal, Canada. Averna makes signal analysis hardware on which Skydel installs software-based simulation of GNSS signals. Skydel’s objective is to be able to make their solution so affordable that every engineer could have one of these record and playback simulators on their desk, rather than having to schedule time on a central, shared multi-function simulator. An exciting new-entry product developed by an energetic group of people with a high level of ingenuity; hopefully they will succeed.

    DLR antenna prototypes
    DLR antenna prototypes

    A robust receiver initiative from Deutsche Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), the German Aerospace Center aims to demonstrate that jamming and interference detection and mitigation can be achieved much more effectively than just at the RF level. Their processing goes deeper with such features as knowing that a source from a particular direction isn’t aligned with the current constellation, so it’s a jamming/interference suspect. Their conformal antenna development attempts to meld an antenna configuration with their signal processing capabilities. DLR is looking for partners to put these developments into commercial receiver applications.

    ComNav has a new K700 family of receivers: K-700 GPS L1, Beidou B1 and Glonass L1 80 channel receiver — added to their K-708 dual frequency 198-channel dual-frequency version. The M300 Pro GNSS Receiver package includes a weather-hardened package, multiple interfaces which enable remote internet control and data access, memory and a rechargeable back-up power supply. ComNav claim the M300 Pro has been selected for the Chinese CORS network. ComNav also anticipates a name change in the near future: SinoGNSS will be their new company name.

    Harxon-antennas-and-radios-W
    Harxon antennas and radios
    Unicore UB370 Beidou/GPS/Glonass multi-frequency OEM receiver
    Unicore UB370 Beidou/GPS/Glonass multi-frequency OEM receiver

    Harxon gave us an overview of their wide range of antenna and radio products, while Unicore in the next booth described their single and dual frequency receivers which they are now promoting extensively in North America.

    NovAtel GAJT antijam systems
    NovAtel GAJT antijam systems

    As usual, NovAtel had a wide range of products on display. I was impressed that the mil-spec GAJT anti-jam product-line has now undergone testing by both the U.S. and Canadian military, and that the GAJT-AE is now flying and providing guidance protection in hostile jamming environments. Once again there were mentions of NovAtel receivers and antennas being used for research in several technical papers at the conference.

    Septentrio continues to make further inroads into the high-precision GNSS receiver market, and announced several new key initiatives. The company has been selected by UNAVCO as the Geodesy Advancing Geosciences and EarthScope (GAGE) facility preferred vendor for next-generation GNSS reference station products. UNAVCO ( ) is a non-profit university-governed consortium, facilitating geoscience research and education using geodesy.

    AsteRx-U dual antenna receiver
    AsteRx-U dual antenna receiver

    Septentrio is developing a next-generation reference receiver with UNAVCO’s inputs and evaluation feedback for the purpose of upgrading and renewing their GNSS networks. Septentrio also launched the AsteRx-U and the AsteRx-U Marine multi-constellation dual antenna receivers which incorporate the latest GNSS tracking and positioning algorithms and interference mitigation along with integrated UHF radio, Wi-Fi, USB, Bluetooth, cellular connectivity, and a spectrum analyzer which provides users with their interference profile.

    Indoor Navigation

    ION’s annual Indoor Navigation Demo session on Wednesday afternoon turned out to have more slides and pre-recorded testing content than actual demonstrations. The participants included Nokia HERE, Rx Networks, SPIRIT Navigation, TRX Systems, Broadcom, Indoors and Combain.

    HERE was able to initially demonstrate some indoor tracking of an equipped cellphone, but the display for the audience appeared to quit after a short period. They did provide a link to allow attendees to download their software and try it for themselves.

    Rx Networks is apparently focusing on self-location for indoor guidance assets, and ran a pre-recorded demo of ‘Zed’ in a Vancouver Mall – but the vertical tracking display part of the video was completely washed out for the audience.

    SPIRIT Navigation ran a recording of the demo I had witnessed earlier – a quite effective, working indoor nav application on a smartphone – and then walked around the demo room, but wasn’t able to show real-time results.

    TRX Systems ran a very effective real-time demo and was able to show the audience the path of their ‘walker’ as he meandered around the Conference Center, changed levels and eventually returned on cue to the demo room. They use crowd sourcing to build an initial map which then constrains sensor data from standard sensors, similar to several other presenters. This appeared to be the winning demonstration for this year’s indoor nav demo. We did hear later that they were not using sensors within the smartphone, rather a separate TRX device attached to the belt or the ‘walker’.

    Broadcom ran an effective demo, albeit with considerable lag between actual and displayed position and frequent jumps between points, presumably due to the same delay problem. This was attributed to the display system used to present to the audience. They also ran a second short in-room demo which was more effective and more real-time, but apparently not as accurate as TRX from the displayed results.

    Indoors also use ‘radio’ fingerprinting with GNSS data as a back-up, and Wi-Fi, BLE, magnetic and inertial data fusion along with dead-reckoning. Their recorded demo was quite effective.

    Combain has a system which is required to be world-wide interoperable for machine-to-machine asset location, so they are focused on using cell and Wi-Fi IDs for navigation, with databases containing 64 million Cell IDs and 726 million Wi-Fi location IDs. They claimed accuracies of 200 meters for urban areas and 40 meters for rural. These accuracies are not suitable for indoor location so no demonstration was provided.

    Pico-second test results (Click on the image to enlarge it.)
    Pico-second test results (Click on the image to enlarge it.)
    Pico-second test results
    Pico-second test results

    Later, I managed to catch a paper which Locata had recommended, which involved a number of Locata networks used by the U.S. Naval Observatory to demonstrate time and frequency transfer using the USNO Time Standard, with some highly accurate results: picoseconds! This paper forms the basis of GPS World magazine’s October cover story, providing more on these significant time-transfer and synchronization findings.

    GRIFFIN-Central-Processor-W
    GRIFFIN Central Processor & Node Antenna Electronic Units

    Another significant paper was presented in the Interference & Spectrum issues track. GPSat Systems Australia has been working for some time to implement a jammer/interference detection and localization system. The GRIFFIN 1000 system uses both Angle of Arrival (AoA) and Time Difference of Arrival (TDOA) to locate interference sources. GPSat claims that RF interference source in the GPS L1 band can be detected and geo-located to accuracies of a few meters within a few seconds. The system is already in production, with final production field testing underway, and customer deliveries scheduled for November.

    Multi Element Antenna Array and Node Electronics
    Multi Element Antenna Array and Node Electronics

    As ION GNSS+ came to a close for another year, it appears that this GNSS-centric conference is weathering the industry’s apparent preference for other sector shows which may draw new paying customers. ION’s academic/technical content was top-notch as usual, unparalleled anywhere, with attendees flocking to the papers, while existing customers still found comfort in meeting their suppliers on the show floor and around the corridors of the Conference Center. The formula still seems to work for now, but the apparent feeling on the floor was that better exhibitor payback may be found elsewhere, and that this could reduce ION participants in future years. Hopefully not, since this was a very good week for everyone with whom I talked.

  • Survey Market Key to Maxtena’s Growth

    Vanja Maric
    Vanja Maric

    Exhibiting at CTIA Super Mobility 2015, Vanja Maric, director of sales and marketing for Rockville, Maryland-based antenna-maker Maxtena, pointed out the challenge that exists for antenna makers in an uncertain drone market: forecasting what will happen next and planning for that future.

    “The problem with the drone space its so volatile and so fragmented, and it’s very, very hard to predict,” Maric said. “Speaking to industry leaders in the UAV market, they don’t even know what it’s going to be in three years, and it’s very hard to put all your cards in that.”

    That fragmentation is largely a dichotomy between the needs of the professional-grade market and the recreational drone pilots, Maric said. Maxtena is currently the antenna provider for several large UAV manufacturers, although confidentiality prevents them from being named.

    Maxtena M1516 L1 GPS GLONASS Passive Embedded Antenna
    Maxtena M1516 L1 GPS GLONASS Passive Embedded Antenna

    “It all comes down to the necessity of precision, and different industries have different needs. UAVs, for example, some use very simple GPS patch antennas, simple receivers and precise location is not as important,” he said. “Then you have guys in the professional space where it is a necessity.”

    That necessity right now is in the survey market, particularly RTK solutions for construction and mining operations in emerging countries. The company has seen an uptick in customers from Asia looking for antennas for Beidou. More specifically, Maric said handhelds for lone worker tracking in open pit mining in China has had “fantastic” growth. The M1227 antenna released earlier this year accomplishes this goal.

    Maxtena GPS antennas at CTIA 2015
    Maxtena GPS antennas at CTIA 2015

    “It’s not just hardware; they have a lot of costs—software, mapping— in on all that, and if that package is right, you have something special. However, don’t forget: The antenna is the link between you and the satellite. That antenna has to be right; that’s what most companies forget,” Maric said. “You can have the best receivers and software in the world, but if you can’t make the link you can’t do it.”