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The 20 GHz circularly polarized, high temperature superconducting microstrip antenna arrayThe primary goal was to design and characterize a four-element, 20 GHz, circularly polarized microstrip patch antenna fabricated from YBa2Cu3O(x) superconductor. The purpose is to support a high temperature superconductivity flight communications experiment between the space shuttle orbiter and the ACTS satellite. This study is intended to provide information into the design, construction, and feasibility of a circularly polarized superconducting 20 GHz downlink or cross-link antenna. We have demonstrated that significant gain improvements can be realized by using superconducting materials for large corporate fed array antennas. In addition, we have shown that when constructed from superconducting materials, the efficiency, and therefore the gain, of microstrip patches increases if the substrate is not so thick that the dominant loss mechanism for the patch is radiation into the surface waves of the conductor-backed substrate. We have considered two design configurations for a superconducting 20 GHz four-element circularly polarized microstrip antenna array. The first is the Huang array that uses properly oriented and phased linearly polarized microstrip patch elements to realize a circularly polarized pattern. The second is a gap-coupled array of circularly polarized elements. In this study we determined that although the Huang array operates well on low dielectric constant substrates, its performance becomes extremely sensitive to mismatches, interelement coupling, and design imperfections for substrates with high dielectric constants. For the gap-coupled microstrip array, we were able to fabricate and test circularly polarized elements and four-element arrays on LaAlO3 using sputtered copper films. These antennas were found to perform well, with relatively good circular polarization. In addition, we realized a four-element YBa2Cu3O(x) array of the same design and measured its pattern and gain relative to a room temperature copper array. The patterns were essentially the same as that for the copper array. The measured gain of the YBCO antenna was greater than that for the room temperature copper design at temperatures below 82K, reaching a value of 3.4 dB at the lowest temperatures.
Document ID
19940028577
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Morrow, Jarrett D.
(Houston Univ. TX, United States)
Williams, Jeffery T.
(Houston Univ. TX, United States)
Long, Stuart A.
(Houston Univ. TX, United States)
Wolfe, John C.
(Houston Univ. TX, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
May 31, 1994
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Report/Patent Number
TR-94-13
NAS 1.26:195097
NASA-CR-195097
Report Number: TR-94-13
Report Number: NAS 1.26:195097
Report Number: NASA-CR-195097
Accession Number
94N33083
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG9-593
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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