English

Microcomb-based true-time-delay network for microwave beamforming with arbitrary beam pattern control

Applied Physics 2018-02-13 v2 Signal Processing

Abstract

Microwave phased array antennas (PAAs) are very attractive to defense applications and high-speed wireless communications for their abilities of fast beam scanning and complex beam pattern control. However, traditional PAAs based on phase shifters suffer from the beam-squint problem and have limited bandwidths. True-time-delay (TTD) beamforming based on low-loss photonic delay lines can solve this problem. But it is still quite challenging to build large-scale photonic TTD beamformers due to their high hardware complexity. In this paper, we demonstrate a photonic TTD beamforming network based on a miniature microresonator frequency comb (microcomb) source and dispersive time delay. A method incorporating optical phase modulation and programmable spectral shaping is proposed for positive and negative apodization weighting to achieve arbitrary microwave beam pattern control. The experimentally demonstrated TTD beamforming network can support a PAA with 21 elements. The microwave frequency range is 820 GHz\mathbf{8\sim20\ {GHz}}, and the beam scanning range is ±60.2\mathbf{\pm 60.2^\circ}. Detailed measurements of the microwave amplitudes and phases are performed. The beamforming performances of Gaussian, rectangular beams and beam notch steering are evaluated through simulations by assuming a uniform radiating antenna array. The scheme can potentially support larger PAAs with hundreds of elements by increasing the number of comb lines with broadband microcomb generation.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1710.00045,
  title  = {Microcomb-based true-time-delay network for microwave beamforming with arbitrary beam pattern control},
  author = {Xiaoxiao Xue and Yi Xuan and Chengying Bao and Shangyuan Li and Xiaoping Zheng and Bingkun Zhou and Minghao Qi and Andrew M. Weiner},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1710.00045},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

10 pages, 9 figures, Journal of Lightwave Technology, 2018

R2 v1 2026-06-22T21:59:20.920Z