ECE Alumni News
Vol. XXXV, No. 2
Winter 2001-02
by
Jamie Hutchinson
For a long time, Jennifer Bernhard has had an idea for a new kind
of antenna array that would enhance communication among devices in
a wireless office network. Now the ECE assistant professor has funding
to begin working in earnest on the idea, or a version of it, but her
sponsor plans to deploy the arrays in outer space rather than an office
space.
And that is fine with Bernhard. She'll use the three-year, $312,000
NASA contract not only to build a prototype for the agency, but also
to develop what she calls a "coherent design methodology"
for the arrays, which will make them easy to modify for different
applications. Meanwhile, she'll keep talking to companies about commercial
uses.
Bernhard's plan is to design and build arrays whose elements (individual
antennas) are reconfigurable and thus can "steer" their
transmitted beams with unprecedented agility. "Usually a beam
is steered by phasing the elements in an array," said Bernhard,
referring to a technique in which identical elements are excited at
different times. "But this kind of steering is limited by the
fact that all the elements are the same. We will give each individual
element the ability to change its radiation pattern, so you have another
degree of freedom in steering the beam."
That new degree of freedom will help a satellite communicate more
effectively with other satellites, with spacecraft, and with ground
stations, scoring a victory for perspicuity amid the jabber of cosmic
noise and flux that too often shout down the cooler heads of space.
Of course, interference and environmental unpredictability can gum
up just about any wireless system, but only those networks whose units
are big enough to accommodate an array are candidates for Bernhard's
solution. The compact design of a mobile phone, for example, usually
allows for just one element. Bernhard's prototypes for NASA will consist
of 4 X 4 arrays (16 elements), and an actual working array on, say,
a future Mars mission might consist of 200 X 300 elements and occupy
several square feet.

|
ECE Assistant Professor Jennifer
Bernhard's (standing) reconfigurable antenna plan was one of over
a thousand submitted to NASA in response to a request for proposals
in various research areas. NASA awarded funding to only about
a hundred proposals. |
Bernhard's co-investigator on the project is ECE Associate Professor
Eric Michielssen, an expert in numerical analysis of antennas. Michielssen
will develop an array simulator that can account for the individual
radiation patterns of all the elements-no mean computational feat.
For her part, Bernhard will oversee development and fabrication of
the arrays, using Michielssen's simulations as well as measurements
of actual designs. She already has some promising schemes employing
off-the-shelf pin diodes and varactors as "switches" to
reconfigure the planar, spiral elements best suited for high-data-rate
wireless transmissions. However, the devices she expects to deliver
to NASA in about two years will use microelectromechanical systems
(MEMS) to carry out the switching function.
"Right now, there are no production quality, radio-frequency
MEMS switches available, so we're using something that's available
and that we know works," said Bernhard. "But by the third
year of the grant, we should be able to get good MEMS samples."
One possible source of those samples: ECE Professor Milton Feng.
Applied in an office environment, such arrays could enable wireless
parallel computing and data processing, according to Bernhard. "You
could have wireless, ad hoc networks that use just the units you need
for a given purpose. The radiation patterns of various machines can
be constrained so that they don't interfere with each other."