Abstract

A Compressed Sensing/Sparse Recovery approach is adopted in this paper for the accurate diagnosis of fault array elements from undersampled data. Experimental validations on a slotted waveguide test array are discussed to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed procedure in the failures retrieval from a small set of measurements with respect to the number of radiating elements. Due to the sparsity feature of the proposed formulation, the method is particularly appealing for the diagnostics of large arrays, typically adopted for radar applications.

1. Introduction

The identification of failures in array antennas is an important problem that have addressed large attention both in academies and industries. It is well known that the presence of fault elements in arrays causes a performance degradation in terms of both gain and sidelobe levels. This is particulary important in case of high performance arrays with very low sidelobes, largely adopted in radar applications.

The back-propagation algorithm [1] is the most widely adopted approach to detect fault array elements. It is based on the Fourier relationship between the fields on the array aperture and the measurement plane, with a number of samples satisfying the Nyquist theorem. However, using the standard half-wavelength sampling step, the number of measurement points and consequently the time required for data acquisition turns out to be very large.

Broadly speaking, it is possible to obtain a data reduction by introducing tighter a priori information on the source. For example, in the last couple of decades, an effective theory to reduce the set of data in antenna measurements under a priori knowledge of the antenna shape [2] has been successfully applied to near-field measurements [3, 4]. Using different a priori information, for example, on the spatial correlation of the sources, a further decrease in the number of measurements can be achieved [5]. Efficient algorithms have been also introduced in the literature to obtain accurate antenna far-field characterization from near-field measurements performed on strategic scanning surfaces with reduced acquisition points [68].

The approach proposed in [9], and based on the matrix inversion method, can be also adopted to obtain a reduction of data by introducing a proper model of the source. However, it generally requires a set of measurements not smaller than the number of array elements.

Recently, Compressed Sensing/Sparse Recovery (CS/SR) techniques [10, 11] have been proposed in antenna diagnosis, first from near-field data [12] and more recently from far-field measurements [13]. The application of CS/SR techniques potentially allows a number of data that increases linearly with the number of failures but only logarithmically with the number of radiating elements, thus allowing a large reduction in the amount of measured data as well as in the acquisition time.

In this paper, an experimental validation of the CS approach proposed in [12] for a proper detection of fault array elements is provided for the first time. For illustrative purpose, a small linear array well known in the literature, namely, a slotted waveguide array, is assumed as a test structure. Near-field measurements on a reduced number of points with respect to the number of array elements are successfully adopted to accurately identify the failures positions, thus demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed CS approach on undersampled data.

2. Outline of the Method

Let us consider (Figure 1) an array under test (AUT) consisting of radiating elements located at known positions . Let and be the excitation coefficient and the electric-field radiation pattern of the th radiating element, respectively. A probe having effective height is placed into spatial points , . The voltage at the probe output can be expressed by a linear system of the kind: wherein , is the probe voltage measured at point , , is a matrix whose element is equal to , , and and are the relative angles between the th measurement point and the th element position in a reference system centered on the th array radiating element.

In the present work, the problem of identification of fault elements into array antennas is considered. If assuming a number of failures, this goal can be achieved by inverting the system (1), as proposed in [9], but requiring that . Let us suppose , as usually happens.

As first step, we suppose to know (by measurements or available model/simulation) the field radiated by the failure-free array into measurement points, thus obtaining a reference data vector . The relative excitations of the reference (failure-free) array are denoted by vector . In a successive step, we collect the field radiated by the array with fault elements, thus obtaining a second vector with associated excitations . Now, let us consider the linear system (1), with and are named as “innovation” vectors. Since , we have an equivalent problem involving a highly sparse array.

Accordingly, the problem is sparse; that is, the unknown vector has only a small number of not null entries, and it can be solved by the following constraint minimization: wherein is related to the noise affecting the data.

3. Numerical Results

As a preliminary step, extensive numerical simulations are performed to check the performance of the failure detection algorithm, by assuming a slotted-waveguide array well characterized in the literature to be AUT [14], with radiating elements (Figure 2). The slotted array is terminated into a matched load, thus working as a nonresonant array and producing a main lobe tilted with respect to the broadside direction [15].

To check the robustness of the CS technique, various simulations are initially performed by considering different numbers of failures and data affected by Gaussian noise. As an example, the histogram of the Mean Square Error (MSE) in the reconstruction of the array excitations is reported in Figure 3, by considering 50 trials in the presence of failures randomly chosen among the elements and assuming measurements affected by a Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) ranging from 20 dB up to 50 dB.

In order to have a qualitative information on the value of MSE required to accurately identify the failures, an example of faults reconstruction is reported in Figures 4 and 5 by assuming a MSE equal to 20 dB and 25 dB, respectively. The plots indicate that a value of MSE equal to 20 dB is not sufficient for an accurate failures identification, while a value of 25 dB gives good results. Accordingly, results depicted in Figure 3 indicate that measurements assure an accurate detection of failures with high probability in the case of SNR greater than 30 db. Such a noise level is easily reached in near-field measurements.

4. Setup Description and Experimental Results

In order to validate the CS approach for fault-arrays diagnosis, a planar near-field setup is assumed by adopting a slotted-waveguide array (Figure 2) as AUT and a standard X-band rectangular waveguide (Figure 6) as measuring probe.

The proper operation of the test array is first verified by performing near-field measurements on a planar grid of 41 × 41 spaced points and then applying the standard planar near-field to far-field transformation. An operating frequency  GHz is chosen. The contour plots of near-field amplitude and phase on the measurement plane placed 40 cm away from the AUT are reported in Figures 7 and 8, respectively. The corresponding far-field pattern along the array plane, illustrated in Figure 9, shows a main lobe properly pointing at an angle approximately equals 5°, as imposed by the array theory [15].

To apply the proposed CS technique, a second set of near-field data is collected on the slotted array by assuming the presence of two failures (namely, with the 3rd and 11th slots covered by a conductive material), as illustrated in Figure 10. The measured near-field amplitudes on the failure-free and two-fault arrays are reported in Figure 11 along the central line of the acquisition domain.

To perform the experimental validation, only a subset of near-field data illustrated in Figure 11 is adopted. In particular, points are assumed, which are equivalent to a field undersampling at a spacing. As outlined in the previous section, the minimization is applied to the difference of the fields plotted in Figure 11, and the corresponding result of Figure 12, giving the difference between the excitation coefficients of the failure-free and the two-faults array, clearly identifies the failures at positions and . It is worth stressing that we use only measurements to estimate excitations. As a comparison, the result obtained using the linear inversion method by pseudoinverse [16] is plotted in Figure 13, showing a poor identification of the fault elements in this case.

5. Conclusion

The problem of arrays diagnostics has been faced in this work by adopting a Compressed Sensing/Sparse Recovery approach able to give an equivalent sparse formulation of the problem relative to the identification of fault elements.

Due to the sparsity feature, the method is able to detect arrays failures from a set of largely undersampled data compared to the one obtained using standard Nyquist sapling step.

The validity of the approach has been tested on a standard slotted waveguide array, by artificially creating critical configurations, and results have demonstrated an accurate identification of the failure positions using a number of measured data smaller than the number of the radiating elements of the array.

In the experimental example, the reduction of the measurements compared to the standard sampling step adopted in near-field measurements is relatively modest, that is, 4 times. However, it is worth recalling that, broadly speaking, the number of measurements required by the proposed technique mainly depends on the number of failures, while other techniques not based on Sparse Recovery require a number of measurements that depend on the electrical dimensions of the antenna under test. Consequently, the small dimensions of the array here adopted for the experimental validations do not make so clear the advantages of the technique when testing high-performance radar antennas with thousands of elements distributed on 2D surfaces, for which a much more significant reduction in the number of measurements is expected [12].