Keywords:
Rangefinder, Process Control Radar, Loop Powered.
Abstract: A pulse-echo radar measures non-contact
range while powered from a two-wire process control loop. A key improvement
over prior loop-powered pulse-echo radar is the use of carrier-based
emissions rather than carrier-free ultrawideband impulses, which are
prohibited by FCC regulations. The radar is based on a swept range-gate
homodyne transceiver having a single RF transistor and a single antenna
separated from the radar transceiver by a transmission line. The transmission
line offers operational flexibility while imparting a reflection, or
timing fiducial, at the antenna plane. Time-of-flight measurements are
based on the time difference between a reflected fiducial pulse and
an echo pulse, thereby eliminating accuracy-degrading propagation delays
in the transmitters and receivers of prior radars. The loop-powered
rangefinder further incorporates a current regulator for improved signaling
accuracy, a simplified sensitivity-time-control (STC) based on a variable
transconductance element, and a jam detector.
Applications: To include industrial tank
level measurement and control, vehicular control, and robotics.