jayanthyk192
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What is your frequency? What is beamwidth (in degrees)? For tenth GHz range it would be difficult to make something laser-like. Even few degrees beam would be a problem. You can start with calculating power level in dBm that needed at receiver side to read signal without error. Then knowing distance you can add attenuation factors. Summing up will give you required transmit power.
at 2.4 GHz you would need a large dish in excess of 3 metres to get a narrow ( less than 5 degree) beamwidth
conversely, at 24GHz, a 4 degree beamwidth is achieveable with a dish of ~ 1 metre
Im sure some one here knows the maths for working that out
You havent really given us all much to go on to try and help you. How about explaining your project a bit more
You are NOT going to achieve the narrow beamwidths of a laser beam when working at RF microwave freqs
Dave
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To do this, initially, I thought of using a laser, but in sunlight it wont work due to saturation of the sensor. So instead I thought of using a highly directional antenna. So, can anyone help me?
Thank you.
Read about monopulse antennas. It is easier to measure angles than make narrow beam. Maybe it is good solution for you. Only need to make mixer for monopulse phase extraction.
should be quite easy with lasers and the appropriate optical filters, after all police LIDAR's work over 500 metres or so with no problems
cheers
Dave
I agree, forget any RF ideas unless you want to get really complicated, very fast.
Use an IR LED, pulsed to carry some identifying data if necessary, place it in the center of a small parabolic reflector, maybe a flashlight 'head' or bicycle 'headlight' reflector. Do the same at the receiving end. You should easily achieve 100m range and a narrow overall beam width. Many TV remote control LEDs/sensor work over 10m without any reflectors at all and the combined extra gain at each end will dramatically increase the range you can achieve. With suitable shielding from direct sunlight it should work fine. Most IR receivers have built in light filters which eliminate most of the effects of ambient light anyway.
Caution: If you use cheap TV remote control LEDs and IR receiver modules, you will find they will not work as expected unless you modulate the light beam. Don't drive the LED with DC, use a square wave at ~38KHz (or ~56KHz if you use a HF detector). The reason is that to improve immunity to other light sources, the receiver will have a built in filter circuit, designed to reject anything far away from it's center frequency (usually 38KHz) so a simple steady light beam will not make it respond.
If you really want to use RF, look at using Doppler modules at either 10GHz or 24GHz. You can achieve reasonably narrow beams by using horn antennas but you may have difficulty discerning a break in the signal because at these frequencies, objects tend to reflect the signal and it can find an alternative route to the receiver.
Brian.
Are you sure they work well in sunlight?
How about newly available bright LED used for traffic lights? Those even do not use any caps to protect from daylight. Such LEDs on black surface looks very black when turned of and very red/greenish when on. Even my mobile phone can see this thing very clear in a sunny day.
I am not sure it can be used for data transmission.. Just a guess on diodes.Can you suggest any sensor that has a CMOS sensor like a cell phone camera?
I am not sure it can be used for data transmission.. Just a guess on diodes.
How about using laser? There are some projects on the net of making rs-232 data line using cheap $2 laser pen. With all details on sensor and schematics
for example : https://www.qsl.net/n9zia/wireless/laser/laser.htm
Your original description suggests all you are trying to do is see if the beam is broken or not. Optical methods are simple and cheap. If you use small parabolic reflectors as I suggested, then mount them in a short opaque tube it will eliminate all but light from a forward direction. Unless the receiver points directly at the Sun (unlikley if it's a point-to-point link) it should work.
Brian.
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