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Automotive RADAR at new resolution levels

Posted by iLOVEautomotive on Jul 22, 2011 12:17:22 PM

by Rainer Makowitz

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RADAR has been quickly adopted as the foundation of the new Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) that are being introduced by vehicle  manufacturers around the globe.

 

The RADAR technology has several benefits over other forward-facing  sensor technologies, like cameras. It can operate under adverse weather  conditions, can ‘see through’ objects to detect smaller targets and is  the primary method to determine speed of objects around the car. What  was used in police cruisers to provide hard evidence against speed limit  offenders has now come to be used as a preventive means to make driving  safer.

 

The choice of 76-81 GHz as the operating  frequency band was made by a standards organization to obtain  exceptional resolution and also to have a globally agreed frequency band  exclusively for this application.

 

At the Freescale Technology Forum (20-24 June, 2011) in San  Antonio, Astyx and Freescale demonstrated a high resolution 77GHz RADAR  sensor that is designed to be used in the next generation of automotive  ADAS systems. New technological advancements over conventional  automotive RADAR systems include:

- Digital beam forming using multiple receive channels
- Full 2D object detection
- High resolution in space and velocity
- Highly integrated RF components

 

Digital beam forming requires many receiver channels, which made it  costly and complex to implement in the past. This demo has implemented  unprecedented 16 receiver channels integrated into four Freescale BiCMOS  receiver chips driving high-resolution imaging. The high dynamics  requirements of automotive use case require fast frequency sweep in the  transmitter. The Freescale transmitter implementation represents the  market leading trade-off between frequency stability and fast sweep  operation.

 

The flexible Digital Beam Forming RADAR  sensor architecture designed  by Astyx allows several sensor ‘personalities’ (short range – up to  50m, or long range – 250m) to be defined by software options only.

 

 

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