RESUMO
Designing beampatterns with constant beamwidth over a wide range of frequencies is useful in many applications in speech, radar, sonar and communication. In this paper, we design constant-beamwidth beamformers for concentric ring arrays. The proposed beamformers utilize the circular geometry to provide improved beamwidth consistency compared to beamformers which are designed for linear sensor arrays of the same order. In the proposed configuration, all sensors on each ring share the same weight value. This constraint significantly simplifies the beamformers and reduces the hardware and computational resources required in a physical setup. Furthermore, a theoretical justification of the beamforming method is provided. We demonstrate the advantages of the proposed beamformers compared to the one-dimensional configuration in terms of directivity index, white noise gain and sidelobe attenuation.
RESUMO
Beamformers have been widely used to enhance signals from a desired direction and suppress noise and interfering signals from other directions. Constant beamwidth beamformers enable a fixed beamwidth over a wide range of frequencies. Most of the existing approaches to design constant beamwidth beamformers are based on optimization algorithms with high computational complexity and are often sensitive to microphone mismatches. Other existing methods are based on adjusting the number of sensors according to the frequency, which simplify the design, but cannot control the sidelobe level. Here, we propose a window-based technique to attain the beamwidth constancy, in which different shapes of standard window functions are applied for different frequency bins as the real weighting coefficients of microphones. Thereby, not only do we keep the beamwidth constant, but we also control the sidelobe level. Simulation results show the advantages of our method compared with existing methods, including lower sidelobe level, higher directivity factor, and higher white noise gain.