Home >> October 2019 Edition >> Earth Station De-Icing: Avoiding the hidden costs of reflector distortion
Earth Station De-Icing: Avoiding the hidden costs of reflector distortion
By David Walton and Ray Powers of W.B. Walton Enterprises, and Daniel Fryer, AdWavez Marketing LLC.

For fixed satellite networks that operate in alpine locations and areas subject to winter snow and ice, it is essential to have an Earth station antenna De-Icing system to prevent downtime and signal degradation due to snow and ice buildup on the antenna and feed.

Antenna De-Icing systems and products from leading manufacturers such as W.B. Walton Enterprises, Inc. (known as Walton De-Ice) have evolved along with the earth station industry over the past four decades, offering increasing reliability, ease-of-use, operational and energy efficiency. These products have proven effective around the globe in protecting uptime for critical business and government ground network sites.

With the proliferation of Direct-to-Home (DTH) satellites, a number of consumer-grade solutions for mitigating snow and ice outages on receive-only dishes have been marketed to home users. These anti-icing products can employ techniques such as hydrophobic covers to shed snow, as well as electrically heated Pads, and even Infrared heaters to warm antennas.



Photo 1. Antenna rear.
Figure 1. Thermal image - Surface Heating Systems, antenna rear.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Consumer-grade anti-icing systems try to combat the problem of antenna ice on small and receive only dishes with varying degrees of effectiveness. Unfortunately, some of these consumer-grade products, sometimes known as “Surface Heating” systems or “Heat Pad” heating systems, have been marketed for professional earth station antenna anti-icing. This is despite the fact that they can actually harm professional two-way satellite networks.

This article explains how and why Surface Heating / Heat Pad and Infrared Heater methods create unnecessary problems, and how Hot-Air De-Icing methods avoid these issues.

Surface / Pad Heating
With surface heating / pad heating type systems, a heater is attached to the back of the antenna reflector to project heat through the rear of the reflector, as shown in Photo 1 to the left.

Figure 1 shows a thermal image of the rear of the same antenna while a Surface Heating / Heat Pad system is activated. The different colors at different spots on the reflector surfaces (e.g., Sp1, Sp2, Sp3, etc.) show their different temperatures. The vertical color spectrum / legend on the right of the image shows that the temperatures in the image range from 20° to 60.1°F.

Table 1 shows temperature measurements for six spots on the antenna rear. For example, Spot 6 (Sp6) is 44.4°F, while spot 2 is 69.3°F, a difference of nearly 25°F, just a few feet away on a 3.7m dish. The image shows that the bottom of center area of the antenna rear is warm next to the surface heater insulation, while around 25 percent of the surface at the top is around 20°F colder.

Table 1 clearly shows the tremendous amount of heat energy wasted out of the back of the reflector.



Photo 2. Front view of an antenna.
Figure 2.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Photo 2 shows the antenna front view. Figure 2 is a thermal image of the front of the same dish taken around the same time with Surface/Pad heating active.

Table 2 shows temperatures measured at various spots (Sp1, Sp2, Sp3, etc.) on the front of the reflector surface. Figure 2 and spot measurements given in Table 2 show that the front reflector surface temperatures range from 89.6 °F to 43.7°F, a delta of over 45 °F.

The cooler top area in the dish in Figure 2, around 25 percent of the surface near Sp6 is about 43°F. The top area is over 100 percent (45.9°F) colder than the warm area in the bottom center (Sp2 and Sp4) near the heaters, which is nearly 90 °F.

Surface / Pad Heating: Completely Uncontrolled Thermal Footprint
Figure 2 is a perfect illustration of how surface/pad heating system have a completely uncontrolled thermal footprint. This causes reflector distortion and gain losses that many operators complain about. It also shows why you should only use a de-icing system that will uniformly heat the entire reflector surface.

Non-Uniform Surface Heating Causes Distortion Losses
Large surface temperature differences such as the above example cause metal elements in a reflector to contract at different rates, which distorts the reflector shape. The huge variations antenna surface temperatures caused by Surface Heating / Pad Heating anti-icing products cause reflector distortion and antenna de-focusing. As a result, antenna performance can fall below minimum required standards. Off-axis antenna transmissions due to antenna off-pointing and/or distortion losses can even cause in interference on the satellite, outages, and penalties from a satellite operator.

Ku-band uplink antennas have tight on-axis pointing tolerances. New Ka-band antennas have even tighter pointing specifications. For the above reasons, such an anti-icing approach should not be used on Ku-, let alone Ka-band antennas.

Another Surface/PAD Heating Problem
Surface heating / Pad heating systems are commonly attached by an adhesive applied rear of an antenna. The perimeter is taped with aluminum HVAC tape. Unfortunately, this does not work very long, given that outdoor moisture and temperature conditions can be harsh.

Unlike surface/ pad heating products, a Walton Hot-Air system, for example, mechanically fastens (screw or bolt on to) a Plenum to the back structure of the reflector. The Plenum is a breakdown-free hot-air enclosure with no mechanical parts that has been field-proven to last for decades around the globe.

Surface / Pad Heaters Waste Energy
Not only do surface heating/pad heating systems fail to deliver the required performance for professional Ku- and Ka-band systems, they also increase energy costs.

This is due to the poor insulation with Surface heating / Pad heating systems, as a large percent of the heat can escape from behind the Pad insulation. That impedes efficient heating of the front of the reflector, where snow and ice accumulate and is a huge waste of energy.

For example, compare the same spots in the Front and Rear Thermal Images (Figures 1 and 2). Sp2 and Sp4 in the center of the dish are around 19-20 degrees. This temperature difference represents heat and energy lost out of the back of the reflector.

Infrared Heating?
This section explains why Infrared (IR) heating should not be used in an attempt to provide a cheap heat source for professional Earth station antenna anti-icing. At least one Earth station operator has attempted to use consumer-grade Infrared (IR) heaters to indirectly heat the rear of a reflector to protect it from ice. Infrared (IR) heating problems are especially dangerous for Ku- or Ka-band services.

Figure 3 shows a thermal image of the same 8 meter antenna shown in Photo 3. The thermal image was taken as eight (8) residential grade Infrared Heaters were placed inside the antenna’s rear enclosure structure and activated in a make-shift attempt to perform anti-icing.



Photo 3. 8 meter antenna.
Figure 3: Infrared-Heated Dish

 

 

 

 

 

 


The temperatures of different spots on the Infrared-Heated Dish in Figure 3 correspond to their colors in the thermal image. The vertical color spectrum / legend on the right of the image shows the range of temperatures from 20 °F to 60 °F. Table 3 on the previous page hows temperature measurements at 12 spots (Sp1, Sp2…Sp12) on the antenna reflector. For example, Spot 4 (Sp4) is 48.4 °F, while spot 5 (Sp5) is 30.7 °F, below freezing.

Reflector Surface InfraRed-Heating Causes Distortion
Aside from the fact that eight Infrared heaters drawing electrical power simultaneously fail to warm the surface above freezing so as to melt ice, an Infrared (IR) heating approach creates more serious problems.

The difference between the coldest and warmest two spots is nearly 18°F. This large variation in surface temperatures causes a reflector’s metal components to contract unevenly, de-focusing the antenna.

As previously discussed, off-axis antenna transmissions could even result in interference to a satellite, outages, and penalties. This shows why such an Infrared-heated solution, when attempted, has caused problems and complaints, and why it should not be used for Ku-Band antennas, let alone Ka-band antennas, which require more accurate beam pointing.

The Hot-Air De-Icing Approach
If direct Surface Heating or Pad heating, or make-shift Infrared (IR) heater approaches are problematic, what approach has been successful? The answer is a hot-air de-icing solution, such as a Walton De-Ice system.

Unlike a Surface Heating / Pad Heating or IR system, a Walton Hot-Air Plenum De-Icing system uniformly heat reflector surfaces, thereby minimizing distortion losses. It elegantly achieves uniform antenna surface heating using hot air.

With Walton Hot-Air De-Icing systems, a Plenum (enclosure) is attached to the rear of an antenna. Energy-efficient industrial forced-air heating systems then circulate hot air within the Plenum, thereby creating uniform surface temperatures on the reflector.

Walton Hot-Air De-Icing systems maximize antenna performance, while preventing ice and snow buildup. These systems ensure that the differences in temperatures between spots on the reflector surface area are kept to within about a 5°F delta.

For example, Figure 4 is a Thermal Image of an 8 meter antenna with a Walton Hot-Air Plenum De-Icing system in operation. Table 4. to the right, shows corresponding spot measurements.

Figure 4. Heat is uniformly distributed, and reflector surface temperature spot differences are within about 5° F of each other.

These tolerances have proven widely acceptable in the industry, with field-proven installations for thousands of Walton Hot-Air De-Ice systems, including over five hundred large Ka-band large dish sites with operators around the globe.

Thermostat-like temperature controls and sensors automate heating with Walton systems to maximize efficiency. Energy-efficient heater options include electrical power, natural gas, or liquid propane, providing flexibility and economy to meet local conditions around the world.

The Bottom Line
By examining thermal images and surface temperature data on satellite Earth station antennas, the company has seen that Surface Heating systems or Heat Pad system can unnecessarily put operations at risk of signal degradation and losses, while failing to effectively de-ice antennas.

Reflector distortion from inferior anti-icing products can cause off-axis antenna pointing, and even cause interference to a satellite network, creating risk of outages and penalties. In addition, attempting to use consumer-grade Infrared (IR) heaters as a make-shift heater substitute for an industrial strength heater is unlikely to de-ice effectively.

Furthermore, it is not integrated with automated control and wastes energy.

Another major problem with Surface / Pad Heating anti-ice systems is that they only heat the reflector to combat ice. They do not address warm weather distortion loss challenges.

They provide no method for maintaining uniform surface temperatures during non-icy conditions, such as during hot weather when sun spots and shadows can unevenly heat and thereby distort metal reflectors.

This deficiency is especially troublesome with Ka-Band antennas, where distortion must be minimized and pointing accuracy maximized 365 days a year.

In contrast, Walton’s system uses temperature probes to continuously monitor quadrants of the reflector surface. It then circulates air inside the Plenum in order to ensure that the reflector maintains an even temperature balance.

Walton systems with Temperature Balance Control maintain uniform temperatures during winter precipitation as well as summer sun heat, regardless of the weather 24/7/365. Surface Heating / Pad Heating systems do not.

When it comes to protecting customer networks, maximizing uptime, and ensuring efficient and automated de-icing of antennas, earth station operators are best served using Hot Air De-Icing systems from leading manufacturers.
www.de-ice.com

David Walton is the Vice President and Ray Powers is the Director of Marketing for W.B. Walton Enterprises, Inc.

Daniel Freyer is Managing Partner of AdWavez Marketing LLC, a marketing agency specializing in the satellite industry. AdWavez helps companies, such as Walton De-Ice, build and grow their brands and markets.

W.B. Walton Enterprises, Inc. designs and manufactures the highest performance line of De-Ice equipment available for satellite Earth station antennas, as well as other unique and patented weather protection solutions for antennas of all sizes.