Infineon Technologies, together with the German automotive supplier, Hella, has developed innovative radio frequency components for a radar sensor, which reliably monitors the blind spot in the car’s rear section (Blind Spot Detection). The module saves space and costs through the integration of multiple, formerly separate components into one transceiver and features low power consumption at improved performance. Due to this efficiency increase, serial production of the driver assistance system is also made possible in vehicles outside of the premium segment.
Hella’s 24 GHz radar sensor system for blind spot detection is claimed to stand out due to its high precision. The continuously updated radar scan detects moving objects even in poor weather and independent of the direction and speed of their motion. Optimized antenna concepts furthermore facilitate an even higher measuring accuracy. For example, when passing others or changing lanes, the system warns of vehicles coming from behind. When parking, the radar registers cross-traffic in the rear and prevents collisions.
Infineon’s new Microwave Monolithic Integrated Circuits (MMICs) of the BGT24Axxas chip family are key components that contribute to the efficiency increase of the driver assistance system. They improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), whereby they ensure higher precision in the detection and signaling of objects in the blind spot.
As fully integrated transceivers, the Infineon MMICs contain all high-frequency components, like oscillators, transmission amplifiers and reception branches with low-noise amplifiers and I/Q mixers. Hella’s radar system thereby becomes smaller, more affordable and it consumes less power. Infineon’s 24 GHz chip family moreover enables a custom-fit configuration of the hardware, depending on the system environment and application field.
In the 24 GHz radar system for controlling the blind spot in the rear section, Hella and Infineon deliver an efficient and reliable product to an automotive market that more than ever demands driving safety and operating comfort. By the year 2020, the number of worldwide installed, radar-supported driver assistance systems is to rise from about 14 million at present to more than 40 million; the Blind Spot Detection system plays a decisive role in this context (Strategy Analytics 2013). The third generation of Hella’s radar module is now in series production and as optional equipment in any vehicle and model class, even outside of the premium segment.