Not Applicable
The present invention generally relates to antennas for fixed wireless, small cell or indoor coverage application.
For an indoor 5G fixed wireless, small cell and indoor coverage system, there is a significant need to have a multi band antenna in which the antenna is either in a flat or a folded cylindrical profile. Most importantly, the antenna must have ultra-wide band performance.
A conventional single band (730-1000 MHz) dipole antenna fed in a micro-strip line is disclosed in Kitchener, U.S. Pat. No. 6,018,324 for an Omni-Directional Dipole Antenna With A Self Balancing Feed Arrangement.
Another conventional dipole antenna fed with a cable is disclosed in Ng et al., U.S. Pat. No. 9,070,966 for Multi-Band, Wide-Band Antennas. Ng et al., discloses a typical dipole antenna wherein each of two quarter-wave length conductors is based on two or more sub-quarter-wavelength conductors.
It is well known that the impedance of typical dipole antenna is around 73 ohm while the cable connected onto the dipole antenna of Ng et al., is 50 ohm. With this obvious mismatch, further increasing the matching bandwidth becomes impractical.
Further increasing the matching bandwidth requires a novel approach.
The present invention provides an antenna assembly for multiband, actually ultra-wideband, dipole antenna fed in a unique coplanar waveguide.
One aspect of the present invention is an ultra-wide band dipole antenna assembly for transmitting or receiving electromagnetic signals comprising a dipole antenna element and coplanar waveguide feeding network.
Another aspect of the present invention is an ultra-wide band dipole antenna assembly for transmitting or receiving electromagnetic signals comprising a dipole antenna element and coplanar waveguide feeding network wherein the dipole antenna delivers the ultra-wide band matching through a pre-determined arrangement after the coplanar waveguide feeding network is applied.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is an ultra-wide band dipole antenna assembly for transmitting or receiving electromagnetic signals comprising a dipole antenna element and coplanar waveguide feeding network in a flat arrangement that delivers ultra-wide band performance with restricted width, through a pre-determined arrangement.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is an ultra-wide band dipole antenna assembly for transmitting or receiving electromagnetic signals comprising a dipole antenna element and coplanar waveguide feeding network wherein an offset of two collars extended from a second quarter conductor act not only as part of a ground plane for the ultra-wideband coplanar micro strip but also as a critical arrangement of widening matching bandwidth of the dipole antenna through close coupling between the first and second quarter wavelength conductors.
Having briefly described the present invention, the above and further objects, features and advantages thereof will be recognized by those skilled in the pertinent art from the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The embodiments of the invention describe antenna assemblies for an ultra-wideband, dipole antenna fed in a unique coplanar waveguide.
The unique feeding network is designed such that one end of a coplanar strip line is connected onto the end of a first quarter wavelength conductor and the other end of the same coplanar strip line, together with a slot from a second quarter wavelength conductor, form the ultra-wideband feeding network at the feeding point.
Further, two collars extended from the second quarter wavelength conductor are designed not only as part of ground plane for the coplanar strip line, but also as critical arrangement for widening the matching bandwidth of dipole antenna through the close coupling between the first and second quarter wavelength conductors.
Through the pre-determined coplanar waveguide feeding network design of this dipole antenna, the initial impedance 73 Ohms of a dipole antenna has been transformed into an impedance of 50 Ohms, delivering an ultra-wideband 600-6000 MHz antenna for a 5G application. Traditional diploe antennas present a 73 Ohms impedance in certain matching bandwidths, but not in an ultra wide matching bandwidth. The coplanar waveguide feeding network provides an impedance transformation to deliver an ultra-wideband dipole antenna with an impedance of 50 Ohms. The present invention transforms the impedance of the dipole antenna to 50 Ohms while increasing the matching bandwidth by the arrangement and combination of the co-planar strip line extended from the first quarter wavelength conductor, the slot in the second quarter wavelength conductor, and the two offset collars extended from the second quarter wavelength conductor which transform the impedance to 50 Ohms and provides an ultra-wideband matching bandwidth of 617-960 MHz and 1710-6000 Mhz.
The profile of the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna can be either in a flat arrangement or a folded cylindrical arrangement.
In one embodiment, a dipole antenna with two quarter wavelength conductors delivers an ultra-wideband operating frequency range with a restricted width. Before the coplanar waveguide feeding network has been arranged, the impedance of this dipole antenna is close to 73 Ohms, for which a wideband transformer is needed. There is a slot inside the second quarter wavelength conductor, which helps widen the matching bandwidth, especially at the upper band of an operating frequency. The location, length and width of the slot is designed to widen the matching bandwidth at the upper band of a 5G operating frequency.
In a coplanar waveguide feeding network embodiment, an ultra-wide band transformer is needed to transfer the initial impedance of dipole antenna into 50 ohm.
The coplanar waveguide feeding network is designed such that one end of coplanar strip line is connected onto an end of the first quarter wave length conductor and the other end of the same coplanar strip line is the feeding point, which together with a slot from a second quarter wave length forms the ultra-wide band feeding network.
In yet another coplanar waveguide feeding embodiment, two collars extending from a second quarter conductor act not only as part of a ground plane for the ultra-wideband coplanar micro strip but also as a critical arrangement of widening a matching bandwidth of the dipole antenna through close coupling between the first and second quarter wavelength conductors.
In a restricted width dipole antenna embodiment, the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna is designed with a restricted width to meet the required ultra-wideband matching bandwidth.
A flat arrangement embodiment delivers an ultra-wideband matching bandwidth as shown in
In a folded cylindrical arrangement embodiment, the same antenna design and structure is folded in a cylindrical arrangement without affecting the antenna performance.
The pre-determined dimension of a dipole element and the unique coplanar waveguide feeding network are designed to maintain the ultra-wide band antenna performance when the same antenna structure is folded in the cylindrical arrangement.
When an antenna structure is folded, the two edges of a folded dipole antenna element are close which affects the overall antenna performance. Thus, the pre-determined dimension of both the dipole antenna and the coplanar waveguide feeding network are arranged to maintain the antenna performance after the flat antenna element is folded.
The cylindrical arrangement delivers an ultra-wideband matching bandwidth as shown in
In a cost-effective embodiment, the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna is a cost effective design in one piece, with the antenna element either in a flat FR4 PCB or in a folded FPC (Flexible Printed Circuit) cylindrical arrangement. This design makes the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna very cost effective and competitive, and easy to be built.
In other versions, the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna uses materials such as LCP (Liquid Crystal Polyester), RF PCB, aluminum, brass, ceramic, LDS (Laser Direct Structuring), PDS (Printing Direct Structuring) or any metal alloy.
In a frequency embodiment, the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna is a multiband, or ultra-wide band, antenna with frequency at 600-960 MHz+1400-6000 MHz.
In another version, the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna is not limited to having an antenna operating 136-174 MHz or 380-520 MHz at the lower band, and 7 GHz and beyond at the upper band, or even further at 28 GHz band. Scaling is an effective way to apply a reference antenna design to different band applications to achieve the bands at 136-174 MHz+380-52 MHz, 7 GHz and beyond at the upper band or even further at the 28 GHz band (mmWave 5G band).
As shown in
The antenna 10 or 20 generally incudes a first quarter wavelength conductor 11 and a second quarter wave length conductor 12 with a coplanar waveguide feeding network 13 arranged such that one end of coplanar strip line 15 is connected onto the end of the first quarter wave length conductor 11 and the other end of the same coplanar strip line 15, together with a slot 16 from the second quarter wave length conductor 12, forming the ultra-wide band feeding network 5.
There are two collars 13 and 14 that extend from the second quarter conductor 12. The collars 13 and 14 are designed not only as part of a ground plane for the co-planar strip line 15, but also as a critical arrangement for widening the matching bandwidth of dipole antenna 10, through close coupling between the first quarter wavelength conductor 11 and the second quarter wavelength conductor 12.
The length of the first collar 13 is preferably 9 mm to 11 m, and most preferably 10.3 mm. Alternatively, the length of the first collar 13 is preferably 5-6% of the length of the antenna 10, and most preferably 5.4% of the length of the antenna 10. The width of the first collar 13 is preferably 2 mm to 4 mm, and most preferably 3.0 mm. Alternatively, the width of the first collar 13 is 8-12% of the width of the antenna 10, and most preferably 10% of the width of the antenna 0.
The length of the second collar 14 is preferably 5 mm to 7 m, and most preferably 5.6 mm. Alternatively, the length of the second collar 14 is preferably 2-4% of the length of the antenna 10, and most preferably 3% of the length of the antenna 10. The width of the second collar 14 is preferably 2 mm to 4 mm, and most preferably 3.0 mm. Alternatively, the width of the second collar 14 is 8-12% of the width of the antenna 10, and most preferably 10% of the width of the antenna 10.
There is a length offset between the collar 13 and the collar 14, which helps widen the matching bandwidth of this dipole antenna 10. The length of the offset is preferably from 1 mm to 3 mm, and most preferably 1.9 mm. Alternatively, the length of the offset is preferably from 0.5 to 2% of the length of the antenna 10, and most preferably 1% of the length of the antenna 10.
Also, there is a spacing offset S1 and S2 between the first quarter wavelength conductor 11 and the second quarter wavelength conductor 12, which helps widen the matching bandwidth of this dipole antenna. The length of the spacing offset S1 is preferably 10 mm to 13 m, and most preferably 11.8 mm. Alternatively, the length of the spacing offset S1 is preferably 5-7% of the length of the antenna 10, and most preferably 6.2% of the length of the antenna 10. The length of the spacing offset S2 is preferably 8 mm to 10 m, and most preferably 9 mm. Alternatively, the length of the spacing offset S2 is preferably 3-6% of the length of the antenna 10, and most preferably 4.7% of the length of the antenna 10.
Also, there is a slot 7 inside the second quarter wavelength conductor, which helps widen the matching bandwidth at the upper band. The length of the slot 7 is preferably 25 mm to 35 m, and most preferably 30 mm. Alternatively, the length of the slot 7 is preferably 13-18% of the length of the antenna 10, and most preferably 15.7% of the length of the antenna 10. The width of the slot 7 is preferably 10 mm to 12 mm, and most preferably 11 mm. Alternatively, the width of the slot 7 is 34-39% of the width of the antenna 10, and most preferably 36.7% of the width of the antenna 10.
Through the pre-determined coplanar waveguide feeding network 5 arrangement of this dipole antenna 10, the initial impedance 73 Ohms of the dipole antenna has been transformed into a 50 Ohms impedance at the feeding point, delivering ultra-wideband 600-6000 MHz for a 5G application.
In one embodiment, a dipole antenna with two quarter wavelength conductors are designed to deliver an ultra-wideband operating frequency range with a restricted width W1. Before the unique coplanar waveguide feeding network 5 has been arranged, the impedance of this dipole antenna 10 is close to 73 Ohms, from which an ultra-wideband transformer is needed.
In another embodiment, this unique coplanar waveguide feeding network 5 has been arranged to transfer the initial impedance of dipole antenna into a 50 Ohms impedance.
With a restricted width (W) of the dipole antenna 10, the arrangement of the first 11 and second quarter wavelength conductor 12, together with the coplanar waveguide feeding network 5, the ultra-wideband, dipole antenna 10 is enabled to deliver the ultra-wideband matching bandwidth with the antenna structure in either flat or in folded cylindrical arrangement.
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From the foregoing it is believed that those skilled in the pertinent art will recognize the meritorious advancement of this invention and will readily understand that while the present invention has been described in association with a preferred embodiment thereof, and other embodiments illustrated in the accompanying drawings, numerous changes modification and substitutions of equivalents may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of this invention which is intended to be unlimited by the foregoing except as may appear in the following appended claim. Therefore, the embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined in the following appended claims.
The Present Application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 63/047,242, filed on Jul. 1, 2020, which is hereby incorporated by reference in tis entirety.
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