The present invention discloses an improved active antenna.
Active antennas are antennas which comprise amplifiers. One known design of an active antenna is a do called distributed amplifier-based active antenna, in which amplifiers which comprise transistors are fed by input signals via a transmission line. In such a design, resistive losses in the transmission line are unavoidable, and the longer the transmission line is, the more losses the transmission line will have. In addition to this, spurious radiation exists from the transmission line, which may damage the radiation pattern of the active antenna and increase the power losses.
It is an object to obtain an improved active antenna which obviates at least some of the disadvantages mentioned above.
This object is obtained by means of an active antenna which comprises a driving loop with a first and a second section, each of which sections extends between two end points. Each end point of each section is electrically connected to the closest end point of the other section by means of a reflection amplifier, and one of said reflection amplifiers comprises differential input/output ports for signals to/from the active antenna.
The active antenna also comprises a passive loop with a first and a second section, each of which sections extends between two end points. Each end point of each section is electrically connected to the closest end point of the other section by means of a reflection amplifier.
In the active antenna, the driving loop and the passive loop extend in parallel to each other, and the first and the second section of each of the loops form separated complementary parts of a closed geometrical shape and are built in open waveguide technology.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the sections of the driving loop are located on alternating sides of the sections of the passive loop, i.e. with one part on the outside of one of the sections of the passive loop and with another part on the inside of the other section of the passive loop.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the two sections of the driving loop are located on one and the same side of the two sections of the passive loop.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the driving loop and the passive loop are arranged to have their signals in-phase or to have a phase difference of 180 degrees between their signals.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the driving loop and the passive loop are arranged to have a phase difference of 90 degrees between their signals.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the driving loop and the passive loop are connected to each other by means of a first amplifier which connects the first sections of the two loops and a second amplifier which connects the second sections of the two loops.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the first and the second amplifiers are both arranged to amplify in the same direction i.e. from the driving loop to the passive loop or from the passive loop to the driving loop.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the first and the second amplifiers are arranged to amplify in different directions, i.e. one of the amplifiers is arranged to amplify from the driving loop to the passive loop and the other amplifier is arranged to amplify from the passive loop to the driving loop.
In embodiments of the active antenna, the two sections of the first and second loop are L-shaped, thus giving each section two legs.
In embodiments of the active antenna, both legs of the L of the two sections are of equal lengths.
The invention will be described in more detail in the following, with reference to the appended drawings, in which
Embodiments of the present invention will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. The invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as being limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Like numbers in the drawings refer to like elements throughout.
The four sections 103, 105, 107 and 108 are arranged to pair-wise form loops of the active antenna, so that the sections 103 and 105 form one loop and the sections 107 and 108 form another loop.
In the drawings and in the following, the four sections 103, 105, 107, 108 of the embodiment 100 will be shown and described as being L-shaped, i.e. as forming a line with a 90-degree bend, where the two sections of each loop, i.e. 103-105 and 107-108 respectively, “face each other”, so that the two L-shaped sections of each loop constitute separated halves of a closed geometrical shape, in this case a square. It should be pointed out that the closed geometrical shape of which the two sections in each loop form separated halves need not be a square: other shapes of the sections than the L-shape are also possible, by means of which other closed geometrical shapes are also possible, e.g. circles and ellipses, formed by sections which are shaped as semi-circles or semi-rectangles.
The two sections comprised in each loop are electrically connected to each other in the following manner: each section 103, 105, 107 and 108 extends between two end points, in this case the two end points of their respective L. The end points of the sections in each pair which are the closest to each other are electrically connected to each other by means of a reflection amplifier which connects the two end points to each other. Thus, in the passive loop, the end points in the sections 107, 108, which are the closest to each other are connected by means of respective reflection amplifiers 102 and 104, and in the driving loop, the end points in the sections 103, 105, which are the closest to each other are connected by means of respective reflection amplifiers 101 and 106. It should be mentioned that the connections from said end points to the reflection amplifiers are not drawn to scale in
The term “reflection amplifier” is here used to denote an amplifier with two ports and which is arranged to receive an input signal at either of the two ports and to deliver it as an amplified output signal at the other port. An example of an embodiment of a reflection amplifier will be given later in this text, and is shown in
One pair of the sections of the active antenna 100 constitutes a driving loop and the other pair constitutes a passive loop. In the embodiment shown in
If a transmit signal is input at the ports 112, 113, the driving loop will thus be excited by this signal, while the passive loop will be connected to the driving loop by means of capacitive coupling between adjacent sections of the driving loop and the passive loop, which will give rise to a weaker signal in the passive loop than in the driving loop. This difference in signal strengths can however be overcome by means of letting the reflection amplifiers 102, 104, which connect the sections of the passive loop to each other have a higher gain than the reflection amplifiers 101, 106 which connect the sections of the driving loop to each other. The gain difference depends on the strength of the electromagnetic coupling between the two loops, but a suitable difference is in the range of 5-8 dB.
The active antenna shown in
If it is desired to give the active antenna 200 of
Regarding the reflection amplifiers, as mentioned, they can be used to equalize the power between the two loops. Another way of equalizing the power between the driving loop and the passive loop is to connect the loops by means of amplifiers which amplify signals from the driving loop to the passive loop. Such amplifiers are then suitably incorporated into one and the same component as the phase shifters 111, 114, so that each of the components 111, 114, become amplifiers with a phase shift. Regarding the direction of amplification, this is shown in
Turning now to how the sections 103, 105, 107 and 108 of the driving loop and the passive loop are arranged geometrically in the embodiments shown in
This can be generalized as saying that the sections 103, 105, of the driving loop are located on alternating sides of the sections, 107, 108, of the passive loop, i.e. with one part on the outside of one of the sections of the passive loop and with another part on the inside of the other section of the passive loop.
The term “inside” and “outside” of the sections as used above refers to the fact that, as noted, each the two sections of a loop will have a shape which is “non-straight”, e.g. L-formed, semi-circular etc, so that there will be an inside and an outside of each section. In the case of L-formed sections, each section will have two “legs”, and it is these legs that are interwoven, by virtue of the fact that the L-shaped sections 107, 108, of the passive loop are rotated 90 degrees with respect to the L-shaped sections 103, 105, of the driving loop.
We see that the embodiment 300 also comprises the phase shifters which shift the phase from the driving loop to the passive loop. As explained in connection to
Turning now to the performance of the active antenna, the active antenna 200 of
In
The amplifier 106 is also a reflection amplifier, but since it is also provided with input/output ports, a modification of the design shown in
As we see in
As shown in
The collectors of the two transistors are also used as input/output ports of the amplifier 101, where input signals at the collector of transistor 15 will be amplified by the transistor 16, and will then be accessible at the collector of transistor 16. In the same way, input signals at the collector of transistor 16 will be amplified by the transistor 15 and be accessible at the collector of transistor 15. The gain of the differential amplifier is determined mainly by the base bias voltage Vb and the transistors' characteristics.
As compared to the reflection amplifier 101, the reflection amplifier 106 comprises two additional transistors, 20 and 22, the collector of one of which is connected to the collector to one of the transistors 15, 16, and the emitters of which are connected to the ground as are the emitters of the transistors 15, 16. The collectors of the transistors 20, 22, are used as the input/output ports by means of which the reflection amplifier 106 is used to connect two end points of the sections 103, 105, of the driving loop, and the bases of the two transistors 20, 22 are used as the differential input/output ports by means of which signals are fed to/accessed from the active antenna 100, 200. The bases of the transistors are also connected to a bias voltage Vb1 via respective resistors 21, 23.
As shown in
In the drawings and specification, there have been disclosed exemplary embodiments of the invention. However, many variations and modifications can be made to these embodiments without substantially departing from the principles of the present invention. Accordingly, although specific terms are employed, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for purposes of limitation.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/055942 | 3/21/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/146715 | 9/25/2014 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20050151690 | Minemura | Jul 2005 | A1 |
20130278473 | Bowers | Oct 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2310320 | Aug 1987 | GB |
Entry |
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Forster, E., “A New Approach to the Design of a BroadBand Active Loop Antenna 50 kHz - 30 MHz”, IEE Colloquium on Electrically Small Antennas, Oct. 23, 1990, pp. 4/1-4/2, IET, London, GB. |
Chung-Tse, M., et al. “A high gain active antenna array using dual-fed distributed amplifier-based CRLH-Leaky wave antennas”, 2012 Asia-Pacific Microwave Conference Proceedings (APMC), Dec. 4, 2012, pp. 136-138, IEEE. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160072197 A1 | Mar 2016 | US |