The specification relates generally to wireless communications, and specifically to an antenna assembly and associated wireless communication assembly.
Printed wireless antennas are employed in a variety of applications, including mobile computing devices (e.g. smart phones) and wireless adapters connectable to computing devices (e.g. desktop computers, “smart” televisions and the like) to enable wireless communication with those devices. Patch elements are common in such antennas; a conventional approach employed to increase the gain or frequency response of a wireless antenna is to replace a single patch (or indeed other types of antenna element) with an array of patches.
Arrays of antenna elements, however, require complex networks of feed lines. In addition to the increased complexity—and therefore cost—of manufacturing such feed line networks, the feed lines can also result in undesirable interference (e.g. due to mutual coupling between the feed lines and the antenna elements), and in undesirably reduced impedance bandwidth. These difficulties are particularly severe at higher frequencies, such as those employed by the IEEE 802.11ad wireless communications standard (also referred to as WiGig™), which prescribes channels having frequencies of about 58 GHz, 60 GHz, 62 GHz and 64 GHz.
According to an aspect of the specification, an antenna assembly is provided, including a support member having opposing first and second surfaces, and a set of electrical contacts; an antenna carried on the first surface of the support member and electrically connected to the set of electrical contacts; a conductive inner ring element carried on the first surface and surrounding the antenna; and a dielectric outer ring element mounted on the first surface and surrounding the conductive inner ring.
Embodiments are described with reference to the following figures, in which:
Antenna assembly 100 includes a support member 104, such as a printed circuit board (PCB) substrate, having a first surface or side 108 (shown in
Support member 104 includes a set of electrical contacts. In the present embodiment, as illustrated in
Antenna assembly 100 also includes an antenna 116 carried on first surface 108. Antenna 116, in the present embodiment, is etched from the copper (or other conductive material) layer of first surface 108. Antenna 116 includes a transmission element 120t connected to electrical contact 200t, and a reception element 120r connected to electrical contact 200r. Antenna elements 120t and 120r are collectively referred to as antenna elements 120 herein. As will now be apparent, in the present embodiment, in which contacts 200 are on the opposite side of support member 104 from antenna elements 120, antenna elements 120 are connected to contacts 200 by vias extending through support member 104 from surface 108 to surface 112.
As will also be apparent from
Antenna 116 (that is, elements 120 and 124) is of conventional design. That is, the size and spacing of the powered elements (120t, 120r) and the parasitic elements (124t, 124r) are selected according to any suitable parasitic patch antenna design available to those skilled in the art. Antenna assembly 100 also includes, however, several non-conventional structural features.
In addition to antenna 116, antenna assembly 100 includes a conductive inner ring element 128 carried on first surface 108 and surrounding antenna 116. In the present embodiment, conductive inner ring element 128 is etched from the same copper layer as antenna 116. In other embodiments, when deposition is employed to manufacture support member 104, antenna 116 and ring element 128, ring element 128 can be deposited in the same deposition process as antenna 116. Conductive ring element 128 is a copper element in the present embodiment, but can also be fabricated of any other suitable conductive material (e.g. gold or any other suitable conductive metal).
Conductive inner ring 128, in the illustrated embodiment, continuously surrounds antenna 116. In other embodiments, however, conductive inner ring 128 may include one of more breaks therein so as to substantially, but not entirely, surround antenna 116. For example, conductive inner ring 128 may include breaks having a combined length of less than about ten percent of the length of the outer perimeter of conductive inner ring 128.
Further, in the present embodiment, conductive inner ring 128 separately surrounds the transmission elements 120t, 124t and the reception elements 120r, 124r of antenna 116. More specifically, conductive inner ring 128 includes a ring 132 encircling the entirely of antenna 116 (that is, surrounding both transmission and reception elements together). Conductive inner ring 128 also includes a divider 136 extending from a first side of ring 132 to a second, opposite side of ring 132. Divider 136 extends between the transmission elements of antenna 116 and the reception elements of antenna 116. Thus, transmission elements 120t and 124t are surrounded by divider 136 and a portion of ring 132, while reception elements 120r and 124r and surrounded separately from the transmission elements by divider 136 and the remaining portion of ring 132. In some embodiments, divider 136 can be omitted.
Antenna assembly 100 also includes a dielectric outer ring 140 mounted on first surface 108 and surrounding conductive inner ring 128 (and therefore also surrounding antenna 116). Dielectric outer ring 140 is fabricated from any suitable dielectric material. Outer ring 140 can be fabricated from the same material as the substrate of support member 104 (e.g. Megtron), or from a different dielectric material. In the present embodiment, outer ring 140 is fabricated from a dielectric material without attributes desirable for high-frequency operation, such as FR4, due to the lower cost of such materials. While the high-frequency performance of the substrate material employed in support member 104 can impact the performance of antenna 116, it has been determined that the high-frequency performance of the material employed for outer ring 140 has little or not impact on antenna performance.
Dielectric outer ring 140 can be manufactured separately from support member 104, antenna 116 and inner ring 128, and mounted on surface 108 using any suitable means (e.g. adhesive, heat bonding or a combination thereof). As best seen in
Returning to
Although support member 104 and outer ring 140 are illustrated as having the same outer perimeters, in other embodiments, support member 104 can have a larger perimeter than outer ring 140. In such embodiments, contacts 200r and 200t can also be placed on surface 108, outside outer ring 140 (that is, so that outer ring 140 is between contacts 200 and antenna 116). In such embodiments, contacts 200 are connected to antenna 116 by multiple vias (e.g. a via from antenna element 120t to surface 112, a trace along surface 112, and another via back to surface 108).
Referring to
As will be apparent, the transmission element 120t of antenna 116 receives a signal delivered to antenna assembly 100 from processing hardware at contact 200t, and emits radiation based on the signal. Reception element 120r of antenna 116, on the other hand, receives radiation and generates an output signal representing that radiation. The output signal is applied to contact 200r for delivery to the processing hardware. Turning now to
Each assembly 400 includes an assembly support member 404a, 404b, which in the present embodiment are four-layer PCBs. Each assembly 400 also includes a baseband processor 408a, 408b carried by support member 404a, 404b respectively. Baseband processors 408 are conventional baseband processors consisting of one or more integrated circuits mounted to assembly support members 404 by any suitable mounting technology (e.g. ball-grid array, or BGA).
Each assembly 400 also includes a radio processor 412a, 412b. Radio processors 412a and 412b are electrically connected to baseband processors 408a, 408b. However, as will be discussed below, the nature of the connection between radio and baseband processors varies between assemblies 400a and 400b. In general, radio processors 412 receive incoming signals from antennas and transmit the processed incoming signals to baseband processors 408. Radio processors 412 also receive outgoing signals from baseband processors 408 and apply the outgoing signals to the antennas for transmission. To that end, each assembly 400 also includes an antenna assembly 100a, 100b. Antenna assemblies 100a and 100b are as described above, with certain exceptions set forth below.
Further, each assembly 400 includes a communications interface 416a, 416b connected to baseband processors 408a, 408b respectively (e.g. via traces and vias on assembly support members 404a, 404b). Communications interfaces 416 permit connection of assemblies 400 to a variety of computing devices and enable such computing devices to communicate using the wireless communication standard implemented by assemblies 400 (such as the WiGig standard). Communications interfaces 416 are, in the present embodiment, universal serial bus (USB) connectors. A wide variety of other interfaces may be employed, however, including other wired interfaces (e.g. Ethernet).
Turning to
Mounting surfaces 500a and 500b each include a set of host electrical contacts. Specifically, mounting surface 500a includes a pair of contacts 504r and 504t. As shown in
Mounting surface 500b includes a pair of contacts 508r and 508t. Turning to
Radiation received at antenna 116 is converted to a received signal and communicated to radio processor 412b via contact 200r. Radio processor 412b then performs any necessary processing of the signal and transmits the processing inbound signal to baseband processor 408b via the second additional set of contacts mentioned above, followed by the first additional set of contacts and contact 508r.
As seen in
Referring now to
Various advantages to the assemblies discussed herein will now occur to those skilled in the art. For example, antenna assembly 100 may provide increased gain (over a conventional patch antenna) comparable with an antenna array, while avoiding at least some of the disadvantages of the array (e.g. complexity of manufacturing, mutual coupling, impedance bandwidth limitations).
The scope of the claims should not be limited by the embodiments set forth in the above examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole.
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4460894 | Robin | Jul 1984 | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180115056 A1 | Apr 2018 | US |