This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-082411, filed Mar. 30, 2012, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Embodiments described herein relate generally to an antenna apparatus and an electronic device including the antenna apparatus.
Various kinds of electronic devices have been developed, which make personal computers and television terminals incorporate radio interfaces using wireless local area network (LAN), WiMAX®, ultra-wideband (UWB), Bluetooth®, and the like to download contents and various kinds of data from Web sites and the like via the radio interfaces.
As an antenna apparatus used for the above radio interface, an antenna apparatus for implementing spatial diversity and multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) is available. Spatial diversity and MIMO use a plurality of antennas arranged side by side. For this reason, it is necessary to ensure a larger space to accommodate the antenna apparatus in an electronic device than when using one antenna. On the other hand, an electronic device such as a personal computer or a tablet computer has a limited surplus space in the housing because of a reduction in the thickness of the housing and high-density packing of circuit components. For this reason, there has been proposed an electronic device including a plurality of antennas juxtaposed on a portion of a frame-type housing which supports a display.
In an electronic device having this arrangement, however, RF cables such as coaxial cables are arranged along the frame of the housing to connect the respective antennas and the radio circuit. For this reason, if, for example, two antennas are juxtaposed, an RF cable routed from one antenna is inevitably wired on or near the other antenna. In such a case, the other antenna is influenced by the RF cable wired on or near it. As a result, the resonant frequency may shift from a desired value, or desired antenna efficiency may not be obtained.
A general architecture that implements the various features of the embodiments will now be described with reference to the drawings. The drawings and the associated descriptions are provided to illustrate the embodiments and not to limit the scope of the invention.
Various embodiments will be described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In general, according to one embodiment, an antenna apparatus provided in an electronic device includes a radio circuit unit and a ground pattern which forms a ground potential. The apparatus includes a first antenna unit disposed along a side of the ground pattern, a second antenna unit disposed along the side of the ground pattern so as to be juxtaposed with the first antenna unit, a first RF cable configured to connect the first antenna unit and the radio circuit unit, and a second RF cable configured to connect the second antenna unit and the radio circuit unit. The first antenna unit resonates in a first frequency band and a second frequency band. The second antenna unit resonates in the second frequency band. The first RF cable and the second RF cable are routed from the first antenna unit and the second antenna unit in an arrangement direction of the first antenna unit and the second antenna unit so as to be parallel to each other, with the first RF cable being disposed so as to pass over the ground pattern.
According to this embodiment, the first RF cable is routed out upon passing over a region formed by setting back the second antenna unit, i.e., over the ground pattern, without passing over the second antenna unit. This can suppress the influence of the first RF cable on the second antenna unit, thereby suppressing the occurrence of unnecessary resonance and a resonant frequency shift.
That is, this embodiment can provide an antenna apparatus which improves the frequency characteristic and radiation efficiency by reducing the influence of RF cables on the antenna even if the installation space of the antenna and RF cables is limited, and an electronic device including the antenna apparatus.
The antenna apparatus includes a dual-band antenna unit 1 serving as the first antenna unit and a single-band antenna unit 2 serving as the second antenna unit. The dual-band antenna unit 1 and the single-band antenna unit 2 are arranged along one side of a ground pattern 3 provided for an electronic device.
As shown in
A portion, of the second antenna element 12, which extends from its intermediate portion to its distal end portion, is parallel to the first antenna element 11 so as to be adjacent to it through a distance W. With this arrangement, the second antenna element 12 is capacitively coupled to the first antenna element 11. The element lengths of the first and second antenna elements 11 and 12 are set so as to make them resonate in different first and second frequency bands f1 and f2. For example, the first and second frequency bands f1 and f2 are set to, for example, a 2-GHz band and 5-GHz band, respectively.
The single-band antenna unit 2 includes a third antenna element 21 and a second feed terminal 22. The third antenna element 21 is formed from an L-shaped linear element, with the proximal end portion being connected to the second feed terminal 22 and the distal end portion being open. The element length of the third antenna element 21 is set so as to make it resonate in the second frequency band f2 (5-GHz band).
The dual-band antenna unit 1 and single-band antenna unit 2 described above operate as a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) antenna in the second frequency band (5-GHz band).
The position of the contact side between the single-band antenna unit 2 and the ground pattern 3 is above the position of the contact side between the dual-band antenna unit 1 and the ground pattern 3 in
One end of a first RF cable 4 which connects the dual-band antenna unit 1 to a radio circuit (not shown) is connected to the first feed terminal 13, and the other end is routed out through the region above the ground pattern 3. This region is formed by setting back the position of the single-band antenna unit 2.
One end of a second RF cable 5 which connects the single-band antenna unit 2 and a radio circuit (not shown) is connected to the second feed terminal 22, and the other end is routed out in the same direction so as to be parallel to the first RF cable 4.
With this arrangement, the first RF cable 4 is routed out upon passing over the region formed by setting back the single-band antenna unit 2, i.e., over the ground pattern 3, without passing over the single-band antenna unit 2. This makes it possible to suppress the influence of the first RF cable 4 on the single-band antenna unit 2, thus suppressing the occurrence of unnecessary resonance and a resonant frequency shift.
Assume that the first RF cable 4 is wired on the single-band antenna unit 2. In this case, for example, as shown in
In addition, in the first embodiment, the first and second frequency bands f1 and f2 are respectively set to a 2-GHz band and 5-GHz band. That is, the relationship between the first and second frequency bands is set to f1<f2. This can improve the efficiency near the low-resonant-frequency band f1.
In the first embodiment, as shown in
The second embodiment provides the second antenna element 12 so as to make the second antenna element 12 operate as a dual-band antenna which operates in a 2-GHz band at the first feed terminal 13. This makes it possible to improve the gross efficiency in resonant-frequency band f1=2 GHz.
First and second radio circuits 30 and 40 are arranged in a lower housing 51 of a notebook computer. An upper housing 52 has a frame-like shape to support a display. A MIMO antenna apparatus 10 and a second antenna apparatus 20 are juxtaposed on an upper side portion 53 of the upper housing 52 having the frame-like shape described above. The layout relationship between the MIMO antenna apparatus 10 and the second antenna apparatus 20 is set such that the MIMO antenna apparatus 10 is located near an end portion of the upper side portion 53 of the upper housing 52, and the second antenna apparatus 20 is located near the middle of the upper side portion 53 of the upper housing 52.
The MIMO antenna apparatus 10 is used, for example, for transmission/reception with respect to a wireless local area network (LAN), and has the same arrangement as that of the antenna apparatus shown in
On the other hand, the second antenna apparatus 20 is used for transmission/reception with respect to a wireless wide area network (WAN), and includes, for example, one monopole antenna element or a folded monopole antenna element. A third RF cable 6 is routed from a feed terminal for this antenna element in the same direction to the first and second RF cables 4 and 5 so as to be parallel to them. The third RF cable 6 is wired along the side portion 54 of the upper housing 52 and is then connected to the second radio circuit 40.
With this arrangement, the MIMO antenna apparatus 10 is disposed at a position near an end portion of the upper side portion 53 of the upper housing 52, and the second antenna apparatus 20 is disposed near the middle of the upper side portion 53 of the upper housing 52. When routing out the first and second RF cables 4 and 5 of the MIMO antenna apparatus 10, therefore, it is possible to wire the cables 4 and 5 without making them pass over the second antenna apparatus 20. This can prevent the second antenna apparatus 20 from being influenced by the first and second RF cables 4 and 5, thereby suppressing the occurrence of unnecessary resonance in the second antenna apparatus 20.
The above embodiments have exemplified the case in which wireless LAN signals are received. A target system may be the one which receives signals transmitted from other systems such as a terrestrial digital radio broadcasting system and a municipally-managed disaster prevention broadcasting system.
In addition, the above embodiments can be executed by variously modifying the types, numbers, arrangements, and sizes of antenna elements constituting the first and second antenna apparatuses. Furthermore, the above embodiments can be executed by variously modifying the disposition positions of the first and second antenna apparatuses, the directions in which RF cables are routed out, and the like.
While certain embodiments have been described, these embodiments have been presented by way of example only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the inventions. Indeed, the novel embodiments described herein may be embodied in a variety of other forms; furthermore, various omissions, substitutions and changes in the form of the embodiments described herein may be made without departing from the spirit of the inventions. The accompanying claims and their equivalents are intended to cover such forms or modifications as would fall within the scope and spirit of the inventions.
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Entry |
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Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-082411, First Office Action, mailed Jun. 18, 2013, (with English Translation). |
Japanese Patent Application No. 2012-82411; Situation Report on Accelerated Examination; Submitted Mar. 8, 2013 (English Translation). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130257681 A1 | Oct 2013 | US |