The present invention relates to an antenna architecture for non-interacting connection of an antenna to a power amplifier, the antenna being connected to the power amplifier via an LC coupler, as well as an LC coupler.
In a modern wireless communication system, such as the mobile wireless standard UMTS or in a wirelessly networked computer network, a so-called wireless local area network (WLAN), the digital data to be transmitted is transmitted via a wireless connection in the gigahertz range. For example, in the UMTS standard, frequencies between 1,900 and 2,170 GHz are used and frequencies around 2.4 GHz are used for a WLAN. For wireless signals of these frequencies, the wavelengths are a few centimeters and thus in the microwave range. Wireless signals of this wavelength may thus be interfered with by comparatively small objects, the interference effect of an object being a function of the distance of the object to the antenna and the electrical conductivity of the object. The lower the distance of the object to the antenna and the greater its electrical conductivity, the stronger the interference with the wireless signal transmitted by the antenna. The interference may cause the propagation of the wireless signal to be impaired, in addition, the wireless signal may be deflected in its direction, in particular reflected, so that the reflected component is guided back to the antenna, for example.
If necessary, and particularly in the case in which an object having good electrical conductivity is in proximity to the antenna, not only does an object interfere with the propagation of the emitted signals, but rather, for example, due to the small distance, changes of the antenna characteristic also result, in particular of the input resistance of the antenna.
In practice, the antennas of such a UMTS or WLAN device are connected nearly directly to a power amplifier, so that the resistors must be adapted for optimum transmission of the transmission power between the power amplifier and the antenna. In the ideal state, i.e., if no interfering object in proximity to the antenna changes the antenna characteristic, adaptation is provided. However, if the input resistance of the antenna changes, this results in a change of the operating point of the power amplifier and the transmission behavior. In practice, the value of the error vector magnitude (EVM value) rises, which is used as a measure of the linearity deviation of high-frequency power amplifiers.
However, to achieve a high data transmission rate, linear transmission behavior of the upstream power amplifier must be achieved. A shift of the operating point of the power amplifier, which is accompanied by a rising EVM value, is thus disadvantageous. Attempts to design a power amplifier as so robust in its behavior that a proximal object having good electrical conduction does not influence the operating point have remained unsuccessful until now.
It is known from the prior art that in such systems so-called “isolators” are used, which are connected between the antenna and the power amplifier and “isolate” the power amplifier from the antenna to thus prevent feedback on the power amplifier. These isolators thus cause the operating point of the power amplifier not to be shifted from the ideal point. Furthermore, in addition to these isolators, which comprise passive elements, work has also been done on electronic regulating solutions, in which electronic regulators are used. Such isolators and electronic regulating solutions are described, for example, in Bezooijen A., Chanlo Ch., Roermund A. H. M., Adaptively Preserving Power Amplifier Linearity under Antenna Mismatch, IMS2004, Fort Worth.
The use of such isolators known from the prior art has multiple disadvantages. Isolators are costly, they require a large amount of space, and they have a high weight in comparison to other components. Furthermore, they have a high damping, so that the output power output by the power amplifier is not transmitted optimally to the antenna and thus emitted. This results in an increased power consumption by the amplifier and therefore, in particular in battery operated mobile wireless devices, such as UMTS mobile telephones, so-called handsets, result in the batteries draining rapidly. Furthermore, the isolators based on electronic regulation may tend toward instability because of the feedback control circuit, which possibly causes further undesired interference. The use of isolators of this type for decoupling the antenna from the power amplifier is thus possible, but connected with great disadvantages and difficulties.
The object of the present invention is therefore to suggest a non-interacting and adapted antenna architecture. To achieve this, a circuit is also to be suggested, which may be implemented using the fewest and simplest components possible.
To achieve this object, an antenna architecture according to the preamble of Claim 1 suggested, which is characterized in that the LC coupler has an input gate for feeding the signal to be transmitted to the antenna and a first antenna gate and a second antenna gate for transmitting the signal to the antenna, the antenna has a first individual antenna and a second, identical individual antenna, the first individual antenna being connected to the first antenna gate and the second individual antenna being connected to the second antenna gate, the load gate is connected to an adapted terminating resistor, and the LC coupler transmits the signal to the first antenna gate with a phase shift of 0° and to the second antenna gate with a phase shift of 90°.
In the present context, the term “LC coupler” comprises all coupler architectures which make use of “lumped elements”, i.e., concentrated components such as SMD components, thin-film or thick-film elements, semiconductor elements, capacitors or coils and similar assemblies.
The LC coupler preferably also has a load gate, at which a signal not emitted by an antenna and reflected may be decoupled, so that it is ensured in a simple and operationally reliable way that this reflected signal no longer reaches a power amplifier.
The suggested antenna architecture thus preferably comprises a four-gate 0°/90° LC coupler and an antenna, which is formed by two identical individual antennas, and a terminating or load resistor, which is adapted in its resistance value to the system impedance. The input gate of the LC coupler is connected to the power amplifier and the load gate is terminated by the terminating resistor. Each of the two identical individual antennas is connected to one antenna gate.
The LC coupler causes a wave running from the output into the LC coupler to finally be absorbed in the adapted terminating resistor. Therefore, wave components which are reflected on an object located in proximity to the antenna and are received by one of the individual antennas are absorbed in the terminating resistor of the LC coupler and thus do not interact with the power amplifier. In this regard, the LC coupler acts like an isolator in relation to the power amplifier for the waves running from the output into the circuit, so that the 0°/90° coupler forms an isolator antenna in connection with the two individual antennas.
For the simplest possible implementation of such an antenna architecture, alternatively and/or cumulatively, a 0°/90° coupler is suggested which has an input gate, a load gate, as well as a further first gate and a further second gate, each gate being formed by a first gate terminal and a second gate terminal. No components which are significantly active in the operating frequency range, i.e., which influence the signals ohmically or in another way, are located between the gate terminals of neighboring gates, so that two gate terminals of neighboring gates are each coincident in one gate terminal and may form a joint gate terminal, of course, negligible and never entirely avoidable residual resistances, inductances, and capacitances existing or able to exist. A configuration of this type is referred to as short-circuited in the present case, so that the first gate terminal of the input gate and the first gate terminal of the first further gate are short-circuited, the second gate terminal of the input gate and the first gate terminal of the load gate are short-circuited, the second gate terminal of the first further gate and the first gate terminal of the second further gate are short-circuited, and the second gate terminal of the second further gate and the second gate terminal of the load gate are short-circuited.
Therefore, the first gate terminal of the input gate is preferably the first gate terminal of the first further gate and the second gate terminal of the input gate is preferably the first gate terminal of the load gate. The second gate terminal of the first further gate is the first gate terminal of the second further gate and its second gate terminal is preferably the second gate terminal of the load gate. The 0°/90° coupler therefore only has four gate terminals.
The LC coupler is characterized in that the first gate terminal of the input gate is connected via a first LC element to the second terminal of the second further gate and the second gate terminal of the input gate is connected via a second LC element to the second gate terminal of the first further gate, and the dimensioning of the two LC elements causes a phase shift of 90° between the two signal transmission paths in the provided operating frequency range.
Therefore, the 0°/90° coupler may particularly be implemented having only two passive components, which cause the desired phase shift in the signal transmission paths in the range of the operating frequency of the 0°/90° coupler.
On the other hand, couplers are known as a possibility from the prior art for connecting two signal-conducting circuits to one another in such a way that an exchange of the signals may occur. Thus, a line coupler is cited as a possibility for defined signal attenuation or signal damping in the publication, “Messsysteme der Hochfrequenztechnik [Measurement Systems of High-frequency Technology]”, Burkhard Schiek, Hüthig Verlag 1984, and it is specified that couplers may be used for the purpose of dividing signals onto multiple gates. Finally, it is specified that line couplers may be used for the purpose of generating two signals having wideband 90° phase shift. A schematically outlined ring coupler is specified as one example. Furthermore, a resistive coupler is cited, which exclusively has equivalent resistances, i.e., purely ohmic resistors as coupler resistors, and is specified for an exemplary calculation to define the damping. A phase shift between the gates is not possible with these resistive couplers because of the use of the purely equivalent resistances. Finally, it is specified for these resistive couplers that the coupler resistors may also be complex. Thus, for example, one equivalent resistance may be replaced by an inductor and the other equivalent resistance may be replaced by a capacitor. The coupler would then be loss free and decoupled in a wideband manner from a gate, but the coupling itself would be frequency-dependent.
The use of “lumped elements” allows the electrical length to be limited to 20° in the LC couplers according to the present invention. In this way, the corresponding couplers may be constructed very small and may particularly also be used in mobile devices without further measures. However, it is obvious that the limitation of the electrical length of the coupler to 20° or 18° or particularly 15° is also advantageous independently of the use of “lumped elements” to provide robust antenna architectures having a small construction for non-interacting connection of an antenna to a power amplifier, in which the antenna is connected via a coupler to the power amplifier, the coupler having an input gate for feeding the signal to be transmitted to the antenna and a first antenna gate and a second antenna gate for transmitting the signal to the antenna, the antenna having a first individual antenna and a second, identical individual antenna, the first individual antenna being connected to the first antenna gate and the second individual antenna being connected to the second antenna gate, the load gate being terminated, and the coupler transmitting the signal to the first antenna gate using a first phase and to the second antenna gate using a second phase, which is shifted by 90° to the first phase.
There are multiple possibilities for implementing the antenna architecture and the 0°/90° LC coupler according to the present invention advantageously. In the following, multiple preferred exemplary embodiments of the antenna architecture and the 0°/90° LC coupler are described on the basis of drawings.
If a wave runs from a power amplifier (not shown here) via the input gate 5 into the 0°/90° coupler 2, this wave is transmitted via the non-phase-shifted signal transmission path 6 to the first antenna gate 7 and thus to the partial antenna 3a. In addition, the wave is transmitted via the signal transmission path 8, which phase-shifts by 90°, to the second antenna gate 9 and thus to the second partial antenna 3b. The wave signal fed into the 0°/90° coupler is thus divided onto the two signal transmission paths 6, 8 and emitted by the first partial antenna 3a without phase shift and by the second partial antenna 3b having a phase shift of 90°.
Therefore, each of the partial antennas 3a, 3b only has to emit half of the energy output by the power amplifier, so that the partial antennas 3a, 3b only have to be designed for half of the energy delivered by the power amplifier. Therefore, the partial antennas 3a, 3b only have to be designed for half of the current carrying capacity in relation to the classical solution using an antenna and isolators, so that this antenna architecture may also be implemented in media which were hardly possible for the classic construction using one antenna. The configuration is additionally significantly more robust to interfering influences, because frequently only one of the two partial antennas is engaged by an interference of this type.
A further advantage is that the directional characteristic of the antenna 3 may be optimized, so that in a mobile wireless telephone, for example, the electromagnetic stress of a user may be reduced.
The configuration has the advantage in particular that a wave reflected by an antenna and/or a wave running from the output into the circuit is absorbed in the terminating resistor 4 and is thus not reflected to the input gate.
For example, a 0°/90° hybrid coupler may be used as the LC coupler, which is especially suitable if the partial antennas 3a, 3b and the input gate 5 are constructed in asymmetrical line technology. It is obvious that other 0°/90° couplers may also be used.
The phase shift necessary for the function of the 0°/90° coupler 2 is obtained for the provided operating frequency of the LC coupler via suitable dimensioning of the capacitor 11 and the inductor 12, for which a brief example is explained in the following according to the known computing rules.
In this example, the system impedance of the LC coupler is Z0=50 ohm and the operating frequency is f0=2 GHz. The resistance Z1 of a capacitor C and the resistance Z2 of an inductor L may then be determined by
Z1=1/ω0C
Z2=ω0L with ω0=2πf0
Using the conditions known for a resonant circuit
Z1+Z2=0and 1.
Z1*Z2=Z02 2.
the values for the inductor L in the capacitor C may be determined as
L=Z0/2πf0=3.97nH
C=1/ω02L=1.59pF
Using this dimensioning of the capacitor and the inductor, a phase shift of 0° or 90° is achieved for the selected operating frequency of 2 GHz. The LC coupler is thus a mono-band 0°/90° coupler for an operating frequency of 2 GHz.
A special feature of this 0°/90° coupler is that a point of the circuit may be connected to ground, so that two asymmetrical gates result. For example, if the joint gate terminal of the input gate 5 and the load gate 10 is connected to ground, asymmetrical components may be connected to these two gates. This is thus a 0°/900 coupler 2 having integrated balun functionality.
If one exchanges the placement of capacitor 11 and inductor 12, a 0°/90° coupler which may be used alternatively thus results.
Furthermore, the two individual antennas 3a, 3b and the input gate 5 may either be implemented in symmetrical conductor technology in this 0°/90° coupler, or all three components must be implemented in asymmetrical conductor technology. In contrast, if a component to be connected is designed asymmetrically to the others, a symmetry element is to be connected between the gate and the component in a known way to restore the symmetry. A so-called balun (balanced-unbalanced) may be used here, which may be implemented as a transformer, for example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102004054442.5 | Nov 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE05/02002 | 11/8/2005 | WO | 6/28/2007 |