The present invention generally relates to antennas for radio communications, and in particular to an antenna array with a reduced mutual coupling effect.
Antenna arrays comprise an arrangement of individually radiating antenna elements for application in radio communication devices, such as wireless access points, routers and base stations, potentially along with user equipment devices such as cellular phones, laptops, and tablets. Certain operations, such as beam-steering, utilize selective operation of the phase and amplitude relationships between individual antenna elements for improving transmission and reception characteristics of the antenna array. Densely packed antenna arrays, potentially with large numbers of elements such as in Massive MIMO systems, can lead to situations in which antenna elements are situated very close to one another. Such dense arrays may be required to enable beam steering over an adequate angular range, for example. Size reduction trends and operation in higher radio frequency bands also encourage reduced spacing between antenna elements. Unfortunately, as the spacing between individual antenna elements in an antenna array becomes narrower, the mutual coupling effect between the individual elements becomes more pronounced and problematic. Mutual coupling is a typically undesired phenomenon that affects the impedance characteristics of the individual antenna elements, results in absorption of energy by nearby antenna elements, and distorts radiation and transmission patterns. Accordingly, an antenna array that reduces the effect of mutual coupling is desired.
This background information is provided to reveal information believed by the applicant to be of possible relevance to the present invention. No admission is necessarily intended, nor should be construed, that any of the preceding information constitutes prior art against the present invention.
An object of embodiments of the present invention is to provide an improved antenna array. In certain embodiments, the antenna array may reduce the mutual coupling effect between individual antenna elements.
In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, there is provided an antenna array including a body, a first antenna element, a second antenna element and a mutual coupling reduction circuit. The first antenna element includes a first radiating body disposed on the body and the second antenna element includes a second radiating body disposed on the body. The mutual coupling reduction circuit couples the first and second radiating bodies to reduce a mutual coupling effect between the first and second antenna elements.
In accordance with other embodiments of the present invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing an antenna array. The antenna array includes a body, a first antenna element having a first radiating body, a second antenna element having a second radiating body, and a mutual coupling reduction circuit. The method includes disposing the first and second radiating bodies on the body and coupling the mutual coupling reduction circuit between the first and second radiating bodies to reduce a mutual coupling effect between the first and second antenna elements.
Further features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in combination with the appended drawings, in which:
It will be noted that throughout the appended drawings, like features are identified by like reference numerals.
Mutual coupling is a typically detrimental effect between antenna elements caused by unwanted energy absorption from nearby antenna elements during antenna operation. The effect of mutual coupling becomes more pronounced in antenna arrays having closely spaced antenna elements, as energy intended to be radiated away from one antenna element, becomes absorbed by another nearby antenna element. Similarly, energy which should be captured by a particular antenna element is instead absorbed by another nearby antenna element. Accordingly, mutual coupling reduces the efficiency and performance of the antenna array in both transmission and reception. In many situations, mutual coupling also serves to perturb individual antenna element patterns, and also perturbs element excitations due to active impedance, and therefore degrades the resultant antenna array pattern. Mutual coupling may perturb antenna element operating characteristics, thereby potentially leading to performance degradation. Embodiments of the present invention seek to address one or more of these problems by providing an antenna array that at least partially reduces the effect of mutual coupling.
Referring to
In various embodiments, the antenna array is formed of first and second interleaved rectangular grids of antenna elements. Each rectangular grid includes antenna elements spaced at regular intervals in the horizontal and vertical directions. The elements of the second rectangular grid are disposed at or near a center point of four adjacent elements of the first rectangular grid. As such, the second rectangular grid is diagonally offset from the first rectangular grid with respect to the horizontal and vertical directions. The second rectangular grid may include a single element or multiple elements. With respect to
As an alternative description, and in some embodiments, the antenna array may include a set of staggered columns of antenna elements. Each column includes a linear arrangement of antenna elements, and the columns are substantially parallel to one another. However, adjacent columns are diagonally offset from each other. In one embodiment, the columns have a vertical element pitch 144 of Y mm, and the columns are offset horizontally by a distance 142 of about X=Y/2 mm. and the adjacent columns may be offset 146 by deltaY=Y/2 mm. In some embodiments, the distance X may take on values other than Y/2.
In various embodiments, each antenna element is associated with two polarizations, namely a polarization along the first direction 132 and a polarization along the second direction 134. The antennas may be differentially driven so as to operate with one or a combination of the two polarizations. The polarizations within each element (e.g. polarizations along directions 132 and 134) may be substantially isolated from one another as well as substantially orthogonal. It is observed herein that mutual coupling between adjacent antenna elements may be strongest in the direction of an operative polarization of one or both of the adjacent antenna elements. This can be particularly true when the antenna elements are co-polarized. As such, in various embodiments, instances of the mutual coupling reduction circuit can be placed between adjacent antenna elements which exhibit relatively high mutual coupling, due to one or both of proximity and polarization. A mutual coupling reduction circuit may be placed between all adjacent radiating bodies, or between one or more selected pairs of radiating bodies, such as adjacent radiating bodies.
Each mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 may be directly conductively coupled to a pair of radiating bodies. In the illustrated embodiment, the rectangular antenna elements have edges which are parallel with the first and second directions 132, 134.
The mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 comprises a network for resonating with the mutual coupling between adjacent radiating bodies. In some embodiments, the coupling reduction can be characterized in terms of the known nomenclature of S-parameters. In particular, let S21 denote the strength of coupling between an input to a probe feed of a first one of the antenna elements and output from a probe feed of a second, adjacent one of the antenna elements. These may, for example, be the antenna elements corresponding to patch radiating bodies 110a and 110b in
In certain embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 may form part of a parallel resonating circuit which exists between the first radiating body 110a and the second radiating body 110b. The parallel resonating circuit includes two parallel branches: the circuit 120 as a first branch, and a capacitive air interface as a second branch. The capacitive air interface can be conceptualized as a capacitive circuit branch located between the first radiating body 110a and the second radiating body 110b. The capacitive air interface is one example of an electrical, magnetic, and/or electromagnetic coupling which inherently exists between antenna elements, due to proximity, orientation, intervening materials, and the like. In some embodiments, a mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 is connected between antenna element radiating bodies, in parallel with a capacitive air interface or the like. The mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 can be selected so as to provide overall electrical characteristics which inhibit antenna element mutual coupling.
In some embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 may comprise an inductor in parallel with the capacitive air interface that resonates in between the first and second radiating bodies 110a, 110b. In other embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 may comprise capacitor, an inductor-capacitor (LC) circuit, or an inductor-capacitor-inductor (LCL) circuit or capacitor-inductor-capacitor (CLC) circuit which enhances symmetry between the first and second radiating bodies 110a, 110b. The inductance and/or capacitance values of the mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 may be selected to tune the circuit at specific operating frequencies, and to limit, reduce or minimize the effect of mutual coupling. The topology of the mutual coupling reduction circuit, for example whether it includes a capacitor and an inductor in series or in parallel, may also be selected to provide for a desired operation of the overall mutual coupling reduction circuit. Inductance and capacitance value selection and/or circuit topology selection can be performed, for example, through electronic circuit simulation of the antenna array 100.
In various embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit 120 is configured to provide for a particular electrical filtering aspect which inhibits mutual coupling between a pair of antenna elements. The electrical filter is provided by a resonating circuit, one branch of which corresponds to the mutual coupling reduction circuit. The filtering characteristics of the resultant resonating circuit can be configured, through inductance and capacitance value selection and/or circuit topology selection. Relevant configurable filtering characteristics may include filter center frequency, filter attenuation, filter bandwidth, filter Q, and the like.
In some embodiments, the coupling between adjacent elements can be a combination of: coupling between patches; and coupling between patch feed structures. The coupling between patches may be the predominant mode of coupling.
In one embodiment, instead of using feed probes, patches can be excited by coupling with radiating slots in a conductive ‘reflector’ 102. In such embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit may be configured having a different topology and/or impedance than when feed probes are used. More generally, the mutual coupling reduction circuit may be configured taking into account various characteristics of the antenna array, including feed structure and radiating body type, shape, topology, inter-element spacing, and relative arrangement.
In some embodiments, the impedance of the mutual coupling reduction circuit may be configured based at least in part on the spacing between antenna elements. In some embodiments the impedance of the mutual coupling reduction circuit may be configured based at least in part on the antenna element structure including the feed network.
In various embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit is placed along the plane of polarization of the antenna elements, and is connected to the patch radiating bodies of adjacent antenna elements at the centre of the patch edges. Connection may include conductive connection using a copper trace, or a capacitive connection using a parallel plate capacitor disposed at least partially over the patch. This arrangement may facilitate cross polarization discrimination of the antenna elements and/or antenna array.
Referring again to
Further, radiating bodies 110a-110e are depicted as co-oriented in a first direction 132 of −45°, and a second direction 134 of +45°, with respect to the vertical edge of the body 102; this permits operation of the antenna elements with a common polarization of −45° or +45° to maintain good cross polarization discrimination. However, in other embodiments (not shown), the first and second directions 132, 134 may comprise different angles with respect to the body 102, for operation of the antenna elements at different polarization vectors.
Moreover, while
In some embodiments, the antenna array may be rotated 45 degrees so that antenna array polarizations are along 0 and 90 degree directions with respect to an external world reference frame. The location of the mutual coupling reduction circuit along the polarization plane may assist in keeping these two antenna array polarizations isolated from one another. The arrangement of antenna elements, such as the spacing 142 in
In one embodiment, the mutual coupling reduction circuit may be provided in the form of two or more parallel circuits. The parallel circuits may be coupled to an edge of an antenna element radiating body at two locations, which are positioned symmetrically about the center location of this edge of the radiating body.
For further clarity,
Further, while radiating bodies 110a-110e are shown in
The vertical spacing 144 and horizontal spacing 142 between radiating bodies 110a-110e may also vary according to particular embodiments. In one embodiment, the vertical spacing 144 may comprise between 0.85λ and 1.15λ, and the horizontal spacing 142 is about 0.5λ, where λ is an operating wavelength of the antenna elements, such as a center wavelength of an operating range. However these dimensions may be changed to meet different design parameters of the antenna array 100.
As further shown in
In various embodiments, whereas the impedance introduced by the second branch 230 is dictated by aspects such as the antenna array physical topology, the impedance introduced by the mutual coupling reduction circuit 220 is adjustable during the design phase. For a range of given impedances of the first branch, the mutual coupling reduction circuit can thus be configured so as to provide for a parallel resonating circuit with desired characteristics. Embodiments of the present invention comprise tuning of the resonant characteristics of the parallel resonating circuit so as to inhibit mutual coupling between the two radiating bodies 210a, 210b.
In some embodiments, impedance of the second branch 230 may be determined through modeling, simulation, experimentation, or the like. The impedance of the mutual coupling reduction circuit 220 can then be selected such that the parallel resonant circuit exhibits desired electrical filtering characteristics. The impedance of the mutual coupling reduction circuit may therefore require adjustment based on antenna array characteristics such as antenna spacing, antenna size and shape, operating frequency, location of reflector or ground plane, presence and location of further passive elements, element feed structure, and the like.
In various embodiments, impedance of the second branch is introduced primarily due to near-field coupling between the two radiating bodies, and may predominantly be direct coupling between the two radiating bodies (i.e. a patch-to-patch coupling) rather than coupling via an electromagnetic wave travelling along a surface of the reflector or ground plane parallel to the radiating bodies. Impedance of the second branch may be a function of a variety of coupling routes between radiating bodies.
Referring to
Still referring to
Referring to
In other embodiments (not shown), a single probe, or a single set of probes, may be used instead of the first and second pair of opposing probes 322a-322b, 324a-324b shown in
Referring to
Referring to
Viewed in a first way, the array of
By providing mutual coupling reduction circuits 320a-320d coupled to adjacent radiating bodies 310a-310e, the antenna array 300 of
Mutual coupling reduction circuits between non-adjacent elements are also possible; however the wider spacing between non-adjacent elements may result in a lower inherent mutual coupling, so that such mutual coupling reduction circuits are omitted in various embodiments.
Further, the body (eg. 102, 302 in
In some embodiments, inductors of the mutual coupling reduction circuits may be provided as pattern of folded or spiraled circuit traces within a PCB layer. Capacitors of the mutual coupling reduction circuits may be provided as a pair of parallel plates formed within two adjacent PCB layers, one of which may be located in the same layer as the radiating bodies. In other embodiments, one or more inductors or capacitors may be provided as discrete components soldered to the PCB.
In some embodiments, the mutual coupling reduction circuit may comprise a first set of one or more conductive features extending from a first radiating body and a second set of one or more conductive features extending from a second radiating body. The first set of conductive features and the second set of conductive features extend toward one another. The shape and relative positioning of the conductive features may provide for a desired capacitance and inductance of the mutual coupling reduction circuit. For example, the first and second sets of conductive features may include a set of interleaved “finger-like” protrusions which provide for a desired amount of capacitive coupling.
Referring to
At step 810: disposing the first and second radiating bodies on the body; and; and
At step 820: providing the mutual coupling reduction circuit between the first and second radiating bodies to reduce a mutual coupling effect between the first and second antenna elements.
Embodiments of the disclosed invention provide an antenna array with reduced mutual coupling between adjacent radiating bodies using a mutual coupling reduction circuit coupled in between. In certain embodiments, this may achieve a relatively low mutual coupling by decreasing the interaction between individual antenna elements, thereby permitting narrower spacing between antenna elements in a densely packed antenna array. These features may be of particular importance for full duplex applications, in which mutual coupling between simultaneously transmitting and receiving antenna elements is not desirable. The reduction in mutual coupling may be enhanced in certain embodiments through symmetrical placement and orientation of radiating bodies of the antenna elements.
Embodiments of the present invention provide for an antenna array exhibiting relatively low passive intermodulation (PIM) characteristics. This is due to the potential provision of the mutual coupling reduction circuit within the PCB structure, for example at least partially in the same plane as the resonating bodies and formed of the same material.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to specific features and embodiments thereof, it is evident that various modifications and combinations can be made thereto without departing from the scope of the invention. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded simply as an illustration of the invention as defined by the appended claims, and are contemplated to cover any and all modifications, variations, combinations or equivalents that fall within the scope of the present invention.