The specification relates generally to wireless communication, and specifically to antenna arrays with similar phase centers.
In certain wireless communication systems, reflectors are employed with antennas, with the antenna being referred to as a feed for the reflector, in order to increase transmission and reception gain over that provided by the antenna alone. Various design constraints impact the design of antennas for such applications. Such antennas may be required to achieve a certain beamwidth, for example a width sufficient to impact substantially the entire surface of the reflector. It may also be desirable to maximize the gain of the antenna itself. Further, it may be desirable to simplify manufacturing of the antenna, and also to reduce energy losses within the antenna. Existing antenna assemblies leave room for improvement in satisfying the above design constraints while also optimizing antenna performance for use with a reflector.
According to an aspect of the specification, an antenna assembly is provided, comprising: a support member having opposing first and second sides; an input electrical contact and an output electrical contact; a first array of transmission patch elements supported on the first side and connected to the input electrical contact, the first array configured to receive an input signal via the input electrical contact and generate outbound radiation according to the input signal; and a second array of reception patch elements supported on the first side and connected to the output electrical contact, the second array configured to receive inbound radiation and generate an output signal at the output electrical contact according to the inbound radiation; the first array and the second array having a common phase center.
According to another aspect of the specification, a wireless communications assembly is provided, comprising: an assembly support member defining a mounting surface including a transmission electrical contact and a reception electrical contact; a radio processor carried on the assembly support member and connected to the transmission electrical contact and a reception electrical contact; and the antenna assembly of the above-mentioned aspect, the support member coupled to the mounting surface to electrically connect the output electrical contact with the reception electrical contact and the input electrical contact with the transmission electrical contact.
According to a further aspect of the specification, a communications system is provided, comprising: a parabolic reflector having a focal point; and a wireless communications assembly according to the above-mentioned aspect, supported to position the common phase center of the first array of transmission patch elements and the second array of reception patch elements at the focal point.
Embodiments are described with reference to the following figures, in which:
Assembly 108 includes an antenna assembly, which will be discussed in greater detail below, directed towards the concave surface of reflector 104. Assembly 108 acts as a feed for reflector 104 by receiving data for transmission from computing device 112, and emitting radiation through excitation of the antenna towards reflector 104. As will now be apparent, the radiation is aligned and directed by reflector 104. Assembly 108 also receives incoming radiation that impacts reflector 104 and is focussed by reflector 104 onto the antenna. The incoming radiation is detected by the antenna and the data encoded therein is provided by assembly 108 to computing device 112.
Computing device 112 may be any of a wide variety of computing devices. Typically, systems employing reflectors such as reflector 104 are deployed as high-gain backhaul links, and thus computing device 112 is illustrated as a data center which may, for example, enable communications between wireless devices and the Internet. This implementation is provided simply as an illustrative example, however—a wide variety of computing devices may be employed with system 100, and system 100 may be deployed in any scenario requiring wireless communications (e.g. with other similar systems, with mobile devices such as smartphones, laptop computers and the like, or a combination thereof).
As seen in
The antenna has a beamwidth angle “A”, shown in
The mechanism by which antenna assembly 212 is mounted to mounting surface 204 is not particularly limited. Mounting surface 204 includes any suitable surface-mount packaging, such as a ball grid array (BGA), to couple antenna assembly 212 to assembly support member 200 and place contacts 208-t and 208-r with the corresponding electrical contacts of antenna assembly 212.
Radio processor 216 also receives outgoing signals from baseband processor 220 and applies the outgoing signals to antenna assembly 212 for transmission. Thus, radio processor 216 is electrically connected to electrical contacts 208 on the opposite side of assembly support member 200, by any suitable combination of vias and traces supported by assembly support member 200.
Baseband processor 220, in turn, is connected to a communications interface 224 carried by assembly support member 200. Communications interface 224 is any suitable communications interface, such as a Universal Serial Bus (USB) interface, an Ethernet interface or the like. Via communications interface 224, baseband processor 220 receives data from computing device 112 for transmission via radio processor 216 and antenna assembly 212. Baseband processor 220 also receives and processes incoming transmissions via antenna assembly 212 and radio processor 216, and transmits the incoming data to computing device 112 via communications interface 224.
Having described certain components of assembly 108, the features of antenna assembly 212 will now be described in greater detail. Referring to
Supported on the first side of support member 300 are a plurality of patch antenna elements, which in the present embodiment are circular patches. In particular, a first phased array of transmission patch elements 304t, and a second phased array of reception patch elements 304r are supported on the first side of support member 300. The patch elements 304 may be etched from a layer of conductive material of support member 300, deposited as conductive material (e.g. copper, silver and the like) on support member 300, or manufactured by any other suitable process.
Each transmission patch element 304t is supported on support member 300 at a predefined distance from a central location on the first side of support member, labelled “PC” (the point PC does not necessarily have any particular structural feature, circuit element or the like). That is, the transmission patch elements 304t are disposed in a circular arrangement having PC as its center. Further, the transmission patch elements 304t are arranged such that the set of vectors extending from the point PC to respective transmission patch elements 304t sum to zero. That is, for the four transmission patch elements 304t shown in
Similarly, each reception patch element 304r is supported on support member 300 at a predefined distance from the point PC. That is, the reception patch elements 304r are disposed in a circular arrangement having PC as its center. Further, the reception patch elements 304r are arranged such that the set of vectors extending from the point PC to respective reception patch elements 304r sum to zero. That is, for the four reception patch elements 304r shown in
As will now be apparent from the above, the arrays of transmission and reception patch elements have a common phase center at the point PC as a result of their arrangements on support member 300. Various arrangements of the transmission and reception patch elements other than that shown in
Turning to
As seen in
Meanwhile, output contact 308-o is connected to the second array of reception patch elements 304r, and reception patch elements 304r are thus configured to receive inbound radiation and generate an output signal at output contact 308-o according to the inbound radiation. As will now be apparent, the output signal generated at output contact 308-o is transmitted to radio processor 216 via reception contact 208-r.
Antenna assembly 212, in some embodiments, includes additional structural features associated with the connections between contacts 308-i and 308-o and the corresponding arrays of patch elements. Turning to
More specifically, in the present embodiment, support member 300 includes eight conductive layers 400-1, 400-2, 400-3, 400-4, 400-5, 400-6, 400-7 and 400-8. Layer 400-1 carries patch elements 304, as described above, while layer 400-8 carries contacts 308-i and 308-o. The conductive layers between layer 400-1 and 400-8 carry various other features, to be discussed below.
A conductive layer 400 between the first and second sides of support member 300—layer 400-4, in the present embodiment, illustrated in
Feed network 500 includes a primary feed line 504 travelling from a via connecting to input contact 308-i to a secondary feed line 508; secondary feed line 508 splits the signal from primary feed line 504 towards two terminal feed lines 512-1, 512-2, each of which further splits the signal between a pair of transmission patch elements 304t (terminal feed lines 512 are connected to intermediate patch elements, to be described in greater detail below, by additional vias). As also seen in
An additional conductive layer 400 between layer 400-4 (that is, the layer carrying first feed network 500) and layer 400-8—layer 400-6, in the present embodiment, illustrated in
Feed network 600 includes a primary feed line 604 travelling from a via connecting to input contact 308-o to a secondary feed line 608; secondary feed line 608 splits the signal from primary feed line 604 towards two terminal feed lines 612-1, 612-2, each of which further splits the signal between a pair of reception patch elements 304r (terminal feed lines 612 are connected to intermediate patch elements, to be described in greater detail below, by additional vias). As also seen in
In other embodiments, a wide variety of other feed network structures can be implemented, with different combinations of primary, secondary and terminal feed lines (as well as additional levels of feed lines if greater numbers of patch elements are employed). Further, the above-mentioned wider traces can be omitted in some embodiments. In addition, in other embodiments the elevation of feed networks 500 and 600 can be reversed (that is, feed network 500 can be placed closer to layer 400-8 than feed network 600).
In addition to feed networks 500 and 600 being carried on different conductive layers 400, support member 300 can include an additional conductive layer in between the layers carrying feed networks 500 and 600, implemented as a ground plane. Thus, in the present embodiment, referring again to
Further, in the present embodiment an additional conductive layer is provided between layer 400-1 (i.e. the layer supporting patch elements 304) and layer 400-4 (i.e. the layer supporting feed network 500). Turning to
In other embodiments, the intermediate patches 700 can be omitted. When the intermediate patches 700 are omitted, direct electrical connections between feed networks 500 and 600 are patch elements 304 can be provided. In further embodiments, intermediate patches 700 have the same shape and size as patch elements 304. In still further embodiments, a plurality of vertically-arranged intermediate patches are provided, with the bottom intermediate patch being electrically connected to the relevant feed network, and the remaining intermediate patches being electromagnetically coupled with each other and with the corresponding patch element 304.
Returning to
As noted earlier, layer 400-8 carries contacts 308-i and 308-o, for example in signal pads. Support member 300 also includes a plurality of ground pads on layer 400-8, not shown for simplicity of illustration. The ground pads, as well as associated vias, interconnect the ground planes (e.g. layers 400-3, 400-5, 400-7) and connect to corresponding ground structures on assembly support member 108.
Variations to the structure of antenna assembly 212 are contemplated. For example, in some embodiments the transmission patch elements 304t are placed at a different predetermined distance from the point PC than the reception patch elements 304r. In further embodiments, the patch elements have non-circular shapes (e.g. rectangular shapes). In still further embodiments, a different number of transmission patch elements 304t is provided than of reception patch elements 304r.
In still further embodiments, the arrangement of the transmission and reception patches is other than in symmetrical pairs, and need not place the patches in the alternating arrangement shown in
Certain advantages to the antenna structures discussed above will now occur to those skilled in the art. For example, the implementation of arrays of patches for each of transmission and reception reduces or eliminates the need for switch mechanisms necessary in antennae with only one radiating element. Further, the placement of the above-mentioned arrays according to the teachings herein permits such arrays to be implemented with common phase centers suitable for use with reflectors. As a further example, the isolated feed networks for the transmission and reception arrays may reduce interference (e.g. mutual coupling between the transmission and reception feed networks), particularly in compact antenna assemblies that may be required to achieve required beamwidths (e.g. around 90 to 100 degrees of −10 dB beamwidth).
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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Number | Date | Country | |
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20180159247 A1 | Jun 2018 | US |