The present invention is generally directed to floor tiles for a raised floor system and in particular to floor tiles incorporating RF antennas for providing Wi-Fi or cellular wireless coverage to users inside a building.
The present invention provides an antenna floor tile for a raised floor system comprising a frame; an insert supported by the frame, the insert including a top surface; a recess disposed below the top surface; an antenna attached to the insert within the recess; and a protective layer disposed over the antenna.
A conventional raised floor system 2 is shown in
The raised floor system 2 provides space 9 below the floor tiles 8 for routing power and communication cables, pipes, HVAC, and other amenities to various points on the floor. The floor tiles 8 are easily removable individually by lifting to gain access to the space 9 below.
Referring to
The antenna 12 is typically used for Wi-Fi (wireless local area network technology based on the IEEE 802.11 standards) or cellular systems to provide wireless coverage for users of the systems within the building. An example of the antenna 12 has an overall rectangular shape, measuring about 13.8″×6.3″×1.2″, a dual band 2.4/5 GHz antenna, Model No. M6030030O32402A, available from TESSCO Communications Incorporated, Hunt Valley, Md.
Referring to
A recess 22 is provided below the top surface 24 of the insert 20. The recess 22 is configured to receive the antenna 12 and preferably centered over the insert 20. The recess may be 0.125-0.25″ deep, depending on the thickness or profile of the specific antenna used, and preferably includes a flat or planar bottom surface to dispose the antenna 12 below the top surface 24 of the insert 20.
The antenna 12 is attached to the insert 20 at the bottom of the recess 22, preferably with construction adhesive 26. The construction adhesive 26 advantageously provides a cushion to the antenna 12 and serves to seal the antenna holes 32.
Referring to
Holes 32 are provided through the thickness of the insert 20 within the area of the recess 22 to allow the leads 34 of the antenna 12 to extend below the raised floor tile system 2 into the space 9 below. The number of the holes 32 depends on the number of connectors attached to the antenna 12 and the type of wireless radio (access point) used.
Referring to
Referring to Fig. to
The antenna 12 propagates the RF signal from the antenna to the client (user device) and receives the RF signal from the client device. The antenna 12 connects to the radio 36 that provides the wireless signal via coaxial cables 34. The number of connectors attached to the antenna 12 depends on the type of wireless radio being used. There are typically 3, 4 or 6 cables.
The antennas 12 can be designed for different communication systems, such as Wi-Fi and DAS (Distributed Antenna System) for LTE Cellular systems for indoors to operate with all of the carriers (AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, T-Mobile, international carriers, etc.).
Once the entire standard raised floor system 2 is installed and the building is constructed and based on RF testing, existing standard floor tiles 8 are replaced with the antenna floor tiles 10 to provide RF coverage as needed. The radios 36 are located under the antenna floor tile 10 supported by metal cage trays and power is run to the radio under the flooring. If the building space is rearranged at any time, the antenna floor tiles 10, along with the respective radios 36 can be repositioned to provide the proper RF coverage. With the raised floor system, all of the cables that are typically placed overhead are now routed advantageously beneath the floor. Advantageously, ladders will not be used to maintain the antennas 12 and the access points 36.
The antenna floor tile 10 may be future-proofed by using antenna designs for radios that have not been released yet but still work for existing products. An example is 802.11ac wave 2 technology, which will use up to 8 ports. The antenna 12 can be designed to work with this future technology but the current technology will be used. In other words, the antenna 12 will be designed with 8 ports but only 4 to 6 maximum will be used until the new technology requiring 8 leads is available. For a DAS implementation, current technology starts at 698 MHz but the antennas 12 can be designed to operate down to 570 MHz, when the FCC opens up the frequency spectrum down to 570 MHz.
While this invention has been described as having preferred design, it is understood that it is capable of further modification, uses and/or adaptations following in general the principle of the invention and including such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which the invention pertains, and as may be applied to the essential features set forth, and fall within the scope of the invention or the limits of the appended claims.
This is a nonprovisional application of Ser. No. 62/068,261, filed Oct. 24, 2014, the priority benefit of which is hereby claimed and whose disclosure is hereby incorporated by reference.
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0719980 | Jul 1996 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160118707 A1 | Apr 2016 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62068261 | Oct 2014 | US |