The present invention relates to an antenna for a hearing assistance device. The invention, more particularly, relates to an antenna element being electromagnetically coupled to a feed line via a feed element.
When designing a hearing assistive device adapted for short range communication via e.g. Bluetooth™, the housing of the hearing assistive device must host an antenna of a considerable length.
The purpose of the invention is to provide a hearing assistance device with an antenna element adapted for a compact design of the hearing assistance device.
This purpose is according to the invention achieved by a hearing assistance device comprising a housing component including a transceiver and processing circuitry arranged in a compact block structure, a small feed loop mounted on the compact block structure and electrically connected to the transceiver, and an antenna element contained within a housing component. The small feed loop and the antenna element are provided as metallic band elements, and the band elements in an area of electromagnetic coupling are arranged in substantially parallel planes. When the small feed loop and the antenna element are magnetically linked together by a common magnetic flux, the coupling is provided by mutual inductance ensuring a reliable electromagnetic coupling for the antenna signal.
In one embodiment, the band elements are arranged in a common plane. In one embodiment, the antenna element is contained adjacent to the top wall of the housing component. Preferably, the antenna element is configured as a folded loop antenna, or as a folded dipole antenna.
In one embodiment, the antenna element is manufactured by adding a metallic pattern to the housing component in a Laser Direct Structuring (LDS) process, preferably on the inner surface of the housing component.
The invention will be described in further detail with reference to preferred aspects and the accompanying drawing, in which:
A hearing assistive device is according to one embodiment of the invention a hearing aid 10 and is shown in
In one embodiment, the sound producing parts of the hearing aid 10 (including a speaker) are located inside of the earpiece component 14. The housing component 12 and the earpiece component 14 are interconnected by a cable 16 comprising two or more wires (not shown) for transferring audio processed in the housing component 12 to the speaker in the earpiece component 14, for powering components in the earpiece component 14, and/or for transferring audio picked up by a microphone (not shown) in the earpiece component 14 to the audio processing components in the housing component 12.
In one embodiment, the sound producing parts of the hearing aid 10 (including a speaker) are located inside of the housing component 12. The housing component 12 and the earpiece component 14 are interconnected by a sound tube (not shown) for passing sound produced by the speaker in the housing component 12 to an outlet in the earpiece component 14.
To illustrate the principles according to the invention,
The loop antenna 30 is a resonant loop antenna, and its size is governed by the intended wavelength of operation. A loop antenna 30 intended to operate in the ISM band at approximately 2.4 GHz, the wavelength will be around 12.5 cm. For simplicity, the loop antenna 30 shown in
Small loops have low radiation resistance and thus poor radiation efficiency. A small loop generally has a circumference around one tenth of a wavelength, in which case there will be a relatively constant current distribution along the conductor. The antenna has some of the characteristics of a resonant loop but is not resonant.
Hereby, the small loop 40 will couple to and excite a current in the resonant loop antenna 30. The circumference of the small feed loop 40 is between 5 and 20% of a wavelength. Preferably, the circumference of the small feed loop 40 is approximately a tenth of a wavelength. In one embodiment, the mutual induction coupling 42 extends along half of the circumference of the small feed loop 40. In one embodiment, the mutual induction coupling 42 extends along the circumference of the small feed loop 40 in a length corresponding to 3-6% of the wavelength of the signal emitted by the resonant loop antenna 30.
The major part of the electronics, including some microphones, a processor, a battery 51, a short-range radio, and an inductive radio, is located inside of the housing component 12. Traditionally, the electronics are arranged in a compact block structure 50, which is illustrated in
The small loop element 40 extends along the periphery of the neck 53 of the compact block structure 50. The resonant loop antenna 30 has an antenna segment 35 extending along the periphery of the neck 63 of the housing component 12. A substantial part of the small loop element 40 is enclosed by the antenna segment 35 and separated therefrom by the neck wall 63, whereby the mutual induction coupling between the feed element and the antenna element is provided. The neck wall 63 has a substantial uniform thickness. The small loop element 40 and the antenna segment 35 are, as seen, arranged substantially orthogonal to the longitudinal axis 65 of the compact block structure 50. The antenna element 35 encloses the small loop element 40 along at least half of the periphery of the small loop element 40. It is furthermore seen that the antenna segment 35 continues in the antenna segment 38 extending in the longitudinal direction of the compact block structure 50.
Once the small loop element 40 has been soldered to the compact block structure 50, the compact block structure 50 is inserted into the housing component 12 as marked by the arrow 67, whereby the mechanical design ensures the correct positioning of the small loop element 40 relatively to the resonant loop antenna 30 ensuring that sufficient energy can be transferred between the small loop element 40 and the resonant loop antenna 30.
In the above, the antenna element 30 is described as being a resonant loop antenna, but in other embodiments the antenna element 30 can be a variety of other antenna types, such as a monopole, a dipole, a patch, a spiral, a slot, or an aperture. The antenna element 30 may be manufactured using various antenna manufacturing techniques. The antenna element 30 can be mounted on and external to the housing component 12.
A current in the feed loop in transmission mode will create an electromagnetic field, and when the created electromagnetic field is induced into the antenna element situated within the same magnetic field, the electromagnetic field is said to be induced magnetically, inductively or by mutual induction. In receiving mode, the current in the antenna element will induce a current in the feed loop by mutual induction, and the feed loop will deliver the current to the receiver. When the two loops are magnetically linked together by a common magnetic flux they are said to have the property of mutual inductance. This is the situation for the embodiments shown in
The direction of the induced current in the antenna element 30 relatively to the current in the small feed loop 40 depends the antenna impedance.
In one embodiment, the antenna element 30 is manufactured by adding a metallic pattern to housing component in a Laser Direct Structuring (LDS) process. The metallic pattern is in one embodiment provided on the outer surface of the housing component 12, whereby the radiated power from the antenna element 30 is not attenuated when passing through the dielectric walls of the housing component 12.
The LDS process is based on a thermoplastic material doped with a (non-conductive) metallic inorganic compound. The metallic inorganic compound is activated by means of laser. The housing component 12 is injection molded in a single shot (single-component injection molding), with almost no limitation in the design freedom. A laser then selectively exposes the course of the later circuit trace on the housing component 12 with a laser beam. Where the laser beam hits the plastic, the metal additive forms a micro-rough track. The metal particles of this track afterwards form the nuclei for a subsequent metallization. In an electroless copper bath, the conductor path layers arise precisely on these tracks. Successively layers of copper, nickel and gold finish can be raised in this way. The LDS process may be applied to the internal as well as to the external surface of the housing component 12.
The dipole antenna commonly consists of two identical conductive elements being bilaterally symmetrical. Dipoles are resonant antennas, meaning that the conductive elements serve as resonators, with standing waves of radio current flowing back and forth between their ends. The shown antenna element 80 is a half-wave dipole, in which each of the two conductive elements are approximately ¼ wavelength long.
In one embodiment illustrated in cross-section in
The antenna element 80 is surrounding the protrusion 86 on the inner side of the housing component 12. At least half of the periphery of the small feed loop 40 is provided adjacent to and within the antenna element 80. The small feed loop 40 and the antenna element 80 are provided a metal paths or patches, and in one embodiment the patches are arranged, at least around the small feed loop 40, substantially within the same plane. The small feed loop 40 is provided on top of the compact block structure 50 and is connected to the transceiver 68.
This application claims benefit of provisional application 62/572,795 filed Oct. 16, 2017, and is related to the following U.S. applications: (1) PCT International Application PCT/EP2018/075422, filed Sep. 20, 2018 and entitled “Antenna For A Hearing Assistance Device,” (2) U.S. application having attorney docket number Q242398 filed Oct. 12, 2018 and entitled “Antenna For A Hearing Assistance Device,” (3) U.S. application having attorney docket number Q242402 filed Oct. 12, 2018 and entitled “Antenna For A Hearing Assistance Device,” and (4) U.S. application having attorney docket number Q242408 filed Oct. 12, 2018 and entitled “Antenna For A Hearing Assistance Device,” the disclosures of all of which are incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62572795 | Oct 2017 | US |