Electronic devices, including portable electronic devices, may communicate with other electronic devices via one or more antennas.
The amount of space that is available to an antenna system (e.g., conductors, cabling, radio transmitter/receiver electronics, etc.) may affect the signal transmission/reception strength and fidelity of the antennas system. The radiation properties of antennas utilized in portable devices may also be affected by other electronics in proximity to the antennas, electromagnetically dissipative human body tissue, and nearby metallic objects.
The present disclosure relates to antennas that are configured to mitigate the interference sources described above. For example, the antennas may be configured to transmit and/or receive data over a frequency associated with GPS, Bluetooth, WiFi, cellular frequencies associated with 3G and LTE cellular specifications, and/or any other suitable communication frequency range. An antenna may be configured (e.g., based on a length, conductive material, position, and/or other parameter) to resonate at a native frequency (e.g., an unmatched frequency) above an associated target frequency (e.g., a matched and/or operating frequency) and then matched via a capacitive matching network connected to the antenna in order to increase performance in a small volume. For example, the small volume may be located in a band or an enclosure of a wearable electronic device or in a cavity of an implantable device. Locating the antenna outside of a display housing (e.g., away from the display electronics) may improve transmission/reception line of sight while isolating the antenna from noise generated by the display or digital processing electronics. A cable connecting the antenna to a radio receiver/transmitter located near the display electronics may be grounded at a pass-through in an outer region of the display housing in order to further reduce noise in the data signal passing to/from the antenna.
Aspects of this disclosure will now be described by example and with reference to the drawing figures listed above. Components and other elements that may be substantially the same in one or more figures are identified coordinately and described with minimal repetition. It will be noted, however, that elements identified coordinately may also differ to some degree.
The illustrated configuration includes four flexible segments 14 linking five rigid segments 16. Other configurations may include more or fewer flexible segments, and more or fewer rigid segments. In some implementations, a flexible segment is coupled between pairs of adjacent rigid segments.
Various functional components, sensors, energy-storage cells, circuits, connectors, or other elements of wearable electronic device 10 may be distributed among multiple rigid segments 16. Accordingly, as shown schematically in
In one implementation, a closure mechanism enables facile attachment and separation of the ends of composite band 12, so that the band can be closed into a loop and worn on the wrist. In other implementations, the device may be fabricated as a continuous loop resilient enough to be pulled over the hand and still conform to the wrist. Alternatively, the device may have an open bracelet form factor in which ends of the band are not fastened to one another. In still other implementations, wearable electronic devices of a more elongate band shape may be worn around the user's bicep, waist, chest, ankle, leg, head, or other body part. Accordingly, the wearable electronic devices here contemplated include eye glasses, a head band, an arm-band, an ankle band, a chest strap, or even an implantable device to be implanted in tissue.
As shown in
In the illustrated conformation of wearable electronic device 10, one end of composite band 12 overlaps the other end. A buckle 16E is arranged at the overlapping end of the composite band, and a receiving slot 30 is arranged at the overlapped end. As shown in greater detail herein, the receiving slot has a concealed rack feature, and the buckle includes a set of pawls to engage the rack feature. The buckle snaps into the receiving slot and slides forward or backward for proper adjustment. When the buckle is pushed into the slot at an appropriate angle, the pawls ratchet into tighter fitting set points. When release buttons 32 are squeezed simultaneously, the pawls release from the rack feature, allowing the composite band to be loosened or removed.
The functional components of wearable electronic device 10 draw power from one or more energy-storage cells 34. A battery—e.g., a lithium ion battery—is one type of energy-storage cell suitable for this purpose. Examples of alternative energy-storage cells include super- and ultra-capacitors. A typical energy storage cell is a rigid structure of a size that scales with storage capacity. To provide adequate storage capacity with minimal rigid bulk, a plurality of discrete separated energy storage cells may be used. These may be arranged in battery compartments 16C and 16D, or in any of the rigid segments 16 of composite band 12. Electrical connections between the energy storage cells and the functional components are routed through flexible segments 14. In some implementations, the energy storage cells have a curved shape to fit comfortably around the wearer's wrist, or other body part.
In general, energy-storage cells 34 may be replaceable and/or rechargeable. In some examples, recharge power may be provided through a universal serial bus (USB) port 36, which includes a magnetic latch to releasably secure a complementary USB connector. In other examples, the energy storage cells may be recharged by wireless inductive or ambient-light charging. In still other examples, the wearable electronic device may include electro-mechanical componentry to recharge the energy storage cells from the user's adventitious or purposeful body motion. More specifically, the energy-storage cells may be charged by an electromechanical generator integrated into wearable electronic device 10. The generator may be actuated by a mechanical armature that moves when the user is moving.
In wearable electronic device 10, compute system 20 is housed in display-carrier module 16A and situated below display 22. The compute system is operatively coupled to display 22, loudspeaker 24, communication suite 28, and to the various sensors. The compute system includes a data-storage machine 38 to hold data and instructions, and a logic machine 40 to execute the instructions.
Display 22 may be any suitable type of display, such as a thin, low-power light emitting diode (LED) array or a liquid-crystal display (LCD) array. Quantum-dot display technology may also be used. Suitable LED arrays include organic LED (OLED) or active matrix OLED arrays, among others. An LCD array may be actively backlit. However, some types of LCD arrays—e.g., a liquid crystal on silicon, LCOS array—may be front-lit via ambient light. Although the drawings show a substantially flat display surface, this aspect is by no means necessary, for curved display surfaces may also be used. In some use scenarios, wearable electronic device 10 may be worn with display 22 on the front of the wearer's wrist, like a conventional wristwatch. However, positioning the display on the back of the wrist may provide greater privacy and ease of touch input. To accommodate use scenarios in which the device is worn with the display on the back of the wrist, an auxiliary display module 42 may be included on the rigid segment opposite display-carrier module 16A. The auxiliary display module may show the time of day, for example.
Communication suite 28 may include any appropriate wired or wireless communications componentry. In
In wearable electronic device 10, touch-screen sensor 44 is coupled to display 22 and configured to receive touch input from the user. Accordingly, the display may be a touch-sensor display in some implementations. In general, the touch sensor may be resistive, capacitive, or optically based. Push-button sensors (e.g., microswitches) may be used to detect the state of push buttons 46a and 46b, which may include rockers. Input from the push-button sensors may be used to enact a home-key or on-off feature, control audio volume, microphone, etc.
Arranged inside pillow contact sensor 58 in the illustrated configuration is an optical pulse-rate sensor 62. The optical pulse-rate sensor may include a narrow-band (e.g., green) LED emitter and matched photodiode to detect pulsating blood flow through the capillaries of the skin, and thereby provide a measurement of the wearer's pulse rate. In some implementations, the optical pulse-rate sensor may also be configured to sense the wearer's blood pressure. In the illustrated configuration, optical pulse-rate sensor 62 and display 22 are arranged on opposite sides of the device as worn. The pulse-rate sensor alternatively could be positioned directly behind the display for ease of engineering. In some implementations, however, a better reading is obtained when the sensor is separated from the display.
Wearable electronic device 10 may also include motion sensing componentry, such as an accelerometer 64, gyroscope 66, and magnetometer 68. The accelerometer and gyroscope may furnish inertial data along three orthogonal axes as well as rotational data about the three axes, for a combined six degrees of freedom. This sensory data can be used to provide a pedometer/calorie-counting function, for example. Data from the accelerometer and gyroscope may be combined with geomagnetic data from the magnetometer to further define the inertial and rotational data in terms of geographic orientation.
Wearable electronic device 10 may also include a global positioning system (GPS) receiver 70 for determining the wearer's geographic location and/or velocity. In some configurations, the antenna of the GPS receiver may be relatively flexible and extend into flexible segment 14a. In the configuration of
In some implementations, wearable electronic device 10 includes a main flexible FPCA 78, which runs from pillow 16B all the way to battery compartment 16D. In the illustrated configuration, the main FPCA is located beneath semi-flexible armature 72 and assembled onto integral features of the display carrier. In the configuration of
Display-carrier module 16A also encloses sensor FPCA 80. At one end of rigid segment 16A, and located on the sensor FPCA, are visible-light sensor 50, ultraviolet sensor 52, and microphone 48. A polymethylmethacrylate window 82 is insert molded into a glass insert-molded (GIM) bezel 84 of display-carrier module 16A, over these three sensors. The window has a hole for the microphone and is printed with IR transparent ink on the inside covering except over the ultraviolet sensor. A water repellent gasket 86 is positioned over the microphone, and a thermoplastic elastomer (TPE) boot surrounds all three components. The purpose of the boot is to acoustically seal the microphone and make the area more cosmetically appealing when viewed from the outside.
As noted above, display carrier module 74 may be overmolded with plastic. This overmolding does several things. First, the overmolding provides a surface that the device TPE overmolding will bond to chemically. Second, it creates a shut-off surface, so that when the device is overmolded with TPE, the TPE will not ingress into the display carrier compartment. Finally, the PC overmolding creates a glue land for attaching the upper portion of display-carrier module 16A.
The charging contacts of USB port 36 are overmolded into a plastic substrate and reflow soldered to main FPCA 78. The main FPCA may be attached to the inside surface of semi-flexible armature 72. In the illustrated configuration, charging contact sensor 56 is frame-shaped and surrounds the charging contacts. It is attached to the semi-flexible armature directly under display carrier module 74—e.g., with rivet features. Skin temperature sensor 60 (not shown in
Shown also in
Shown also in
In the configuration of
Pass-through structure 308a may be formed of conductive material pressed into outer walls of the display-carrier module 74 in order to enable the coaxial cable to be grounded at a point between the radio receiver and/or transmitter 304a (e.g., grounded at substrate 310) and the antenna 302a. The coaxial cable 306a may be grounded at antenna 302a via connection to a radiofrequency ground disposed on a rear side 314a of an antenna substrate 312a. Grounding at multiple points along the coaxial cable, including the location at which the cable passes from the conductive enclosure to the antenna, may further isolate the antenna conductor from disruptive/interfering electromagnetic activity. The antenna conductor may be disposed on a front side 316a of the antenna substrate, as described in more detail with respect to
A second antenna 302b and associated components may be disposed on an opposite side of the display-carrier module from the first antenna 302a. Components labelled with a same base reference numeral may perform similarly to those described above. For example, a second coaxial cable 306b may connect a second radio transmitter/receiver 304b to antenna 302b. The second coaxial cable may traverse a second pass-through structure 308b and a second antenna substrate 312b may have a rear side 314b and a front side 316b. The antennas may be configured to communicate via different communication frequencies and/or protocols. For example, antenna 302a may be configured to receive and/or transmit Global Positioning System (GPS) signaling, while antenna 302b may be configured to communicate via a Bluetooth connection to another compute system. It is to be understood that the above-described arrangement is non-limiting and any suitable arrangement of antennas may be utilized to communicate via any suitable communication frequency or protocol.
As described above, an antenna conductor may be configured such that in an unmatched condition, the antenna falls into one of two states. The first of these states may be described as under-resonant and describes a condition where at a particular (e.g., target) frequency the antenna impedance has some imaginary component and has not yet become purely real. The second of these states may be described as over-resonant and describes a condition where at the particular (e.g., target) frequency, the antenna impedance has some imaginary component and has surpassed the point where it was purely real. Modification of the antenna conductor geometry may determine in which of these two states and/or conditions the antenna is classified. In some examples, an antenna in the under-resonant state has a total conductor length that is less than the total conductor length of an antenna in the over-resonant state. Regardless of the initial state of the antenna, the resonant frequency after matching will correspond to a selected target frequency (e.g., an operating frequency at which a radio receiver and/or transmitter 304a/304b is configured to communicate). Turning briefly to
In order to match the over-resonant antenna conductor 502a to a selected target frequency of the radio receiver/transmitter 304a, a capacitive matching circuit 504 may be connected between the antenna conductor and ground. A first terminal of a capacitor of the capacitive matching circuit may be connected to the antenna conductor (e.g., between the antenna conductor and an associated radio receiver/transmitter) and a second terminal of the capacitor may be connected to ground (e.g., an antenna ground disposed on an antenna substrate). A capacitor may additionally or alternatively be provided in printed form by overlapping an area of two conductive traces located in different layers (without providing contact between the traces and/or layers). Other techniques may be utilized to provide a capacitive matching circuit, including but not limited to inter-digital capacitors, in-line gap, and other suitable printed techniques.
Returning to
As illustrated, pass-through structure 702 may include a pair of mirror-symmetric brackets 704 having an axis of symmetry along a longitudinal axis 706 of the coaxial cable 306a. Brackets 704 may be configured to secure the pass-through structure to the display-carrier module by abutting outer surface 708 and inner surface 710 of a wall 712 of the display-carrier module. A central block 714 of pass-through structure 702 may have a flat top surface, an arched bottom surface, and a hollow central region through which the coaxial cable 306a may pass.
The example antenna systems described above mitigate sources of antenna interferences including other electronic devices in proximity to the antennas, electromagnetically dissipative human body tissue, and metallic objects coupled to the antennas. For example, an over-resonant antenna that is matched to a selected target frequency via a capacitive matching circuit may increase performance of the antenna in a small volume compared to antennas that are under-resonant. The position of the example antenna systems (e.g., outside of a display housing) may increase line of sight visibility while isolating the antenna from noise generated by the display electronics. Grounding a coaxial cable connecting the antenna conductor to an associated transmitter/receiver at a pass-through in an outer region of the display housing may further reduce noise in the data signal passing to/from the antenna. Accordingly, the above-described features may enable a small form factor antenna to be utilized in a wearable electronic device without sacrificing antenna performance.
It will be understood that the configurations and approaches described herein are exemplary in nature, and that these specific implementations or examples are not to be taken in a limiting sense, because numerous variations are feasible. The specific routines or methods described herein may represent one or more processing strategies. As such, various acts shown or described may be performed in the sequence shown or described, in other sequences, in parallel, or omitted.
The subject matter of this disclosure includes all novel and non-obvious combinations and sub-combinations of the various processes, systems and configurations, and other features, functions, acts, and/or properties disclosed herein, as well as any and all equivalents thereof.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160020506 A1 | Jan 2016 | US |