Antenna having a feed and a shorting post connected between reference plane and planar conductor interacting to form a transmission line

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6317083
  • Patent Number
    6,317,083
  • Date Filed
    Friday, July 16, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 13, 2001
    23 years ago
Abstract
An antenna comprises a reference plane 204, a conductive polygonal lamina 202 disposed opposing the reference plane, and a feed section 206 coupled to the reference plane and the lamina. The feed section 206 is arranged as a transmission line. The feed section may comprise at least two planar conductors 208 arrange parallel to each other, one of the planar conductors 208b being connected to the feed and the other of the conductors 208a being connected to the reference. The feed section may be in the form of a coplanar strip.
Description




This invention relates to antennas and in particular to flat plate or planar antennas.




As electronics and communications technologies have advanced, there has been a drive to increase the performance and decrease the size of consumer devices. In particular, in the field of mobile communications, there has been continual demand for increasingly smaller communications devices, such as telephones, computers and personal organisers, but without a decrease in performance.




One area in which size and weight design goals may be counter to performance design goals is in the design of antennas. The performance of an antenna can be measured by various parameters such as gain, specific absorption rate (SAR), impedance bandwidth and input impedance. Conventionally, mobile telephones have been provided with a rod antenna. These provide good performance relative to cost. However, since the antennas extend from the housing of the device, they are prone to breakage. Furthermore, as the size of a rod antenna decreases, the gain also decreases which is undesirable. As communication devices become smaller, rod antennas are therefore unlikely to provide a convenient antenna solution.




It is desirable therefore to develop an antenna which could be located within the device. An example of such an antenna is a flat plate or low profile antenna such as planar inverted-F antennas (PIFAs) which are well known in antenna art. A PIFA comprises a flat conductive sheet supported a height above a reference voltage plane such as a ground plane. The sheet may be separated from the reference voltage plane by an air dielectric or supported by a solid dielectric. A corner of the sheet is coupled to the ground via a grounding stub and provides an inductive load to the sheet. The sheet is designed to have an electrical length of π/4 at the desired operating frequency. A feed is coupled to an edge of the flat sheet adjacent the grounded corner. The feed may comprise the inner conductor of a coaxial line. The outer conductor of the coaxial line terminates on and is coupled to the ground plane. The inner conductor extends through the ground plane, through the dielectric (if present) and to the radiating sheet. As such the feed is shielded by the outer conductor as far as the ground plane but then extends, unshielded, to the radiating sheet.




The PIFA forms a resonant circuit having a capacitance and inductance per unit length. The feed point is positioned on the sheet a distance from the corner such that the impedance of the antenna at that point matches the output impedance of the feed line, which is typically 50 ohms. The main mode of resonance for the PIFA is between the short circuit and the open circuit edge. Thus the resonant frequency supported by the PIFA is dependent on the length of the sides of the sheet and to a lesser extent the distance and the thickness of the sheet.




Planar inverted-F antennas have found particular applications in portable radio devices, e.g. radio telephones, personal organisers and laptop computers. Their high gain and omni-directional radiation patterns are particularly suitable. Planar antennas are also suitable for applications where good frequency selectivity is required. Additionally, since the antennas are relatively small at radio frequencies, the antennas can be incorporated into the housing of a device, thereby not distracting from the overall aesthetic appearance of the device. In addition, placing the antenna inside the housing means that the antenna is less likely to be damaged.




However it is difficult to design a planar antenna that offers performance comparable to that of a rod antenna, in particular as far as the bandwidth characteristics of the device are concerned. Loss in an antenna is generally due to two sources: radiation, which is required; and energy which is stored in the antenna, which is undesirable. Planar antennas have an undesirably low impedance bandwidth.




In accordance with the invention there is provided an antenna comprising a reference plane, a conductive polygonal lamina disposed opposing the reference plane; and a feed section coupled to the reference plane and the lamina, the feed section being arranged as a transmission line.




Since the feed section is arranged as a transmission line (otherwise known as a waveguide), energy is contained and guided between the conductors of the transmission line. This results in a low Q factor and hence a higher impedance bandwidth compared with conventionally-fed planar antennas. The bandwidth is increased considerably while retaining the efficiency, size and ease of manufacture of planar antennas. The feed section should be as low-loss as possible.




At the end of the feed section adjacent the reference plane, the feed section preferably has an impedance which matches the impedance of the feed (typically a 50 Ω line). At the end of the feed section adjacent the lamina, the feed section preferably has an impedance which matches the impedance of the antenna. Thus the feed section acts as an impedance transformer, matching the impedance characteristics of the feed at one end and the characteristics of the radiating lamina at the other. The feed section generally has a graded impedance characteristic along its length and provides an inductive load for the antenna. The impedance advantageously varies along the length of the feed section in a uniform manner.




The feed section generally comprises a first conductor for providing the feed signal to the conductive lamina and a second conductor connected to the reference plane, the first and second conductors together forming a transmission line. Thus the conductors of the feed section are e.m. coupled and operate as a waveguide. The energy is guided along the two conductors rather than being stored in the shorting post connected to the reference plane as is the case with conventional planar antennas. Thus the resulting antenna is very efficient compared with known antennas.




Preferably the width of the two conductors are of a similar order of magnitude.




Preferably the feed section comprises a microstrip line and/or a coplanar strip. In a particularly preferred embodiment, the feed section comprises a first part comprising a microstrip line parallel to the reference plane and a second part comprising a coplanar strip which extends at an angle from the reference plane to the conductive lamina. However, other transmission lines may be used e.g. coaxial line.




Thus an antenna according to the invention has an increased impedance bandwidth compared with known planar antennas without a sacrifice in efficiency. There is little radiation from the feed section because the energy is guided along the conductors of the transmission line feed section. In addition the resulting antenna is easy, and therefore relatively inexpensive, to manufacture.




The first conductor provides an inductive load to the conductive lamina.











The invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:





FIG. 1

shows a perspective view of one embodiment of an antenna according to the invention;





FIG. 2

shows a side view of the antenna of

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 3

shows a plan view of the antenna shown in

FIG. 1

;





FIG. 4

shows an expanded view of part A of the antenna shown in

FIG. 3

;





FIG. 5

shows the gain of an antenna according to the invention;





FIG. 6

shows examples of transmission line which may form the feed section of an antenna according to the invention; and





FIG. 7

shows a second embodiment of the invention in which the feed section comprises a coaxial line.











The antenna


20


of

FIG. 1

comprises a lamina


202


made from a conductive material. The lamina is disposed opposing a reference plane


204


which is commonly a ground plane. A feed section


206


provides both the feed to excite the lamina into resonance and also the grounding point of the antenna. The feed section comprises a transmission line having two planar metal conductors


208


and has a first part


206




a


comprising a coplanar coupled strip and second part


206




b


comprising a microstrip transmission line. The conductor


208




a


nearest the edge


210


of the sheet


202


adjacent the feed section is grounded by connection to the ground plane


204


at the end remote from the sheet


202


. The remote conductor


208




b


is the feed. The feed section introduces a propagation mode transition as well as an impedance transition.




The transmission line


206


conveys power from one point (the source of the feed signal) to another (the radiating antenna) and is arranged in such a manner that the properties of the lines must be taken into account i.e the feed section operates as a low-loss waveguide The conductors of the transmission line are close-coupled narrow lines and able to support more than one mode of propagation.




At the end of the feed section


206


adjacent the ground plane


204


, the feed section has an impedance which matches the impedance of the line of the ground plane (typically 50 Ω). At the end of the feed section


206


adjacent the lamina


202


, the feed section matches the impedance at the feed point of the antenna, typically of the order of 200 Ω. The impedance varies along the length of the feed section in a uniform manner.




Thus feed into the lamina


202


is balanced. In section


206




b


the field is confined between the conductors


208


and the ground plane. In section


206




a


the field is confined between the conductors


208


.




The centre frequency of the antenna is determined by the electrical length of the resonant circuit which extends from the open circuit on an edge


214


of the antenna sheet


202


, along the feed section


206


and to the point


212


at which the feed section meets the ground plane. This electrical length is usually designed to be a quarter wavelength of the desired frequency.




Referring to

FIGS. 2

,


3


and


4


, for an antenna with a resonant frequency of around 1.1 GHz and a sheet


202


having dimensions x=7.8 mm, y=33 mm, the distance D from the ground plane is 8 mm; the width w of the conductors


208


is 0.6 mm; the distance d between the conductors


208


is 0.6 mm; and the length l


1


of the first part


206




a


is 11.3 mm. The feed section extends from the ground plane


204


to the lamina


202


at an angle of 45°. For a co-planar strip (CPS) line the track width-to-gap (w,d) measurements may be calculated using well known formulae to achieve the desired impedance transformation. This is also so with other forms of transmission line.




The antenna may be produced using conventional printed circuit board techniques thus making manufacture economical.




The impedance bandwidth of an antenna is calculated as follows:






B


Z


=B





6dB/f


0


×100






where




B


z


is the impedance bandwidth;




B





6dB is the bandwidth at 6dB; and




f


0


is the centre frequency




As can be seen in

FIG. 5

, the bandwidth of the antenna at —6dB is 166 MHz which results in an impedance bandwidth of 16%. This is a substantial increase compared with conventionally fed planar antennas which typically have a maximum impedance bandwidth of around 7%. Using a feed section as described herein has been found to provide an impedance bandwidth of the order of 23% and up to 31% if loading is also used to improve the characteristics.





FIG. 6

shows four examples of strip transmission line which may be used to form the feed section


206


. FIG.


6


(


a


) shows stripline comprising a conductor


60


embedded within a support of dielectric


62


. A reference plane


64


is provided either side of the conductor


60


. The electric field is confined between the conductor


60


and the reference planes


64


. In this embodiment, the conductor


60


forms the feed and one of the reference planes forms the grounding point as has been described earlier. Thus the plate


202


is connected to the reference plane


64


.




FIG.


6


(


b


) shows microstrip which comprises a single conductor


60


separated from a ground plane


64


by dielectric


62


. The electrical field is confined between the conductor


60


and the reference plane


64


. In this embodiment, the conductor


60


forms the feed and the reference plane


64


forms the ground point as has been described earlier. Thus the plate


202


is connected to the reference plane


64


.




FIG.


6


(


c


) shows a co-planar waveguide which comprises a single conductor


60


located on the surface of a dielectric material


62


. Located on either side of the conductor


60


on the surface of the dielectric is a reference plane


64


. The electrical field is confined between the conductor


60


and the reference planes


64


. In this embodiment, the conductor


60


forms the feed and one of the reference planes forms the ground point as has been described earlier. Thus the plate


202


is connected to the reference plane


64


.




FIG.


6


(


d


) shows a co-planar strip (CPS) which comprises two conductors


60


located on the surface of a dielectric material


62


. Located on the other side of the dielectric


62


is a reference plane


64


. The electrical field is confined between the two conductors


60


. In this embodiment, one of the conductors


60


forms the feed and the other of the conductors


60


forms the grounding point, an end of which remote from the sheet


202


is coupled to the reference plane


64


.





FIG. 7

shows a further embodiment of the feed section. The feed section


70


comprises a coaxial line having an inner conductor


72


and an outer conductor


74


. The gap between the inner conductor


72


and the outer conductor


74


is filled with dielectric (not shown). One end


72




a


of the inner conductor


72


is connected to the lamina


202


and the other end


72




b


of the inner conductor


72


is connected to the source of the feed signal (not shown). One end


74




a


of the outer conductor


74


is connected to the lamina


202


and part


74




b


of the outer conductor remote from the end


74




a


is connected to the ground plane


204


. The profile of the coaxial cable is graded to provide an impedance transformer. At the end of the feed section


70


adjacent the ground plane


204


, the feed section has an impedance which matches that of the feed (typically 50 Ω). At the end of the feed section


70


adjacent the lamina


202


, the feed section matches the impedance at the feed point of the antenna, typically of the order of 200 Ω. The impedance preferably varies along the length of the feed section in a uniform manner although a non-uniform variation may be chosen.



Claims
  • 1. An antenna comprising:a reference plane; a conductive polygonal lamina disposed opposing the reference plane; and a feed section extending from the reference plane to the lamina and coupled to the reference plane and the lamina; wherein the feed section comprises: a first conductor for providing a feed signal to the conductive lamina, and a second conductor connected to the reference plane, wherein first and second conductors together interact to form a transmission line to contain and guide said feed signal between said first and second conductors.
  • 2. An antenna according to claim 1 wherein the feed section comprises at least two planar conductors arrange parallel to each other, one of the planar conductors being connected to the feed and the other of the conductors being connected to the reference plane.
  • 3. An antenna according to claim 1 wherein the feed section is connected to the conductive lamina adjacent an edge thereof, the conductor adjacent the edge being connected to the reference plane and the conductor remote from the edge being connected to the feed.
  • 4. An antenna according to claim 3 wherein the feed section is connected adjacent a corner edge of the conductive lamina.
  • 5. An antenna according to claim 1 wherein the feed section comprises a stripline.
  • 6. An antenna according to claim 1 wherein the feed section comprises microstrip.
  • 7. An antenna according to claim 1, wherein the feed section comprises two strips coplanar to each other strip.
  • 8. An antenna according to claim 1, wherein the feed section comprises a first part comprising a microstrip line parallel to the reference plane and a second part comprising two strips coplanar to each other which extend at an angle from the reference plane to the conductive lamina.
  • 9. A mobile telephone handset incorporating an antenna according to claim 1.
  • 10. A portable radio device incorporating an antenna according to claim 1.
  • 11. A planar inverted-F comprising:a planar conductor arranged to resonate at f=Nλ/4, where n is odd; a shorting post coupled to the planar conductor and a reference plane to provide a short circuit between the planar conductor and the reference plance; a feed to provide a feed signal to the planar conductor; wherein the feed and the shorting post are arranged to interact as a transmission line to contain and guide the feed signal between the feed and the shorting post.
  • 12. An antenna according to claim 2 wherein the feed section is connected to the conductive lamina adjacent an edge thereof, the conductor adjacent the edge being connected to the reference plane and the conductor remote from the edge being connected to the feed.
  • 13. An antenna according to claim 3 wherein the feed section is connected to the conductive lamina adjacent an edge thereof, the conductor adjacent the edge being connected to the reference plane and the conductor remote from the edge being connected to the feed.
  • 14. An antenna according to claim 2 wherein the feed section comprises a stripline.
  • 15. An antenna according to claim 3 wherein the feed section comprises a stripline.
  • 16. An antenna according to claim 2 wherein the feed section comprises microstrip.
  • 17. An antenna according to claim 3 wherein the feed section comprises microstrip.
  • 18. An antenna according to claim 2 wherein the feed section comprises two strips coplanar to each other.
  • 19. An antenna according to claim 3 wherein the feed section comprises two strips coplanar to each other.
  • 20. An antenna according to claim 2 wherein the feed section comprises a first part comprising a microstrip line parallel to the reference plane and a second part comprising two strips coplanar to each other which extend at an angle from the reference plane to the conductive lamina.
  • 21. An antenna according to claim 3 wherein the feed section comprises a first part comprising a microstrip line parallel to the reference plane and a second part comprising two strips coplanar to each other which extend at an angle from the reference plane to the conductive lamina.
  • 22. A mobile telephone handset incorporating an antenna according to claim 2.
  • 23. A mobile telephone handset incorporating an antenna according to claim 3.
  • 24. A portable radio device incorporating an antenna according to claim 2.
  • 25. A portable radio device incorporating an antenna according to claim 3.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
116692/98 May 1998 GB
Parent Case Info

This is a Continuation of International Application PCT EP99/03715, with an international filing date of May 28, 1998.

US Referenced Citations (7)
Number Name Date Kind
4701763 Yamamoto et al. Oct 1987
5268702 Amano Dec 1993
5631660 Higashiguchi May 1997
5764190 Murch et al. Jun 1998
5896109 Hachiga et al. Apr 1999
6034636 Saitoh Mar 2000
6081728 Stein et al. Jun 2000
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
720252A1 Jul 1996 EP
2191045A Dec 1987 GB
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent PCT/EP99/03715 May 1998 US
Child 09/355019 US