This invention generally relates to antennas and more specifically to improving an antenna isolation in handsets or wireless communication devices.
Mutual coupling means the electromagnetic interaction of nearby antenna elements in a multi-antenna system. The currents in each element couple electromagnetically to the neighboring elements thus distorting the ideal current distributions along the elements. This causes changes in the radiation patterns and also in the input impedances of the antennas. From the RF point of view, isolation between the feeding ports of the antennas and mutual coupling are the same thing. So low isolation means high coupling causing energy transfer between the ports and, therefore, decrease in the efficiencies of the antennas. The strength of the isolation can be measured by looking at the scattering (S-) parameters of the antennas. So, for example, the S-parameter S21 determines how much energy is leaking from port 1 to port 2.
Furthermore, a typical mobile phone antenna is generally compounded of a resonating antenna element and a more or less resonating chassis of the phone, working as a positive pole and a negative pole of the antenna, respectively. This generalization is valid regardless of the type of the antenna element. In practice, the ground plane of the PWB (printed wiring board) also works as the main ground for the antenna and, depending on the inner structure of the phone, the currents induced by the antenna extend over the whole chassis. On the PWB the currents are concentrated on the edges.
Modern phone terminals are designed to operate in several cellular and also non-cellular systems. Therefore, the terminals must also include several antenna elements in order to cover all the desired frequency bands. In some cases even two antennas working at the same frequency band are required for optimizing the performance. In small terminals the antenna elements are located very close to each other thus leading to a low natural isolation. This problem arises especially at low frequencies, where the electrical size of the terminal is small, and when the coupled antennas work at the same frequency band. Moreover, the antennas are also connected galvanically via the PWB acting as a mutual ground plane for the antennas.
Furthermore, the performance of a mobile phone antenna depends strongly on a size of the PWB. Optimal performance is achieved when the size coincides with certain resonance dimensions, i.e., when the width and the length of the PWB are suitably chosen compared with wavelength. Therefore, an optimal size for the PWB depends on the frequency. A non-resonating ground plane causes significant reduction in the impedance bandwidth and in the efficiency of the antenna. On the other hand, the currents on a resonating ground plane are strong causing significant electromagnetic coupling between the antenna and the other RF-parts of the phone. Furthermore, the strong chassis currents also define the locations of the SAR (specific absorption rate) maximums.
Furthermore, mobile phones have been designed mainly in a mono block form but demands from customers for a variety of forms are increasing. Fold phones are extremely popular already in Asia and they are getting popular year by year in Europe and America. Slide phones have also joined the competition. From antenna design point of view, moving from the mono block form to the fold or slide form adds extra complexity and difficulties for achieving an adequate performance at all possible modes of operation of a fold/slide device.
Because small antenna on mobile phones is heavily relying on its chassis dimension to work as an important part of the antenna length, an antenna performance changes dramatically when the fold/slide phone changes its modes from open to close. That makes the antenna design very difficult and forces a designer either to optimize the design for one mode while sacrificing for another or compromise at both modes to find a good balance. Inserting series inductors at the connection of lower and upper parts of the phone is one known prior art solution to the problem. It isolates lower and upper parts from an RF point of view. But it requires a large area on the PWB to accommodate numbers of inductors for each line connecting upper and lower halves. Insulating a metallic hinge also remains problematic.
The object of the present invention is to provide a method for improving antenna isolation in an electronic communication device (e.g. a mobile phone or a handset) using ground RF microwave elements and patterns (structures) such as strip lines or using a balun concept.
According to a first aspect of the invention, an electronic communication device comprises: at least one antenna; and an RF microwave element in a ground plane of the at least one antenna for providing an isolation from electro-magnetically coupled currents between the at least one antenna and other RF components of the electronic communication device in the ground plane.
According further to the first aspect of the invention, the electronic communication device may be a portable communication device, a mobile electronic device, a mobile phone, a terminal or a handset.
Further according to the first aspect of the invention, the other RF components may include at least one further antenna. Further, the electronic communication device may contain more than one of the at least one further antenna. Still further, the at least one further antenna may be a whip-type antenna.
Still further according to the first aspect of the invention, the at least one antenna may be a planar inverted-F antenna.
According further to the first aspect of the invention, the RF microwave element may be a short-circuited section of a quarter-wavelength long transmission line. Further, the quarter-wavelength long transmission line may be a stripline.
According still further to the first aspect of the invention, the RF microwave element may contain a metallic coupler and two striplines. Further, the two striplines may have different lengths.
According further still to the first aspect of the invention, the electronic communication device may have at least two blocks which can fold or slide relative to each other to facilitate different modes of operation of the electronic communication device. Further, the RF microwave element may be a balun structure attached to at least one of the at least two blocks. Still further, the balun structure may be implemented as a rod made of a conducting material parallel to the at least one of the at least two blocks and attached to the at least one of the at least two blocks at one end of the rod, wherein another end of the rod is left open and the rod has a length of substantially a quarter wavelength which the electronic communication device operates on.
According to a second aspect of the invention, a method for isolating from electro-magnetically coupled currents in a ground plane between at least one antenna and other RF elements in an electronic communication device, comprises the step of: placing an RF microwave element in a ground plane of the at least one antenna for providing an isolation from electro-magnetically coupled currents between the at least one antenna and other RF elements of the electronic communication device in the ground plane.
According further to the second aspect of the invention, the electronic communication device may be a portable communication device, a mobile electronic device, a mobile phone, a terminal or a handset.
Further according to the second aspect of the invention, the other RF components may include at least one further antenna. Further, the electronic communication device may contain more than one of the at least one further antenna. Still further, the at least one further antenna may be a whip-type antenna.
Still further according to the second aspect of the invention, the at least one antenna may be a planar inverted-F antenna.
According further to the second aspect of the invention, the RF microwave element may be a short-circuited section of a quarter-wavelength long transmission line. Further, the quarter-wavelength long transmission line may be a stripline.
According still further to the second aspect of the invention, the RF microwave element may contain a metallic coupler and two striplines. Further, the two striplines may have different lengths.
According further still to the second aspect of the invention, the electronic communication device may have at least two blocks which can fold or slide relative to each other to facilitate different modes of operation of the electronic communication device. Further, the RF microwave element may be a balun structure attached to at least one of the at least two blocks. Still further, the balun structure may be implemented as a rod made of a conducting material parallel to the at least one of the at least two blocks and attached to the at least one of the at least two blocks at one end of the rod, wherein another end of the rod is left open and the rod has a length of substantially a quarter wavelength which the electronic communication device operates on.
By using this kind of ground RF elements it is possible to achieve considerable natural isolation between antenna elements placed on a mobile terminal and, by this way, to get more freedom in positioning the antenna elements. It is also possible to design isolated diversity antenna structures for the low band. Generally this method helps also in controlling the currents flowing along the PWB, thus giving a better control also on the coupling to other RF parts of the terminal and on the SAR (specific absorption rate).
Furthermore, another main advantage in using this kind of ground RF structures is to achieve a better control on the ground plane currents. As a consequence, it is easier to isolate the antenna from other RF-parts. Secondly, it is possible to optimize the grounding for multi-band operation. It is also possible to adjust the locations of the local SAR maximums by the design of the ground striplines. Moreover, this idea could be exploited in designing general antenna solutions, i.e. antennas that can be implemented directly in several phone concepts.
Furthermore, balun structure in phones for preventing an unwanted current flow can solve the problem of antenna performance degradation due to the change of modes of operation of a portable radio device. The invention applies to the compact structures which can be implemented in small phones while prior art (inserting series inductors) would take a large area on the PWB which is not acceptable for designing small phones.
Also the prior art cannot solve metallic hinge connection but this invention solves this problem regardless of the connection. Moreover, the prior solution of inserting series inductors may cause an ESD (electrostatic discharge) problem and EMC designers are reluctant to implement it (the inductors will cause a voltage difference in flip and grip modes). But this is not a problem with the present invention.
For a better understanding of the nature and objects of the present invention, reference is made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
a is a schematic representation of an antenna structure wherein a PIFA-type antenna causes an impedance discontinuity for ground plane currents induced by a whip antenna;
b is a graph of simulated S-parameters in a free space as a function of frequency for the structure of
a is a schematic representation of another antenna structure wherein a PIFA-type antenna causes an impedance discontinuity for ground plane currents induced by a whip antenna;
b is a graph of simulated S-parameters in a free space as a function of frequency for the structure of
c is a graph of simulated S-parameters in a free space as a function of frequency for the structure of
a is a schematic representation of an antenna structure wherein a separate stripline causes an impedance discontinuity between PIFA and whip antennas;
b is a graph of simulated S-parameters in a free space as a function of frequency for the structure of
a and 4b are schematic representations of an antenna structure wherein two separate striplines cause the impedance discontinuity between two PIFA-type antennas on a flip-type mobile terminal (phone),
c and 4d are graphs of simulated S-parameters in a free space as a function of frequency for the structure of
a and 6b are a graph of simulated S-parameters in a free space and a Smith chart, respectively, for the structure of
a through 8d are pictures of a phone when a) the phone is closed and folding blocks are connected, b) the phone is closed and folding blocks are disconnected, c) the phone is open, and folding blocks are connected and d) the phone is open and folding blocks are disconnected;
The present invention provides a new method for improving antenna isolation in an electronic communication device using grounded RF microwave elements and patterns (structures). According to embodiments of the present invention, the RF microwave element can be implemented as a short-circuited section of a quarter-wavelength long transmission line (such as a stripline), or the RF microwave element can contain a metallic coupler and two thin striplines with different lengths, or said the RF microwave element can be implemented using a balun concept. The electronic communication device can be a portable communication device, a mobile electronic device, a mobile phone, a terminal, a handset, etc.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, in a small terminal, it is possible to increase the isolation between two antennas significantly by suppressing the currents flowing along certain parts of the ground plane with a device that provides a high impedance (i.e., an impedance wall) or an impedance discontinuity at an appropriate location (acting like an isolator). This kind of impedance discontinuity can be achieved, e.g., with a short-circuited section of a λ/4 (quarter wavelength)-long transmission line (microstrip, stripline), which provides a high impedance at an open end, thus preventing the flow of the ground plane currents in that direction. It is possible to implement structures where, firstly, an antenna element operates both as an isolator and as a radiator or, secondly, some other RF-parts of the terminal (e.g., a display frame) can work as an isolator.
a shows one example among others of a schematic representation of an antenna structure 10 wherein a planar inverted-F antenna (PIFA) 14 (alternatively can be called a PIFA-type antenna 14) causes an impedance discontinuity for the ground plane currents induced by a whip-type (whip) antenna 12, and
In the configuration shown in
a-2c show another example among others of the same concepts described in regard to
a is a schematic representation of another antenna structure 20 wherein a PIFA-type antenna 24 again causes an impedance discontinuity for the ground plane currents induced by a whip antenna 22.
According to an embodiment of the present invention,
a is a schematic representation of an antenna structure 30 wherein a separate stripline 36 causes the impedance discontinuity between the PIFA-type antenna 34 and the whip antenna 32.
a and 4b are schematic representations of antenna structure wherein two separate striplines 46 and 48 cause the impedance discontinuity between two PIFA-type antennas 42 and 44 on a flip-type mobile terminal (phone) 40. Two similar PIFA-type antennas 42 and 44 are at the opposite ends of the flip-type terminal 40 and two separate striplines 46 and 48 are in the middle causing the local isolation maximum at around 850 MHz.
c and 4d are graphs of simulated S-parameters in a free space as a function of frequency for the structure shown in
Moreover, according to another embodiment of the present invention, the ground for an antenna element can be constructed with an integrated ground element. The idea is to combine the antenna element and its ground into a compact part of a whole, which can be isolated from the PWB. The ground element can be implemented, e.g., with a small metallic coupler under the antenna element and two thin striplines connected to the edges of the coupler. The lengths of the two striplines can then be adjusted according to the desired operating frequency bands of the antenna. It is also possible to exploit slow-wave structures in the striplines, such as a meander-line, in order to increase their electrical lengths.
In the configuration shown in
As can be seen in the simulated S11-parameters of the antenna, shown in
Yet, in another embodiment of the present invention, the grounded RF microwave elements for preventing unwanted current flow (i.e., for isolating antennas) can be implemented as a balun structure in electronic communication devices. This technique is especially useful, e.g., in folded devices (e.g., a folded mobile phone), wherein the device has at least two blocks which can fold or slide relative to each other to facilitate different modes of operation. Attaching the balun structure to one of the blocks, according to an embodiment of the present invention can improve the antenna isolation performance. The performance of balun structures is well known in the art; for example, it is described in “Antennas”, by J. D. Kraus and R. J. Marhefka, McGraw-Hill, 3d Edition, 2002, Chapter 23 and incorporated here by reference.
Antenna performance in fold/slide phones is not constant and dependent on the mode of operation. Performance of antenna at a frequency band of around 1 GHz is typically degraded when the phone is open compared with a close position as illustrated in
One of the main reasons for the problem is that some currents flow onto the upper half (e.g., the folding block 72a) of the phone if an antenna is located in the lower half (e.g., the folding block 72a). Inserting series inductors at the connection point 74 of the upper and lower halves 72a and 72b (per the prior art) requires a large area on the PWB to accommodate numbers of inductors for each line connecting the upper and lower halves 72a and 72b. Also insulating metallic hinges remains a problem.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the isolation problem between the upper and lower halves 72a and 72b can be solved by mechanically constructing a balun in the phone in order for the current from the low half 72b to see the upper half 72a as a high impedance which prevents unwanted current flow into the upper half 72a. There are a number of balun concepts developed and generally available in antenna area as one of the matching methods. Some examples are illustrated in
Comparing to the worst case scenario for the curve 70c wherein the phone is open and the folding blocks 72a and 72b are connected, the improvement in return loss for the curve 90 is clearly observed at around 0.97 GHz. Moreover, the curve 90 at around 0.97 GHz almost approaches the target performance indicated by the curve 70d wherein the phone is open and the folding blocks 72a and 72b are disconnected.
It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are only illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Numerous modifications and alternative arrangements may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention, and the appended claims are intended to cover such modifications and arrangements.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/603,459 filed Aug. 20, 2004.
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