Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6285324
-
Patent Number
6,285,324
-
Date Filed
Wednesday, September 15, 199925 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, September 4, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 343 700 MS
- 343 702
- 343 770
- 343 830
- 343 795
- 343 833
- 343 786
- 343 789
- 343 873
- 343 916
- 343 872
- 333 26
- 333 248
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
An antenna package for use in a wireless communications device. The package includes a metallic leadframe section having a plurality of leads and a paddle shaped as a planar antenna, and dielectric material encapsulating the paddle and portions of the leads.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to wireless communications devices and, more particularly, to an improved small, low cost antenna package for such a device.
The greater capacity and larger number of providers for Personal Communications Services (PCS) means far greater competition for wireless subscribers. Although total revenue is soaring, revenue per subscriber has been declining as many casual and emergency-only users enter the market. In response, equipment providers are under pressure to keep terminal costs low, and at the same time support an increasing number of features that will increase revenue per subscriber. Wireless data transmission is one of the growth areas for wireless services, with increasing demand for wireless images, financial information and Internet access. Although a conventional cellular phone can be used as a wireless modem to transmit data, transmission rates are low and bit error rates are high. Subscriber acceptance of data via this mode has been relatively weak. Although the higher frequency and bandwidth of PCS provides some improvement, it does not offer the significant increase in bit rate that makes data transmission attractive to a wide customer base.
Antenna diversity does provide this significant improvement. Spatial diversity with a switching algorithm can increase the system gain by 3-5 dB depending on the effectiveness of the algorithm and the isolation between antennas. As an example, a simple switch algorithm monitors only the one antenna signal in use. When this signal falls below some threshold value, it switches to the other antenna. A more complicated algorithm would monitor both antenna signals and switch to the one with the strongest signal even if they are both above the operational threshold. Even more complicated systems would replicate much of the RF train and monitor both signals closer to digital baseband. The higher average gain attained with switched diversity allows lower bit error rates to be achieved at higher data rates.
Realizing enough separation between the antennas is an important consideration in spatial diversity on a handset. Horizontal separation is more effective than vertical separation because the decorrelation of the received signal increases faster with horizontal separation, particularly when the vertical beamwidth is smaller than the horizontal beamwidth as it is when one of the antennas is an omni-directional dipole. The signals have to be essentially uncorrelated and the first null in correlation factor occurs when the distance between antennas is approximately 0.38 times the wavelength. Practically, a correlation coefficient below 0.25, and in some cases below 0.50, can be neglected, providing effective separations of as little as ⅕ the wavelength. This is about 8 cm at 900 MHz and 4 cm at 1.9 GHz. The problem with diversity in a small terminal with a size less than one half the wavelength is that it is difficult to determine the center of the radiation since the entire housing radiates through near field coupling, especially when the antenna is inside. So although the distances required for effective diversity can be realized on the handset, the actual situation is much more complicated. When the antennas are different types and positioned differently, then other types of diversity (directional and polarization) may have an effect as well.
It is therefore apparent that a need exists for small, low cost antennas for use as diversity antennas in handheld wireless communications devices.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
According to the present invention, there is provided an antenna package for use in a wireless communications device. The inventive package includes a metallic leadframe section having a plurality of leads and a paddle shaped as an antenna. Dielectric material encapsulates the paddle and portions of the leads.
In accordance with an aspect of this invention, the paddle is shaped as a planar inverted F antenna (PIFA).
In accordance with another aspect of this invention, the package further includes electronic circuitry attached to the leadframe section and encapsulated by the dielectric material.
Fabrication of the aforedescribed package includes the step of providing a metallic leadframe section having a plurality of leads and a paddle shaped as an antenna. The leadframe section is positioned along the parting line of a mold, and in registration with a mold cavity. The mold cavity is filled with molten dielectric material so as to encapsulate the paddle and portions of the leads. The dielectric material is allowed to harden. The encapsulated leadframe section is removed from the mold, and the unencapsulated portions of the plurality of leads are then trimmed.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The foregoing will be more readily apparent upon reading the following description in conjunction with the drawings in which like elements in different figures thereof are identified by the same reference numeral and wherein:
FIG. 1
is a cross sectional view of an illustrative planar antenna;
FIG. 2
is a cross sectional view showing a first embodiment of an antenna package constructed in accordance with this invention and mounted with respect to a circuit board, the package being contoured to the outer case of a wireless communications device;
FIG. 3
illustrates two types of interconnection to a printed circuit board for an antenna package according to the present invention;
FIG. 4
is a side cross sectional view of a capacitively coupled planar inverted F antenna constructed with a leadframe in accordance with the principles of this invention;
FIG. 5
is a “transparent” top view of the antenna shown in
FIG. 4
;
FIGS. 6-9
illustrate an integrated antenna and radio components package with a formed EMI/RFI shield, with
FIGS. 6 and 7
being top and side views, respectively, before the shield has been formed and with
FIGS. 8 and 9
being top and side views, respectively, after the shield has been formed;
FIGS. 10A
,
10
B,
11
,
12
A,
12
B,
13
A and
13
B illustrate steps in the formation of an antenna package according to the present invention;
FIG. 14
illustrates the separation of individual antenna packages from a group of leadframes which have been molded together; and
FIG. 15
illustrates the forming of the leads of an individual package.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Upon consideration of the problem of providing diversity antennas in a handheld wireless communications device, it was initially decided to use the dipole (whip) as one antenna and utilize as a second antenna one which is small enough to be integrated within the housing of the handheld device. A particularly suitable small antenna is a planar inverted F antenna (PIFA). One such antenna for dual band operation is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,926,139, issued to Korisch on Jul. 20, 1999.
FIG. 1
is a cross sectional view of such an antenna where a ground plane
22
is on a first side of a dielectric substrate
24
and a radiating element
26
is on the other side of the dielectric substrate
24
. A feed pin
28
extends through the ground plane
22
and the substrate
24
to couple the radiating element
26
to transceiver circuitry (not shown) and is insulated from the ground plane
22
by an insulating via
30
.
To fit the planar antenna within the housing of the device, polyurethane or other suitable material may be used to form a casting of the unused volume of the interior of the device between the printed circuit board and the housing. As shown in
FIG. 2
, this casting is utilized to produce a plastic piece
32
which conforms to a portion of the interior space of the device between the outer case
34
and the printed circuit board
36
. Alternatively, other known techniques can be utilized to produce a plastic piece conforming to the desired shape. A radiating patch
38
having the desired antenna configuration is then mounted to the plastic piece
32
on a surface
40
remote from the printed circuit board
36
. A ground plane
42
is then applied to the opposite surface of the plastic piece
32
and a feed
44
extends through the plastic piece
32
. As shown, the plastic piece
32
covers at least a portion of the duplexer
46
so that the metallized surface of the duplexer
46
is used as an extended ground plane for the antenna.
FIG. 3
schematically illustrates two types of interconnection to a printed circuit board
48
. A lead
50
extending out of the molded plastic part
52
and connected to a capacitive feed
54
is formed into a spring clip
56
that contacts a gold plated pad
58
on the printed circuit board
48
. Alternatively, the lead
60
connected to the ground plane
62
is reflow soldered to the surface mount pad
64
.
According to the present invention, a small low cost antenna package, as discussed above, can be produced from plastic substrates and stamped metallic leadframes. With plastic molding technology, the leadframes can be positioned at the parting line as in conventional integrated circuit packages, or metal can be pre-inserted in a mold at either the top or bottom surface. In addition, two layers of metal can be positioned at the parting line in accordance with the teachings of U.S. Pat. No. 4,801,765, issued on Jan. 31, 1989, to Moyer et al. These metal layers can produce radiating elements, feed planes or ground planes as shown in FIG.
3
. The formed metal leads that exit the molded body are the feed and ground interconnections that can be “J” or “gull wing” types. They can be interconnected to the printed wiring board in conventional surface mount assembly operations, or be formed into spring clips as discussed above. Through-hole leads can also be used for antennas although it will be more difficult to shield the radiation which could be emitted on both sides of the board. The molded body itself could be the thermoset molding compound used for integrated circuit encapsulation, but this material is fairly lossy in the gigahertz frequency range. It would therefore be preferable to use a molding plastic having low radio frequency loss at the frequency of interest, as long as it matches the coefficient of thermal expansion of the metal insert. Highly glass-filled grades of polycarbonate, liquid crystal polymer, or polyphenylene sulfide material would work well from both a mechanical and radio frequency loss viewpoints.
FIGS. 4 and 5
illustrate a planar inverted F antenna constructed utilizing the aforedescribed technology, wherein the encapsulating plastic material
66
is shown as being “transparent” so all the elements molded therein are visible. As shown, the inventive package has layers including a radiating element
68
, a capacitively coupled feed element
70
and a ground element
72
. As an alternative to the design shown in
FIGS. 4 and 5
, the ground element
72
could be incorporated in the printed wiring board to which the package is mounted.
Since the use of a metal leadframe provides interconnect structure and the use of the molded plastic body provides a packaging medium, the ability to integrate both active and passive radio components with the antenna is now greatly facilitated. The metal leadframes can be stamped to almost any degree of complexity to realize pads and leads for discrete and active components, mini-wiring boards, or multi-chip modules. These frames would be similar to the multi-chip packages that are already on the market, but in the present application part of the leadframe would be devoted to the antenna elements. This provides the RF designer with considerable latitude in bundling components to either eliminate interconnects and connectors or to modularize a specific option. For example, the extra filtering required for data capability could be added onto the leadframe so that the data antenna is a stand-alone option. The multitude of leads that are possible with packages this large means that dozens of the leads could be diverted to the interconnection of these active and passive components. Alternatively, an antenna matching circuit can be incorporated into the leadframe.
FIGS. 6-9
illustrate the integration of radio components and an antenna into a molded package with a formed shield. As shown, a stamped metal leadframe section
74
is provided, having a first paddle
76
shaped as an antenna, a second paddle
78
which will become a shield, a plurality of leads
80
and additional paddles
82
to which circuit components
84
are mounted in a conventional manner.
FIGS. 8 and 9
show the forming of the shield paddle
78
into an electromagnetic and radio frequency shield between the circuit components
84
and the antenna
76
. The formation of such a shield is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,113,466, issued to Acarlar et al on May 12, 1992. After the shield formation, the assembly is encapsulated into a package, the outline of which is shown by the broken line
86
in
FIGS. 6-9
.
An advantage of the present invention is that the encapsulation of the antenna and associated components can be effected by techniques utilized in the packaging of integrated circuits. Thus, the packaging turns out to be of low cost. Such packaging is illustrated in
FIGS. 10A
,
10
B,
11
,
12
A,
12
B,
13
A,
13
B,
14
and
15
. If the package is to contain active components such as integrated circuits or amplifiers, then the leadframes are placed on a conveyer and pass through a die attach machine. A pick and place machine puts one or more components on each leadframe section. On the same conveyer, the leadframes pass through a wire bond machine where all of the pads on the integrated circuit are wire bonded to the leads of the leadframe section at the rate of two per second. After die attachment and wire bonding, the leadframes are positioned on the parting line of a molding tool.
FIGS. 10A and 10B
show such a tool which includes two halves
88
,
90
, each of which includes cavities
92
and a channel
94
connecting the cavities
92
to a fill chamber
96
. There may be as many as twelve sections on each leadframe, which are positioned over respective cavities
92
. As many as sixteen leadframes can be inserted in a single molding tool so that there can be as many as
192
or more cavities in a large molding tool.
The molding tool is then clamped shut, as shown in
FIG. 11
, under high pressure which keeps the mold halves
88
,
90
from opening when molten plastic is injected under high pressure. A molten plastic material is then injected into the chamber
96
and is distributed through the channel
94
to each of the individual cavities
92
, as best shown in
FIGS. 12A and 12B
. The temperature and injection pressure are carefully controlled so that the molten plastic does not damage the internal features of the components which are being encapsulated.
After the mold is filled, the mold stays clamped shut and the molten plastic hardens for a time period from about 30 to about 180 seconds. If the material can harden just with cooling, then only 30 to 40 seconds are needed for this to occur. If the material is an epoxy material that must polymerize to harden, the time can be as long as three minutes. The mold is then opened and the leadframes are unloaded off the molding tool. Each of the sections of the leadframe
98
is now encapsulated within plastic material
100
, as shown in
FIGS. 13A and 13B
. If the plastic material is an epoxy molding compound, the components may need a post-cure treatment of sustained high temperature to complete the cure process and make the plastic strong enough to withstand the next operations. As many as one thousand components can be post-cured in one batch in one oven. The components are still attached to the leadframes at this point. They are placed on a conveyer belt and pass through a trim and form machine. This is a punch press that has a special stamping tool installed in it. This stamping tool trims away the metal of the leadframe
98
so that the leads are isolated and singulated, as shown in FIG.
14
. As the leadframes move through to the next stage of the trim and form press, the leads are formed into the “J” or “gull wing” forms that can be assembled onto a printed wiring board, as shown in FIG.
15
. The last stage of the trim and form press separates the components entirely from the leadframe so that they are now individual packages.
The individual packages are then placed on another conveyer belt and are marked with either a transfer printing process (ink stamping) or a laser writing process. In either case, a code mark or other component and manufacturer name is written onto the package. If it is an antenna package including active components, the package is sent for testing. For passive components including only antennas, no testing is needed.
By making the inventive antenna packages similar to integrated circuit packages, the antenna packages can be assembled to printed circuit boards very cheaply using standard “pick and place” technology. In addition, since the inventive antenna package is relatively small, a number of such packages can be assembled to different locations on a printed circuit board to provide the diversity which is desirable for data transmission in a handheld wireless communications device.
Accordingly, there has been disclosed an improved small, low cost, antenna package for a wireless communications device. While various embodiments of the present invention have been disclosed herein, it is understood that modifications and adaptations to the disclosed embodiments are possible. Thus, other types of antennas besides PIFA's can be accommodated, such as dipoles, monopoles, quarterwave or halfwave microstrip patches, top loaded monopoles, slot antennas, spiral antennas, or any antenna element that would conform to the geometrical and size constraints associated with an overmolded lead frame. The antenna does not have to be planar, and can conform to the shape of the housing, or even be imbedded in the housing. It is therefore intended that this invention be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
Claims
- 1. A method for fabricating an antenna package for use in a wireless communications device, comprising the steps of:providing a metallic leadframe section having a plurality of leads and a paddle shaped as an antenna; providing a mold having a parting line and at least one cavity; positioning the leadframe section along the mold parting line and in registration with a mold cavity; filling the mold cavity with molten dielectric material so as to encapsulate the paddle and portions of the leads; allowing the dielectric material to harden; removing the encapsulated leadframe section from the mold; and trimming the unencapsulated portions of the plurality of leads.
- 2. The method according to claim 1 wherein the step of providing includes the step of shaping the paddle as a planar inverted F antenna (PIFA).
- 3. The method according to claim 1 wherein the step of providing includes the step of:attaching electronic circuitry to the leadframe section.
- 4. The method according to claim 2 wherein the step of providing includes the steps of:providing an additional paddle between the electronic circuitry and the antenna; and bending the additional paddle to form an electromagnetic and radio frequency shield between the electronic circuitry and the antenna.
- 5. An antenna package for use in a wireless communications device, comprising:a metallic leadframe section having a plurality of leads and a paddle shaped as an antenna; and dielectric material encapsulating the paddle and portions of the leads.
- 6. The package according to claim 5 wherein the paddle is shaped as a planar inverted F antenna (PIFA).
- 7. The package according to claim 5 further comprising electronic circuitry attached to the leadframe section and encapsulated by the dielectric material.
- 8. The package according to claim 7 wherein the leadframe section has an additional paddle between the electronic circuitry and the antenna and bent to form an electromagnetic and radio frequency shield between the electronic circuitry and the antenna, the additional paddle being encapsulated by the dielectric material.
- 9. In combination with a wireless communications device having an insulative outer case and electrical components supported on a printed circuit board mounted within the case, an internal antenna package comprising:a plastic piece molded to fill a portion of the interior space of the device between the outer case and the printed circuit board; and an antenna on a surface of the plastic piece remote from the printed circuit board.
US Referenced Citations (8)