The subject matter herein generally relates to antenna structures, and more particularly to an antenna structure of a wireless communication device.
As electronic devices become smaller, an antenna structure for operating in different communication bands is required to be smaller.
Implementations of the present disclosure will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the attached figures.
It will be appreciated that for simplicity and clarity of illustration, where appropriate, reference numerals have been repeated among the different figures to indicate corresponding or analogous elements. Additionally, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the embodiments described herein. However, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that the embodiments described herein can be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, methods, procedures and components have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the related relevant feature being described. The drawings are not necessarily to scale and the proportions of certain parts may be exaggerated to better illustrate details and features. The description is not to be considered as limiting the scope of the embodiments described herein.
Several definitions that apply throughout this disclosure will now be presented.
The term “coupled” is defined as connected, whether directly or indirectly through intervening components, and is not necessarily limited to physical connections. The connection can be such that the objects are permanently connected or releasably connected. The term “substantially” is defined to be essentially conforming to the particular dimension, shape, or other word that “substantially” modifies, such that the component need not be exact. For example, “substantially cylindrical” means that the object resembles a cylinder, but can have one or more deviations from a true cylinder. The term “comprising” means “including, but not necessarily limited to”; it specifically indicates open-ended inclusion or membership in a so-described combination, group, series and the like.
The antenna structure 100 includes a housing 11, a first feed portion 12 (shown in
The border frame 111 is substantially hollow rectangular and is made of metal or other conductive material. The border frame 111 is mounted around a periphery of the system ground surface 110. In one embodiment, an edge of one side of the border frame 111 is spaced from the system ground surface 110 to define a clearance area 114 (shown in
The middle frame 112 is substantially rectangular and is made of metal or other conductive material. A size of the middle frame 112 is less than a size of the system ground surface 110. The middle frame 112 is layered over the system ground surface 110.
In one embodiment, the border frame 111 defines an opening (not shown) in one side adjacent to the middle frame 112 for receiving a display 201 of the wireless communication device 200. The display 200 is exposed through the opening.
The back cover 113 is made of metal or other conductive material. The back cover 113 is mounted around a periphery of the border frame 111. In one embodiment, the back cover 113 is mounted to a side of the system ground surface 110 opposite from the middle frame 112 and is substantially parallel to the display 201 and the middle frame 112.
In one embodiment, the system ground surface 110, the border frame 111, the middle frame 112, and the back cover 113 are integrally formed. The middle frame 112 is a metal plate located between the display 201 and the system ground surface 110. The middle frame 112 supports the display 201, provides electromagnetic shielding, and enhances durability of the wireless communication device 200.
In one embodiment, the border frame 111 includes at least an end portion 115, a first side portion 116, and a second side portion 117. The end portion 115 may be a bottom end of the wireless communication device 200. The first side portion 116 and the second side portion 117 face each other and are respectively coupled to opposite ends of the end portion 115 and are substantially perpendicular to the end portion 115.
The housing 11 includes a slot 118 and at least one gap. The slot 118 is defined in the back cover 113. The slot 118 is substantially U-shaped and is defined in the back cover 113 adjacent to the end portion 115. The slot 118 extends toward the first side portion 116 and the second side portion 117. In one embodiment, the housing 11 defines a first gap 119 and a second gap 120. Each of the first gap 119 and the second gap 120 is defined in the end portion 115. The first gap 119 and the second gap 120 partition the border frame 111 and are each coupled to the slot 118.
The first gap 119 and the second gap 120 cut across and cut through the end portion 115. The slot 118, the first gap 119, and the second gap 120 cooperatively divide the housing 11 into a first radiating portion F1, a second radiating portion F2, and a third radiating portion F3. In one embodiment, a portion of the border frame 111 between the first gap 119 and the second gap 120 is the first radiating portion F1. A portion of the border frame 111 between the first gap 119 and an endpoint E1 of the first side portion 116 is the second radiating portion F2. A portion of the border frame 111 between the second gap 120 and an endpoint E2 of the second side portion 117 is the third radiating portion F3. In one embodiment, the first radiating portion F1 is spaced from and insulated from the middle frame 112. Each of an end of the second radiating portion F2 adjacent to the endpoint E1 and an end of the third radiating portion F3 adjacent to the endpoint E2 is coupled to the system ground surface 110, and the back cover 113 and are coupled to ground.
In one embodiment, a width of the slot 118 is less than or equal to twice a width of the first gap 119 and a width of the second gap 120. The width of the slot 118 is 0.5-2 mm, and each of the width of the first gap 119 and the width of the second gap 120 is 1-2 mm.
The slot 118, the first gap 119, and the second gap 120 are filled with insulating material, such as plastic, rubber, glass, wood, or ceramic.
As shown in
In other embodiment, the second electronic component 23 and the third electronic component 25 may be mounted in different locations according to requirements.
In one embodiment, the first feed portion 12 is mounted in the clearance area 114 between the system ground surface 110 and the border frame 111. One end of the first feed portion 12 is electrically coupled to a signal feed point (not shown) of the system ground surface 110 by a clip, a microgap, a gap, a coaxial cable, or other connection means. A second end of the first feed portion 12 is electrically coupled through a matching circuit (not shown) to a side of the first radiating portion F1 adjacent to the second gap 120 for feeding an electric current to the first radiating portion F1, the second radiating portion F2, and the third radiating portion F3.
In one embodiment, the first feed portion 12 is formed by laser direct structuring (LDS) iron, metal cladding, or other conductive material.
In one embodiment, the antenna structure 100 includes a switching circuit 13 and a switching circuit 15. The switching circuit 13 is mounted to the second gap 120, and the switching circuit 15 is mounted to the first gap 119. One end of the switching circuit 13 is electrically coupled to the first radiating portion F1, and a second end of the switching circuit 13 is electrically coupled to the third radiating portion F3. One end of the switching circuit 15 is electrically coupled to the first radiating portion F1, and a second end of the switching circuit 15 is electrically coupled to the second radiating portion F2.
In one embodiment, the switching circuit 13 and the switching circuit 15 are controlled to switch between an open circuit state and a closed circuit state to electrically coupled the first radiating portion F1, the second radiating portion F2, and the third radiating portion F3, thereby adjusting a frequency of the antenna structure 100.
In one embodiment, as shown in
In one embodiment, the first resonance mode is a long term evolution advanced (LTE-A) low-frequency mode, the second resonance mode is an LTE-A high-frequency mode, and the third resonance mode is an LTE-A mid-frequency mode. The first frequency band is 700-960 MHz. The second frequency band is 2300-2690 MHz. The third frequency band is 1710-2170 MHz.
As shown in
In one embodiment, the fourth resonance mode is an ultra-mid-frequency mode, and the fifth resonance mode is an ultra-high-frequency mode. The fourth frequency band is 1447.9-1510.9 MHz, and the fifth frequency band is 3400-3800 MHz.
As shown in
The switching circuits 13, 15 may be one-way switches, two-way switches, two-way switches with a matching component, multi-way switches with a matching component, or the like.
As shown in
As shown in
The movable contact b1 is controlled to switch between the first fixed contact b2 and the second fixed contact b3. Thus, the first radiating portion F1 is switched to electrically couple to the third radiating portion F3 or the system ground surface 110. When the first radiating portion F1 is electrically coupled to the third radiating portion F3, the switching circuit 13 is in the closed state. When the first radiating portion F1 is electrically coupled to the system ground surface 110, the switching circuit 13 is in the open state. In other words, by controlling the movable contact b1 to switch between the first fixed contact b2 and the second fixed contact b3, the switching circuit 13 is controlled to switch between the open state and the closed state to open or close a circuit between the first radiating portion F1 and the third radiating portion F3 to adjust a radiation frequency.
As shown in
The movable contact c1 is controlled to switch between the first fixed contact c2 and the second fixed contact c3 to control the first radiating portion F1 to electrically couple to the third radiating portion F3 or the system ground surface 110. When the first radiating portion F1 is electrically coupled to the third radiating portion F3, the switching circuit 13 is in the closed state. When the first radiating portion F1 is electrically coupled through the matching component 131 to the system ground surface 110, the switching circuit 13 is in the open state. In other words, by controlling the movable contact c1 to switch between the first fixed contact c2 and the second fixed contact c3, the switching circuit 13 is controlled to switch between the open state and the closed state to open or close a circuit between the first radiating portion F1 and the third radiating portion F3 to adjust a radiation frequency.
As shown in
The movable contact d1 is controlled to switch between the first fixed contact d2, the second fixed contact d3, the third fixed contact d4, and the fourth fixed contact d5 to control the first radiating portion F1 to electrically couple to the third radiating portion F3 or the system ground surface 110 through different one of the matching components 133. When the first radiating portion F1 is electrically coupled to the third radiating portion F3, the switching circuit 13 is in the closed state. When the first radiating portion F1 is electrically coupled through one of the matching components 131 to the system ground surface 110, the switching circuit 13 is in the open state. In other words, by controlling the movable contact d1 to switch between the first fixed contact d2, the second fixed contact d3, the third fixed contact d4, and the fourth fixed contact d5, the switching circuit 13 is controlled to switch between the open state and the closed state to open or close a circuit between the first radiating portion F1 and the third radiating portion F3 to adjust a radiation frequency.
In one embodiment, the border frame 111 is electrically coupled to the system ground surface 110 by clipping, welding, pinning, or other means. An electrical contact point between the border frame 111 and the system ground surface 110 may be adjusted according to requirements for adjusting a low-frequency band. For example, an electrical contact point adjacent to the first feed portion 12 raises the frequency of the low-frequency band, and an electrical contact point further away from the first feed portion 12 lowers the frequency of the low-frequency band.
As shown in
In other words, the antenna structure 100 uses the switching circuits 13, 15 to excite different resonance modes, such as the low, mid, and high-frequency modes and the ultra-mid and ultra-high frequency modes to cover all frequency bands in common use. Specifically, the antenna structure 100 operating in the low-frequency mode covers
GSM850/900/WCDMA Band5/Band8. The mid-frequency mode covers GSM 1800/1900/WCDMA 2100(1710-2170 MHz). The high-frequency band covers LTE-A Band1, Band40, Band41(2300-2690 MHz). The ultra-mid-frequency band covers 1447.9-1510.9 MHz. The ultra-high-frequency band covers 3400-3800 MHz. The antenna structure 100 can be applied in GSM Qual-band, UMTS Band I/II/V/VIII frequencies and global LTE 850/900/1800/1900/2100/2300/2500 frequencies.
As described above, the border frame 111 of the antenna structure 100 uses at least one gap (the first gap 119 and the second gap 120) and corresponding switching circuits 13, 15. Thus, the low, mid, high, ultra-mid, and ultra-high frequencies are covered by the antenna structure 100 to satisfy carrier aggregation (CA) requirements.
The antenna structure 100a includes a housing 11, a first feed portion 12, and at least one switching circuit. The housing 11 includes at least a system ground surface 110, a border frame 111, a middle frame 112, and a back cover 113. The border frame 111 includes an end portion 115a, a first side portion 116, and a second side portion 117. The housing 11 includes a slot 118 and at least one gap. The wireless communication device 200a includes a first electronic component 21a, a second electronic component 23a, and a third electronic component 25a.
A difference between the antenna structure 100a and the antenna structure 100 is that the end portion 115a is a top end of the wireless communication device 200a.
Another difference between the antenna structure 100a and the antenna structure 100 is that the housing 11 of the antenna structure 100a includes three gaps, a first gap 119, a second gap 120, and a third gap 121. The three gaps are defined in the border frame 111. Specifically, the third gap 121 is defined in the first side portion 116 adjacent to the first gap 119. The third gap 121 is defined in the border frame 111 and is coupled to the slot 118.
The first gap 119, the second gap 120, and the third gap 121 cut across and cut through the border frame 112. The slot 118, the first gap 119, the second gap 120, and the third gap 121 cooperatively divide the housing 11 into a first radiating portion F1, a second radiating portion F2a, a third radiating portion F3, and a fourth radiating portion F4. In one embodiment, a portion of the border frame 111 between the first gap 119 and the second gap 120 is the first radiating portion F1. A portion of the border frame 111 between the first gap 119 and the third gap 121 is the second radiating portion F2a. A portion of the border frame 111 between the second gap 120 and an endpoint E2 of the second side portion 117 is the third radiating portion F3. A portion of the border frame 111 between the third gap 121 and an endpoint E1 of the first side portion 116 is the fourth radiating portion F4.
Another difference between the antenna structure 100a and the antenna structure 100 is that the antenna structure 100a includes a first electronic component 21a, a second electronic component 23a, and a third electronic component 25a. The first electronic component 21a may be a proximity sensor. The first electronic component 21a is mounted in the middle frame 112 adjacent to a center edge of the first radiating portion F1. The second electronic component 23a may be a front camera mounted in the middle frame 112 on a side of the first electronic component 21a away from the first radiating portion F1. The third electronic component 25a may be a microphone mounted in the middle frame 112 adjacent to an edge of the first radiating portion F1. The third electronic component 25a is mounted between the first electronic component 21a and the first gap 119.
In other embodiment, the second electronic component 23 and the third electronic component 25 may be mounted in different locations according to requirements.
In one embodiment, each of the first electronic component 21a, the second electronic component 23a, and the third electronic component 25a is insulated from the first radiating portion F1 by the slot 118. The first electronic component 21a is spaced 2-10 mm from the slot 118, and the third electronic component 25a is spaced 2-10 mm from the slot 118.
One end of the first feed portion 12 is electrically coupled to a signal feed point (not shown) of the system ground surface 110 by a clip, a microgap, a gap, a coaxial cable, or other connection means. A second end of the first feed portion 12 is electrically coupled through a matching circuit (not shown) to a side of the first radiating portion F1 adjacent to the second gap 120 for feeding an electric current to the first radiating portion F1.
Another difference between the antenna structure 100 and the antenna structure 100a is that the antenna structure 100a further includes a second feed portion 16a, a third feed portion 17a, and a ground portion 18a. One end of the second feed portion 16a is electrically coupled to a signal feed point of the system ground surface 110 by a clip, a microgap, a gap, a coaxial cable, or other connection means. A second end of the second feed portion 16a is electrically coupled through a matching circuit (not shown) to a side of the second radiating portion F2a adjacent to the first gap 119 for feeding an electric current to the second radiating portion F2a. One end of the third feed portion 17a is electrically coupled to a signal feed point of the system ground surface 110 by a clip, a microgap, a gap, a coaxial cable, or other connection means. A second end of the third feed portion 17a is electrically coupled through a matching circuit (not shown) to a side of the fourth radiating portion F4 adjacent to the third gap 121 for feeding an electric current to the fourth radiating portion F4. One end of the ground portion 18a is electrically coupled to a side of the second radiating portion F2a adjacent to the third gap 121. A second end of the ground portion 18a is electrically coupled to the system ground surface 110 for grounding the second radiation portion F2a.
Another difference between the antenna structure 100a and the antenna structure 100 is that the antenna structure 100a only includes one switching circuit 13. The switching circuit 13 is mounted to the second gap 120. One end of the switching circuit 13 is electrically coupled to the first radiating portion F1, and a second end of the switching circuit 13 is electrically coupled to the third radiating portion F3. In other embodiments, the switching circuit 13 may be mounted to a different gap, such as the first gap 119 or the third gap 121 according to frequency band requirements. A structure of the switching circuit 13 may be one of the structures illustrated in
As shown in
The electric current from the first feed portion 12 are further coupled from the first radiating portion F1 to the second radiating portion F2a toward the third gap 121 along a current path P4a to excite a fourth resonance mode and generate a radiation signal in a fourth frequency band. The electric current from the first feed portion 12 are further coupled from the first radiating portion F1 to the third radiating portion F3, and then passed through the system ground surface 110 and the middle frame 112 along a current path P5a to excite a fifth resonance mode and generate a radiation signal in a fifth frequency band.
As shown in
In one embodiment, the sixth resonance mode is a global positioning system (GPS) mode and a WIFI 2.4 GHz mode. The seventh resonance mode is a WIFI 5 GHz mode and an ultra-high-frequency mode. The sixth resonance mode has a has a frequency band frequency of 1575 MHz and 2400-2480 MHz. The seventh resonance mode has a frequency band frequency of 5150-5850 MHz and 3400-3800 MHz.
As shown in
In other words, the antenna structure 100a uses the switching circuit 13 to excite different resonance modes, such as the low, mid, high, ultra-mid, ultra-high, GPS, WIFI 2.4 GHz, and WIFI 5 GHz frequency modes to cover all frequency bands in common use. Specifically, the antenna structure 100a operating in the low-frequency mode covers GSM850/900/WCDMA Band5/Band8. The mid-frequency mode covers GSM 1800/1900/WCDMA 2100(1710-2170 MHz). The high-frequency band covers LTE-A Band1, Band40, Band41(2300-2690 MHz). The ultra-mid-frequency band covers 1447.9-1510.9 MHz. The ultra-high-frequency band covers 3400-3800 MHz. The antenna structure 100a can be applied in GSM Qual-band, UMTS Band I/II/V/VIII frequencies and global LTE 850/900/1800/1900/2100/2300/2500 frequencies.
As described above, the border frame 111 of the antenna structure 100a uses at least one gap (the first gap 119, the second gap 120, and the third gap 121) and the switching circuit 13. Thus, the low, mid, high, ultra-mid, and ultra-high frequencies are covered by the antenna structure 100a to satisfy carrier aggregation (CA) requirements.
The embodiments shown and described above are only examples. Even though numerous characteristics and advantages of the present technology have been set forth in the foregoing description, together with details of the structure and function of the present disclosure, the disclosure is illustrative only, and changes may be made in the detail, including in matters of shape, size and arrangement of the parts within the principles of the present disclosure up to, and including, the full extent established by the broad general meaning of the terms used in the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201810558769.3 | Jun 2018 | CN | national |