The present invention relates to a structure for an antenna. Embodiments of the invention find particular application in flexible structures for radio antennas, such as those which can be incorporated into clothing.
Wearable antennas have been developed for use in variety of communications applications. The construction of an antenna using thin, flexible materials has been investigated, giving a lightweight, discrete result which does not hinder the wearer's movements.
There are several challenges in developing a wearable antenna which can for example be incorporated into clothing. Both the antenna and its feed need to be relatively undetectable and also sufficiently robust, for instance to withstand normal movement and handling of the clothing, and washing.
Generally, in practice, antennas require a balanced feed in order to prevent the feed itself from radiating as well as the antenna. If the feed radiates, it reduces the efficiency of the antenna, can distort the radiation/reception pattern and can interfere with other equipment. The output of a radio for use with a wearable communications antenna is unbalanced. It is known to use a transmission line plus a balun to convert the radio output to a balanced antenna feed. Available baluns tend to be easily detectable however.
Spiral antennas are known which have an “infinite balun”. These have a feed which winds into the centre of the spiral. They were originally published by J. D. Dyson, for example in 1959 in a paper entitled “The Equiangular Spiral Antenna,” in Transactions of the Institute of Radio Engineers. U.S. Pat. No. 5,815,122 discloses a structure of this type. Such arrangements function without an additional balun structure but have significant depth, making them very detectable.
“Spiral” in the context of this specification includes any path on a plane that winds around a fixed centre point at an increasing or decreasing distance from the point. Although the increase or decrease of the distance may be continuous and/or regular, it is not essentially so. The term “spiral” therefore encompasses shapes that might be described as non-circular.
Other constraints with regard to wearable antennas and their feeds are impedance matching, compatibility with broadband operation, delivery of adequate signal power for use in the field, for example 5 Watts or more, and the effect of variable proximity to the body.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided an antenna assembly for use as a wearable antenna, the antenna comprising at least two spiral arms, one of the arms being constructed to provide a feed structure to a feed connection to at least one other arm in the central region of the spiral antenna, the feed structure comprising a coplanar waveguide.
The arm constructed to provide the feed structure may indeed consist of said coplanar waveguide. That is, the arm comprises slots and a line conductor in a coplanar ground plane, the outer edges of the ground plane providing the width of the arm.
It has been found that such an antenna assembly provides an acceptable performance in spite of a structural difference between the arms.
A spiral antenna of this type does not require a separate balun, benefitting from the “infinite balun” effect mentioned above.
The coplanar waveguide feed structure may provide one or more impedance transforming structures for matching the impedance of a signal feed line, for example from a radio source, to that of the spiral antenna. For example, the ratio of the width of the slots to the width of the line conductor can be changed to alter the impedance of the coplanar waveguide.
In use, the coplanar waveguide will not generally present a flat surface since a wearable antenna may often be subjected to bending or folding. The term “coplanar” is intended to mean a waveguide in which wave-guiding is provided by the feed structure when its elements share a common plane but encompasses such feed structures when bent or folded.
Conveniently, the coplanar waveguide feed structure can easily be designed to provide a quarter wave impedance transformer at the central region of the antenna, where there is a feed connection between the feed structure and the spiral antenna. This can be done by positioning a step change in the ratio of the width of the slots to the width of the line conductor at a point along the slot waveguide which lies one quarter wavelength of the carrier signal wavelength of the antenna, in use, along the waveguide from the feed connection.
Microstrip transmission line feeds using flat conductors give low attenuation and high power handling when the strip width is maximised but this leads to inconveniently low impedance because of the small thickness generally provided by wearable fabrics. Typical, wearable cloth substrates, such as cotton, are often no more than 1 mm thick and can be no more than 0.5 mm or 0.3 mm. A coplanar waveguide for a wearable spiral antenna is best suited to impedances of 75 Ω to 125 Ω, for instance of the order of 100 Ω, where the ratio of the air gap to the conductor width is suitable large and the slot width can be of order 1 mm, reducing the chance of accidental short circuits when the material is crumpled
Wearable antennas according to embodiments of the invention have been found to have impedances of 150 Ω and above, for example of the order of 190 Ω. In this case, the quarter wave impedance transformer described above might be constructed to provide impedance matching between the antenna and a feed structure having an impedance in the range 75 Ω to 125 Ω, for instance of the order of 100 Ω. This allows the bulk of the spiral arm providing the feed structure to be constructed with practical dimensions in respect of slot width while also being integral with a suitable quarter wave impedance transformer at the feed connection.
Typical radio feed lines for wearable antennas have an impedance of about 50 Ω. Feed structures used in embodiments of the invention can conveniently provide impedance matching to the feed line as well as to the antenna. For example, the coplanar waveguide feed structure may have an extension with respect to the outer edge of the spiral antenna, which extension provides an impedance matching section for matching the impedance of the coplanar waveguide of the feed structure to that of a signal feed line. For good performance, this extension might be linear and may be tangential to the outer edge of the spiral antenna.
Some spiral antennas have an absorbing cavity behind them. In embodiments of the invention the wearable antenna, or at least the wearable fabric it is constructed on, can be worn close to or against the human body which provides the absorption.
Embodiments of the invention can be constructed in just one plane, on a flexible material, making them difficult to detect, even by a body search, and easily incorporated into clothing. They allow a suitable antenna plus feed structure to be provided in spite of the tight requirements of wearable antennas in terms of detectability, robustness and electrical parameters.
A spiral antenna assembly will now be described as an embodiment of the invention, by way of example only, with reference to the following figures in which:
It should be noted that the figures are not drawn to scale.
Referring to
Indeed the arm 105 providing the feed structure consists of the feed structure, the outer edges of the ground plane 200, 205 defining the width of the arm 105.
The antenna described here is intended for use with Multiband Inter/Intra Team Radios (“MBITRs”), these being operable at 5 W power level and providing a 50 Ω feed.
The winding of the transmission line around the spiral creates a balanced feed.
There is a requirement for an impedance transformer between the 50 Ω impedance of the signal feed line from the radio and that of the antenna which is roughly 200 Ω. This can be done in sections of the waveguide feed line by changes in the width of the slots 125. A section adjoining the feed connection 305 of the antenna has the widest slot width, giving a roughly 150 Ω impedance, and the outer end of the arm 105 has an extension 145 along a tangent to the antenna where the slots 125 have a reduced slot width in order to match to the feed from the radio. The main length of the feed structure has slots whose width is designed for 100 Ω impedance as, in the embodiments described below, these are sufficiently robust in use while allowing a quarter wave transformer to be constructed at the feed connection to the antenna. The gap between the conductors at this impedance is greater than 1 mm which gives a reasonable lack of sensitivity to fabrication errors, crumpling of the material, or damage due to washing, etc.
The antenna is a symmetrical two-arm spiral, so it might be expected that it needs a symmetrical feed at the centre but it has been found unnecessary in embodiments of the invention.
In more detail, the antenna is an Archimedean spiral of known type. The centrelines of the spiral arms are defined by:
where 0≦θ≦θ0
with outer radius r0=225 □mm and maximum angle θ0=6 π.
The widths of the arms 100, 105 is 20 mm each, leaving a gap of 17.5 mm between them. The centre conductor 130 of the CPW feed is 5 mm wide. One arm 105 carries the CPW feed, while the other arm 100 is unmodified. The antenna is therefore not quite the Babinet dual of itself, but its input impedance is close to the ideal impedance of a self-complementary antenna, which in this case would be 188 Ω.
The overall diameter of a spiral antenna is usually at least one wavelength at the lowest frequency used. The embodiment described here is of a size that ideally would carry frequencies from about 500 MHz upwards.
In normal usage, with a MBITR radio, a quarter wavelength of the carrier signal in the CPW feed is 210 mm. The angle in the spiral from its centre to the point where s=□210 mm is θ=325°□.
The spiral antenna can be fed in known manner, using a coaxial cable (not shown).
The width of both arms 100, 105 (20 mm) and the width of the centre conductor 130 (5 mm) have been made as large as possible so as to minimise the resistive loss in the feed structure 200, 125, 130, 205. The slots 125 are each 1.25 mm wide, leaving the ground plane conductors 200, 205 each 6.25 mm wide. A centre conductor 130 wider than 5 mm could be used, but the outer ground plane conductors 200, 205 would then be relatively narrow and this might affect the impedance of the CPW feed structure.
The currents associated with the spiral-mode and CPW mode of the antenna are approximately orthogonal. For the radiating spiral mode of the antenna, the currents flow in the same direction on all three conductors 200, 130, 205 of the CPW line. For the CPW mode of transmission, the currents are equal and opposite on the centre and outer conductors.
The antenna is fabricated from a sheet of conductive, flexible material, prior to mounting on a wearable fabric 140. As shown in
The material of the antenna may be any suitable conductive material. However, a conductive material for use with wearable fabrics 140 is Nora Dell Nickel-Copper-Silver plated nylon plain weave fabric, manufactured by Shieldex Trading Incorporated, with a quoted average resistivity of 0.005 Ω/sq. The antenna 100, 105 and its impedance matching extension 120, 145 can be laser cut from this material. An important feature of a wearable antenna and its feed is the power handling. For example, in order to handle the 5 W output of an MBITR radio, it is important that materials in the antenna assembly do not overheat. It was found that the spiral antenna assembly was acceptable in this respect, as long as relatively low resistivity material was used and the Nora Dell fabric was good in this respect.
The antenna is mounted on cotton T-shirt style fabric 140. Typical thicknesses of wearable cotton fabric are of the order of 0.3 mm. Although other attachment techniques might be desirable in practice, a working embodiment of the invention can be constructed using adhesive TESA® tape (manufactured by TESA SE) applied to one side of the laser cut Nora Dell material. The backing is removed from the TESA tape and the design can be pressed on to a wearable fabric such as cotton sheet.
The antenna has an expected impedance of 188 Ω while the main length of the CPW feed has an impedance of 100 Ω. Immediately before the central feed point 305, a quarter-wave transformer of 137 Ω is introduced to match the expected impedance of the antenna to the 100 Ω feed. The length of this transformer might be any odd multiple of quarter wavelengths, such as three, but in this case is 210 mm, which is one quarter-wavelength at 300 MHz, allowing for the empirically measured velocity factor of 0.84 for CPW on the 0.3 mm cotton fabric. A three quarter-wavelength transformer would only be matched over a narrower bandwidth.
The feed arm 105 has an extension 120, 145 at a tangent for a distance of 500 mm to provide matching to the 50 Ω signal feed line of the radio. In more detail, the extension has a first section 120 adjoining the antenna arm 105 which is 300 mm long and maintains the slot width at 1.25 mm, as it is in the arm 105. There is then a second section 145 which is 200 mm long and has a slot width 0.33 mm. The second section 145 steps down the 100 Ω impedance of the feed arm 105 to a suitable impedance, approximately 70 Ω, for connection to the 50 Ω radio feed line.
Referring to
Referring to
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376.7K(s/(s+2w))
when the lines are in vacuum. In
Referring to
It can be seen that there is a trade-off between the size of the structure, and therefore the degree of detectability, and the attenuation. Other factors, in practice, include for example the maximum current for which a conductor is still comfortable to the touch and the minimum slot width (about 1 mm) which is electrically and physically robust enough in use.
Referring to
In practice, for a prototype antenna, a three stage transformer was constructed, in copper tape on a metallised nylon fabric, in order to match from the 50 Ω input line to the approximately 200 Ω seen at the feed connection 305 of the antenna. This had a return loss of 20 dB across a 3:1 band. The centre conductor 130 line width was 5 mm. The impedances and slot widths “w” of the three stages were as follows:
In the above, it can be seen that the input line (50 Ω) was connected directly to a 67 Ω section of the three-stage transformer. The 0.055 measurement for “w” was found too difficult to realise in the copper tape prototype.
Referring to
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Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10275068.4 | Jun 2010 | EP | regional |
1010982.5 | Jun 2010 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/GB2011/000985 | 6/29/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/6/2012 |