This application relates to metamaterial (MTM) structures and their applications.
The propagation of electromagnetic waves in most materials obeys the right handed rule for the (E,H,β) vector fields, where E is the electrical field, H is the magnetic field, and β is the wave vector. The phase velocity direction is the same as the direction of the signal energy propagation (group velocity) and the refractive index is a positive number. Such materials are “right handed” (RH). Most natural materials are RH materials. Artificial materials can also be RH materials.
A metamaterial is an artificial structure. When designed with a structural average unit cell size p much smaller than the wavelength of the electromagnetic energy guided by the metamaterial, the metamaterial can behave like a homogeneous medium to the guided electromagnetic energy. Different from RH materials, a metamaterial can exhibit a negative refractive index where the phase velocity direction is opposite to the direction of the signal energy propagation where the relative directions of the (E,H,β) vector fields follow the left handed rule. Metamaterials that support only a negative index of refraction are “left handed” (LH) metamaterials.
Many metamaterials are mixtures of LH metamaterials and RH materials and thus are Composite Left and Right Handed (CRLH) metamaterials. A CRLH metamaterial can behave like a LH metamaterials at low frequencies and a RH material at high frequencies. Designs and properties of various CRLH metamaterials are described in, Caloz and Itoh, “Electromagnetic Metamaterials: Transmission Line Theory and Microwave Applications,” John Wiley & Sons (2006). CRLH metamaterials and their applications in antennas are described by Tatsuo Itoh in “Invited paper: Prospects for Metamaterials,” Electronics Letters, Vol. 40, No. 16 (August, 2004).
CRLH metamaterials can be structured and engineered to exhibit electromagnetic properties that are tailored for specific applications and can be used in applications where it may be difficult, impractical or infeasible to use other materials. In addition, CRLH metamaterials may be used to develop new applications and to construct new devices that may not be possible with RH materials.
This application describes, among others, Techniques, apparatus and systems that use one or more composite left and right handed (CRLH) metamaterial structures in processing and handling electromagnetic wave signals. Antenna, antenna arrays and other RF devices can be formed based on CRLH metamaterial structures. For example, the described CRLH metamaterial structures can be used in wireless communication RF front-end and antenna sub-systems.
In one implementation, an antenna device includes a dielectric substrate having a first surface on a first side and a second surface on a second side opposing the first side; a cell conductive patch formed on the first surface; a cell ground conductive electrode formed on the second surface and in a footprint projected by the cell conductive patch onto the second surface; a main ground electrode formed on the second surface and separated from the cell ground conductive electrode; a cell conductive via connector formed in the substrate to connect the cell conductive patch to the cell ground conductive electrode; a conductive feed line formed on the first surface and having a distal end located close to and electromagnetically coupled to the cell conductive patch to direct an antenna signal to or from the cell conductive patch; and a conductive strip line formed on the second surface and connecting cell ground conductive electrode to the main ground electrode. The cell conductive patch, the substrate, the cell conductive via connector and the cell ground conductive electrode, and the electromagnetically coupled conductive feed line are structured to form a composite left and right handed (CRLH) metamaterial structure. The cell ground electrode may have an area greater than a cross section of the cell conductive via connector and less than an area of the cell conductive patch. The cell ground electrode may also be greater than an area of the cell conductive patch.
In another implementation, an antenna device includes a dielectric substrate having a first surface on a first side and a second surface on a second side opposing the first side; cell conductive patches formed over the first surface to be separated from and adjacent to one another to allow capacitive coupling between two adjacent cell conductive patches; a main ground electrode formed on the second surface outside a footprint projected collectively by the cell conductive patches onto the second surface; and cell ground electrodes formed on the second surface to spatially correspond to the cell conductive patches, one cell ground electrode to one cell conductive patch, respectively. Each cell ground electrode is within a footprint projected by a respective cell conductive patch onto the second surface, and wherein the cell ground electrodes are spatially separate from the main ground electrode. This device also includes conductive via connectors formed in the substrate to connect the cell conductive patches to the cell ground electrodes, respectively, to form a plurality of unit cells that construct a composite left and right handed (CRLH) metamaterial structure; and at least one conductive strip line formed on the second surface to connect the plurality of cell ground electrodes to the main ground electrode.
In another implementation, an antenna device includes a first dielectric substrate having a first top surface on a first side and a first bottom surface on a second side opposing the first side, and a second dielectric substrate having a second top surface on a first side and a second bottom surface on a second side opposing the first side. The first and second dielectric substrates stack over each other to engage the second top surface to the first bottom surface. This device includes cell conductive patches formed on the first top surface to be separated from and adjacent to one another to allow capacitive coupling between two adjacent cell conductive patches and a first main ground electrode formed on the first surface and spatially separate from the cell conductive patches. The first main ground electrode is patterned to form a co-planar waveguide that is electromagnetically coupled to a selected cell conductive patch of the cell conductive patches to direct an antenna signal to or from the selected cell conductive patch. A second main ground electrode is formed between the first and second substrates and on the second top surface and the first bottom surface. Cell ground electrodes are formed on the second bottom surface to spatially correspond to the cell conductive patches, one cell ground electrode to one cell conductive patch, respectively and each cell ground electrode is within a footprint projected by a respective cell conductive patch onto the second bottom surface. This device further includes bottom ground electrodes formed on the second bottom surface below the second main ground electrode; ground conductive via connectors formed in the second substrate to connect the bottom ground electrodes to the second main electrode, respectively; and bottom surface conductive strip lines formed on the second bottom surface to connect the plurality of cell ground electrodes to the bottom ground electrodes, respectively.
In yet another implementation, an antenna device includes a dielectric substrate having a first surface on a first side and a second surface on a second side opposing the first side; a cell conductive patch formed over the first surface; a perfect magnetic conductor (PMC) structure comprising a perfect magnetic conductor (PMC) surface and engaged to the second surface of the substrate to press the PMC surface against the second surface; a cell conductive via connector formed in the substrate to connect the cell conductive patch to the PMC surface; and a conductive feed line formed on the first surface and having a distal end located close to and electromagnetically coupled to the cell conductive patch to direct an antenna signal to or from the cell conductive patch. In this device, the cell conductive patch, the substrate, the cell conductive via connector, electromagnetically coupled conductive feed line, and the PMC surface are structured to form a composite left and right handed (CRLH) metamaterial structure.
These and other implementations can be used to achieve one or more advantages in various applications. For example, compact antenna devices can be constructed to provide broad bandwidth resonances and multimode antenna operations.
A pure LH material follows the left hand rule for the vector trio (E,H,β) and the phase velocity direction is opposite to the signal energy propagation. Both the permittivity and permeability are negative. A CRLH Metamaterial can exhibit both left hand and right hand electromagnetic modes of propagation depending on the regime or frequency of operation. Under certain circumstances, a CRLH metamaterial can exhibit a non-zero group velocity when the wavevector is zero. This situation occurs when both left hand and right hand modes are balanced. In an unbalanced mode, there is a bandgap in which electromagnetic wave propagation is forbidden. In the balanced case, the dispersion curve does not show any discontinuity at the transition point β(ωo)=0 between Left and Right handed modes, where the guided wavelength is infinite λg=2π/|β|→∞ while the group velocity is positive:
This state corresponds to Zeroth Order mode m=0 in a Transmission Line (TL) implementation in the LH handed region. The CRLH structure supports a fine spectrum of low frequencies with a dispersion relation that follows the negative β parabolic region which allows a physically small device to be built that is electromagnetically large with unique capabilities in manipulating and controlling near-field radiation patterns. When this TL is used as a Zeroth Order Resonator (ZOR), it allows a constant amplitude and phase resonance across the entire resonator. The ZOR mode can be used to build MTM-based power combiner/splitter, directional couplers, matching networks, and leaky wave antennas.
In RH TL resonators, the resonance frequency corresponds to electrical lengths θm=βml=mπ, where l is the length of the TL and m=1, 2, 3, . . . . The TL length should be long to reach low and wider spectrum of resonant frequencies. The operating frequencies of a pure LH material are the low frequencies. A CRLH metamaterial structure is very different from RH and LH materials and can be used to reach both high and low spectral regions of the RF spectral ranges of RH and LH materials.
CRLH MTM antennas can be designed to reduce the size of the antenna elements and to allow for close spacing between two adjacent antenna elements, while minimizing undesired coupling between different antenna elements and their corresponding RF chains. For example, each MTM unit cell can have a dimension smaller than one sixth or one tenth of a wavelength of a signal in resonance with the CRLH metamaterial structure and two adjacent MTM unit cells can be spaced from each other by one quarter of the wavelength or less. Such antennas can be used to achieve one or more of the following: 1) antenna size reduction, 2) optimal matching, 3) means to reduce coupling and restore pattern orthogonality between adjacent antennas by using directional couplers and matching network, and 4) potential integration of filters, diplexer/duplexer, and amplifiers.
Various radio devices for wireless communications include analog/digital converters, oscillators (single for direct conversion or multiples for multi-step RF conversion), matching networks, couplers, filters, diplexer, duplexer, phase shifters and amplifiers. These components tend to be expensive elements, difficult to integrate in close proximity, and often exhibit significant losses in signal power. MTM-based filters and diplexer/duplexer can be also built and integrated with the antennas and power combiner, directional coupler, and matching network when present to form the RF-chain. Only the external port that is directly connected to the RFIC needs to comply with 50Ω regulation. Internal ports between antenna, filter, diplexer, duplexer, power combiner, directional coupler, and matching network can be different from 50Ω in order to optimize matching between these RF elements. Hence, MTM structures can be used to integrate these components in an efficient and cost-effective way.
MTM technologies can be used to design and develop radio frequency (RF) components and subsystems with performance similar to or exceeding conventional RF structures, at a fraction of existing sizes, for examples antenna size reduction as much as λ/40. One limitation of various MTM antennas and resonators is a narrow bandwidth around a resonating frequency in either single-band or multi-band antennas.
In this regard, this application describes techniques to design MTM-based broadband, multi-band, or ultra-wideband transmission line (TL) structure to be used in RF components and sub-systems such as antennas. The techniques can be used to identify suitable structures that are low-cost and easy to manufacture while maintaining high efficiency, gain, and compact sizes. Examples of such structures using full-wave simulation tools such as HFSS are also provided.
In one implementation, the design algorithm includes (1) Identifying structure resonant frequencies, and (2) Determining the dispersion curve slopes near resonances in order to analyze bandwidth. This approach provides insights and guidance for bandwidth expansion not only for TL and other MTM structures but also for MTM antennas radiating at their resonance frequencies. The algorithm also includes (3): once the BW size is determined to be realizable, finding a suitable matching mechanism for the feed line and edge termination (when present), which presents a constant matching load impedance ZL (or matching network) over a wide frequency band around the resonances. Using this mechanism, the BB, MB, and/or UWB MTM designs are optimized using Transmission Lines (TL) analysis and then adopted in Antenna designs through use of full-wave simulation tools such as HFSS.
MTM structures can be used to enhance and expand the design and capabilities of RF components, circuits, and sub-systems. Composite Left Right Hand (CRLH) TL structures, where both RH and LH resonances can occur, exhibit desired symmetries, provide design flexibility, and can address specific application requirements such as frequencies and bandwidths of operation.
Designs of MTM 1D and 2D transmission lines in this application can be used to construct 1D and 2D broadband, multiband (MB), and ultra-wideband (UWB) TL structures for antennas and other applications. In one design implementation, N-cell dispersion relations and input/output impedances are solved in order to set the frequency bands and their corresponding bandwidths. In one example, a 2-D MTM array is designed to include a 2D anisotropic pattern and uses two TL ports along two different directions of the array to excite different resonances while the rest of the cells are terminated.
The 2D anisotropic analysis has been conducted for a transmission line (TL) with one input and one output. The matrix notation is denoted in Eq. II-1-1. Notably, an off-center TL feed analysis is conducted to consolidate multiple resonances along the x and y directions to increase frequency bands.
A CRLH MTM array can be designed to exhibit a broadband resonance and to include one or more of the following features: (1) 1D and 2D structure with reduced Ground Plane (GND) under the structure, (2) 2D anisotropic structure with offset feed with full GND under the structure, and (3) improved termination and feed impedance matching. Based on the techniques and examples described in this application, various 1D and 2D CRLH MTM TL structures and antennas can be constructed to provide broadband, multi-band, and ultra-wideband capabilities.
A 1D structure of CRLH MTM elements can include N identical cells in a linear array with shunt (LL, CR) and series (LR, CL) parameters. These five parameters determine the N resonant frequencies, the corresponding bandwidth, and input and output TL impedance variations around these resonances. These five parameters also decide the structure/antenna size. Hence careful consideration is given to target compact designs as small as λ/40 dimensions, where λ is the propagation wavelength in free-space. In both TL and antenna cases, the bandwidth over the resonances are expanded when the slope of dispersion curves near these resonances is steep. In the 1D case, it was proven that the slope equation is independent of the number of cells N leading to various ways to expand bandwidth. CRLH MTM structures with high RH frequency ωR (i.e. low shunt capacitance CR and series inductance LR) exhibit lager bandwidths. Low CR values can be achieved by, e.g., truncating the GND area under the patches that are connected to the GND through the vias.
Once the frequency bands, bandwidth, and size are specified, the next step is to consider matching the structure to the feed-line and proper termination of edge cells to reach the targeted frequency bands and bandwidth. Specific examples are given where BW increased with wider feed lines and adding a termination capacitor with values near matching values at the desired frequencies. One challenge in designing CRLH MTM structures is identifying appropriate feed/termination matching impedances that are independent of or change slowly with frequency over a desired band. Full analyses are conducted to select a structure with similar impedance values around the resonances.
Conducted analyses and running FEM simulations show the presence of different modes in the frequency gap. Typical LH (n≦0) and RH (n≧0) are TEM modes, whereas the modes between LH and RH are TE modes are considered mixed RH and LH modes. These TE modes have higher BW in comparison with pure LH modes, and can be manipulated to reach lower frequencies for the same structure. In this application, we present some examples of structures exhibiting mixed modes.
Analysis and designs of 2D CRLH MTM structures are similar to 1D structures in some aspects and are generally much more complex. The 2D advantage is the additional degrees of freedom it provides over the 1D structure. In designing a 2D structure, the bandwidth can be expanded following similar steps as in the 1D designs and multiple resonances along the x and y directions can be combined to expand the device bandwidth.
A 2D CRLH MTM structure includes Nx and Ny number of columns and rows of cells along x and y directions, respectively, and provides a total of Ny×Nx cells. Each cell is characterized by its series impedance Zx (LRx,CLx) and Zy (LRy,CLy) along the x and y axes respectively and shunt admittance Y (LL,CR). Each cell is represented by a four-branch RF network with two branches along the x-axis and two branches long the y-axis. In a 1D structure, the unit cell is represented by a two-branch RF network which is less complex to analyze than the 2D structure. These cells are interconnected like a Lego structure through its four internal branches. In 1D the cells are interconnected through two branches. In a 2D structure, the external branches, also referred to by edges, are either excited by external source (input port) to serve as an output port, or terminated by “Termination Impedances.” There are a total of Ny×Nx edge branches in a 2D structure. In 1D structure, there are only two edge branches that can serve as input, output, input/output, or termination port. For example, a 1D TL structure that is used in an antenna design has one end serving as the input/output port and the other end terminated with Zt impedance, which is infinite in most cases representing the extended antenna substrate. (leave out—mentioned several times above and below)
In a 2D structure, each cell can be characterized by different values of its lump elements Zx(nx,ny), Zy(nx,ny, and Y(nx,ny) and all terminations Ztx(1,ny), Ztx(Nx,ny), Zt(nx,1), and Zt(nx,Ny) and feeds are inhomogeneous. Although, such a structure may have unique properties suitable for some applications, its analysis is complex and implementations are far less practical than a more symmetric structure. This is of course in addition to exploring bandwidth expansion around resonance frequencies. Examples for 2D structures in this application are for CRLH MTM unit cells with equal Zx, Zy, and Y along x-direction, y-direction, and through shunts respectively. Structures with different values of CR can also be used in various applications.
In a 2D structure, the structure can be terminated by any impedances Ztx and Zty that optimize impedance matching along the input and output ports. For simplicity, infinite impedances Ztx and Zty are used in simulations and correspond to infinite substrate/ground-plane along these terminated edges.
2D structures with non-infinite values of Ztx and Zty can be analyzed using the same analysis approach described in this application and may use alternative matching constraints. An example of such non-infinite termination is manipulating surface currents to contain electromagnetic (EM) waves within the 2D structure to allow for another adjacent 2D structure without causing any interference. Interestingly, when the input feed is placed at an offset location from the center of the one of the edge cell along the x or y direction. This translates in the EM wave propagating asymmetrically in both x and y directions even though the feed is along only one of these directions. In a 2D structure with Nx=1 and Ny=2, the input can be along the (1,1) cell and the output can be along the (2,1) cell. The transmission [A B C D] matrix can be solved to compute the scattering coefficient S11 and S12. Similar calculations are made for truncated GND, mixed RH/LH TE modes, and perfect H instead of E field GND. Both 1D and 2D designs are printed on both sides of the substrate (2 layers) with vias in between, or on multilayer structure with additional metallization layers sandwiched between the top and bottom metallization layer.
1D CRLH MTM TL and Antenna with Broadband (BB), Multi-Band (MB), and Ultra Wideband (UWB) Resonances
The individual internal cell has two resonances ωSE and ωSH corresponding to the series impedance Z and shunt admittance Y. Their values are given by the following relation:
The two input/output edge cells in
In order to simplify the computational analysis, we include part of the ZLin′ and ZLout′ series capacitor to compensate for the missing CL portion as seen in
A condition of AN=DN is set because the CRLH circuit in
Because the parameter GR is derived by either building the antenna or simulating it with HFSS, it is difficult to work with the antenna structure to optimize the design. Hence, it is preferable to adopt the TL approach and then simulate its corresponding antennas with various terminations ZT. Eq II-1-2 notation also holds for the circuit in
The frequency bands are determined from the dispersion equation derived by letting the N CRLH cell structure resonates with nπ propagation phase length, where n=0, ±1, ±2, . . . ±N. Each of the N CRLH cells is represented by Z and Y in Eq II-1-2, which is different from the structure shown in
The dispersion relation of N identical cells with the Z and Y parameters, which are defined in Eq II-1-2, is given by the following relation:
where, Z and Y are given by Eq II-1-2 and AN is derived from either the linear cascade of N identical CRLH circuit or the one shown in
Table 1 provides χ values for N=1, 2, 3, and 4. Interestingly, the higher resonances |n|>0 are same regardless if the full CL is present at the edge cells (
An illustration of the dispersion curve β as a function of omega is provided in
where, χ is given in Eq II-1-5 and ωR is defined in Eq II-1-2. From the dispersion relation in Eq II-1-5 resonances occur when |AN|=1, which leads to a zero denominator in the 1st BB condition (COND1) of Eq II-1-8. As a reminder, AN is the first transmission matrix entry of the N identical cells (
As previously indicated, once the dispersion curve slopes have steep values, then the next step is to identify suitable matching. Ideal matching impedances have fixed values and do not require large matching network footprints. Here, the term “matching impedance” refers to feed lines and termination in case of a single side feed such as antennas. In order to analyze input/output matching network, Zin and Zout need to be computed for the TL circuit in
The reason that B1/C1 is greater than zero is due to the condition of |AN|≦1 in Eq II-1-5 which leads to the following impedance condition:
0≦−ZY=χ≦4.
The 2ed BB condition is for Zin to slightly vary with frequency near resonances in order to maintain constant matching. Remember that the real matching Zin′ includes a portion of the CL series capacitance as stated in Eq II-1-4.
Unlike the TL example in
Since LH resonances are typically narrower than the RH ones, selected matching values are closer to the ones derived in the n<0 than the n>0.
The examples of 1-D and 2-D CRLH MTM antennas in this application illustrate several techniques for impedance matching. For example, the coupling between the feed line and a unit cell can be controlled to assist impedance matching by properly selecting the size and shape of the terminal end of the feed line, the size and shape of the launch pad formed between the feed line and the unit cell. The dimension of the launch pad and the gap of the launch pad from the unit cell are can be configured to provide a impedance matching so that a target resonant frequency can be excited in the antenna. For another example, a termination capacitor can be formed at the distal end of an MTM antenna can be used to assist the impedance matching. The above two exemplary techniques may also be combined to provide proper impedance matching. In addition, other suitable RF impedance matching techniques may be used to achieve desired impedance matching for one or more target resonant frequencies.
CRLH MTM Antennas with Truncated Ground Electrode
In a CRLH MTM structure, the shunt capacitor CR can be reduced to increase the bandwidth of LH resonances. This reduction leads to higher ωR values of steeper beta curves as explained in Eq. II-1-8. There are various ways to decrease CR, including: 1) increasing the substrate thickness, 2) reducing the top cell patch area, or 3) reducing the ground electrode under the top cell patch. In designing CRLH MTM devices, one of these three methods may be used or combined with one or two other methods to produce a MTM structure with desired properties.
The designs in
For example, a CRLH MTM resonant apparatus can include a dielectric substrate having a first surface on a first side and a second surface on a second side opposing the first side; cell conductive patches formed on the first surface and separated from one another to capacitively couple two adjacent cell conductive patches; cell ground electrodes formed on the second surface and located below the top patches, respectively; a main ground electrode formed on the second surface; conductive via connectors formed in the substrate to connect the conductive patches to respective cell ground electrodes under the conductive patches, respectively; and at least one ground conductor line that connects between each cell ground electrode and the main ground electrode. This apparatus can include a feed line on the first surface and capacitively coupled to one of the cell conductive patches to provide input and output for the apparatus. The apparatus is structured to form a composite right and left handed (CRLH) metamaterial structure. In one implementation, the cell ground electrode is equal to or bigger than the via cross section area and is located just below the via to connect it to the main GND through the GND line. In another implementation, the cell ground electrode is equal to or bigger than the cell conductive patch.
The equations for truncated GND can be derived. The resonances follow the same equation as in Eq II-1-6 and Table 1 as explained below:
The impedance equation in Eq II-1-12 shows that the two resonances ω and ω′ have low impedance and high impedance respectively. Hence, it is easier to tune near the ω resonance.
In the second approach case, the combined shunt induction (LL+Lp) increases while the shunt capacitor decreases which leads to lower LH frequencies.
In some implementations, antennas based on CRLH MTM structures can include a 50-□ co-planar waveguide (CPW) feed line on the top layer, a top ground (GND) around the CPW feed line in the top layer, a launch pad in the top layer, and one or more cells. Each cell can include a top metallization cell patch in the top layer, a conductive via connecting top and bottom layers, and a narrow strip connecting the via to the main bottom GND in the bottom layers. Some characteristics of such antennas can be simulated using HFSS EM simulation software.
Various features and designs of CRLH MTM structures are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/741,674 entitled “ANTENNAS, DEVICES AND SYSTEMS BASED ON METAMATERIAL STRUCTURES” and filed on Apr. 27, 2007, which is published as U.S. Patent Publication No. US-2008-0258981-A1 on Oct. 23, 2008. The disclosure of the U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/741,674 is incorporated by reference as part of the specification of this application.
The capacitive tuning element 1630 includes the metal patch 1631 and the via 1642. The metal patch 1631 at least partially overlaps with the footprint of the top cell metal patch 1641 of the cell 1624. Different from metal patches 1643 which are not in direct contact with the cell vias 1642, the via 1632 is in direct contact with the metal patch 1631 and connects the metal patch 1631 to the ground strip line 1612. Therefore, metal patch 1631 and the top cell metal patch of the last cell 1624 forms a capacitor and the strength of the capacitive coupling with the cell 1624 can be controlled by setting a proper spacing between the metal patch 1631 and the top cell metal patch 1643 of the last cell 1624 as part of the design process.
Therefore, the 1-D antenna in
The dielectric material for the substrate 1601 can be selected from a range of materials, including the material under the trade name “RT/Duroid 5880” from Rogers Corporation. In one implementation, the substrate can have a thickness of 3.14 mm and the overall size of the MTM antenna element can be 8 mm in width, 18 mm in length and 3.14 mm in height as set by the substrate thickness. The top cell metal patch 1641 of the unit CRLH cell can be 8 mm wide in the x direction and 4 mm long in the y-direction with an inter-cell gap of 0.1 mm between two adjacent cells. The coupling between adjacent cells is enhanced by using MIM patches which can be 8 mm wide and 2.8 mm long positioned equidistant from the centers of the two patches and at a height of 5 mil below. The feed-line is coupled to the antenna with a 0.1 mm gap from the edge of the first unit cell. The termination cell top patch is as wide as the unit CRLH cell and 4 long. The gap between the fourth CRLH cell and termination cell is 5 mil. The vias connecting all top patches with bottom cell-GND are 0.8 mm in diameter and located in the center of the top patches.
Full-wave HFSS simulations were conducted on the design in
The HFSS simulations were also used to evaluate the effects of matching the feed line to the MTM structure and the effects of the capacitive tuning termination.
The size of the substrate/GND plane is also adjusted to investigate the effect of strong GND plane reduction on the antenna resonances and respective BW in the three-cell 1-D MTM antenna design in
This elimination of a portion of the GND plane in the vicinity of the radiating element to increase the antenna bandwidth produces significant advantages. Instead of eliminating completely the part of the GND plane extending beyond the feed point in direction of the radiating element, a square area of the GND electrode larger than the MTM structure by several wavelengths of the signal is cut out. Narrow metal strips 2312 remain below the structure in order to connect the cell vias 212 to the GND electrode 2310 shared by all MTM cells 2300.
In one implementation, the antenna in
In comparison, the same MTM cell array antenna with a full contiguous ground electrode approximately exhibits the n=−1 resonance at 2.4 GHz which is a frequency of interest for several wireless communication applications, most notably the WiFi networks under 802.11b and g standards. However, the resonance BW of the MTM cell array antenna with a full contiguous ground electrode is less than 1% and thus may have limited use in various practical applications which require broader bandwidths.
In
Additional advantage of exploiting the mixed modes for antenna application comes from the fact that for small antennas the RH resonances appear at high frequencies, which are not used in wireless communications. The mixed modes are readily available for such applications. Also, these modes provide additional advantage in terms of antenna gain and efficiency, since they show smallest attenuation due to conductor loss.
In many of the above MTM designs, the ground electrode layer is located on one side of the substrate. The ground electrode, however, can be formed on both sides of the substrate in a MTM structure. In such a configuration, an MTM antenna can be designed to include an electromagnetically parasitic element. Such MTM antennas can be used to achieve certain technical features by presence of one or more parasitic elements.
As a specific example of the above design in
The parasitic element 3022 serves to increase the maximum gain of the active element 3021 along a selected direction. The antenna in
The above example in
MTM structures may also be used to construct transceiver antennas for various applications in a compact package, such as wireless cards for laptop computers, antennas for mobile communication devices such as PDAs, GPS devices, and cell phones. At least one MTM receiver antenna and one MTM transmitter antenna can be integrated on a common substrate.
Each of the antenna cells 3321, 3322 and 3323 is structured to include a top cell metal patch on the top substrate surface, a conductive via 3340, and a ground pad 3350 with a dimension less than the top cell metal patch. The ground pad 3350 can have an area greater than the cross section of the via 3340. In other implementations, the ground pad 3350 can have an area greater than that of the top cell metal patch. In each antenna cell, a strip line 3351 is formed on the bottom substrate surface to connect the ground pad 3350 to the bottom ground electrode 3332. In the example shown, the two receiver antenna cells 3321 and 3322 are configured to have a rectangular shape that is elongated along a direction perpendicular to the elongated direction of the CPW 3030 and the transmitter antenna cell 3323, which is located between the two receiver antenna cells 3321 and 3322, is configured to have a rectangular shape that elongated along the elongated direction of the CPW 3030. Referring to
The above transceiver antenna device design can be used to form a 2-layer MTM client card operating at 1.7 GHz for the transmitter antenna cell and 2.1 GHz for the receiver antenna cells. The three MTM antenna cells are arranged along a PCMCIA card with a width of 45 mm where the middle antenna cell resonates a transmitter within a frequency band from 1710 MHz to 1755 MHz and the two receiver side antennas resonate at frequencies in a frequency band from 2110 MHz to 2155 MHz for the Advanced Wireless Services (AWS) systems for mobile communications to provide data services, video services, and messaging services. The 50-Ohm impedance matching can be accomplished by shaping the launch pad (e.g., its width). The antenna cells are configured based on the specification listed below. A FR4 substantiate with a thickness of 1.1 mm is used to support the cells. The distance between the side cells and GND is 1.5 mm. The strip line on the bottom layer consists of two straight lines of 0.3 mm in width and ¾ of a circle with a 0.5-mm radius. The middle antenna resonates at lower frequency due to its longer bottom GND line. The gap between the launch pad and top GND is 0.5 mm. The spiral constitutes of a full circle with a radius of 0.6 mm and a spacing of 0.6 mm from the center of the ground pad.
FIGS. 34C and 34D-F show the efficiency and radiation patterns in the 2.1-GHz band, respectively. The efficiency is above 50% and the peak gain is achieved at 1.8 GHz. These are excellent numbers considering the antenna cell 3323 has a compact antenna structure with a dimension of λ/20 (length)×λ/35 (width)×λ/120 (depth).
FIGS. 34G and 34H-J show the efficiency and radiation patterns in the 1.71-GHz band, respectively. The efficiency reaches 50% and peak gain is achieved at 1.6 GHz. These are excellent numbers considering the antenna cell 3323 has a compact antenna structure with a dimension of λ/17 (length)×λ/35 (width)×λ/160 (depth).
Some applications such as laptops impose space constraints on the length of antennas in the direction perpendicular to the surface of the GND plane. The antenna cells can be arranged in a parallel direction to the top GND to provide a compact antenna configuration.
MTM antenna cells 3531, 3532 and 3533 are positioned to form an antenna that is elongated along a direction parallel to the border of ground electrodes 3541, 3542 and 3543. Accordingly, three bottom ground electrode pad 3543 are formed on the bottom of the substrate 3502. Each antenna cell includes a top cell patch 3551 on the top surface of the substrate 3501, a cell via 3552 extending between the top surface of the substrate 3501 and the bottom surface of the substrate 3502 and in contact with the top cell metal patch 3551, and a bottom ground pad 3553 on the bottom surface of the substrate 3502 and in connect with the cell via 3552. The cell via 3552 may include a first via in the top substrate 3501 and a separate second via in the bottom substrate 3502 that are connected to each other at the interface between the substrates 3501 and 3502. A bottom ground strip line 3554 is formed on the bottom surface of the substrate 3502 to connect the ground pad 3553 to the bottom ground electrode pad 3543. The middle ground electrode 3542 and the ground electrode pads 3543 are connected by conductive middle-bottom vias 3620 which are also visible from the bird's eye view of the top layer in
In one implementation, the top substrate 3501 is 0.787 mm thick and the lower substrate 3502 is 1.574 mm thick. Both substrates 3501 and 3502 can be made from a dielectric material with a permittivity of 4.4. In other implementations, the substrates 3501 and 3502 can be made from dielectric materials of different permittivity values. The top patch of the unit CRLH MTM cell is 2.5 mm wide (y-direction) and 4 mm long (x-direction) with a 0.1-mm gap between two adjacent cells. The feed-line is coupled to the antenna with a 0.1 mm gap from the edge of the first unit cell. The vias connecting all top patches with bottom cell-GND are 12 mil in diameter and are located in the center of the top patches. The GND line extends 3.85 mm below the mid-layer main GND to lower frequency resonances and vias of 1.574 mm in length and 12 mil in diameter are used to connect the bottom layer GND lines to mid-layer main GND.
CRLH MTM Antennas with Perfect Magnetic Conductor Structure
The above CRLH MTM structure designs are based on use of a perfect electric conductor (PEC) as the ground electrode on one side of the substrate. A PEC ground can be a metal layer covering the entire substrate surface. As illustrated in above examples, a PEC ground electrode may be truncated to have a dimension less than the substrate surface to increase bandwidths of antenna resonances. In the above examples, a truncated PEC ground electrode can be designed to cover a portion of a substrate surface and does not overlap the footprint of a MTM cell. In such a design, a ground electrode strip line can be used to connect cell via and the truncated PEC ground electrode. This use of reduction of the GND plane beneath the MTM antenna structure to achieve reduced RH capacitance C_R and increased LH counterpart, C_L. As a result, the bandwidth of a resonance can be increased. A PEC ground electrode provides a metallic ground plane in MTM structures. A metallic ground plane can be substituted by a Perfect Magnetic Conductor plane or surface of a Perfect Magnetic Conductor (PMC) structure. PMC structures are synthetic structures and do not exist in nature. PMC structures can exhibit PMC properties over a substantially wide frequency range. Examples of PMC structures are described by Sievenpiper in “High-Impedance Electromagnetic Surfaces”, Ph.D. Dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles (1999). The following sections describe MTM structures for antenna and other applications based on combinations of CRLH MTM structures and PMC structures. An MTM antenna can be designed to include a PMC plane instead of a PEC plane beneath the MTM structure. Initial investigations based on a HFSS model confirm that such designs can provide greater BW than MTM antennas with metallic GND plane for MTM antennas in both 1-D and 2-D configurations. Hence, an MTM antenna can include, for example, a dielectric substrate having a first surface on a first side and a second surface on a second side opposing the first side, at least one cell conductive patch formed on the first surface, a PMC structure formed on the second surface of the substrate to support a PMC surface in contact with the second surface, and a conductive via connector formed in the substrate to connect the conductive patch to the PMC surface to form a CRLH MTM cell. A second substrate can be used to support the PMC structure and is engaged to the substrate to construct the MTM antenna.
The full HFSS model can be based on the 2-D MTM antenna design in
In the above examples, the borders of electrodes for various components in CRLH MTM structures such as the top cell metal patches and launch pads are straight.
In various CRLH MTM devices in 1D and 2D configurations, single and multiple layers can be designed to comply with RF chip packaging techniques. The first approach is leveraging the System-on-Package (SOP) concept by using Low-Temperature Co-fired Ceramic (LTCC) design and fabrication techniques. The multilayer MTM structure is designer for LTCC fabrication by using a material with a high dielectric constant or permittivity ∈. One example of such a material is the DuPont 951 with ∈=7.8 and loss tangent of 0.0004. The higher ∈ value leads to further size miniaturization. Therefore, all the designs and examples presented in previous section using FR4 substrates with ∈=4.4, can be ported to LTCC with tuning the series and shunt capacitors and inductors to comply with LTCC higher dialectic constant substrate. Monolithic Microwave IC (MMIC) using GaAs substrates and thin polyamide layers may also be used to reduce the printed MTM design to RF chips. An original MTM design on FR4 or Roger substrates is tuned to comply with the LTCC and MMIC substrates/layers dielectric constants and thicknesses.
While this specification contains many specifics, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of an invention or of what may be claimed, but rather as descriptions of features specific to particular embodiments of the invention. Certain features that are described in this specification in the context of separate embodiments can also be implemented in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features that are described in the context of a single embodiment can also be implemented in multiple embodiments separately or in any suitable subcombination. Moreover, although features may be described above as acting in certain combinations and even initially claimed as such, one or more features from a claimed combination can in some cases be excised from the combination, and the claimed combination may be directed to a subcombination or a variation of a subcombination.
Only a few implementations are disclosed. However, it is understood that variations and enhancements may be made.
This application is a continuation of U.S. Nonprovisional patent application Ser. No. 12/562,114, entitled “Antennas Based on Metamaterial Structures” and filed Sep. 17, 2009, which is a continuation of U.S. Nonprovisional patent application Ser. No. 11/844,982, entitled “Antennas Based on Metamaterial Structures” and filed Aug. 24, 2007, which claims the benefits of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Nos. 60/840,181 entitled “Broadband and Compact Multiband Metamaterial Structures and Antennas” and filed on Aug. 25, 2006, and 60/826,670 entitled “Advanced Metamaterial Antenna Sub-Systems” and filed on Sep. 22, 2006. The disclosures of the above applications are incorporated by reference as part of the specification of this application.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60840181 | Aug 2006 | US | |
60826670 | Sep 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12562114 | Sep 2009 | US |
Child | 12914936 | US | |
Parent | 11844982 | Aug 2007 | US |
Child | 12562114 | US |