The technology described in this patent application relates to the field of antennas. More particularly, the application describes an antenna system of a motor vehicle.
This invention relates to a multiservice antenna system that may, for example, be integrated in a plastic cover fixed in the inner surface of the transparent windshield of a motor vehicle.
The invention includes miniaturized antennas for the basic services currently required in a car, namely, the radio reception, preferably within the AM and FM or DAB bands, the cellular telephony for transmitting and receiving in the GSM 900, GSM 1800 and UMTS bands, and the GPS navigation system.
The antenna shape and design are based on combined miniaturization techniques which permit a substantial size reduction of the antenna making possible its integration into a vehicle component such as, for instance, a rearview mirror.
Until recently, the telecommunication services included in an automobile were limited to a few systems, mainly analog radio reception (AM/FM bands). The most common solution for these systems is the typical whip antenna mounted on the car roof. The current tendency in the automotive sector is to reduce the aesthetic and aerodynamic impact of such whip antennas by embedding the antenna system in the vehicle structure. Also, a major integration of the several telecommunication services into a single antenna is especially attractive to reduce the manufacturing cost or the damage due to vandalism and car wash systems.
Antenna integration is becoming more and more necessary due to a deep cultural change towards an information society. The Internet has evoked an information age in which people around the globe expect, demand, and receive information. Car drivers expect to be able to drive safely while handling e-mail and telephone calls and obtaining directions, schedules, and other information accessible on the world wide web (WWW). Telematic devices can be used to automatically notify authorities of an accident and guide rescuers to the car, track stolen vehicles, provide navigation assistance to drivers, call emergency roadside assistance, and provide remote engine diagnostics.
The inclusion of advanced telecom equipment and services in cars and other motor vehicles is very recent, and was first limited to top-level, luxury cars. However, the fast reduction in both equipment and service costs are bringing telematic products into mid-priced automobiles. The massive introduction of a wide range of such new systems would generate a proliferation of antennas upon the bodywork of the car, in contradiction with the aesthetic and aerodynamic trends, unless an integrated solution for the antennas is used.
Patent PCT/EPOO/00411 proposed a new family of small antennas based on a set of curves, referred to as space-filling curves. An antenna is said to be a small antenna (a miniature antenna) when it can fit into a small space compared to the operating wavelength. It is known that a small antenna features a large input reactance (either capacitive or inductive) that usually has to be compensated for with an external matching/loading circuit or structure. Other characteristics of a small antenna are its small radiating resistance, small bandwidth and low efficiency. Thus, it is highly challenging to pack a resonant antenna into a space that is small in terms of the wavelength at resonance. The space-filling curves introduced for the design and construction of small antennas improve the performance of other classical antennas described in the prior art (such as linear monopoles, dipoles and circular or rectangular loops).
The integration of antennas inside mirrors has been proposed. U.S. Pat. No. 4,123,756 is one of the first to propose the utilization of conducting sheets as antennas inside of mirrors. U.S. Pat. No. 5,504,478 proposed the use of the metallic sides of a mirror as an antenna for a wireless car aperture. Others configurations have been proposed to enclose a wireless car aperture, garage door opener or car alarm (U.S. Pat. No. 5,798,688) inside the mirrors of motor vehicles. Obviously, these solutions propose a specific solution for determinate systems, which generally require a very narrow bandwidth antenna, and do not offer a full integration of basic service antennas.
Other solutions were proposed to integrate the AM/FM antenna into the thermal grid of the rear windshield (Patent WO95/11530). However, this configuration requires an expensive electronic adaptation network, including RF amplifiers and filters to discriminate the radio signals from the DC source, and is not adequate for transmissions such as telephony signals because of its low antenna efficiency.
One of the substantial innovations introduced by the present invention is the use of a rearview mirror to integrate all basic services required in a car, such as radio-broadcast, GPS and wireless access to cellular networks. The main advantages of the present invention with respect to the prior art include a full antenna integration with no aesthetic or aerodynamic impact, second a full protection from accidental damage or vandalism, and a significant cost reduction.
The utilization of microstrip antennas is known in mobile telephony handsets (See, Paper by K. Virga and Y. Rahmat-Samii, “Low-Profile Enhanced-Bandwidth PIFA Antennas for Wireless Communications Packaging”, published in IEEE Transactions on Microwave theory and Techniques in October 1997), especially in the configuration denoted as PIFA (Planar Inverted F Antennas). The reason for the utilization of microstrip PIFA antennas resides in their low profile, low fabrication costs, and easy integration within the hand-set structure. However, this antenna configuration has not been proposed for use in a motor vehicle. Several antenna configurations claimed by the present invention for the integration of a multiservice antenna system inside of an interior rearview mirror include the utilization of PIFA antennas.
One of the miniaturization techniques used in the present invention is based, as noted above, on space-filling curves. In a particular case of the antenna configuration proposed in this invention, the antenna shape could also be described as a multi-level structure. Multi-level techniques have already been proposed to reduce the physical dimensions of microstrip antennas (PCT/ES/00296).
An antenna system for a motor vehicle includes a radio antenna integrated with a physical component of a motor vehicle. The radio antenna has a radiating arm, with at least a portion of the radiating arm defining a space-filling curve. The radio antenna also has a feeding point for coupling the radio antenna to a radio receiver in the motor vehicle.
In one embodiment, an antenna system for a motor vehicle may include a plurality of antenna structures integrated within a physical component of the motor vehicle. The plurality of antenna structures includes a radio antenna and at least one of a cellular telephony antenna and a satellite-signal antenna. The radio antenna has a radiating arm, with at least a portion of the radiating arm defining a space-filling curve. The radio antenna also has a feeding point for coupling the radio antenna to a radio receiver in the motor vehicle.
In an additional embodiment, the radio antenna in the antenna system may include a radiating arm that defines a grid dimension curve.
In another embodiment, the present invention describes an integrated multiservice antenna system for a vehicle comprising the following parts and features:
In the present invention, one of the preferred embodiments for the plastic cover enclosing the multiservice antenna system is the housing of the inside rearview mirror, including the rearview mirror support and/or the mirror itself. This position ensures an optimized antenna behavior, i.e. a good impedance matching, a substantially omnidirectional radiation pattern in the horizontal plane for covering terrestrial communication systems (like radio or cellular telephony), and a wide coverage in elevation for satellite communication systems, such as GPS.
The important size reduction of the antennas introduced in the present invention is obtained by using space-filling geometries, such as a space-filling or grid-dimension curve. A space-filling curve can be described as a curve that is large in terms of physical length but small in terms of the area in which the curve can be included. More precisely, the following definition is taken in this document for a general space-filling curve, a curve composed by at least ten segments, said segments forming an angle with each adjacent segment. Regardless of the particular design of such space-filling curve is, it can never intersect with itself at any point except the initial and final point (that is, the whole curve can be arranged as a closed curve or loop, but none of the parts of the curve can become a closed loop). A space-filling curve can be fitted over a flat or curved surface, and due to the angles between segments, the physical length of the curve is always larger than that of any straight line that can be placed in the same area (surface) as said space-filling curve. Additionally, to properly shape the structure of a miniature antenna according to the present invention, the segments of the space-filling curves must be shorter than a tenth of the free-space operating wavelength.
In the present invention, at least one of the antennas including a space-filling curve is characterized by a more restrictive feature: said curve is composed by at least two hundred segments, said segments forming a right angle with each adjacent segment, said segments being smaller than a hundredth of the free-space operating central wavelength. A possible antenna configuration may use said space-filling antenna as a monopole, where a conducting arm of said monopole is substantially described as a space filling curve. The antenna is then fed with a two conductor structure such as a coaxial cable, with one of the conductors connected to the lower tip of the multilevel structure and the other conductor connected to the metallic structure of the car which acts as a ground counterpoise. Of course, other antenna configurations can be used that feature a space-filling curve as the main characteristic, for example a dipole or a loop configuration. This antenna is suitable, for instance, for analog (FM/AM) or digital broadcast radio reception, depending on the final antenna size, as is apparent to anyone skilled in the art. Said antenna features a significant size reduction below 20% of the typical size of a conventional external quarter-wave whip antenna; this feature, together with the small profile of the antenna which may, for instance, be printed in a low cost dielectric substrate, allows a simple and compact integration of the antenna structure into a car component, such as inside of the rearview mirror. By properly choosing the shape of said space-filling curve, the antenna can also be used in at least certain transmission and reception application in the cellular telephone bands.
In addition to reducing the size of the antenna element covering the radio broadcast services, another important aspect of integrating the antenna system into a small package or car component is reducing the size of the radiating elements covering the wireless cellular services. This can be achieved, for instance, using a Planar Inverted F Antenna (PIFA) configuration that consists of two parallel conducting sheets, which are to connect together and are separated by either air or a dielectric, magnetic, or magneto-dielectric material. The parallel conducting are connected through a conducting strip near one of the corners and orthogonally mounted to both sheets. The antenna is fed through a coaxial cable that has its outer conductor connected to the first sheet. The second sheet is coupled either by direct contact or capacitively to the inner conductor of the coaxial cable. Although the use of PIFA antennas is known for handsets and wireless terminals, in the present invention a PIFA configuration is used advantageously for integrating a wireless service into a vehicle. The main advantage is that due to the small size, low profile and characteristic radiation pattern, the PIFA antennas are fully integrated in a preferred configuration into the housing or mounting of the inner rearview mirror, obtaining an optimum coverage for wireless networks, a null impact on the car aesthetics, and a reduced irradiation of the driver's head and body due to the protection of the mirror surface.
A further reduction of the PIFA antennas within the multiservice antenna system is optionally obtained in a preferred embodiment of the present invention by shaping at least one edge of at least one sheet of the antenna with a space-filling curve. It is known that the resonant frequency of PIFA antennas depends on its perimeter. By advantageously shaping at least a part of the perimeter of said PIFA antennas with a space-filling curve, the resonant frequency is reduced such that the antennas for wireless cellular services in said preferred embodiment are reduced as well. The size reduction that can be achieved using this combined PIFA-space-filling configuration can be better than 40% compared to a conventional, planar microstrip antenna using the same materials. The size reduction is directly related to a weight and cost reduction which is relevant for the automotive industry.
Coverage of a satellite system, such as GPS, is obtained by placing a miniature antenna close to the surface of the housing of the antenna system, which is attached to the vehicle window glass. In the present invention, the space-filling technique or the multilevel antenna technique is advantageously used to reduce the size, cost and weight of said satellite antenna. In a preferred embodiment, a microstrip patch antenna with a high dielectric permittivity substrate is used for said antenna, with at least a part of the patch shaped as either a space-filling curve or a multilevel structure.
An important advantage of the present invention is the size reduction obtained on the overall antenna systems using space-filling techniques. This size reduction allows antennas for the current applications required in today's and future vehicles (radio, mobile telephony and navigation) to be fully integrated inside of a rearview mirror. This integration supposes an important improvement of the aesthetic and visual impact of the conventional monopoles used in radio or cellular telephony reception and transmission in the automotive market.
Another important advantage of the present invention is the cost reduction, not only in the material of the antenna, but also in the manufacture and assembly of the motor vehicle. The substitution of the several conventional whip monopoles (one for each terrestrial wireless link) by the antenna system of the present invention supposes the elimination of mounting operations in production lines, such as the perforation of the car bodywork, together with the suppression of additional mechanical pieces that ensure a solid and watertight fixture of conventional whip antennas which are exposed to high air pressure. Placing the antenna system inside of the rearview mirror in the interior of the car does not require additional operations in the final assembly line. Also, a weight reduction is obtained by avoiding the conventional heavy mechanical fixtures.
According to current practice in the automotive industry, the same rearview mirror can be used through several car models or even car families; therefore, an additional advantage of the present invention is that the integrated antenna system is also standardized for such car models and families. The same component can be used irrespective of the type of vehicle, namely a standard car, a monovolume, a coupe or even a roof-less cabriolet.
The present invention describes an integrated multiservice antenna system for a vehicle comprising at least one miniature antenna characterized by a space-filling curve. In another embodiment, the miniature antenna may be characterized by a grid dimension curve, as described below with reference to
The antenna system comprises a space-filling antenna 5 suitable for radio broadcast signal reception, AM and FM or DAB bands, a set of miniature antennas 6 suitable for the transmission and reception of cellular telephony signals, the GSM 900, GSM 1800 and UMTS bands, and a miniature patch antenna 7 for GPS signal reception. It should be understood that, depending upon the intended market for the antenna (e.g., U.S., Japan, Europe, Korea, China, etc.), the same antenna embodiment may be adjusted for other cellular services, such as CDMA, WCDMA, AMPS, KPCS, 3G/UMTS, and others. The space-filling antenna 5 is characterized by a conducting strip 9 which defines a space-filling curve. This space-filling curve is composed by at least two-hundred segments, with said segments forming a right angle with each adjacent segment, and said segments being smaller than a hundredth of the free-space operating central wavelength. The conducting strip 9 can be supported by any class of low loss dielectric material, including flexible or transparent boards.
In this embodiment, one arm of the conducting strip is connected to a first conductor of a two-conductor transmission line, and the second conductor is connected to the metallic structure of the vehicle, which acts as a metallic counterpoise. Although the space-filling shape of the antenna and its use for receiving radio broadcast is part of the essence of the invention, it is apparent to those skilled in the art that the length of the space-filling curve can be scaled using conventional techniques to obtain an optimal matching impedance in the VHF band. Depending on the chosen scale, said antenna can be made appropriate for either FM/AM or DAB/AM reception.
Compared to the typical length of an external quarter-wavelength monopole, the size of said space-filling antenna is reduced at least by a factor of five, that is, the final size is smaller than 20% of a conventional antenna. Fed as a monopole, this antenna observes a similar radiation pattern to a conventional elemental monopole, i.e. a fairly omnidirectional monopole in a direction perpendicular to the antenna. The position inside of the mirror base support 1 offers a wide open area, assuring correct reception from all directions. Like other reception systems, the signal quality can be improved using diversity techniques based on space diversity (using several similar antennas for receiving the same signal) or polarization diversity (exciting orthogonal current modes within the same antenna structure).
Together with the space-filling antenna 5, this example of a preferred embodiment of the multiservice antenna system comprises a miniature cellular telephony antenna subsystem for transmitting and receiving cellular telephony signals, such as GSM 900, GSM 1800, UMTS, and other cellular bands. The antennas 6 are characterized by a first planar conducting sheet 10, with said sheet being smaller than a quarter of the operating wavelength, and a second parallel conducting sheet 8 that acts as a ground counterpoise. In the present embodiment, the antennas share the same ground counterpoise 8, with the ground counterpoise being juxtaposed or close to the mirror 3. Both the conducting sheet 10 and the ground counterpoise 8 are connected through a conducting strip. The conducting sheet 10 is fed by means of a vertical conducting pin coupled either by direct ohmic contact or by capacitive coupling. The antenna polarization is mainly vertical, allowing a good penetration of the signal inside the car.
The antennas are optionally combined by means of a diplexer or triplexer filter with a single transmission line connected to the input of said diplexer or triplexer. Said diplexer or triplexer can be realized using concentrated elements or stubs, but in any case is supported by the same ground counterpoise 8. Moreover, additional electronic circuits can be included, on the same circuit board, such as an electrochromic system or a rain detector. The radiation pattern of the antenna 6 is similar to those of a conventional patch antenna, assuring a fairly omnidirectional pattern in the horizontal plane. However, the position of the antennas 6 with respect to the front windshield and the ground counterpoise 8 juxtaposed to the mirror 3 limits the power radiated inside the car, especially in the direction of the head of the driver, and reduces any possible interaction or biological effect with the human body along with interference from other electronic devices.
The antenna system is completed by a satellite antenna such as a GPS antenna 7. Said GPS antenna 7 consists of two parallel conducting sheets (spaced by a high permittivity dielectric material) forming a microstrip antenna with circular polarization. The circular polarization can be obtained either by a two-feeder scheme or by perturbing the perimeter of the superior conducting sheet 11 of the antenna. The GPS antenna 7 also includes a low-noise high-gain pre-amplifier 12. This amplifier is included on a chip such as for instance those proposed by Agilent or Mini-Circuits (series HP58509A or HP58509F for instance). The chip is mounted on a microstrip circuit alongside by side with the microstrip GPS antenna such that both the antenna and the circuit share the same conducting ground plane. A major difference between the GPS system and the radio or the cellular telephony is that a GPS antenna requires a wide open radiation pattern in the vertical direction. An adequate position for this antenna is within the mirror base support 1 in a substantially horizontal position. Even though the antenna position presents a slight inclination with respect to the horizontal, the radiation pattern of such microstrip antenna is sufficiently omnidirectional to assure a good reception from multiple satellite signals over a wide range of positions.
As is clear to those skilled in the art, the novelty of the antenna system invention is based, in part, on choosing a very small, low cost, flat space-filling antenna for radio reception, in combining said space-filling antenna with other miniature antennas for wireless cellular services and satellite services, and packaging them all inside a small plastic or dielectric housing attached on a glass window. In this particular embodiment, the inside rearview mirror is chosen advantageously as a housing for the whole antenna system because of its privileged position in the car (wide open visibility for transmitting and receiving signals, close position to the control panel of the car) and insignificant visual impact on the car design; nevertheless it is apparent to those skilled in the art that the same basic antenna system can be integrated in other car components, such as a rear brake-light, without affecting the essential novelty of the invention.
Presented in
Presented in
As mentioned above, other space-filling curves can be used within the spirit of the present invention, as shown in
In
Another preferred embodiment is presented in
In
In
In
An alternative position for a GPS antenna 7 is presented in
The grid dimension of a curve may be calculated as follows. A first grid having square cells of length L1 is positioned over the geometry of the curve, such that the grid completely covers the curve. The number of cells (N1) in the first grid that enclose at least a portion of the curve are counted. Next, a second grid having square cells of length L2 is similarly positioned to completely cover the geometry of the curve, and the number of cells (N2) in the second grid that enclose at least a portion of the curve are counted. In addition, the first and second grids should be positioned within a minimum rectangular area enclosing the curve, such that no entire row or column on the perimeter of one of the grids fails to enclose at least a portion of the curve. The first grid should include at least twenty-five cells, and the second grid should include four times the number of cells as the first grid. Thus, the length (L2) of each square cell in the second grid should be one-half the length (L1) of each square cell in the first grid. The grid dimension (Dg) may then be calculated with the following equation:
For the purposes of this application, the term grid dimension curve is used to describe a curve geometry having a grid dimension that is greater than one (1). The larger the grid dimension, the higher the degree of miniaturization that may be achieved by the grid dimension curve in terms of an antenna operating at a specific frequency or wavelength. In addition, a grid dimension curve may, in some cases, also meet the requirements of a space-filling curve, as defined above. Therefore, for the purposes of this application a space-filling curve is one type of grid dimension curve.
For a more accurate calculation of the grid dimension, the number of square cells may be increased up to a maximum amount. The maximum number of cells in a grid is dependant upon the resolution of the curve. As the number of cells approaches the maximum, the grid dimension calculation becomes more accurate. If a grid having more than the maximum number of cells is selected, however, then the accuracy of the grid dimension calculation begins to decrease. Typically, the maximum number of cells in a grid is one thousand (1000).
For example,
It should be understood that the cascaded sections 182-190 and 202-210 of the antennas 180, 200 shown in
This written description uses examples to disclose the invention, including the best mode, and also to enable a person skilled in the art to make and use the invention. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that occur to those skilled in the art. For example, each of the antennas incorporated in the integrated multiservice antenna systems, described above, could be individualized while keeping the features previously described, this possibility is especially well-suited for low or medium class vehicles, in which only one antenna type is installed.
This is a continuation-in-part of International Application Number PCT/EP00/10562, filed on Oct. 26, 2000 under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), and entitled Integrated Multiservice Car Antenna.
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0178192 | Oct 2001 | WO |
0182410 | Nov 2001 | WO |
0235646 | May 2002 | WO |
02091518 | Nov 2002 | WO |
02096166 | Nov 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040119644 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | PCT/EP00/10562 | Oct 2000 | US |
Child | 10422578 | US |