The present invention relates to an antenna with a transmission part and a receiving part separated from each other; and, more particularly, to a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) reader antenna whose transmission ports and reception ports are highly isolated from each other by using a quadrature hybrid coupler.
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) readers are used in diverse fields, such as material management and security, along with an RFID tag, or transponder. Generally, when an object with an RFID tag attached thereto is disposed in a read zone of the RFID reader, the RFID reader modulates an RF signal which has a predetermined carrier frequency and sends an interrogation to the RFID tag. Then, the RFID tag responds to the interrogation from the RFID reader.
In short, the RFID reader transmits an interrogating signal to the RFID tag by modulating a continuous electromagnetic wave, which has a predetermined frequency. Then, the RFID tag performs back-scattering modulation onto the electromagnetic wave transmitted from the RFID reader to return its own information stored in a memory inside the RFID tag.
Back-scattering modulation is to modulate the intensity or phase of a scattered electromagnetic wave when an RFID tag returns an electromagnetic wave outputted from an RFID reader after scattering. Herein, since the RFID tag simply performs the back-scattering modulation onto the electromagnetic wave transmitted from the RFID reader, the carrier frequency of the electromagnetic wave transmitted from the RFID to the RFID reader is the same as the carrier frequency of the electromagnetic wave transmitted from the RFID reader to the RFID tag.
An RF receiver of the RFID reader receives not only signals transmitted from the RFID tag, but also some transmission signals transmitted from an RF transmitter of the RFID reader due to leakage. Herein, since the two kinds of signals have the same carrier frequency, the RF receiver of the RFID reader cannot separate one from the other even with a filter.
Generally, the intensity of the transmission signals leaked out of the RF transmitter of the RFID reader is higher than that of the signals transmitted from the RFID tag. The leakage signals degrade the reception sensitivity of the RFID reader.
To reduce leakage power from the RFID transmitter of the RFID reader, suggested is a method of forming two radiating bodies, i.e., a transmission part and a reception part, respectively, in an RFID reader antenna, and disposing them apart from each other with wide space between them to thereby isolate the transmitting port and the receiving port from each other. The method, however, has a problem that the antenna becomes large due to the wide space between the two radiating bodies.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide an antenna in which transmission ports of a transmission radiating body and reception ports of a reception radiating body are isolated from each other by using a quadrature hybrid coupler.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention can be understood by the following description, and become apparent with reference to the embodiments of the present invention. Also, it is obvious to those skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains that the objects and advantages of the present invention can be realized by the means as claimed and combinations thereof.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, there is provided an antenna with a transmission part and a reception part highly isolated from each other, which includes: a transmission radiating body having two feed points for transmitting signals; a reception radiating body having two feed points for receiving signals; a transmission hybrid coupler which is connected to the two feed points of the transmission radiating body and transmits transmission signals which have a phase difference of 90° with each other; and a reception hybrid coupler which is connected to the two feed points of the reception radiating body and receives reception signals which have a phase difference of 90° with each other, wherein signals leaking from the two feed points of the transmission radiating body to the two feed points of the reception radiating body are offset.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an antenna with a transmission part and a reception part highly isolated from each other, which includes: two radiating bodies for transmission and reception, respectively; and two hybrid couplers for dually feeding the radiating bodies, wherein signals leaking from two feed points of a transmission radiating body to two feed points of a reception radiating body are offset by each other.
The objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent by the following descriptions with reference to the accompanying drawings. Accordingly, those of ordinary skill in the art to which the present invention pertains may easily implement the technological concept of the present invention. Also, when it is considered that detailed description on a related art may obscure the points of the present invention, the description will not be provided herein.
Meanwhile, the high-isolation antenna of the present invention can be applied to diverse kinds of antennas which require high isolation between a transmission part and a reception part, other than the RFID reader antenna. Hereinafter, however, the present invention will be described by taking an RFID reader antenna as an example of the antenna with high isolation between the transmission part and the reception part.
The present invention can highly isolate a transmission port and a reception port from each other by using a hybrid coupler.
Also, the present invention can reduce the size of an antenna by minimizing the space between a transmission radiating body and a reception radiating body.
The above and other objects and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of the preferred embodiments given in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
To have a look at the operation of the RFID system 100, the RFID reader 110 modulates RF signals having a predetermined carrier frequency and transmits an interrogation to the RFID tag 130. The RF signals generated in the RF transmitter 111 of the RFID reader 110 are transmitted to the outside in the form of electromagnetic wave through the transmission radiating body 121 of the reader antenna 120.
When the electromagnetic wave 141 transmitted outside arrives at the RFID tag 130, the RFID tag 130 performs back-scattering modulation onto the electromagnetic wave 141 transmitted from the RFID reader 110 and reflects the back-scattering modulated electromagnetic wave back to the RFID reader 110 to thereby response to the interrogation of the RFID reader 110. The back-scattering modulated electromagnetic wave 142 reflected in the RFID tag 130 is transmitted to the RF receiver 112 of the RFID reader 110 through the reception radiating body 122 of the reader antenna 120.
Meanwhile, the RF receiver 112 of the RFID reader 110 receives not only the back-scattering modulated electromagnetic wave 142 reflected in the RFID tag 130 but also some of the signals transmitted from the RF transmitter 111, which are leaked out of the transmission. The leaked transmission signals 143 deteriorate reception sensitivity of the RFID reader 110 considerably. The leaked transmission signals 143 are mainly originated from the combination between the transmission radiating body 121 and the reception radiating body 122 of the reader antenna 120.
The present invention prevents the leakage of the transmission signals from the RF transmitter 111 to the RF receiver 112 by highly isolating the input ports of the transmission and reception radiating bodies in the RFID reader 110 from each other, which is described in
Herein, two feed points of the transmission radiating body 210 are marked as a 211 and b 212, whereas two feed points of the reception radiating body 220 are marked as c 221 and d 222. The feed points a 211 and b 212 are fed by a transmission coupler 230, and the feed points c 221 and d 222 are fed by a reception coupler 240.
Also, the transmission coupler 230 supplying signals to the two feed points a and b of the transmission radiating body 210 includes two transmission ports T1 231 and T2 232. The reception coupler 240 acquiring signals from the two feed points c and d of the reception radiating body 220 includes two reception ports R1 241 and R2 242.
Power inputted to the transmission ports T1 231 and T2 232 of the transmission coupler 230 is delivered to the feed points a 211 and b 212 of the transmission radiating body 210 in the same size but a phase shifted at 90° to thereby generate circular polarization in the transmission radiating body 210. When the port T1 231 is used as a transmission port, the transmission radiating body 210 generates a right hand circular polarization (RHCP). When the port T2 232 is used as a transmission port, the transmission radiating body 210 generates a left hand circular polarization (LHCP). Herein, the port that is not used should have a load matched to a port impedance.
Meanwhile, when the reception coupler 240 uses the port R1 241 as a reception port, the reception radiating body 220 receives the LHCP. When the reception coupler 240 uses the port R2 242 as a reception port, the reception radiating body 220 receives the RHCP.
All the ports {circle around (1)}, {circle around (2)}, {circle around (3)} and {circle around (4)} of the two couplers 310 and 330 are matched. Power inputted to the port D is delivered to the ports {circle around (2)} and {circle around (3)} in the same size but a phase shifted at 90°, but it is not delivered to the port {circle around (4)}. Thus, a scattering matrix SC of the two couplers 310 and 330 is expressed as shown in Equation 1.
In the Equation 1, Sij denotes a ratio of a signal inputted to a port i and a signal outputted from a port j. Sij becomes a reflection coefficient when the ports i and j are the same (i=j). When the ports i and j are not the same (i≠j), Sij denotes a transmission coefficient. A scattering matrix and a scattering matrix (i.e., Equation 1) of the quadrature hybrid coupler are described in detail by D. M. Pozar in “Microwave Engineering,” Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, pp. 220-231 and pp. 441-412, 1990.
A scattering matrix SM of the equivalent 4-port network 320 showing connection among the four feed points a, b, c and d is expressed as shown in Equation 2, when all the ports {circle around (1)}, {circle around (2)}, {circle around (3)} and {circle around (4)} are matched.
Meanwhile, a scattering matrix ST of the entire circuit network connecting the transmission coupler 310, the equivalent 4-port network 320, and the reception coupler 330 in
In the Equation 3, a transmission coefficient SR
When Sda=Scb in the Equation 4, signals leaking from the feed point a 211 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point d 222 of the reception radiating body 220 are offset by signals leaking from the feed point b 212 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point c 221 of the reception radiating body 220 in
Also, when Sca=Sdb in the Equation 5, signals leaking from the feed point a 211 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point c 221 of the reception radiating body 220 are offset by signals leaking from the feed point b 212 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point d 222 of the reception radiating body 220 in
When a transmission coefficient is designed to satisfy Sda=Scb and Sca=Sdb at the same time, the SR
|S
R
T
|=|S
ca| Eq. 6
|S
R
T
|=|S
da| Eq. 7
The meaning of the Equations 6 and 7 will be described hereinafter with reference to
The equation 6 signifies that the isolation degree between the port T1 231 and the port R1 241 in the reader antenna 200 is the same as the isolation degree between the feed point a 211 of the transmission radiating body 210 and the feed point c 222 of the reception radiating body 220. The equation 7 signifies that the isolation degree between the port T1 231 and the port R2242 in the reader antenna 200 is the same as the isolation degree between the feed point a 211 of the transmission radiating body 210 and the feed point d 221 of the reception radiating body 220.
Therefore, to acquire a reader antenna 200 having a high isolation between a transmission part and a reception part, the transmission and reception radiating bodies and the feed points are designed to have a minimum min[|Sda|,|Sca|] while Sda=Scb and Sca=Sdb. Then, when |Sda|<|Sca|, the port T1 231 and the port R2 242 are used as a transmission port and a reception port, respectively. The other unused ports T2 and R1 232 and 241 have a matched load.
On the contrary, when |Sda|>|Sca|, the port T1 231 and the port R1 241 are used as a transmission port and a reception port, respectively. The other unused ports T2 and R2 232 and 242 have a matched load.
Meanwhile, when a transmission coefficient SR
SR
SR
In the Equation 8, when Sca=Sdb, a signal leaking from the feed point a 211 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point c 221 of the reception radiating body 220 is offset by a signal leaking from the feed point b 212 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point d 222 of the reception radiating body 220. Thus, the isolation between the transmission port T2 232 and the reception port R1 241, i.e., −20 log|SR
Also, in the Equation 9, when Sda=Scb, a signal leaking from the feed point a 211 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point d 222 of the reception radiating body 220 is offset by a signal leaking from the feed point b 212 of the transmission radiating body 210 to the feed point c 221 of the reception radiating body 220. Thus, the isolation between the transmission port T2 232 and the reception port R2 242, i.e., −20 log|SR
When a reader antenna is designed to simultaneously satisfy both Sda=Scb and Sca=Sdb, the following Equations 10 and 11 are acquired from the Equations 6 to 9.
|S
R
T
|=|S
R
T
|=|S
da| Eq. 10
|S
R
T
|=|S
R
T
|=|S
ca| Eq. 11
In short, when Sda=Scb and Sca=Sdb the isolation degree between the port T2 232 and the port R1 241 is the same as the isolation degree between the port T1 231 and the port R2 242, and the isolation degree between the port T2 232 and the port R2 242 is the same as the isolation degree between the port T1 231 and the port R1 241.
To sum up, in order to acquire a reader antenna 200 with a high isolation degree, the structure of the transmission and reception radiating bodies and the position of the feed points should be designed to have a minimum min[|Sda|, |Sca|] while Sda=Scb and Sca=Sdb. Then, |Sda| and |Sca| are compared with each other.
When |Sda|<|Sca| and the port T1 231 is used as a transmission port, the port R2 242 is used as a reception port and the two unused ports T2 and R1 232 and 241 have a matched load attached thereto. When the port T2 232 is used as a transmission port, the port R1 241 is used as a reception port and the two unused ports T1 and R2 231 and 242 have a matched load attached thereto.
On the contrary, when |Sda|>|Sca| and the port T1 231 is used as a transmission port, the port R1 241 is used as a reception port and the two unused ports T2 and R2 232 and 242 have a matched load attached thereto. When the port T2 232 is used as a transmission port, the port R2 242 is used as a reception port and the two unused ports T1 and R1 231 and 241 have a matched load attached thereto.
Also, the feeding method of the radiating bodies in the reader antennas shown in
The ground body 550 is designed in the form of a cavity surrounding the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520. In other words, the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520 are positioned in the ground body 550, which is formed in the shape of a metal box, and apertures 551 and 552 of a predetermined size are formed in the direction of a main beam of the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520.
Herein, the reader antenna of
Meanwhile, RF signals are received through the feed points c and d of the reception radiating body 520 and the RF signals are delivered to the ports R1 and R2 of the reception coupler 240 through the shorting pin. When the port R1 is used as a reception port, the reception radiating body 520 receives a left hand circular polarization. When the port R2 is used as a reception port, the reception radiating body 520 receives a right hand circular polarization.
Meanwhile, although the reader antenna of
The aperture coupling is a feeding method of electrically connecting the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520 to the transmission and reception couplers 530 and 540 by not connecting the two feed points (a,b) and (c,d) of the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520 with the two ports (T1, T2) and (R1, R2) of the transmission and reception couplers 530 and 540 through the shorting pin, positioning the ground body between the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520 and the transmission and reception couplers 530 and 540, and forming an aperture in the ground body in a predetermined shape. The aperture coupling feeding is disclosed in detail in a paper by Marcel Kossel, entitled “Circularly Polarized, Aperture-coupled Patch Antennas for a 2.4 GHz RFID System,” Microwave Journal, November 1999.
Meanwhile, the proximity coupling is a feeding method of connecting two feed points (a,b) and (c,d) of the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520 with the two ports (T1, T2) and (R1, R2) of the transmission and reception couplers 530 and 540 through a capacitive coupling, instead of connecting the two feed points (a,b) and (c,d) of the transmission and reception radiating bodies 510 and 520 with the two ports (T1, T2) and (R1, R2) of the transmission and reception couplers 530 and 540 through a shorting pin.
The proximity coupling feeding is disclosed in detail in a paper by D. M. Pozar, entitled “Increasing the bandwidth of a microstrip antenna by proximity coupling,” Electronics Letters, Vol. 23, No. 8, April 1987.
It can be seen from
While the present invention has been described with respect to certain preferred embodiments, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
The technology of the present invention can be applied to an antenna with a transmission part and a reception part isolated from each other in a Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) system.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2005-0091562 | Sep 2005 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/KR2005/004644 | 12/29/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/21/2008 |