This relates generally to antennas and, more particularly, to cavity antennas for electronic devices.
Electronic devices often have wireless communications circuitry. For example, electronic devices may contain antennas and radio-frequency transceiver circuitry that is used in transmitting and receiving cellular telephone signals, wireless local area network signals, and other wireless traffic.
It may sometimes be desirable to mount an antenna resonating element within a conductive cavity to form a cavity-backed antenna (“cavity antenna”). This type of type of approach may be used, for example, when it is desired to isolate an antenna resonating element from its immediate surroundings within an electronic device. In a typical configuration, a cavity may have a rectangular box shape with a rectangular opening in which an antenna resonating element is formed.
The use of conventional cavity antenna designs can help provide antennas with good immunity from surrounding structures in an electronic device and can help reduce the impact of manufacturing variations on antenna performance. Conventional cavity antennas may, however, be challenging to manufacture and may be challenging to mount within devices where space is constrained such as devices with compact housings.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide improved cavity antennas.
Cavity antennas may be provided for electronic devices. A cavity antenna may have a conductive antenna cavity with an opening. An antenna resonating element may be mounted within the opening. The antenna resonating element may implemented using a laser-patterned antenna resonating element, an antenna resonating element formed from a two-shot plastic substrate, an antenna resonating element formed from a printed circuit substrate, or other types of antenna resonating element structure. The antenna resonating element may be soldered within the cavity opening so that the conductive material of the resonating element is electrically shorted to the conductive material of the cavity along at least part of the edge of the cavity opening.
An electronic device may have a display that is covered by a cover glass layer. The display and other internal device components may be mounted in an electronic device housing.
A cavity antenna may be mounted so that its cavity opening and resonating element lie under a portion of the cover glass layer outside of the portion covering the display. The cavity antenna may have cavity wall portions that bend or otherwise extend between internal electronic device components and portions of the electronic device housing. Extended antenna cavities such as these have curves, branches that surround internal device components, T shapes, and other shapes that help maximize the volume of the cavity while accommodating internal components in a device and other cavity mounting constraints.
A speaker may be formed using the interior volume within a cavity antenna. Speaker components such as a speaker diaphragm and a speaker driver may be mounted within the interior volume of the cavity antenna.
Further features of the invention, its nature and various advantages will be more apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
Electronic devices such as electronic device 10 of
The antennas within device 10 may be based on inverted-F antenna resonating elements, planar inverted-F antenna resonating elements, open or closed slot antenna resonating elements, monopoles, dipoles, L-shaped antenna resonating elements, patch antenna resonating elements, loop antenna resonating elements, or any other suitable type of antenna resonating element. The antenna resonating elements may be mounted in conductive cavities to form cavity antennas (also sometimes referred to as cavity-backed antennas).
Device 10 of
Electronic device 10 of
Device 10 may include a housing such as housing 12. Housing 12, which may sometimes be referred to as a case, may be formed of plastic, glass, ceramics, fiber composites, metal (e.g., stainless steel, aluminum, etc.), other suitable materials, or a combination of these materials. In some situations, parts of housing 12 may be formed from dielectric or other low-conductivity material. In other situations, housing 12 or at least some of the structures that make up housing 12 may be formed from metal elements. In a housing configuration with conductive structures, a cavity antenna may be configured to place a cavity opening and an associated antenna resonating element adjacent to dielectric structures (e.g., portions of a display, a dielectric antenna window, portions of dielectric housing, etc.). This type of arrangement may allow antenna signals to be transmitted and received through the dielectric structures. Other portions of the cavity antenna may be recessed within the interior of the electronic device housing.
Device 10 may, if desired, have a display such as display 14. Display 14 may, for example, be a touch screen that incorporates capacitive touch electrodes. Display 14 may include image pixels formed from light-emitting diodes (LEDs), organic LEDs (OLEDs), plasma cells, electronic ink elements, liquid crystal display (LCD) components, or other suitable image pixel structures. A cover glass layer may cover the surface of display 14. Portions of display 14 within rectangular region 20 may correspond to the active part of display 14. In active display region 20, an array of image pixels may be used to display images for a user. Portions of display 14 such as peripheral regions 28 surrounding rectangular active region 20 may be inactive and may be devoid of image pixel structures.
The cover glass layer that covers display 14 may have openings such as a circular opening for button 16 and a speaker port opening such as speaker port opening 18 (e.g., for an ear speaker for a user). Openings 16 and 18 may, for example, be formed in inactive portion 28 of display 14. Device 10 may also have other openings (e.g., openings in display 14 and/or housing 12 for accommodating volume buttons, ringer buttons, sleep buttons, and other buttons, openings for an audio jack, data port connectors, removable media slots, etc.). For example, the portion of housing 12 at the lower end of device 10 or other suitable portion of device 10 may have openings to form speaker port 22, connector port 24, and microphone port 26 (as an example).
Transceiver circuitry 34 may include one or more radio-frequency transmitters and one or more radio-frequency receivers. During signal transmission operations, data that has been received from control circuitry 32 may be transmitted over one or more of antennas 36 using a transmitter in transceiver circuitry 34. During signal reception operations, data that has been transmitted to device 10 from an external source may be received by one or more of antennas 36 and radio-frequency receiver circuitry in transceiver 34.
Antennas 36 may include cavity antennas, non-cavity antennas, combinations of one or more cavity antennas and one or more non-cavity antennas, or other suitable antenna structures.
Control circuitry 32 may be coupled to electrical components such as input-output devices 30. Input-output devices 30 may include displays for displaying information to a user, sensors, keyboards, keypads, touch sensors (e.g., touch sensor arrays that are incorporated into displays), speakers, microphones, vibrators, light-emitting diodes (status indicator lights), input-output ports, and other circuitry and components for facilitating the process of providing a user with output and with gathering input from the user.
An illustrative cavity antenna is shown in
Cavity 36A may have conductive walls 40. Walls 40 may have edges 44 that surround an opening such as cavity opening 42. When assembled, antenna resonating element 36B may be mounted within opening 42 (e.g., on edges 44).
As shown in the example of
For optimal performance, it may be desirable to ensure that the volume of cavity 36B is not too small. Excessively small cavity volumes may decrease the bandwidth of antenna 36. With one suitable arrangement, length (depth) L of cavity 36B is not too small and perimeter P of cavity 36B is not too small. The dimensions of cavity 36B (e.g., length L, the lateral cavity dimensions perpendicular to L, perimeter P, etc.) are preferably at least one eighth of a wavelength at an operating frequency of interest and are preferably at least one quarter of a wavelength or one half of a wavelength or more. In some configurations, it may be desirable to form cavity walls 40 so that L is equal to about one quarter or one half of a wavelength at the operating frequency of antenna 36 (e.g., to help produce constructive interference). These are merely illustrative configurations that may be used for cavity 40. Any suitable cavity sizes and shapes may be used if desired.
As shown in
A transmission line may be coupled between the antenna feed for antenna resonating element 36B and transceiver circuitry 34 (
A cross-sectional side view of a portion of device 10 is shown in
In the illustrative configuration of
Cavity antenna 36 may be mounted within the interior of housing 12 and device 10 so that cavity opening 42 (and the antenna resonating element that lies within cavity opening 42) is not blocked by conductive structures in display 14 and/or housing 12. With the illustrative configuration of
As shown in
If desired, components 58 may be interposed within openings formed between respective portions of antenna cavity 36A. This type of configuration is shown in
Cavity 36A may have shapes with sides that are not planar. As shown in
As shown in the cross-sectional side view of illustrative antenna cavity 36A of
The
As shown in
With the illustrative configuration for antenna cavity 36A that is shown in
Curved antenna cavity 36A may be characterized by bend radius R. To ensure that cavity 36A operates as a satisfactory antenna cavity, it may be desirable to configure the curved walls of antenna cavity 36A so that bend radius R is at least a quarter or a half of a wavelength at a desired operating frequency (as an example).
As shown in
To conserve space within device 10 it may be desirable to form antenna cavity 36A using structures that serve multiple functions. For example, antenna cavity 36A may be formed, at least partly, using cavity structures that serve acoustic functions, structural functions, functions associated with forming connector ports, or other functions in device 10.
Antenna cavity 36A may, as an example, be implemented by forming conductive walls 40 on the sides of a chamber that is used in forming a speaker (i.e., a speaker box). This type of configuration is shown in
Antenna resonating element 36B may be mounted behind an acoustically transparent and radio-frequency transparent cover structure such as mesh 114 using a mounting structure such as mounting structure 112. Mounting structure 112 may be formed from plastic (e.g., an integral portion of the plastic that forms supporting structures for walls 40) or other materials. Resonating element 36B may have a smaller area than the area of opening 42, to allow sound that is produced by driving diaphragm 106 to exit the speaker. Antenna terminals 118 may be coupled to positive antenna feed and ground antenna feed terminals on antenna resonating element 36B. By combining both antenna cavity and speaker volume functions into structure 98, the overall size of device 10 can be minimized.
A cross-sectional side view of the combined speaker and antenna cavity structure of
As shown in the example of
Cavity walls such as cavity walls 40 of antenna cavity 36A may be formed from sheets of metal (e.g., stamped metal foil), from cast or machined metal, from patterned traces on printed circuit board substrates, using metal that is deposited onto a plastic carrier using electrochemical deposition or physical vapor deposition, using metal deposited on one or two shots of molded thermoplastic (e.g., a molded interconnect device) or any other suitable conductive materials. Techniques such as these may also be used in forming conductive structures for antenna resonating element 36B in cavity antenna 36.
With one suitable arrangement, laser patterning may be used in forming conductive antenna structures. Laser patterning processes may use thermoplastic materials that can be locally sensitized by exposure to laser light. Once sensitized, electroplating may be used to deposit additional metal and thereby form a desired pattern of conductive antenna structures. Laser patterning techniques of this type are sometimes referred to as Laser Direct Structuring (LDS). Tools for performing these techniques are available from LPFK Laser & Electronics AG of Garbsen, Germany.
Use of an illustrative laser patterning technique in forming an antenna resonating element and subsequent steps involved in attaching the antenna resonating element to a conductive antenna cavity are shown in
After moving laser beam 126 over the surface of substrate 128, metal may be added to the sensitized portions of substrate 128 using electrochemical deposition (e.g., electroplating) to form antenna resonating element traces 132.
Conductive cavity walls 40 for antenna cavity 36A may be formed by using stamping tool 138 to form a conductive material such metal sheet 134 into a desired cavity shape or other techniques may be used in forming conductive cavity walls 40. Solder 136 (e.g., a bead of solder paste) may be formed around the periphery of opening 42 in cavity 36A (i.e., on some or all of edges 44). After placing antenna resonating element 36B in opening 42, antenna 36 may be placed in solder reflow oven 140 or may otherwise be exposed to heat (e.g., from a heat gun, laser, etc.). The heat may cause the solder paste to reflow and form solder joints 136 around some or all of the edges of antenna resonating element 36B (e.g., portions of the edge of cavity opening 42 where the conductive material of the antenna resonating element is present). As shown in the lower portion of
Antenna resonating element 36B may have an inverted-F shape, a planar inverted-F shape, a closed or open slot antenna shape, a loop antenna shape, an L-shape or T-shape, a horn antenna shape, or any other suitable antenna shape.
Use of two different types of thermoplastic in a two step molding process of the type shown in
The foregoing is merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
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