The invention relates to a combination of the antennas isolated electrically from each other. It is especially intended for small-sized mobile terminals for operating in different radio systems.
Since increase in the functions of a mobile terminal, it is usual that an individual device operates at least in two different radio systems. Also in this case one antenna is often enough for the radio device, which antenna has been designed so that its operating bands cover the frequency ranges used by the radio systems in question. Two distinct antennas may be used if a device has to operate, in two systems simultaneously, especially when the frequency ranges used by these systems are relatively close to each other. Such a situation comes into being for example when one system is GSM1800 (Global System for Mobile telecommunications) and the other is GPS (Global Positioning System). Because the transmitting band of GSM1800 is 1710-1785 MHz and the receiving frequency of GPS is 1575 MHz, the receiving of the GPS is susceptible to the interferences caused by the GSM transmittals. A corresponding problem can arise also if a GSM terminal includes, in addition to its basic technique, e.g. Bluetooth or WLAN (Wireless Local Area Network) technique, and particularly if the receiving and transmitting of a same system take place occasionally simultaneously in the terminal. The last-mentioned situation occurs for example in a phone implemented to support the GPRS (General Packet Radio System) category, which requires simultaneous transmitting and receiving.
By means of the separated antennas the interference in the simultaneous receiving caused by the transmitting party can naturally be made smaller than by using a shared antenna. However, the interference does not disappear entirely, because there is a certain electromagnetic coupling between the antennas. This problem can in principle be reduced by increasing the distance between the antennas which, however, is hardly possible for example in a mobile phone. The electromagnetic coupling between the antennas can also be reduced by arranging a grounded strip conductor between them. The flaw of this solution is its difficulty from the point of view of the production and the degradation in the directional characteristics of the antennas.
In
The first antenna includes said short circuit instead of a simple short conductor. This circuit consists of a first conductor piece 126 joining to the radiator 120, a second conductor piece 127 joining to the ground plane GND and a conductor wire 128. The first and second conductor piece are next to each other, and their surfaces, which are face to face, are so close to each other that there is a significant capacitance C between them. The conductor wire 128 starts from the ground plane GND and ends after one loop to the radiator 120 beside the joining point of the first conductor piece. The conductor wire 128 has a certain inductance L. The parallel resonance circuit thus constituted is designed so that its resonance frequency equals the medium frequency of the receiving band of the second antenna. In the operating band of the first antenna the impedance of said resonance circuit is low, for which reason the first antenna radiates and receives well. On the other hand, in the operating band of the second antenna the impedance of the resonance circuit is high, in which case the matching of the first antenna is poor and it radiates weakly. Of course the fact that the frequency is aside the transmitting band of the first antenna already degrades the matching, but this alone does not mean a sufficient isolation between the antennas for example in the above-mentioned case of the GSM1800 and GPS.
A disadvantage of the solution according to
In
A radio device including the antenna is shown in
On the inner surface of the substrate SBS there is in this example also a second feed element 212, which is located mostly between the above-mentioned feed element 211 and the second side edge of the radiator. The feed point FP of the antenna is located in the second feed element. The feed point FP is connected to the antenna port of the radio device on its circuit board PCB by the feed conductor FC visible in
The second feed element 212 and the front end of the feed element 211 are so close to each other that there is a sufficient electromagnetic coupling between them for transferring transmitting energy to the field of the feed element and further to the field of the radiator 220. On the other hand, the second feed element also feeds electromagnetically directly the radiator. By means of the separate second feed element the chance is enhanced to achieve a good matching simultaneously both in the lower and upper operating band. To this end, the above-mentioned electromagnetic coupling is tuned to be suitable by a capacitor CM, which is connected between the feed elements relatively near to the short-circuit point SP. The upper operating band of the antenna is based on the resonance of the second feed element 212 together with the front end of the feed element 211, the radiator and the ground plane. The lower operating band of the antenna is based on the resonance of the whole feed arrangement together with the other antenna parts.
The antenna according to
The object of the invention is to implement in a new and advantageous way an antenna combination, where the antennas are electrically isolated from each other. An antenna combination according to the invention is characterized in that which is specified in the independent claim 1. Some advantageous embodiments of the invention are presented in the dependent claims.
The basic idea of the invention is as follows: A radio device comprises a main antenna, the radiator of which is a conductive part of the outer cover of the device, and a second antenna to enable simultaneous operation in the frequency bands close to each other. The second antenna is a narrow ILA (Inverted-L Antenna), and its radiator is placed in a slot between the radiator of the main antenna and the rest of the cover. The matching circuits of the antennas are implemented so that they function at the same time as filters, which enhance the electric isolation of the antennas.
An advantage of the invention is that a second antenna can be added to a radio device with a cover radiator so that its radiator does not require extra space. This is due to the location of said radiator between the cover parts of the device. A further advantage of the invention is that the electric isolation between the antennas is good despite the closeness of their radiators. This is due to the type and radiator's shape of the second antenna and the filtering characteristics of the matching circuits of the antennas.
The invention is below described in detail. Reference will be made to the accompanying drawings where
a,b present an example of the antenna, in which the radiator is a conductive part of the outer cover of the device,
The second antenna is of ILA type. Its radiator, or the second radiator 330, is located according to the invention in a relatively narrow slot SLT between the part of the outer cover 320, which functions as the radiator of the main antenna, and the adjacent part COV of the outer cover. The cover part COV is typically located at the battery of the device. Also it can be conductive, in which case it is connected to the ground. The feed point FP2 of the second antenna is located at the end of the second radiator 330 about in the middle of the longitudinal line of the slot SLT. The second radiator starts from the feed point FP2 in the direction of the slot towards the side edge of the device, makes a U-shaped turn close to the side edge and continues some distance back towards the starting end. In practice, there is a ground plane below the second radiator on the circuit board of the device. However, the above-mentioned U-shaped turn is arranged, viewed from above, outside the edge of the ground plane. In the example the tail portion of the second radiator is located close to the edge of the slot SLT on the side of the main radiator 320, and correspondingly the first portion starting from the feed point is located close to the edge of the slot SLT on the side of the cover part COV. Because the slot is narrow, the width w of the second radiator and the distance d between the second radiator and main radiator are small. The width w is at the most 3 mm and the distance d at the most 2 mm.
The second antenna can be used only as a receiving antenna. However, also in that case its element is called ‘radiator’ and the point, from which the element is connected to the receiver, ‘feed point’, for the sake of consistency.
Between the antenna port PT2 of the transmitter and/or receiver, which uses the second antenna, and the second feed point FP2 there is a second filter FL2, which belongs to the matching circuit of the second antenna, or the second matching circuit. The aim of the second filter is to enhance the isolation between the antennas at least in the operating band of the main antenna, which is located next to the operating band of the second antenna. The impedance of the second filter at the frequencies of the operating band of the main antenna is arranged to be very high, for which reason the second antenna does not degrade the operation of the main antenna. This is achieved, when the second filter is e.g. a band-pass filter, the pass band of which covers the operating band of the second antenna. In fact the second filter FL2 then improves the matching of the main antenna. In this example the second matching circuit comprises also a coil L41 connected between the second feed point and the ground.
In
It is found from
It is also seen from
Adding the second antenna affects also the efficiency of the main antenna. In the upper operating band the efficiency in free space degrades a little less than one decibel when the GPS antenna is added, however, being still better than −3 dB. In the lower operating band the efficiency on the contrary gets a little better.
Curve 622 shows the fluctuation of the reflection coefficient of the second antenna as a function of frequency. At the GPS frequency 1575.42 MHz the reflection coefficient is about −18 dB, which is a very satisfactory value. The bandwidth of the second antenna is about 75 MHz, or 4.7%, which also is a satisfactory value.
The antenna combination according to the invention has been described above. Its structure can in details vary from that presented. For example the shape of the radiator of the second antenna, which radiator is located in the slot between the cover parts of a radio device, the position of the radiator in the slot and the location of the feed point in the radiator can vary. The feed element of the main radiator can be also unitary, and the implementing way of the filters in the matching circuits can vary. The inventive idea can be applied in different ways within the scope defined by the independent claim 1.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20085907 | Sep 2008 | FI | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/FI2009/050744 | 9/17/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/20/2011 |