The present invention relates to a composite filter to be used in communication devices such as mobile phones.
A conventional composite filter used in portable wireless communication devices such as mobile phones is described with reference to
The low-pass filter is formed by combining an inductor with a capacitor, and is embedded in laminated substrate 2 made of low temperature co-fired ceramics and formed by layering a plurality of dielectric layers 1. The inductor is formed of a plurality of dielectric layers 1 with arc-shaped conductors 3 formed thereon and coupled to each other. The capacitor is formed of planar capacitor electrodes 4 sandwiching dielectric layer 1.
The elastic surface-wave filter is formed by combining elastic surface-wave resonators 5 in a ladder shape as shown in
The low-pass filter is coupled to a transmission output side of the foregoing filter in order to attenuate the doubled or tripled harmonics in the pass band of the filter. The composite filter discussed above, however; is formed by embedding the low-pass filter in laminated substrate 2, so that the inductor and the capacitor are obliged to occupy a large area, and the capacitor, in particular, takes a greater portion of the occupied area because its capacitance is proportionate to its area. As a result, the filter cannot be further downsized.
The art related to the present invention is listed here as patent documents 1 and 2.
Patent Document 1: Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No. 2004-254257
Patent Document 2: Unexamined Japanese Patent Publication No. 2005-184773
The present invention addresses the foregoing problem and aims to provide a composite filter downsized from the conventional one without degrading the characteristics. To achieve this objective, the present invention employs the following structure: at least one of capacitors is placed such that its comb-shaped electrodes are oppositely placed to each other on a piezoelectric substrate, and the opposing direction of the comb-shaped electrodes differs from that of comb-shaped electrodes of a surface acoustic wave resonator.
The foregoing structure allows for a decrease in the area occupied by the capacitors because at least one of the capacitors is formed such that its comb-shaped electrodes oppose each other on the piezoelectric substrate. On top of that, unlike the comb-shaped electrodes of the surface acoustic wave resonator, the structure allows the comb-shaped electrodes of the capacitors to not be excited because its opposing direction differs from that of the comb-shaped electrodes of the surface acoustic wave resonator, so that no loss is produced. As a result, a downsized composite filter can be obtained without degrading the characteristics.
An exemplary embodiment of the present invention is demonstrated hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In
Elastic surface-wave filter 12 is formed by combining surface acoustic wave resonators 14 placed on piezoelectric substrate 10 such that their comb-shaped electrodes oppose to each other. LC filter 13 is formed by combining π-shaped LC filter 17 with capacitor 15c, where filter 17 is formed of capacitors 15a and 15b coupled to inductor 16a in a π-shape, and capacitor 15c is coupled in parallel to this inductor 16a.
This π-shaped LC filter 17 is configured by connecting respective first ends of capacitors 15a and 15b to inductor 16a, and respective second ends thereof are grounded. Each one of two capacitors 15a and 15b is configured by placing its comb-shaped electrodes opposing each other on piezoelectric substrate 10, and the opposing direction (A) of the comb-shaped electrodes differs orthogonally from the opposing direction (B) of the comb-shaped electrodes of surface acoustic wave resonator 14. Inductor 16a is embedded in laminated substrate 11 in a spiral shape. Capacitor 15c placed in parallel with inductor 16a is also configured by placing its electrodes opposing each other on piezoelectric substrate 10, and the opposing direction (A) of its electrodes orthogonally differs from the foregoing opposing direction (B).
As shown in
The structure discussed above allows for decreasing of a parasitic capacitance generated between inductor 16a and grounding conductor 21, and suppressing ripples to be generated in the pass band.
The composite filter further includes antenna terminal 18 disposed at a first end of surface acoustic wave filter 12, and transmission terminal 19 disposed at a first portion of a second end thereof via LC filter 13, and reception terminal 20 disposed at a second portion of the second end of surface acoustic wave filter 12. If the reception side wants to attenuate a higher frequency band than the pass band, LC filter 13 connected between the reception terminal and the terminal of the surface acoustic wave filter will achieve this task. If both of the reception side and the transmission side want to attenuate a higher frequency band than the pass band, LC filter 13 connected between the antenna terminal and the terminal of the surface acoustic wave filter will achieve this task.
The composite filter discussed above has the frequency characteristics as shown in
Unlike the conventional composite filter formed of planar capacitor electrodes opposing each other, capacitors 15a-15c can be formed on a highly dielectric piezoelectric-substrate by using a fine patterning similar to the surface acoustic wave resonator, so that capacitors 15a-15c can be placed to occupy a smaller area. Particularly the opposing direction (A) of comb-shaped electrodes of capacitors 15a-15c is different from that (B) of comb-shaped electrodes of resonator 14, so that the comb-shaped electrodes of capacitors 15a-15c do not become excited unlike resonator 14, of which comb-shaped electrodes become excited. Each one of capacitors 15a-15c thus can always work as a capacitor regardless of frequencies.
For instance, use of the foregoing composite filter in UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications Systems), a kind of mobile telephones and the third generation of mobile communication system in Europe, allows the outer dimensions of the filter to be approx. 30 μm×220 μm. Use of the conventional composite filter embedded in the laminated substrate, of which relative dielectric constant is 7.4 makes its outer dimensions approx. 350 μm×330 μm. The occupied area of the composite filter of the present invention is thus as small as approx. 1/18 of the conventional one.
As shown in
Laminated substrate 11 includes another grounding conductor 26 embedded therein other than grounding conductor 21 formed on piezoelectric substrate 10 (see
The composite filter discussed above has the frequency characteristics as shown in
From the standpoint of capacitance, the comb-shaped electrodes of capacitors 15a-15c can be covered with dielectric such as SiO2 or SiN for increasing their capacitances, and this preparation can also suppress the dispersion of the capacitances due to changes in temperature.
Inductor 16a can be formed of strip lines having equivalent dielectric to that of the equivalent circuit of resonator 14 at a given frequency, or formed of chip inductors for obtaining a higher Q value, or formed on piezoelectric substrate 10 instead of embedded in laminated substrate 11 in order to downsize the filter.
The composite filter of the present invention can be used in communication devices such as mobile phones.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005-351680 | Dec 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2006/324159 | 12/4/2006 | WO | 00 | 3/5/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/066608 | 6/14/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6489861 | Noguchi et al. | Dec 2002 | B2 |
6756864 | Muramatsu | Jun 2004 | B2 |
20040227586 | Taniguchi et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20060091977 | Inoue et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
5-083084 | Apr 1993 | JP |
7-007369 | Jan 1995 | JP |
09-098046 | Apr 1997 | JP |
9-098056 | Apr 1997 | JP |
2000-077967 | Mar 2000 | JP |
2000-114917 | Apr 2000 | JP |
2004-254257 | Sep 2004 | JP |
2005-184773 | Jul 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090278629 A1 | Nov 2009 | US |