This invention relates to an antenna arrangement, the frequency of which may be adjusted by control of a multiple throw switch connected to one or more strip or microstrip lines.
It is relatively common for radiotelephone handsets to include internal patch antenna arrangements, since these are relatively inexpensive to manufacture and since they can have suitably narrow bandwidths at desired operating frequencies. However, the use of patch antennas presents a problem when the radiotelephone is required to operate in more than two multiple frequency bands, for example in the PCS and DCS bands as well as the GSM 900 band. The PCS band comprises the frequencies 1850 to 1990 MHz, and the DCS transmitter band comprises the frequencies 1710 to 1785 MHz, the DCS receiver band comprises the frequencies 1805 to 1889 MHz.
Patch antennas which are arranged to operate multiple frequency bands are known from, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,777,581, which discloses a patch antenna connectable to plural tuning strips by respective switches. An antenna more suitable for use in mobile telephone applications is disclosed in JP11-136025. In this document, a ground plane and an antenna element are formed on opposite faces of a substrate. The antenna element is grounded at one end, can be coupled to ground at another end by a controllable switch. Further switches may couple other locations on the antenna element to ground potential, allowing the antenna to be tuned to plural discreet frequencies.
It is an aim of the invention to provide an improved antenna arrangement.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided an antenna arrangement comprising a multiple throw switch arranged to couple one or more strip or microstrip lines to an antenna element.
Preferably, the antenna arrangement comprises a load element capacitively coupled to the antenna element, the switch being connected to the load element. This arrangement is particularly advantageous since it allows tuning of the antenna element without the direct connection of the switch to the antenna element. This, in turn, allows tuning to any frequency over a range permissible by the load element. Preferably, the load element is a patch. In one embodiment, the load element is on a surface of substrate such that the load element is perpendicular to the antenna element. However, any suitable arrangement may be used, the main requirement being that the load element is capacitively coupled to the antenna element such that the frequency of the antenna element can be adjusted by adjusting the impedance of the load element.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided an antenna arrangement comprising a load element capacitively coupled to an antenna element, and a switch arranged to connect one of one or more strip or microstrip lines to the load element.
The use of one or more strip or microstrip lines of different lengths is advantageous since the phase difference caused by the impedance of the strip or microstrip line leads to the desired effect of controllable impedance in the antenna arrangement. Control of the impedance which can result from using the invention is advantageous since the antenna element can be tuned accurately by suitable control of the switch.
Preferably, the switch is connected to at least two or more strip or microstrip lines. Since the frequency of the antenna element depends on the length of the strip or microstrip line, the use of plural lines allows the antenna element to be tuned to plural frequencies. Preferably, one throw of the switch is connected to a strip or microstrip line of substantially zero length. A zero length strip or microstrip line can still cause reflection, resulting in a desired impedance which in turn results in a desired frequency of operation. By suitable design, the number of strip or microstrip lines with a length larger than zero can be fewer than the number of frequencies to which the antenna arrangement is tuneable.
The embodied antenna arrangements include a feed connection and a ground connection applied directly to the antenna element, with the switch being connected separately from either of these connections. This has the advantage that the switch causes loss only at the frequency band where the switching takes place. If the switch were to be associated with either the ground connector or the feed connector, all frequency bands of the antenna would suffer from the loss of the switch.
The invention also provides a radiotelephone including an antenna arrangement according to the invention.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Referring firstly to
The metallisation formed on the third face 15 constitutes an antenna element 22 in the form of a patch. The patch antenna element 22 is connected to a ground plane (shown in
On the fourth face 16, metallisation is present for a 3 mm strip 25 of the face which runs lengthwise along the face and which adjoins the patch antenna element 22. This constitutes part of the antenna element, and helps to connect it capacitively to the ground plane.
On the second face 14 of the substrate 12, a feed connector 26 having a width of approximately 2 mm is connected at one end to the patch antenna element 22 and extends perpendicularly along the second face to a feed connection on the printed wire board 10. The feed connector 26 is located approximately 5 mm from the end of the second face 14 which adjoins the first face 13.
Also on the second face 14, a load patch 27 is formed having a length of approximately 19 mm and a width of approximately 3 mm. One end of the load patch 27 is separated from the feed connector 26 by a gap of approximately 3 mm. The load patch 27 is separated from the patch antenna element 22 by a gap of approximately 0.8 mm, and the size of the gap remains constant for the entire length of the load element 27. An end of the load element 27 opposite to the feed connector 26 is separated from the end of the second face 14 by a gap of approximately 0.8 mm. The load element 27 and the feed connector 26 are formed of metalisation layers. The load element 27 is connected to circuitry on the reverse face of the printed wire board 10 by a connector 28.
The distance between the load element 27 and the patch antenna element 22 determines the amount of coupling between the two elements. Although in this embodiment the gap is 0.8 mm wide, it could take any distance between 0.1 mm and 2 mm. The distance between the load element and the feed connector 26 also has an affect on the amount of coupling between the antenna element 22 and the load element, as does the distance between the load element and the metallisation 25 on the fourth face 16.
The substrate 12 can take any suitable form. For example, the substrate 12 need not be a solid rectangular block, but could be comprised of a box formed from PVC walls having a thickness of 0.5 mm. The metallisation of the antenna and load elements etc. could be formed on an inside surface or an outside surface of the box. The dielectric constant of the material used to form the substrate 12 is important, since this has an effect on the dimensions of the antenna element 22 needed for operation at a given frequency.
Referring now to
The switch 33 may take any suitable form. One such suitable switch is the AS 202-321 produced by Skyworks Solutions, Inc of 20 Sylvan Road, Woburn, Mass., USA.
Each of the strip lines 35, 37 and 40 has a different length, and each terminates with a square end. The strip lines 35, 37, 40 may be 50 Ω strip lines. The length of the strip lines 35, 37 and 40 are selected such that they provide the load patch 27 with impedances which give rise to the antenna arrangement 11 having desired frequency characteristics.
The frequency of the antenna element 22 is unaffected by the load patch 27 when the load patch is presented to a very high (e.g. open circuit) impedance at the junction with the connector 28 because the capacitive loading is minimised. When the load patch 27 is presented to a zero impedance (short circuit) at the junction with the connector 28, the resonant frequency of the antenna element 22 is reduced by the maximum amount allowable by the antenna 11, because the capacitive loading is maximised. Providing the load patch 27 with another ‘reflecting’ impedance between these extremes results in the resonant frequency taking a value between the two extremes. By varying only the phase of the impedance presented to the load patch at the junction with the connector 28, the impedance presented to the load can be varied between open circuit and short circuit. The phase of the impedance presented to the load patch 27 at the junction with the connector 28 is a function of the frequency and of the combined electrical length of the connector 28, the link from the connector to the pole 32, the switch 33, the link from the switch to the start of the relevant strip line 35, 37, 40 and the electrical length of the strip line itself. Hence, by connecting a strip line having a certain physical length, thereby also an electrical length to the load patch 27, the phase of the impedance to the load patch is controlled, and thus the resonant frequency of the antenna 11, is controlled. The electrical length of the strip lines 35, 37, 40 is determined by the electrical properties of the material. In this embodiment, the printed wire board is an FR4 substrate, which has a dielectric constant of around 4.5.
In
Performance of the antenna 11 is illustrated by the graphs of
Although the above-described embodiment includes three strip lines, allowing tuning to three discreet-frequencies, the invention is not so limited. In a further embodiment (not shown), a 4 throw switch is used, each throw being connected to a respective strip line of unique length. In this way, the antenna arrangement is tuneable to four discreet frequencies. By selecting suitable lengths of strip line, the antenna arrangement can be tuneable to, for example, the DCS Tx and Rx frequencies and the PCS Tx and Rx frequencies.
Advantages arise from the fact that the load element is capacitively coupled to the antenna element, and the fact that the impedance of the load element can be controlled to adopt any one of a number of discreet steps which is equal to the number of throws on the switch.
Also, by allowing tuning by way of controlling the impedance of the load element, the antenna arrangement can be made smaller than a comparable antenna operable at the same frequencies. The applicants have produced the antenna of
Referring to
Since the antennas 11 and 50 have greater physical separation from each other, resulting from the smaller size of the antenna 11, the amount of radio frequency isolation between them is increased. Furthermore, when the WCDMA antenna 50 is in use, the switch 33 is controlled so that the load patch provides a short circuit, causing the antenna 11 to operate at the DCX Tx band of 1710-1785 MHz. Accordingly, significant frequency isolation of the two antennas 11 and 50 is obtained.
Referring again to
Another advantage is that potential type approval problems are avoided since the switch 33 is not in the chain between the (unshown) amplifier and the antenna patch 22.
Since the impedance presented by the load patch 27 depends on the lengths of the strip lines 35, 37, 40, adjustment of the resonant frequency can be effected at a late stage in antenna design. In particular, the mass-production tools for the antenna do not need to be modified for a final tuning of the operating frequencies; instead adjustment can take place by changing the length of the strip lines on the printed wire board 10. Furthermore, the design can be optimised such the minimum amount of area of the reverse side of the printed wire board 10 is required for implementing the
It will be appreciated that the antenna element 22 constitutes a dual-band PIFA (planar inverted F-antenna). The placing of the load patch 27 is important, since it determines which frequency bands of the antenna element 22 it has an effect on. With the load patch 27 being located as shown in the Figures, only the high frequency bands are affected by its impedance. Control of the operating frequency at a low band could be effected by including a load patch at a suitable location, and by including a controllable switch and strip line arrangement with it.
In a further embodiment (not shown), the load patch 27 is included on the fifth face 17, where it has an effect on the lower frequency band of the antenna arrangement 11. The load patch of this embodiment is connected via a two-throw switch to one of two strip lines. One of the strip lines provides a short circuit at frequencies of around 850 MHz, causing operation of the antenna at 850 MHz. The other strip line provides an open circuit, causing operation of the antenna at 900 MHz. Thus, the antenna arrangement is operable at the two different sub-1 GHz frequencies.
An alternative embodiment is illustrated in
Instead of strip lines formed on the surface of the printed wire board, the invention may be implemented using microstrip lines (not shown). In this case, the microstrip lines are embedded in the printed wire board 10.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/12985 | 11/20/2002 | WO | 5/18/2005 |