The present invention relates generally to antennas. More particularly, the present invention relates to a reverse-fed planar inverted F-type antenna (PIFA).
Each generation of communication devices is designed to be physically smaller than the previous generation. Small size is desirable to reduce physical size and weight and enhance user convenience. Many communication devices are designed and manufactured for consumer use. These include wireless devices such as radiotelephone handsets, handheld radios, personal digital assistants and lap top computers. Like all consumer products, these devices must be designed for low cost manufacturing and operation.
Manufacturers of wireless devices such as handsets, PDA's and laptops have very little room in their products given these extreme size and cost pressures. All of these devices require an antenna for wireless communication. These devices often need multiple antennas for operation at various frequency bands. It is desirable to incorporate the antenna within the package or case for reasons of esthetics, durability and size.
Such wireless devices typically pack a substantial amount of circuitry in a very small package. The circuitry may include a logic circuit board and an RF circuit board. The printed circuit board can be considered a radio frequency (RF) ground to the antenna, which is ideally contained in the case with the circuitry. Thus, the ideal antenna would be one that can be placed extremely close to such a ground plane and still operate efficiently without adverse effects such as frequency detuning, reduced bandwidth, or compromised efficiency. The antenna solution must also be cost effective for use in a consumer product.
A variety of other antennas having small profiles have been developed. These include Planar Inverted-F Antennas (PIFAs), types of shorted patches, and various derivatives which may contain meander lines. To date, however, none of these antennas satisfy the present design goals, which specify efficient, compact, low profile antennas whose height is at most λ/60 above a ground plane, where λ is the frequency of interest. There is a particular need for a 2.4 GHz antenna whose maximum height is at most 2 to 3 mm above a ground plane, and is thus well suited to devices requiring optimum performance in a compact volume, and operated according to the Bluetooth Standard, published by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group and IEEE Standard 802.11b, published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers.
Devices for the Bluetooth Standard operate at 2.4 GHz (λ=125 mm). Existing shorted patch antennas are typically λ/8 to λ/4 in length. An antenna useful for such applications should have a length on the order of λ/10. One typical commercially available 2.4 GHz antenna is the SkyCross model 222-0463, available from SkyCross, Inc., Melbourne, Fla. This antenna has a volume of 3300 mm3. The antenna useful for these applications should have a volume under 300 mm3.
In addition to small size, portable devices typically are designed to be as lightweight as possible. Commercially available surface mountable 2.4 GHz antennas typically weigh 5 g or more. The SkyCross model 222-0463 has a mass of 8.9 g. The antenna useful for these applications has a mass under 1 g.
Cost must be reduced as well in these devices. Published embodiments of miniature patch antennas often use multiple layers of metal and multiple vias to create slow wave structures, such as meanderlines. One example is shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,790,080. However, the antenna useful for these applications uses only one metal layer to construct the patch, and no vias, reducing fabrication costs.
Also, system designers want all components to be surface mountable to reduce assembly costs. But they also require low profile components to fit within available volumes. This problem is exacerbated when a ground plane is used under a surface mounted antenna, which is typically desired. Successful antennas need to be designed with the expectation of being surface mounted to a ground plane. A typical low profile 2.4 GHz antenna is the SkyCross model 222-0463, which is 3.56 mm in height. A lower height antenna is desired.
By way of introduction only, the present embodiments provide a direct current (DC) inductive shorted patch antenna. In another embodiment, an antenna including a direct current inductive (DCL) frequency selective surface (FSS) including a radiating element, a ground plane, a feed and a radio frequency (RF) short to the ground plane, positioned between the feed and the radiating element, is provided.
Yet another embodiment provides an antenna modeled by an equivalent circuit comprising a pair of coupled transmission lines, each transmission line defined by even mode and odd mode characteristic impedances and even mode and odd mode effective dielectric constants. Yet another embodiment provides an antenna including a ground plane, a foam substrate disposed on the ground plane and a polyimide layer disposed on the foam substrate. The antenna further includes metallization disposed on the polyimide layer to define capacitance and inductance to produce a resonance at one or more frequencies of interest.
The foregoing discussion of the preferred embodiments has been provided only by way of introduction. Nothing in this section should be taken as a limitation of the following claims, which define the scope of the invention.
Referring now to the drawing,
A more detailed model 106 is shown in FIG. 1(b). In the model 106, capacitors 108 are added in parallel with the inductors 102 to model conditions in a real embodiment of a DCL FSS. There will always be a small amount of parasitic capacitance between the wires, which acts to shunt the inductance. Again, a unit cell 112 models the contribution of each wire to the overall DCL FSS. A DCL FSS can be designed with this intended equivalent circuit, as is the case for the example of a uniplanar compact photonic bandgap (UC-PBG) structure. See, for example, Fei-Ran Yang, Kuang-Ping Ma, Yongxi Qian, and Tatsuo Itoh, “Uniplanar Compact Photonic Bandgap (UC-PBG) Structure and Its Application for Microwave Circuits,” IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory and Techniques, Vol 47, No. 8, August 1999, pp. 1509-1514. Additional background information and examples are provided in provisional patent Ser. No. 60/310,655 filed Aug. 6, 2001 in the names of William E. McKinzie III, Greg S. Mendolia and Rodolfo E. Diaz and entitled “LOW FREQUENCY ENHANCED FREQUENCY SELECTIVE SURFACE TECHNOLOGY AND APPLICATIONS,” which is incorporated herein by this reference. FIGS. 1(a) and 1(b) are isotropic surfaces if the values of L and C are uniform for both in-plane directions, which means that such a surface offers the same frequency response for both horizontally and vertically polarized electric fields.
If the horizontal circuits are absent, then the frequency response is maintained only for vertical electric field polarizations, and the FSS is said to be anisotropic. However, a more complex type of anisotropy is illustrated in FIG. 1(c) where a meanderline 114 of unit cells 116 is formed. Now, if a ground plane is placed near this finite meanderline 114, the structure will support even and odd modes associated with coupled lines, resulting in a dual-band antenna if properly fed. In the presently disclosed embodiments, a one-turn meanderline of a DCL circuit is used.
The present embodiments relate to a miniature dual-band patch antenna. In one embodiment, the antenna is defined by several characteristic features. For example, in one embodiment, only one metal layer is used to form the patch. Also, the preferred embodiment is a single turn meanderline with two very closely coupled lines. The feed post and ground post are reversed relative to conventional shorted patch designs such that the feed post is located in the corner of the patch. The single layer of metal which forms the patch has built-in parallel inductors and capacitors which, if connected as an infinite periodic structure, behave as a DC inductive frequency selective surface. The conductive traces at the perimeter of the antenna in one embodiment have at least twice the width of interior traces in the DCL FSS unit cells. This has been shown to significantly increase radiation efficiency.
The antenna 200 illustrated in
For operation as a shorted patch antenna or planar inverted F antenna (PIFA), the metallization 208 forms a radiating element 306. The radiating element 306 has a radiating portion 308, a feed end 310 and a ground point 312. The antenna 200 includes a feed pin 314 and a radio frequency (RF) shorting pin 316. In the illustrated embodiment, the RF short 316 is positioned between the feed pin 314 and the ground point 312. This is the concept of reverse-feeding the antenna 200 which is described in greater detail in a U.S. Provisional Patent Application filed on even date herewith in the names of Greg S. Mendolia, John Dutton and William E. McKinzie III and entitled “MINIATURIZED REVERSEFED PLANAR INVERTED-F ANTENNA,” which application is incorporated herein by reference. In other embodiments, a more conventional feed technique may be used in which the feed 314 is positioned between the RF short 316 and the radiating portion 308.
As shown in
The embodiment of
As can be seen in
Throughout the antenna 200, the line width and spacing may be chosen according to design rules and performance goals. In the embodiment of
To improve the antenna efficiency of the DCL shorted patch antenna illustrated in
Test measurements on a fabricated antenna show the radiation efficiency of the preferred embodiment is typically 73% at the low band (2460 MHz) when attached to the corner of a 45 mm square ground plane. The test measurement method employed a Wheeler Cap test fixture in the form of a 3.5″ square waveguide. A 7.5″ square ground plane formed the bottom of the closed Wheeler Cap, and this larger ground plane was conductively connected to the 45 mm square ground plane via an SMA barrel connector. Measurements of this same antenna and ground plane setup in an antenna test chamber showed a peak radiation efficiency of 72%, which agrees to within 0.03 dB. These measured efficiencies include the line loss of the 2″ coaxial cable in the test fixture, which is ˜0.2 dB. Accordingly, the true antenna efficiency is near 75%.
The DCL shorted patch antenna 200 has been modeled using a full-wave simulation tool.
This model is very similar to the embodiment of
Dual band operation is revealed in the simulations, with resonances near 2.27 GHz and 4.83 GHz, a ratio of 2.13. Three dimensional radiation patterns, included in the Appendix file herewith, show that the dominant polarization is right hand circular polarization at the low band, and left hand circular polarization at the high band.
The coupled transmission lines are uniquely defined by their even mode characteristic impedance, Zoe, and their odd mode characteristic impedance, Zoo, as well as the effective dielectric constant for the even mode ∈e and the odd mode ∈o. One benefit of a DCL patch, as illustrated herein over a solid patch, using conventional solid coupled transmission lines, is that the effective dielectric constants of the DCL patch can be increased above unity. This slows down the phase velocities of both even and odd modes on the coupled lines, and it permits the design of a more compact antenna. This is achieved without the additional cost and weight of any dielectric loading materials, but simply by patterning the transmission lines to contain a DC inductive unit cell as shown for example in FIG. 2.
As a comparison of the circuit model to measured data, the equivalent circuit 800 of
The proposed circuit model 800 of
From the foregoing, it can be seen that the presently disclosed embodiments provide an antenna satisfying the size, weight, cost and surface installation requirements described above. This antenna in one embodiment has a maximum linear dimension of only λ/10 at the lower of the two resonant frequencies. Volume is approximately 0.00011 λ3. This is more than an order of magnitude smaller in volume than currently commercially available antennas which are surface mountable directly on a ground plane. The absence of dielectric materials, other than the thin polyimide used to support printed traces, allows this antenna embodiment to weigh on the order of 0.25 grams or less for a 2.4 GHz antenna. It is at least 50 times lighter than commercially available antennas. The illustrated embodiment has a nominal height above the ground plane of about λ/60, and other heights are possible in other embodiments. Even the latest commercially available meander line designs are at least λ/35 in height.
Hardware experiments have shown that the DCL shorted-patch illustrated herein is not very easily detuned by changes in ground plane size or by the proximity of nearby dielectric bodies. This embodiment resonates with adequate VSWR bandwidth to be usable at multiple frequency bands, such as Bluetooth and IEEE standard 802.11 frequencies near 2.4 GHz and 5.2 GHz.
Several physical features combine to permit a very low-cost manufacturing approach. They include, first, a very small footprint, second, only one layer of patch metal is needed, third, no feed through pins are needed as this design may be fed and grounded from its perimeter, and fourth, no exotic materials are needed for the design. These characteristics are ideal for applications in wireless products such as handsets, personal digital assistants (PDAs) and laptops that are wirelessly connected to a Local Area Network (LAN) or Personal Area Network. (PAN) This technology can be scaled to various frequencies such as 800 MHz (cellular), 900 MHz (GSM), 1500 MHz (GPS) 1800 MHz (GSM), 1900 MHz (PCS), 2400 MHz (Bluetooth and IEEE standard 802.11), 5200 MHz (IEEE standard 802.11) and higher frequencies.
Alternative embodiments exist for DCL shorted patch antennas. However, the performance of such embodiments may vary from performance of the design described above.
The above two examples show DCL FSS materials can be used as a patch antenna in which the DCL FSS is anisotropic. In other words, x and y directed patch currents see different sheet impedances, or different equivalent circuits. Patch currents are currents flowing in the metal or other conductor on the surface of the patch. In this example, x and y axes are orthogonal and in the plane of the FSS. There are many physical realizations of anisotropic DCL FSS materials, an exemplary one of which is shown herein. However, it is possible, and perhaps desirable, to fabricate a DCL shorted patch with an isotropic DCL FSS.
An important point to be understood about DCL shorted patch antennas is that the unit cell of the DCL FSS is very small relative to a free-space wavelength at any antenna resonant frequency. A typical unit cell dimension for the first two embodiments is 2% to 4% of a free space wavelength for the lowest resonant frequency. Other dimensions may be used as well.
In
A modification of the embodiment of
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, modifications may be made. It is therefore intended in the appended claims to cover such changes and modifications, which follow in the true spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Patent application Ser. No. 60/354,003 filed Jan. 23, 2002. This application is related to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/352,113 filed Jan. 23, 2002 and Provisional Patent application Ser. No. 60/354,697 filed Feb. 4, 2002 in the names of Greg S. Mendolia, John Dutton and William E. McKinzie III and entitled “MINIATURIZED REVERSE-FED PLANAR INVERTED-F ANTENNA, which applications are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. This application is related to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/310,655 filed Aug. 6, 2001 in the names of William E. McKinzie III, Greg S. Mendolia and Rodolfo E. Diaz and entitled “LOW FREQUENCY ENHANCED FREQUENCY SELECTIVE SURFACE TECHNOLOGY AND APPLICATIONS,” which application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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