The present invention relates generally to electromagnetic antennas, and more specifically, to antennas and related communications systems that include a decoherence plate.
Antennas radiate and receive intentional and unintentional electromagnetic signals. The unintentional signals, also known as field coupling or electromagnetic interference, may result from current-carrying traces, wires and other conductors, as well as from other antennas in a same or a different antenna module or structure. Unintentional signals associated with current-carrying traces, wires and other conductors can be minimized through proper circuit design and board layout, including the use of multilayer printed circuit boards with separate ground planes and/or the use of electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding.
As illustrated in
Unintentional electromagnetic signals associated with other antennas are common since multiple antennas are often implemented in close proximity. A high isolation of a respective antenna is often necessary to achieve good performance (a high signal-to-noise ratio, a low bit error rate, etc.) in a communication system. There are a variety of conventional techniques for improving the isolation between two or more antennas. One such approach isolates a transmit and a receive path in the communications system, for example, by using a transmit-receive isolation switch or a transmit-receive grating in conjunction with a delay line. Another approach divides a frequency spectrum into a set of orthogonal sub-bands by using coding techniques such as orthogonal frequency division multiplexing and bit loading.
In addition to these approaches, there are a variety of conventional techniques for isolating two or more antennas from one another by decoupling beam patterns of the antennas. Such techniques include modifying a directivity of the beam patterns (by antenna design and/or antenna placement), increasing a free space path loss (by physically separating the antennas), EMI shielding, one or more ground planes and, if possible, polarization isolation. While these techniques can improve antenna isolation, there are limits to the overall efficacy. In addition, there are inevitable antenna and communications system design tradeoffs. For example, to be effective, ground planes tend to have a large spatial extent. Such large ground planes add expense, are unwieldy (especially in compact and/or portable communications systems) and may restrict degrees of freedom in antenna design.
There is a need, therefore, for low cost and compact structures to increase the isolation of antennas in communications systems.
The decoherence plate apparatus and method provide reduced field coupling or improved isolation between two or more antennas. In an embodiment of the apparatus, an antenna module includes a first antenna, a second antenna and a decoherence plate having a surface. The first antenna transmits one or more electromagnetic signals. The surface of the decoherence plate is substantially positioned in a plane that is substantially perpendicular to a line connecting the first antenna and the second antenna. For each first path from the first antenna to the plane to the second antenna there is a corresponding second path, from the first antenna to the plane to the second antenna, that is substantially 180° out of phase for a respective wavelength in the one or more electromagnetic signals transmitted by the first antenna. Both the first and second paths are selected from the set of paths falling within a predefined range of path lengths. In this way, the decoherence plate reduces the field coupling between the first antenna and the second antenna.
In some embodiments, the surface of the decoherence plate is intercepted by the line connecting the first antenna and the second antenna.
In some embodiments, the field coupling between the first antenna and the second antenna at the respective wavelength is at least 30 dB less than a field coupling corresponding to free space path loss between the first antenna and the second antenna. In some embodiments, the field coupling between the first antenna and the second antenna at the respective wavelength is between 40 and 70 dB less than the field coupling corresponding to free space path loss between the first antenna and the second antenna.
In some embodiments, the decoherence plate includes a metal layer. The metal layer may be thicker than a skin depth of the metal, the skin depth corresponding to a minimum frequency of the one or more electromagnetic signals transmitted by the first antenna. The metal layer may be copper, aluminum, gold, silver and their related alloys and oxides.
In some embodiments, the metal layer is patterned into a predetermined shape. The predetermined shape may have a maximum lateral extent that is no larger than a distance separating a dipole moment of the first antenna from a dipole moment of the second antenna. In other embodiments, the maximum lateral extent may be no larger than half the distance separating the dipole moment of the first antenna from the dipole moment of the second antenna. The decoherence plate may include a substrate, where the metal layer is deposited in a layer located above a surface of the substrate. In some embodiments, the substrate is a circuit board.
In an embodiment of the method, a shape of the decoherence plate for a respective geometry having a first antenna and a second antenna is determined by selecting a shape of the decoherence plate in a plane substantially perpendicular to a line connecting the first antenna and the second antenna. A field coupling between the first antenna and the second antenna for a respective wavelength of an electromagnetic signal is determined. A next shape of the decoherence plate is selected in accordance with a result from the determined field coupling. The determining of the field coupling and the selection of the next shape are repeated until the field coupling between the first antenna and the second antenna is less than a threshold.
In some embodiments, the field coupling is determined by summing a Kirchoff diffraction kernel in the plane of the decoherence plate at least over a surface area including the shape of the decoherence plate. The Kirchoff diffraction kernel may include a product of a weighting component, a spherical wave Green's function and an obliquity component that includes a near-field expression. In other embodiments, the summing is performed in the plane of the decoherence plate over a surface area extending beyond that defined by the shape of the decoherence plate.
In some embodiments, the field coupling is determined for two or more wavelengths in the electromagnetic signal. The weighting component may include a real portion and an imaginary portion. The decoherence plate may include two or more separate segments.
Additional variations on the apparatus and method embodiments are provided.
Additional objects and features of the invention will be more readily apparent from the following detailed description and appended claims when taken in conjunction with the drawings.
Like reference numerals refer to corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, components, and circuits have not been described in detail so as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the present invention.
The dipole moment of a pair of opposite charges of magnitude q is defined as the magnitude of the charge times the distance between the charges. A positive direction for the dipole moment is defined towards a positive charge. For an antenna, such as the first antenna 210, which has spatial dimension larger than a respective wavelength in the one or more electromagnetic signals, the dipole moment may represent a significant or dominant term in a multi-pole expansion of the antenna or field pattern. In some embodiments, where the antenna, such as the first antenna 210, does not have a dipole moment, the first distance 216 and the second distance 218 may correspond to a dominant term in the multipole expansion for the antenna.
For each first path 222_1 from the first antenna 210 to the plane 318 (
In the embodiment illustrated in
The threshold is a result of mutual substantial cancellation for the first path 222_1 and the second path 222_2 having a path length difference approximately equal to half the respective wavelength. This results in a deep minimum in the field coupling. A shape of the decoherence plate may be chosen such that mutual cancellation occurs for a plurality of paths from the first antenna 210 to the plane 318 (
In some embodiments, the threshold for the reduced field coupling between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212 at the respective wavelength is at least 30 dB less than a field coupling corresponding to free space path loss between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212. In other embodiments, the threshold for the reduced field coupling between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212 at the respective wavelength is at least 40 dB less, at least 50 dB less, or at least 60 dB less than the field coupling corresponding to free space path loss between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212. In some embodiments, the threshold for the reduced field coupling between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212 at the respective wavelength is between 40 and 70 dB less than the field coupling corresponding to free space path loss between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212.
In some embodiments, the first layer 310 is a metal. A thickness 320 of the first layer 310 may be thicker than a skin depth of the metal. The skin depth of the metal layer 310 may correspond to a minimum frequency (and thus a maximum wavelength) of the one or more electromagnetic signals transmitted by the first antenna 210 (
The decoherence plate 300 may include an optional substrate 314. In these embodiments, the first layer 310 is deposited above a surface of the substrate 314. The substrate 314 material and thickness may be chosen to provide sufficient mechanical support and/or integrity to the first layer 310. The substrate 314 may be an insulator or a dielectric. In some embodiments, the substrate 314 is a circuit board.
The decoherence plate may also include one or more optional underlayers 312 between the first layer 310 and the substrate 314. The materials and thicknesses of the one or more underlayers 312 may be chosen to control the properties of the first layer, including mechanical stress, grain size, morphology and orientation, as is known in the art. The one or more underlayers 312 may also be chosen to act as a seed layer to promote growth of the first layer 310. The first layer 310 may be deposited on the substrate 314 and/or the one or more underlayers 312 using techniques such as evaporation, sputtering, electroplating and vapor deposition, as are known in the art.
Referring to
In the embodiments described, the decoherence plate 220 reduces the field coupling between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212 when the first antenna 210 is transmitting one or more electromagnetic signals. By the principle of reciprocity, the decoherence plate 220 also reduces the field coupling between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212 when the second antenna 212 is transmitting one or more electromagnetic signals.
The shape of the decoherence plate 220 for a respective embodiment may be determined by calculating the field coupling between the first antenna 210 and the second antenna 212 for a respective geometry, such as that illustrated in
In some embodiments, additional steps may be included in the procedure. For example, a respective shape for the decoherence plate 220 (
In some embodiments, the field coupling may be determined using Kirchoff diffraction theory. A geometry used in such a calculation is illustrated in
where the symbol |νTS| represents a magnitude of a vector distance between the transmitter element 710 and the surface element dS 712, the symbol |νSR| represents a magnitude of a vector distance between the surface element dS 712 and the receiver element 714, g is a gain, λ is the respective wavelength, i is the square root of −1, and symbols with a hat denote unit vectors.
The double integral over surface elements in the plane 318 (
The calculation may be repeated for all pairings of differential elements in the first antenna 210 (
The integral or sum may be performed over a surface area in the plane 318 (
For surface elements that transmit electromagnetic signals without a phase shift, the gain g is real number. For surface elements that transmit electromagnetic signals with a phase shift (relative to free space), the gain is a complex number, having a real portion and an imaginary portion. For example, if a decoherence plate 300 is fabricated by patterning a metal first layer 310 on a circuit board substrate 314, regions without metal will produce such a phase shift associated with the complex dielectric constant of the circuit board material. For complicated shapes of the decoherence plate 220 (
In some embodiments, the field coupling may be determined for two or more wavelengths.
The decoherence plate 510 has a gear-like structure with teeth or cogs. Adjustable parameters in the shape of the decoherence plate 510 include a teeth width, a teeth length and a radius of the gear. A first ruler 516 and a second ruler 518 are each 5.08 cm, thereby illustrating the lateral extent in the plane 318 (
The decoherence plate 510 provides an additional 50-60 dB reduction in the field coupling relative to free space at 5.2 GHz. A decoherence plate having the shape of the first circle 514 would only provide approximately 21 dB additional reduction in the field coupling relative to free space. A decoherence plate having the shape of the second circle 512 would only provide approximately 20 dB additional reduction in the field coupling relative to free space.
As illustrated in
The decoherence plate 220 reduces field coupling between antennas using a compact structure, as opposed, for example, to using a large ground plane. Decoherence plates can be designed for use with electromagnetic signals having a range of respective wavelengths or frequencies. Collectively, the ranges for different decoherence plates encompass the electromagnetic spectrum, including very low frequency, low frequency, medium frequency, radio frequency, microwave, infrared, visible, ultraviolet and x-ray.
The foregoing description, for purposes of explanation, used specific nomenclature to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the specific details are not required in order to practice the invention. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical applications, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. Thus, the foregoing disclosure is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings.
It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/614,097, filed Jul. 3, 2003, pending. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/614,097 is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10614097 | Jul 2003 | US |
Child | 11104007 | Apr 2005 | US |