This invention relates to wireless communication systems including directional antennas useful in such systems.
In wireless communication systems, antennas are used to transmit and receive radio frequency signals. In general, the antennas can be omni-directional or unidirectional. In addition, there exist antenna systems which provide directive gain with electronic scanning rather than being fixed. However, many such electronic scanning technologies are plagued with excessive loss and high cost. In addition, many of today's wireless communication systems provide very little room for antennae elements.
Traditional Yagi-Uda arrays consist of a driven element (by this we mean a signal is fed to the element by a transmitter or other signal source), called the driver or antenna element, a reflector, and one or more directors. The reflector and directors are not driven, and are therefore parasitic elements. By choosing the proper length and spacing of the reflector from the driven element, as well as the length and spacing of the directors, the induced currents on the reflector and directors will re-radiate a signal that will additively combine with the radiation from the driven element to form a more directive radiated beam compared to the driven element alone. The most common Yagi-Uda arrays are fabricated using a dipole for the driven element, and straight wires for the reflector and directors. The reflector is placed behind the driven element and the directors are placed in front of the driven element. The result is a linear array of wires that together radiate a beam of radio frequency (RF) energy in the forward direction. The directivity (and therefore gain) of the radiated beam can be increased by adding additional directors, at the expense of overall antenna size. The director can be eliminated, which leads to a smaller antenna with wider beam width coverage compared to Yagi antennas utilizing directors. The dipole element is nominally one-half wavelength in length, with the reflector approximately five percent longer than the dipole and the director or directors approximately five percent shorter than the dipole. The spacing between the elements is critical to the design of the Yagi and varies from one design to another; element spacing will vary between one-eighth and one-quarter wavelength.
The present invention includes a method, apparatus and system as described in the claims.
Briefly in one embodiment, An antenna system and method are provided that permit a variably directed antenna beam using elements of the antenna for different purposes in different configurations. I one aspect, a configurable antenna system includes a first compound antenna element including a first upper element, a first lower element and a first switch controllably coupling the first upper element and the first lower element. A second compound antenna element includes a second upper element, a second lower element and a second switch controllably coupling the second upper element and the second lower element. The first upper element and the second upper element are coupled by an upper conductive path. The first lower element and the second lower element are coupled by a lower conductive path.
Other embodiments are shown, described and claimed herein.
These and other aspects, advantages and details of the present invention, both as to its structure and operation, may be gleaned in part by a study of the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention.
Certain embodiments as disclosed herein provide for systems and methods for a wireless communication device having a switched multi-beam antenna and methods for manufacturing the same. For example one system and method described herein provides for a plurality of antenna of elements. Groups of the antenna elements cooperate to form active one or more antenna elements while other groups of the antenna elements cooperate to form a reflector for the active antenna elements. This creates a directed transmission or direction of positive gain for the antenna system. The same group of antenna elements can be switched so that other antenna elements cooperate to form the active element while another group forms a reflector for the active elements thereby providing a different direction of positive gain. The system can be used for various wireless communication protocols and at various frequency ranges. For example, the system can be used at frequency ranges and having bands centered around 2.4 Ghz, 2.8 Ghz and 5.8 Ghz.
After reading this description it would become apparent to one skilled in the art how to implement the invention in various alternative embodiments and alternative applications. However, although various embodiments of the present invention will be described herein, it is to be understood that these embodiments are presented by way of example only, and not limitations. As such, this detailed description of various embodiments should not be construed to limit the scope or breadth of the present invention.
Turning now to the figures,
The first switch 135 is located between antenna element 131 and antenna element 133. In the embodiment depicted in
The distance from the feeding point 140 to antenna element 131 and to antenna element 121 is a reflective distance of approximately one-quarter wavelength (λd/4) of the transmitted signal in the transmission path. For example, distance can be 0.30λd, 0.29λd, 0.28λd, 0.27λd, 0.26λd, 0.24λd, 0.23λd, 0.22λd, 0.21λd, or 20λd. Therefore, when the antenna elements 131 or 121 are coupled to there corresponding antenna elements 133 and 123, respectively, by their respective switches, an electrical open is seen looking back towards the feeding point 140 from the antenna elements 131 and 121. Therefore, the reflective distance between feeding point 140 and the antenna elements 131 and 121 can be selected taking into account the frequency range(s) in which the antenna will be used, the dielectric constant of the transmission path and the desired efficiency of the antenna system. In one example, the reflective distance from each of the elements 121 and 131 to the feeding point is λd/4, where λd is the center frequency of the frequency band for which the antenna system is intended to be used.
Each of the antenna element pairs 130 and 120 can operate as an active antenna element such as a dipole. Each of the antenna element pairs can also act as a reflector. When switch 135 is closed, coupling antenna element 131 to antenna element 133, the antenna element pair 130 is configured as a reflector and the element pair 120 (with the second switch 125 open) acts as the active antenna element (in this example, a dipole). This produces a directional antenna. When switch 125 is closed, coupling antenna element 121 to antenna element 123, the antenna element pair 120 is configured as a reflector and the element pair 130 (with the switch 135 open) acts as the active antenna element. This produces a directional antenna. Alternatively, both antenna element pairs can be active elements at the same time, switches 125 and 135 both open, to act as an omni-directional antenna.
When switch 135 is open, antenna elements 133 and 131 cooperate to form a dipole antenna element. Similarly, when switch 125 is open antenna elements 123 and 121 cooperate to form a dipole element. Conversely, when switch 135 is closed, antenna elements 131 and 133 form a reflector for the dipole formed by antenna elements 121 and 123. Similarly, when the switch 125 is closed antenna elements 121 and 123 form a reflector for the dipole formed by antenna elements 131 and 133. Approximate dimensions for one embodiment of the system for use with a frequency band centered around 2.4 GHz are shown on the figure.
The antenna elements depicted in
FIGS. 6A-E are views of alternative configurations of antenna elements that can be used to accommodate a wide variety of applications.
Turning now to
The radio system 704 includes a radio sub-system 722. The radio sub-system 722 includes a includes a plurality of radio transmitter/receivers (radios) 710a-n and a MIMO signal processing module (the signal processing module) 712. The plurality of radios 710a-n are in communication with the MIMO signal processing module. The radios generate radio signals which are transmitted by the antenna system 702 and receive radio signals from the antenna system. In one embodiment each configurable antenna 100a-n is coupled to a single corresponding radio 710a-n. Although each radio is depicted as being in communication with a corresponding antenna element by a transmit and receive line, more or fewer such lines can be used. In addition, in one embodiment the radios can be controllably connected to various ones of the antennas by multiplexing or switching.
The signal processing module 712 implements the MIMO processing. MIMO processing is well known in the art and includes the processing to send information out over two or more radio channels on two or more of the antennas and to receive information via multiple radio channels and antennas as well. The signal processing module can combine the information received via the multiple antenna into a single data stream. The signal processing module may implement some or all of the media access control (MAC) functions for the radio system and control the operation of the radios so as to act as a MIMO system. In general, MAC functions operate to allocate available bandwidth on one or more physical channels on transmissions to and from the communication device. The MAC functions can allocate the available bandwidth between the various services depending upon the priorities and rules imposed by their QoS. In addition, the MAC functions operate to transport data between higher layers, such as TCP/IP, and a physical layer, such as a physical channel. The association of the functions described herein to specific functional blocks in the figure is only for ease of description. The various functions can be moved amongst the blocks, shared across blocks and grouped in various ways.
A central processing unit (CPU) 714 is in communication with the signal processor module 712. The CPU 714 may share some of the MAC functions with the signal processing module 712. In addition, the CPU can include a data traffic control module 715. Data traffic control can include, for example, routing associated with data traffic on a back haul connection 717, such as a DSL connection, and/or TCP/IP routing. A common or shared memory 716 which can be accessed by both the signal processing module and the CPU can be used. This allows for efficient transportation of data packets between the CPU and the signal processing module.
In one embodiment an antenna control module 721 is included in the CPU 714. The antenna control module determines the desired configuration for each of the antenna 100a-n and generates the control signals to be sent to the antenna system 702. In one embodiment, the antenna control module 721 operates above the MAC layer of the system. In response to the control signals, the configuration of one or more of the antennas is changed. In one embodiment, all of the antennas are configured in the same manner. For example, all of the antennas can be disposed in the same plane and all of the antennas can have their gain maximized in the same direction. Alternatively, each antenna can be individually configured. Further, the antennas can be configured into predetermined configurations.
The antenna control module 721 can be provided with direct or indirect communication to the antenna system 702, for example via control lines 706a-n. More or fewer control lines than those shown can be used. The control signals from the antenna control module 721 can be transmitted directly from the CPU to the antenna system 702 or can be transmitted via the other elements of the radio system 704 such as the signal processing module 712 or the radios 710a-n. Alternatively, the antenna control module 721 can reside on the signal processing module 712 or in one or more of the radios 710a-n.
In one embodiment the antenna control module 721 is provided with or has access to a signal quality metric for each received signal and/or transmitted signal on a communication link. The signal quality metric can be provided from the MIMO signal processing module 712. The MIMO signal processing module has the ability to take into account MIMO processing before providing a signal quality metric for a communication link between the wireless communication device 700 and a station with which the wireless communication device is communicating. For example, for each communication link the signal processing module can select from the MIMO techniques of receive diversity, maximum ratio combining, and spatial multiplexing each. The signal quality metric received from the signal processing module, for example, data through put or error rate, can vary based upon the MIMO technique being used. A signal quality metric, such as received signal strength, can also be supplied from one or more of the radios 710a-n. However, the radios would not take into account MIMO techniques, such as spatial multiplexing. The signal quality metric is used to determine or select the antenna configurations.
The above description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the invention. Numerous modifications to these embodiments would be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the principals defined herein can be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Thus, the invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiment shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principal and novel features disclosed herein.