1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to wireless communications. More specifically, the present invention relates to dual band antenna arrays.
2. Description of the Related Art
In wireless communications systems, there is an ever-increasing demand for higher data throughput and reduced interference that can disrupt data communications. A wireless link in an Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) 802.11 network can be susceptible to interference from other access points and stations, other radio transmitting devices, and changes or disturbances in the wireless link environment between an access point and remote receiving node. The interference may degrade the wireless link thereby forcing communication at a lower data rate. The interference may, in some instances, be sufficiently strong as to disrupt the wireless link altogether.
In one particular example, the wireless device 100 can be a handheld device that receives input through an input mechanism configured to be used by a user. The wireless device 100 may process the input and generate a corresponding RF signal. The generated RF signal may then be transmitted to one or more receiving nodes 110-140 via wireless links. Nodes 120-140 may receive data, transmit data, or transmit and receive data (i.e., a transceiver).
Wireless device 100 may also be an access point for communicating with one or more remote receiving nodes over a wireless link as might occur in an 802.11 wireless network. The wireless device 100 may receive data as a part of a data signal from a router connected to the Internet (not shown) or a wired network. The wireless device 100 may then convert and wirelessly transmit the data to one or more remote receiving nodes (e.g., receiving nodes 110-140). The wireless device 100 may also receive a wireless transmission of data from one or more of nodes 110-140, convert the received data, and allow for transmission of that converted data over the Internet via the aforementioned router or some other wired device. The wireless device 100 may also form a part of a wireless local area network (LAN) that allows for communications among two or more of nodes 110-140.
For example, node 110 can be a mobile device with WiFi capability. Node 110 (mobile device) may communicate with node 120, which can be a laptop computer including a WiFi card or wireless chipset. Communications by and between node 110 and node 120 can be routed through the wireless device 100, which creates the wireless LAN environment through the emission of RF and 802.11 compliant signals.
Receiving nodes 105-120 can be different types of devices which are configured to communicate at different frequencies. Receiving node 105 may operate at a first frequency or band and receiving node 110 may operate on a second frequency. Current wireless devices may include omnidirectional antennas that are vertically and horizontally polarized in a single band, but do not operate as omnidirectional in multiple bands. What is needed is a wireless device that includes omnidirectional and multi-polarization antennas which operates in dual band.
The present invention may include a wireless device having vertically and horizontally polarized antenna arrays, which concurrently operate at multiple frequencies. A horizontally polarized antenna array allows for the efficient distribution of RF energy in dual bands into a communications environment. The horizontally polarized antenna array may use selectable antenna elements, reflectors and/or directors that create and influence a particular radiation pattern (e.g., a substantially omnidirectional radiation pattern). A vertically polarized array can provide a high-gain dual band wireless environment such that one wireless environment does not interfere with other nearby wireless environments (e.g., between floors of an office building) and, further, avoids interference created by the other environments.
A first embodiment of an antenna system includes a horizontally polarized antenna array, a vertically polarized antenna array and a radio modulator/demodulator. The horizontally polarized antenna array can be configured to operate at a first frequency and a second frequency concurrently. The vertically polarized antenna array can be coupled to the horizontally polarized antenna array and configured to operate at the first frequency and the second frequency concurrently with the horizontally polarized antenna array. The radio modulator/demodulator can be configured to communicate a radio frequency signal with the horizontally polarized antenna array and vertically polarized antenna array.
Embodiments of the present invention allow for the use of wireless device having vertically and horizontally polarized antenna arrays, which concurrently operate at multiple frequencies. A horizontally polarized antenna array allows for the efficient distribution of RF energy in dual bands into a communications environment using, for example, selectable antenna elements, reflectors and/or directors that create and influence a particular radiation pattern (e.g., a substantially omnidirectional radiation pattern). A vertically polarized array can provide a high-gain dual band wireless environment such that one wireless environment does not interfere with other nearby wireless environments (e.g., between floors of an office building) and, further, avoids interference created by the other environments.
The data I/O module 205 of
The antenna selector 215 of
Antenna array 240 can include horizontal antenna element arrays and vertical antenna element arrays. The antenna element arrays can include a horizontal antenna array and a vertical antenna array, each with two or more antenna elements. The antenna elements can be configured to operate at different frequencies concurrently such as 2.4 GHZ and 5.0 GHz. Antenna array 240 can also include a reflector/controller array.
The reflector/directors 305, 310 and 315 can comprise passive elements (versus an active element radiating RF energy) and be configured to constrain the directional radiation pattern of dipoles formed by antenna elements of antenna array 230. The reflector/directors can be placed on either side of the substrate (e.g., top or bottom). Additional reflector/directors (not shown) can be included to further influence the directional radiation pattern of one or more of the modified dipoles.
Each of the reflectors/directors 305, 310 and 315 can be selectively coupled to a ground component within the horizontal antenna array of
By coupling together a plurality of the reflector elements, the elements may effectively become reflectors that reflect and otherwise shape and influence the RF pattern emitted by the active antenna elements (e.g., back toward a drive dipole resulting in a higher gain in that direction). RF energy emitted by an antenna array can be focused through these reflectors/directors to address particular nuances of a given wireless environment. Similarly, the parasitic elements (through decoupling) can be made effectively transparent to any emitted radiation pattern. Similar reflector systems can be implemented on other arrays (e.g., a vertically polarized array).
A similar implementation can be used with respect to a director element or series of elements that may collectively operate as a director. A director focuses energy from an RF source away from the source thereby increasing the gain of the antenna. Both reflectors and directors can be used to affect and influence the gain of the antenna structure. Implementation of the reflector/directors can occur on all antenna arrays in a wireless device, a single array, or on selected arrays.
The horizontally polarized antenna array 320 in
On the first side of the substrate (solid lines 405) in
On the second side of the substrate, depicted as dashed lines in
To minimize or reduce the size of the antenna array 320, each of the modified dipoles (e.g., the antenna element 405a and the portion 410a of the ground component) may incorporate one or more loading structures 420. For clarity of illustration, only the loading structures 420 for the modified dipole formed from antenna element 405a and portion 410a are numbered in
Antenna selector 215 of
A series of control signals can be used to bias each PIN diode. With the PIN diode forward biased and conducting a DC current, the PIN diode switch is on, and the corresponding antenna element is selected. With the diode reverse biased, the PIN diode switch is off. In this embodiment, the radio frequency feed port 335 and the PIN diodes of the antenna element selector are on the side of the substrate with the antenna elements 405a-405c, however, other embodiments separate the radio frequency feed port 335, the antenna element selector, and the antenna elements 405a-405c.
One or more light emitting diodes (LED) (not shown) can be coupled to the antenna element selector. The LEDs function as a visual indicator of which of the antenna elements 405a-405c is on or off. In one embodiment, an LED is placed in circuit with the PIN diode so that the LED is lit when the corresponding antenna element 410 is selected.
The antenna components (e.g., the antenna elements 405a-405c, the ground component 410, and the reflector/directors directors 305, 310 and 315) are formed from RF conductive material. For example, the antenna elements 405a-405c and the ground component 410 can be formed from metal or other RF conducting material. Rather than being provided on opposing sides of the substrate as shown in
The antenna components can be conformally mounted to a housing. The antenna element selector comprises a separate structure (not shown) from the antenna elements 405a-405c in such an embodiment. The antenna element selector can be mounted on a relatively small PCB, and the PCB can be electrically coupled to the antenna elements 405a-405c. In some embodiments, a switch PCB is soldered directly to the antenna elements 405a-405c.
Antenna elements 405a-405c can be selected to produce a radiation pattern that is less directional than the radiation pattern of a single antenna element. For example, selecting all of the antenna elements 405a-405c results in a substantially omnidirectional radiation pattern that has less directionality than the directional radiation pattern of a single antenna element. Similarly, selecting two or more antenna elements may result in a substantially omnidirectional radiation pattern. In this fashion, selecting a subset of the antenna elements 405a-405c, or substantially all of the antenna elements 405a-405c, may result in a substantially omnidirectional radiation pattern for the antenna array 320.
Reflector/directors 305, 310, 315 and 340 may further constrain the directional radiation pattern of one or more of the antenna elements 405a-405c in azimuth. Other benefits with respect to selectable configurations are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/041,145 filed Jan. 21, 2005, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,362,280 and entitled “System and Method for a Minimized Antenna Apparatus with Selectable Elements,” the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Vertical antenna array 645 includes two selectable vertical antennas 650 and 655 and can be coupled to the horizontal antenna array 600 by direct soldering at a trace, use of a jumper resistor, or some other manner. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated, the vertical antenna array 645 is coupled using slots positioned along an approximate center axis of the horizontal antenna array. Each vertical antenna is configured as an active element, is coupled to an RF feed port and can be selected using a PIN diode or other mechanism. The antenna elements of vertical antenna array 645 can operate at about 2.4 GHz.
Reflector/director array 605 includes reflectors 610, 615 and 620. Each of the reflectors/directors is passive elements and can be selected to form a connection with a ground plane portion to reflect a radiated RF signal. Reflector/director array 625 includes selectable reflectors/directors 630, 635 and 640 which operate similarly to the reflectors/directors of reflector/director array 605. Each of reflector/director arrays 605 and 625 can be coupled to the horizontal antenna array in such a position to reflect or direct RF radiation of vertical antenna array 645.
As illustrated in the exemplary embodiment of
Each antenna set in exemplary horizontal antenna array 700 can include one or more antenna elements that operate at 2.4 GHz, one or more antenna elements that operate at 5.0 GHz, and one or more passive reflector/director elements. In antenna element set 705, selectable antenna elements 735 may operate at 2.4 GHz and selectable antenna element 745 may operate at 2.4 GHz. Selectable element 740 can form a dipole with element 725 and selectable element 750 can form a dipole with element 745. Each of selectable elements 740 and 750 are passive elements that can be connected to ground. Selectable element 755 is passive element which can be connected to ground for use as a reflector/director.
Only the antenna elements, ground portions and reflector of antenna set 705 are labeled in the horizontal antenna array 700 for purposes of clarity of instruction. Each antenna set of horizontal antenna array 700 may include the labeled components of antenna set 705 or additional or fewer components (e.g., antenna elements, dipole ground elements, and reflectors/directors).
The horizontal antenna elements can be positioned on the horizontal antenna array 700 such that antenna elements that operate at 2.4 GHz are positioned on the inside (closer to the center of the PCB) of antenna elements that operate at 5.0 GHz. The antenna elements which radiate at 2.4 GHz can degrade the radiation signal of the 5.0 GHz antenna elements when the 2.4 GHz antenna elements are in the desired path of the radiation produced by the 5.0 GHz antenna elements. The smaller 5.0 GHz antenna elements have a negligible effect on the radiation of the 2.4 GHz antenna elements. Hence, when radiation is configured to go outward along the plane of the horizontal antenna array PCB, the 2.4 GHz antenna elements (dipole elements 735 and 740 in
Each antenna element within an antenna element array set can be coupled to a switch such that the antenna elements which operate at about 2.4 GHz and about 5.0 GHz can radiate concurrently. Antenna elements within multiple antenna sets can also be configured to operate simultaneously, such as opposing antenna sets 705 and 720, 710 and 725, and 715 and 730.
Horizontal antenna array 700 can be coupled to one or more vertical antenna arrays. The vertical antenna arrays can couple to one or more slits or apertures within the horizontal antenna array, wherein the slits or apertures can be positioned in various positions on the horizontal antenna array PCB board. The horizontal antenna array may include slits or apertures for receiving vertical antenna arrays that operate at 5.0 GHz, vertical antenna arrays that operate at 2.4 GHz, reflectors and directors, or a combination of these. Slits such as 765 in set 705 in
Reflector/director arrays 805, 815, 820, 830, 835, and 845 couple with horizontal antenna array 700 through slits as shown in
The 2.4 GHz vertical antenna arrays 905, 910, and 915 can be spaced on horizontal antenna array 700 between the 5.0 GHz vertical antenna arrays 810, 825 and 840, for example in an alternating order and spaced apart from the 5.0 GHz vertical antenna arrays by sixty degrees. For example, 5.0 GHz antenna array 815 can be coupled to horizontal antenna array 700 between 2.4 GHz antenna arrays 910 and 915 and directly across from 2.4 GHz antenna array 905.
The vertical antenna arrays 905, 910 and 915 may couple to a position-sensing element 920. The position sensing element 920 may determine the orientation of wireless device 105 as well as detect when the position of the wireless device 105 changes. In response to detecting the position of movement of wireless device 105, radiation patterns of the wireless device can be adjusted. A wireless device with a position sensor and adjustment of radiation patterns based on the position sensor are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/404,127 filed Mar. 13, 2009 and entitled “Adjustment of Radiation Patterns Utilizing a Position Sensor,” the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Wireless device 105 with a horizontal antenna array 700 and the vertical arrays illustrated in
With respect to the antenna arrays of
The antenna array 240 can be a dual polarized, multiple frequency, high-gain, omnidirectional antenna system. While perpendicular horizontal and vertical antenna arrays are disclosed, it is not necessary that the various arrays be perpendicular to one another along a particular axis (e.g., at a 90 degree intersection). Various array configurations are envisioned in the practice of the presently disclosed invention. For example, a vertical array can be coupled to another antenna array positioned at a 45 degree angle with respect to the vertical array. Utilizing various intersection angles with respect to the two or more arrays may further allow for the shaping of a particular RF emission pattern.
A different radio can be coupled to each of the different polarizations. The radiation patterns generated by the varying arrays (e.g., vertical with respect to horizontal) can be substantially similar with respect to a particular RF emission pattern. Alternatively, the radiation patterns generated by the horizontal and the vertical array can be substantially dissimilar versus one another.
An intermediate component can be introduced at a trace element interconnect of an antenna array such as a zero Ohm resistor jumper. The zero Ohm resistor jumper effectively operates as a wire link that can be easier to manage with respect to size, particular antenna array positioning and configuration and, further, with respect to costs that can be incurred during the manufacturing process versus. Direct soldering of the traces may also occur. The coupling of the two (or more) arrays via traces may allow for an RF feed to traverse two disparate arrays. For example, the RF feed may ‘jump’ the horizontally polarized array to the vertically polarized array. Such ‘jumping’ may occur in the context of various intermediate elements including a zero Ohm resistor and/or a connector tab as discussed herein.
The embodiments disclosed herein are illustrative. Various modifications or adaptations of the structures and methods described herein can become apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, embodiments of the present invention can be used with respect to MIMO wireless technologies that use multiple antennas as the transmitter and/or receiver to produce significant capacity gains over single-input and single-output (SISO) systems using the same bandwidth and transmit power. Such modifications, adaptations, and/or variations that rely upon the teachings of the present disclosure and through which these teachings have advanced the art are considered to be within the spirit and scope of the present invention. Hence, the descriptions and drawings herein should be limited by reference to the specific limitations set forth in the claims appended hereto.
The embodiments disclosed herein are illustrative. Various modifications or adaptations of the structures and methods described herein can become apparent to those skilled in the art. Such modifications, adaptations, and/or variations that rely upon the teachings of the present disclosure and through which these teachings have advanced the art are considered to be within the spirit and scope of the present invention. Hence, the descriptions and drawings herein should be limited by reference to the specific limitations set forth in the claims appended hereto.
The present application is a continuation and claims the priority benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/605,256, filed Oct. 23, 2009, which is a continuation in part and claims the priority benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/396,439 filed Mar. 2, 2009 and now U.S. Pat. No. 7,880,683, which is a continuation and claims the priority benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/646,136 filed Dec. 26, 2006 and now U.S. Pat. No. 7,498,996, which claims the priority benefit of U.S. provisional application 60/753,442 filed Dec. 23, 2005; U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/646,136 is also a continuation in part and claims the priority benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/041,145 filed Jan. 21, 2005 and now U.S. Pat. No. 7,362,280, which claims the priority benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 60/602,711 filed Aug. 18, 2004. The disclosure of each of the aforementioned applications is incorporated herein by reference.
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