A multi-port antenna structure for a wireless-enabled communications device in accordance with one or more embodiments of the invention includes a coupler-antenna having a first antenna port for transmitting electromagnetic signals and a second antenna port for receiving electromagnetic signals. The coupler-antenna is positioned on a chassis of the wireless enabled communications device to transmit energy between the chassis and the first and second antenna ports. Resonant modes of the chassis for one antenna port are orthogonal to resonant modes of the chassis for the other antenna port, such that the first and second antenna ports are isolated from each other.
Various embodiments of the invention are provided in the following detailed description. As will be realized, the invention is capable of other and different embodiments, and its several details may be capable of modifications in various respects, all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and description are to be regarded as illustrative in nature and not in a restrictive or limiting sense, with the scope of the application being indicated in the claims.
The present invention relates generally to wireless communications devices and, more particularly, to antennas used in such devices.
Many communications devices require antennas that are packaged within a small device or product. Common examples of such communications devices include portable communications products such as cellular handsets, personal digital assistants (PDAs), and wireless networking devices or data cards for personal computers (PCs). These devices often use a single antenna for both transmission and reception of wireless signals.
A conventional approach is to use a single port antenna for both transmit and receive functions. Because the local transmit signal is at a much higher power than the receive signals, a substantial amount of isolation between transmit and receive paths is needed, particularly because transmit and receive paths are connected at a common point at the antenna port. For time division duplexed architectures, the isolation is typically provided by a transmit/receive (TX/RX) select switch so that the antenna is only connected to the transmit circuitry during the transmit period, and only to the receive circuitry during the receive period. In the case of full duplex architectures, the isolation is obtained through use of a duplexer. In either case, because the transmit and receive frequency bands are slightly offset from each other, additional isolation is obtained by use of narrow band pass filters in particular in the receive circuitry.
An alternate approach is to use two separate antennas, one for transmit and one for receive, thereby relieving the isolation requirement of either the switch or duplexer because the transmit and receive paths are no longer connected at a common point. However, in general this is of limited utility for a handset or other portable wireless communication devices because the addition of a second antenna to the handset generally results in a two-antenna system where one antenna port is poorly isolated from the other due to electromagnetic coupling between the antennas and by coupling through a common ground structure. This coupling is problematic in handheld wireless devices for several reasons. First, at the desired frequencies of operation such as the cellular band (approximately 900 MHz), the size of a handset does not allow for antennas to be placed more than a fraction of a wavelength apart
Second, because consumer acceptance requires antennas to be embedded (or very low profile) such that the major portion of the antenna is provided by the phone chassis itself while the “antenna” may be better described as an exciter or a coupler-antenna, which transmits energy between the chassis and the antenna ports. Therefore, a two antenna approach may still in large part provide a common connection to a single antenna, i.e., the chassis. Furthermore, the operable bands of the antennas tend to overlap such that isolating the antennas by filtering (i.e., diplexing) is problematic. The bandwidth of a single antenna resonance is described by the antenna Q, and the number of poles characteristic of the resonators comprising the antenna system. In typical handsets, this is a two or 4-pole system, and does not have sufficient selectivity to isolate the receive and transmit band structure.
In applications where it is desirable to relax the isolation requirement of the switch, it is generally necessary to provide greater decoupling of the receive and transmit antennas. In accordance with one or more embodiments, a technique is provided utilizing a unique two-port antenna that may be embedded in a handset to achieve substantial isolation between ports thereby providing a means to realize the advantage of separate TX and RX ports. This method has the advantage that the requirement for a TX/RX switch or duplexer may be eliminated altogether or the performance requirements for these components may be relieved allowing for simpler or more cost-effective alternatives.
Many wireless communications protocols require use of multiple wireless channels in the same frequency band either to increase the information throughput or to increase the range or reliability of the wireless link. This requires use of multiple independent antennas. It is generally desirable to place the antennas as close together as possible to reduce the size of the antenna system. However placing antennas in close proximity can lead to undesirable effects of direct coupling between antenna ports and diminished independence, or increased correlation, between the radiation patterns of the antennas.
A basic understanding of antenna operation can be obtained by representation of the PCB and electronics as a rectangular conductor. The long dimension, referred to here as height, is typically around 10 cm and the short dimension, or width, is typically about half the height. This means that at cellular band frequencies near 900 MHz, the height is close to one-third the free-space wavelength (33 cm). An antenna may be fed from the end of the PCB such that the PCB ground plane acts as a counterpoise to the antenna. However the antenna may be allowed to extend no more than one or two centimeters from the counterpoise to meet the goals for overall size and appearance of the handset. Thus, the length of the antenna in terms of the distance it extends from the counterpoise is a very small fraction of a wavelength such that, taken by itself, the performance of the antenna would be severely limited by the small size. This is in fact not a limitation because the antenna can couple to the counterpoise such that the two together function as a larger antenna. The antenna can accordingly be described as an exciter or coupler-antenna, which transmits energy between the counterpoise and the antenna ports.
If a second antenna is added to operate at the same frequency (or nearly the same frequency as in the case of TX/RX sub-bands), the antenna ports may not be isolated from each other because both antennas are coupled to the common counterpoise and thereby coupled together. This is true because without careful design to avoid it, both antennas will excite the dominant resonant mode of the counterpoise at the frequency of operation. In the case of the cellular frequencies, this is expected to be the half-wave resonance of the long dimension of the counterpoise as this is the lowest frequency radiation mode.
Famdie et al. (Famdie, Celestin Tamgue; Schroeder, Werner L.; Solbach, Klaus, “Numerical Analysis Of Characteristic Modes On The Chassis Of Mobile Phones,” Antennas And Propagation, 2006. EuCAP 2006. First European Conference, vol., no., pp. 1-6, 6-10 Nov. 2006) have identified the first four characteristic modes for a rectangular sheet conductor of dimensions 100 mm length by 40 mm width as depicted in
Given that the next higher modes are approximately twice the frequency of the first characteristic mode, the first mode is by far the most effective antenna mode and the easiest to excite. This mode is effectively excited by an antenna positioned at the end of the counterpoise. If two antennas are positioned at the end of the counterpoise, then both tend to couple to the same fundamental characteristic mode and consequently a signal applied at one antenna port will tend to be coupled to the second antenna port. What is needed to avoid the port to port coupling therefore is an antenna system that will excite different resonant modes of the counterpoise depending on which port is used.
One example of such an antenna is shown diagrammatically in
The common mode is effective for driving only counterpoise modes 1 or 2 (shown in
The resonant frequencies of the antenna may be manipulated by adjusting the electrical length from the antenna ports to the ends of the antenna, with a longer electrical length corresponding to a lower resonant frequency. The amount of isolation between ports may be manipulated by adjusting the electrical length of the section between the two ports. In this way isolation between ports may be obtained at a particular desired frequency. Multiple resonant frequencies may be obtained by using multiple branches (having multiple electrical lengths) for the sections of antenna beyond the ports.
Details of the shape of the antenna copper pattern are shown in
To reduce the physical size of the antenna, the shapes are provided with narrow widths and meandering paths nearer to the feed ports for inductive loading and broader widths at the ends for capacitive top loading, both with the purpose of making the antenna electrically longer. The branches on opposite sides of the antenna are of similar geometry, but unequal lengths. The difference in length is to generally optimize the impedance matching for the respective ports, which have different frequency requirements. Port 1 is the point of connection for the transmit circuitry, which uses the lower portions of the GSM bands, 880 to 915 MHz and 1710 to 1785 MHz. Port 2 is the point of connection for the receive circuitry, which uses the upper portions of the GSM bands, 925 to 960 MHz and 1805 to 1880 MHz.
The portion between the antenna branches is meandered to increase electrical length. The electrical length and inductance of this section has a large effect on the amount of isolation obtained between ports and a lesser effect on shifting the frequency response of the antenna or tuning. In contrast, the lengths of the antenna branches strongly affect tuning, but have only a weak affect on the isolation between ports. Thus, between these two adjustments, the amount of isolation and the frequency at which it occurs can be manipulated for particular design requirements.
Similarly, in terms of modal behavior, the lengths of the antenna branches primarily affect the frequency at which the antenna couples to the resonant modes of the counterpoise, and so affects tuning. The characteristic of the antenna section between the branches has a strong affect on the modal content of the antenna and therefore the modal excitation of the counterpoise. When the length and shape of this section are changed, it affects the proportion of the common mode relative to the differential mode on the antenna. When the appropriate amount of differential excitation is achieved, the modal excitation of the counterpoise from one port is orthogonal to that produced by the other port, and port to port isolation is obtained.
The antenna can be used with a matching network to generally optimize the antenna input impedance match to transmit and receive circuitry. For this antenna, a three component lumped element matching network is used for both receive and transmit. Graphs of the VSWR measurements for the antenna plus matching networks are provided as
While multiple frequency operation may be obtained by the use of multiple antenna branches, the complexity of the antenna is increased with the number of frequency bands and the required antenna size may need to increase. Alternately, the electrical lengths of one or more branches may be made adjustable so that antenna may be dynamically tuned to operate in a selected frequency band. This is particularly useful for devices that may operate in different frequency bands at different periods of time, but do not simultaneously operate at more than one frequency band at any one time.
Cellular handsets are an example of devices that generally require multiband functionality, but operate only within a single frequency band at any given time.
The configuration of
It is to be understood that although the invention has been described above in terms of particular embodiments, the foregoing embodiments are provided as illustrative only, and do not limit or define the scope of the invention.
Various other embodiments, including but not limited to the following, are also within the scope of the claims. For example, the elements or components of the various antenna structures described herein may be further divided into additional components or joined together to form fewer components for performing the same functions.
Having described preferred embodiments of the present invention, it should be apparent that modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/644,718 filed Dec. 22, 2009, which claims priority to U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/140,370 filed Dec. 23, 2008, both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130169491 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12644718 | Dec 2009 | US |
Child | 13757192 | US |