This relates generally to electronic devices, and, more particularly, to wireless communications circuitry and antennas for electronic devices.
Electronic devices such as portable computers and cellular telephones are often provided with wireless communications capabilities. For example, electronic devices may use long-range wireless communications circuitry such as cellular telephone circuitry and WiMax (IEEE 802.16) circuitry. Electronic devices may also use short-range wireless communications circuitry such as WiFi® (IEEE 802.11) circuitry and Bluetooth® circuitry.
It can be challenging to implement antenna structures in wireless electronic devices. For example, portable electronic devices are often limited in size, which may restrict the amount of space available for implementing antenna structures. Some portable electronic devices contain conductive structures such as conductive housing structures, display structures, and printed circuit boards. There is often a desire to provide antennas that cover a variety of communications bands, but this can be difficult in environments where space is limited and in which antenna structures are located in the vicinity of conductive structures.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide improved antenna structures for wireless electronic devices.
Electronic devices may be provided that contain wireless communications circuitry. The wireless communications circuitry may include radio-frequency transceiver circuitry coupled to an adjustable antenna. The radio-frequency transceiver circuitry may be used in transmitting and receiving radio-frequency signals through the adjustable antenna.
A control circuit in the electronic device may be used to make dynamic adjustments to the antenna to support operation in different antenna modes. For example, the control circuit may be used to selectively open and close switches in the antenna to tune the antenna as a function of which communications band is being used by the radio-frequency transceiver circuitry. If desired, antenna tuning arrangements may be implemented using passive circuits. For example, an adjustable antenna may include passive circuits such as resonant circuits that change impedance at different operating frequencies and thereby reconfigure the antenna to support different antenna modes at different operating frequencies.
The adjustable antenna may contain conductive antenna structures such as conductive electronic device housing structures. The conductive antenna structures may include a peripheral conductive housing member, internal housing structures, conductive portions of electrical components such as connectors, displays, speakers, microphones, parts of printed circuit boards, or other conductive structures. Electrical components such as switches and resonant circuits may be used in configuring the conductive structures of the adjustable antenna so that they operate as different types of antennas in different antenna modes.
Further features of the invention, its nature and various advantages will be more apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
Electronic devices may be provided with wireless communications circuitry. The wireless communications circuitry may include adjustable antenna structures. The adjustable antenna structures may be used to implement one or more adjustable antennas. The adjustable antenna structures may be used in any suitable electronic equipment. The use of adjustable antennas in electronic devices such as portable electronic devices is sometimes described herein as an illustrative example. If desired, the adjustable antenna structures may be implemented in other electronic equipment.
The adjustable antenna structures may be adjusted using actively configured components such as switches. With this type of arrangement, control circuitry within the electronic device may issue control signals depending on which mode of operation is desired. If, for example, a baseband processor, microprocessor, or other control circuitry within the electronic device desires to place the device into a mode in which wireless signals can be handled in a first frequency range, the control circuitry may issue control commands that place one or more switches into a first state. If it is desired to transmit and receive wireless signals in a second frequency range, the control circuitry may issue control commands that place the one or more switches into a second state. The states of the switches determine which portions of the conductive antenna structures are electrically connected to each other, thereby configuring the conductive antenna structures to operate in different antenna modes in different frequency ranges.
If desired, some or all of the antenna structures in the electronic device can be configured using circuitry that exhibits a frequency-dependent impedance. The frequency-dependent-impedance circuitry, which is sometimes referred to as resonant circuitry or filter circuitry, may be coupled between one or more conductive structures that form the antenna structures. When operating at some frequencies, a resonant circuit may exhibit a relatively low impedance and may couple certain antenna structures together. When operating at other frequencies, the resonant circuit may exhibit a relatively high impedance and may electrically isolate those antenna structures. The frequencies of operation at which the resonant circuits exhibit high and low impedances can be configured to allow the adjustable antenna to operate in different antenna modes in different desired communications bands.
Combinations of these arrangements may also be used. For example, antenna structures may be formed that include actively adjusted switches and passively adjusted resonant circuits. At different operating frequencies, the resonant circuits will exhibit different impedances, thereby selectively connecting and disconnecting conductive antenna structures. At the same time, control circuitry may be used to generate control signals for switches that selectively connect and disconnect conductive antenna structures from each other. The antenna structures in device 10 may therefore be adjusted to cover a desired set of frequency bands using passive antenna adjustments (e.g., frequency-dependent adjustments to an antenna by virtue of inclusion of frequency-dependent-impedance circuitry among conductive antenna structures) and/or by using active adjustments to switching circuitry that is coupled between conductive antenna structures.
An illustrative electronic device of the type that may be provided with an antenna that is formed from conductive antenna structures that are coupled together using resonant circuits and/or actively controlled switching circuitry is shown in
Device 10 may include a housing such as housing 12. Housing 12, which may sometimes be referred to as a case, may be formed of plastic, glass, ceramics, fiber composites, metal (e.g., stainless steel, aluminum, etc.), other suitable materials, or a combination of these materials. In some situations, parts of housing 12 may be formed from dielectric or other low-conductivity material. In other situations, housing 12 or at least some of the structures that make up housing 12 may be formed from metal elements.
Device 10 may, if desired, have a display such as display 14. Display 14 may, for example, be a touch screen that incorporates capacitive touch electrodes or that incorporates a touch sensor formed using other types of touch sensor technology (e.g., acoustic touch sensor technology, light-based touch sensor technology, pressure-sensor-based touch sensor technology, resistive touch sensor technology, etc.). Display 14 may include image pixels formed from light-emitting diodes (LEDs), organic LEDs (OLEDs), plasma cells, electronic ink elements, liquid crystal display (LCD) components, or other suitable image pixel structures. A cover layer such as a layer of cover glass may cover the surface of display 14. Portions of display 14 such as peripheral regions 201 may be inactive and may be devoid of image pixel structures. Portions of display 14 such as rectangular central portion 20A (bounded by dashed line 20) may correspond to the active part of display 14. In active display region 20A, an array of image pixels may be used to display images for a user.
The cover glass layer that covers display 14 may have openings such as a circular opening for button 16 and a speaker port opening such as speaker port opening 18 (e.g., for an ear speaker for a user). Device 10 may also have other openings (e.g., openings in display 14 and/or housing 12 for accommodating volume buttons, ringer buttons, sleep buttons, and other buttons, openings for an audio jack, data port connectors, removable media slots, etc.).
Housing 12 may include a peripheral conductive member such as peripheral conductive housing member 17. Peripheral conductive member 17 may be a bezel that runs around the upper edge of housing 12 around some or all of the periphery of display 14 or may have other shapes. For example, some or all of conductive member 17 may form sidewalls for device 10. The sidewalls may have vertical surfaces that are perpendicular to the surface of display 14 or may have curved or straight surfaces that are oriented at non-perpendicular angles with respect to the planar surface of display 14. With one suitable arrangement, which is sometimes described herein as an example, peripheral conductive member 17 may be formed from a metal band-shaped member that surrounds substantially all of the periphery of rectangular display 14. Peripheral conductive housing member 17 and other conductive structures in device 10 may be formed from conductive materials such as metal. For example, conductive peripheral housing member 17 may be formed from a metal such as aluminum or stainless steel (as examples).
As shown in
Conductive antenna structures in device 10 (i.e., the conductive structures that are sometimes referred to as forming an antenna or antennas in device 10) may be formed from conductive portions of housing 12 such as one or more portions of peripheral conductive member 17, from one or more internal conductive housing structures such as internal conductive frame members and/or conductive planar structures such as patterned conductive sheet metal structures and associated conductive components (sometimes referred to as forming a midplate member or midplate structures), from conductive traces such as metal traces on rigid printed circuit boards, from conductive traces such as metal traces on flexible printed circuit boards (i.e., “flex circuits” formed from patterned metal traces on flexible sheets of polymer such as polyimide sheets), from conductive traces on plastic carriers (e.g., metal traces on molded plastic carriers), from wires, from patterned metal foil, from conductive structures on other substrates, from other patterned metal members, from conductive portions of electrical components (e.g., switches, display components, connector components, microphones, speakers, cameras, radio-frequency shielding cans, integrated circuits, or other electrical components), from other suitable conductive structures, or from combinations of one or more such conductive structures. In some illustrative arrangements for device 10, which are sometimes described herein as an example, at least some of the conductive structures that form the antenna structures include conductive housing structures such as portions of conductive peripheral housing member 17 and some of the conductive structures that form the antenna structures include ground plane structures such as a conductive housing midplate member, printed circuit board ground structures, and other conductive structures (e.g., conductive portions of electronic components such as connectors, microphones, speakers, displays, cameras, etc.).
Antennas may be located along the edges of device 10, on the rear or front of device 10, as extending elements or attachable structures, or elsewhere in device 10. With one suitable arrangement, which is sometimes described herein as an example, device 10 may be provided with one or more antennas at lower end 24 of housing 12 and one or more antennas at upper end 22 of housing 12. Locating antennas at opposing ends of device 10 (i.e., at the narrower end regions of display 14 and device 10 when device 10 has an elongated rectangular shape of the type shown in
If desired, a first cellular telephone antenna (first cellular telephone antenna structures) may be located in region 24 and a second cellular telephone antenna (second cellular telephone antenna structures) may be located in region 22. Antenna structures for handling satellite navigation signals such as Global Positioning System signals or wireless local area network signals such as IEEE 802.11 (WiFi®) signals or Bluetooth® signals may also be provided in regions 22 and/or 24 (either as separate additional antennas or as parts of the first and second cellular telephone antennas). Antenna structures may also be provided in regions 22 and/or 24 to handle WiMax (IEEE 802.16) signals.
In regions 22 and 24, openings may be formed between conductive housing structures and printed circuit boards and other conductive electrical components that make up device 10. These openings may be filled with air, plastic, or other dielectrics. Conductive housing structures and other conductive structures may serve as a ground plane for the antennas in device 10. The openings in regions 22 and 24 may serve as slots in open or closed slot antennas, may serve as a central dielectric region that is surrounded by a conductive path of materials in a loop antenna, may serve as a space that separates an antenna resonating element such as a strip antenna resonating element or an inverted-F antenna resonating element such as an inverted-F antenna resonating element formed from part of conductive peripheral housing member 17 from the ground plane, may serve two or more of these functions (e.g., in antenna structures that are configured to operate in different configurations at different frequencies), or may otherwise serve as part of antenna structures formed in regions 22 and 24.
Antennas may be formed in regions 22 and 24 that are identical (i.e., antennas may be formed in regions 22 and 24 that each cover the same set of cellular telephone bands or other communications bands of interest). Due to layout constraints or other design constraints, it may not be desirable to use identical antennas. Rather, it may be desirable to implement the antennas in regions 22 and 24 using different designs. For example, the antennas in regions 22 and 24 may be implemented using different antennas types, may be implemented using designs that exhibit different gains, may be implemented so that one end of device 10 houses a fixed antenna while the opposing end of device 10 houses an adjustable antenna, and/or may be implemented using designs that cover different frequency ranges.
Device 10 may use any suitable number of antennas. For example, device 10 may have one antenna, two or more antennas, three or more antennas, four or more antennas, or five or more antennas. Device 10 may, for example, include at least a first antenna such as a cellular telephone antenna in region 22 and a second antenna such as a cellular telephone antenna in region 24. Additional antennas (e.g., local area network antennas, a satellite navigation antenna, etc.) may be formed in region 22 and/or region 24 or other suitable portions of device 10.
A schematic diagram of a system in which electronic device 10 may operate is shown in
Device 10 may include control circuitry such as storage and processing circuitry 28. Storage and processing circuitry 28 may include storage such as hard disk drive storage, nonvolatile memory (e.g., flash memory or other electrically-programmable-read-only memory configured to form a solid state drive), volatile memory (e.g., static or dynamic random-access-memory), etc. Processing circuitry in storage and processing circuitry 28 and other control circuits such as control circuits in wireless communications circuitry 34 may be used to control the operation of device 10. This processing circuitry may be based on one or more microprocessors, microcontrollers, digital signal processors, baseband processors, power management units, audio codec chips, application specific integrated circuits, etc.
Storage and processing circuitry 28 may be used to run software on device 10, such as internet browsing applications, voice-over-internet-protocol (VoIP) telephone call applications, email applications, media playback applications, operating system functions, etc. To support interactions with external equipment such as base station 21, storage and processing circuitry 28 may be used in implementing communications protocols. Communications protocols that may be implemented using storage and processing circuitry 28 include internet protocols, wireless local area network protocols (e.g., IEEE 802.11 protocols—sometimes referred to as WiFi®), protocols for other short-range wireless communications links such as the Bluetooth® protocol, IEEE 802.16 (WiMax) protocols, cellular telephone protocols such as the Long Term Evolution (LTE) protocol, Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) protocol, Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) protocol, and Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS) protocol, etc.
Circuitry 28 may be configured to implement control algorithms for device 10. The control algorithms may be used to control radio-frequency switching circuitry, transceiver circuitry, and other device resources. The control algorithms may also be used to activate and deactivate transmitters and receivers, to tune transmitters and receivers to desired frequencies, to compare measured device operating parameters to predetermined criteria, to adjust switching circuitry in antenna structures, etc.
In some scenarios, circuitry 28 may be used in gathering sensor signals and signals that reflect the quality of received signals (e.g., received pilot signals, received paging signals, received voice call traffic, received control channel signals, received data traffic, etc.). Examples of signal quality measurements that may be made in device 10 include bit error rate measurements, signal-to-noise ratio measurements, measurements on the amount of power associated with incoming wireless signals, channel quality measurements based on received signal strength indicator (RSSI) information (RSSI measurements), channel quality measurements based on received signal code power (RSCP) information (RSCP measurements), reference symbol received power (RSRP measurements), channel quality measurements based on signal-to-interference ratio (SINR) and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) information (SINR and SNR measurements), channel quality measurements based on signal quality data such as Ec/lo or Ec/No data (Ec/lo and Ec/No measurements), etc. This information and other data may be used in controlling how the wireless circuitry of device 10 is configured and may be used in otherwise controlling and configuring device 10. For example, signal quality information, information received from base station 21, and other information may be used in determining which communications bands are to be used in handling wireless signals for device 10. As device 10 communicates at different frequencies, the antenna structures in device 10 may be used to cover appropriate communications bands. For example, the resonant circuits in the antenna structures may exhibit different impedances at different frequencies so that the configuration of the antenna structures in device 10 changes as a function of frequency and/or the control circuitry in device 10 may generate control signals to adjust one or more switches and thereby dynamically configure the antenna structures to cover desired communications bands.
Input-output circuitry 30 may be used to allow data to be supplied to device 10 and to allow data to be provided from device 10 to external devices. Input-output circuitry 30 may include input-output devices 32. Input-output devices 32 may include touch screens, buttons, joysticks, click wheels, scrolling wheels, touch pads, key pads, keyboards, microphones, speakers, tone generators, vibrators, cameras, sensors, light-emitting diodes and other status indicators, data ports, etc. A user can control the operation of device 10 by supplying commands through input-output devices 32 and may receive status information and other output from device 10 using the output resources of input-output devices 32.
Wireless communications circuitry 34 may include radio-frequency (RF) transceiver circuitry formed from one or more integrated circuits, power amplifier circuitry, low-noise input amplifiers, passive RF components, one or more antennas, and other circuitry for handling RF wireless signals.
Wireless communications circuitry 34 may include satellite navigation system receiver circuitry such as Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver circuitry 35 (e.g., for receiving satellite navigation system signals at 1575 MHz). Transceiver circuitry 36 may handle 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands for WiFi® (IEEE 802.11) communications and may handle the 2.4 GHz Bluetooth® communications band. Circuitry 34 may use cellular telephone transceiver circuitry 38 for handling wireless communications in cellular telephone bands such as bands at 700 MHz, 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, 1900 MHz, 2100 MHz, 2300 MHz, and other cellular telephone bands of interest. Wireless communications circuitry 34 can include circuitry for other short-range and long-range wireless links if desired (e.g., WiMax circuitry, etc.). Wireless communications circuitry 34 may, for example, include, wireless circuitry for receiving radio and television signals, paging signals, etc. In WiFi® and Bluetooth® links and other short-range wireless links, wireless signals are typically used to convey data over tens or hundreds of feet. In cellular telephone links and other long-range links, wireless signals are typically used to convey data over thousands of feet or miles.
Wireless communications circuitry 34 may include antennas 40. Antennas 40 may be coupled to transceiver circuitry such as receiver 35, transceiver 36, and transceiver 38 using transmission lines 37. Transmission lines 37 may include coaxial cables, microstrip transmission lines, stripline transmission lines, and/or other transmission line structures. Matching circuits may be interposed within the transmission lines (e.g., to match transmission line impedance to transceiver circuitry impedance and/or antenna impedance). Antennas 40 may be formed using any suitable types of antenna. For example, antennas 40 may include antennas with resonating elements that are formed from loop antenna structures, patch antenna structures, inverted-F antenna structures, closed and open slot antenna structures, planar inverted-F antenna structures, helical antenna structures, strip antennas, monopoles, dipoles, hybrids of these designs, etc. Different types of antennas may be used for different bands and combinations of bands. For example, one type of antenna may be used in forming a local wireless link antenna (e.g., for handling WiFi® traffic or other wireless local area network traffic) and antennas of one or more other types may be used in forming a remote wireless link antenna (e.g., for handling cellular network traffic such as voice calls and data sessions). As described in connection with
As shown in
Control signals may optionally be provided to components 42 from control circuitry such as storage and processing circuitry 28 using paths 44. Paths 44 and 46 may be formed from patterned traces on substrates such as plastic carriers, flexible printed circuit substrates, rigid printed circuit substrates, patterned metal foil, conductive device structures such as conductive housing structures (e.g., all or part of conductive peripheral housing member 17 of
One or more electrical components such as components 42 may be used in configuring antenna structures 40 to cover operating frequencies of interest. Components 42 may be implemented using passive circuits (i.e., resonant circuits) and/or switches. When implemented using switches, control circuitry in device 10 such as storage and processing circuitry 28 (e.g., a baseband processor or other processor) may be used in issuing control commands for the switches on paths 44. The control circuitry may, for example, issue a first set of one or more control signals to open and/or close one or more switches 42 for a first mode of operation, may issue a second set of one or more control signals to open and/or close one or more switches 42 for a second mode of operation, and may issue additional sets of control signals to place switches 42 in desired states for supporting optional additional mode of operation. When configured for the first mode of operation, antenna structures 40 may cover a first set of frequencies (e.g., a first set of cellular telephone communications bands or other desired frequency range(s)). When configured for the second mode of operation, antenna structures 40 may cover a second set of frequencies. Additional sets of operating frequencies (i.e., one or more communications bands) may be covered by configuring switches 42 for its optional additional modes of operation.
When implementing components 42 using passive circuitry (i.e., resonant circuits that do not include switches), components 42 may reconfigure antenna structures 40 by virtue of their frequency-dependent impedance. Combinations of components 42 based on switches and based on passive (non-switching) circuits may be provided to configure antenna 40 across frequencies if desired. Because antenna 40 can change its configuration during operation, a potentially wider range of operating frequencies can be covered than would be possible using a fixed (non-switching and frequency-independent) antenna arrangement. This may allow antenna 40 to be implemented in a relatively compact region of device 10 and may allow antenna 40 to be implemented in the vicinity of conductive device structures (e.g., adjacent to peripheral conductive housing member 17, ground plane structures in device 10, or other conductive structures). Antenna 40 may also be formed using portions of member 17 or other conductive device structures (e.g., ground plane structures, electrical components, etc.).
The conductive structures of ground plane G may be formed from sheet metal structures (e.g., a single-part of multi-part planar midplate member with optional stamped features that is welded between left and right portions of member 17), from printed circuit board traces, from housing frame members, from conductive display structures, from conductive structures associated with peripheral conductive housing member 17 such as portion 17G, from conductive materials in electronic components that are coupled to ground plane G, or other conductive structures.
Dielectric gaps between respective conductive antenna structures such as gap 19-1 in conductive member 17 of
Dielectric-filled region (antenna opening) 78 may be filled with plastic (e.g., plastic that is insert molded over patterned sheet metal structures in ground plane G), air, glass, ceramic, or other dielectric materials. There may be one or more components such as component 42 of
A circuit diagram of an illustrative switch-based configuration for component 42 is shown in
As shown in
A graph in which the impedance Z for a resonant circuit such as resonant circuit 42 of
Antenna 40 may be based on antenna structures of any suitable type such as structures for implementing a patch antenna, an inverted-F antenna, a planar inverted-F antenna, an open or closed slot antenna, a monopole antenna, a dipole antennas, a coil antenna, an L-shaped antenna, or other suitable antenna.
An illustrative inverted-F antenna is shown in
Another illustrative configuration that may be used for inverted-F antenna 60 is shown in
Antenna structures that form one or more inverted-F antenna arrangements such as the antenna structures of
If desired, antenna 40 may be formed using a design that incorporates antenna structures associated with multiple antennas. Antenna 40 may, for example, be formed from a first antenna of a first design and a second antenna of a second design that are coupled together using one or more components 42 (e.g., one or more switches and/or resonant circuits). The first and second antenna designs may be selected from antenna designs such as patch antenna designs, monopole designs, dipole designs, inverted-F antenna designs, planar inverted-F antenna designs, open slot designs, closed slot antenna designs, loop antenna designs, or other suitable antenna designs.
As an illustrative example, antenna 40 may be formed from at least a first antenna such as an inverted-F antenna and at least a second antenna such as a slot antenna.
An illustrative slot antenna is shown in
An antenna feed for slot antenna 74 may be formed using positive antenna feed terminal 70 and ground antenna feed terminal 72.
The frequency response of an antenna is related to the size and shapes of the conductive structures in the antenna. Inverted-F antennas of the type shown in
As a result of this type of behavior, slot antennas tend to be more compact than inverted-F antennas for a given operating frequency. For a typical slot where slot length SL>> slot width SW, the length of a slot antenna will tend to be about half of the length of an inverted-F antenna that is configured to handle signals at the same frequency. When the size of inverted-F antenna length L and slot length SL are equal, the slot antenna will therefore be able to handle signals at approximately twice the frequency of the inverted-F antenna.
These attributes of inverted-F and slot antennas can be exploited to form a multi-band antenna such as an antenna having both inverted-F and slot antenna portions in which the inverted-F antenna portion of the antenna is used in transmitting and receiving low-band signals at a given frequency and in which the slot antenna portion of the antenna is used in transmitting and receiving high-band signals at approximately twice the given frequency (or other appropriate higher frequency). Components 42 such as switches and/or resonant circuits can be used to couple the conductive antenna structures that form the inverted-F and slot antenna portions of the multi-band antenna. The number of components 42 that are included in the antenna may be selected to ensure that the antenna can be operated in all desired frequency bands. If, for example, the antenna is to be operated in a single low band and a single high band, a single component 42 may suffice to allow the antenna to transition between a low band (inverted-F) operating regime and a high band (slot) operating regime. More components 42 may be used in scenarios in which the antenna is used to cover additional communications bands of interest (e.g., multiple inverted-F modes and/or multiple slot antenna modes).
An illustrative configuration for antenna 40 that includes inverted-F (e.g., planar inverted-F or non-planar inverted-F) and slot antenna portions is shown in
The conductive structures (paths) in antenna 40 such as segments 64, 68, 86, 84, and 82 may be used in forming both inverted-F and slot antennas. The inverted-F characteristic of antenna 40 can be exploited at low-band operating frequencies (i.e., frequencies where the length of segment 86 is about a quarter of a wavelength). In this operating frequency range, the control circuitry of device 10 may actively open switch 42 to form an open circuit at the right-hand end of opening 78 (placing antenna 40 of
As shown in
Antenna 40 may include conductive structures that serve as one or more inverted-F antennas. For example, portion LB1 of peripheral conductive member 17-1 may serve as the main antenna resonating element branch of a first inverted-F antenna, feed path 68 may serve as the feed branch of the first inverted-F antenna, and path 64 may serve as a short circuit branch for the first inverted-F antenna. Portion LB2 of peripheral conductive member 17-1 may serve as the main antenna resonating element branch of a second inverted-F antenna, feed path 68 may serve as the feed branch of the second inverted-F antenna, and path 64 may serve as a short circuit branch for the second inverted-F antenna. In configurations in which branch LB1 is longer than branch LB2, the first inverted-F antenna may resonate in a first communications band (e.g. a first low band) and the second inverted-F antenna may resonating in a second communications band (e.g., a second low band). The second communications band may cover frequencies that are higher than the first communications band.
The structures of antenna 40 may include components 42 such as resonant circuits that exhibit a frequency-dependent impedance and/or components 42 such as switches that are controlled by application of control signals from the control circuitry within device 10. The states of components 42 may be used in configuring the structures of antenna 40 to operate as different types of antennas at different operating modes. For example, in a first range of frequencies (i.e., a lower frequency range), one or more of components 42 may form open circuits (i.e., because the impedance of one or more resonant-circuit components is high and/or one or more switch-type components have been placed in an open state). In a second range of frequencies (i.e., a higher frequency range), one or more of components 42 may form closed circuits (i.e., because the impedance of one or more resonant-circuit components is low and/or because one or more switch-type components have been placed in a closed state).
Antennas such as antenna 40 of
Consider, as an example, a configuration for antenna 40 in which components 42-1, 42-2, and 42-4 are open and component 42-3 is closed (or antenna 40 is using an arrangement in which short circuit path 64 is devoid of interposed components 42). In this configuration, gaps 19-1 and 19-2 in peripheral conductive housing member form open circuits in peripheral conductive housing member 17 and electrically isolate peripheral conductive housing member segment 17-1 from segments 17-2 and 17-3. The upper portions of ground plane structures G are separated from member 17-1 by dielectric-filled opening 78. Arm LB1 therefore forms the main branch of a first inverted-F antenna and arm LB2 forms the main branch of a second inverted-F antenna in antenna 40. The first and second inverted-F portions of antenna 40 may each contribute to antenna coverage in a different communications band.
Antenna 40 may operate in slot antenna modes of operation at different operating frequencies. Consider, as an example, a scenario in which component 42-1 is closed (exhibits a low impedance) and bridges gap 19-1, component 42-4 is closed (exhibits a low impedance) and bridges gap 19-2, and component 42-3 is open (exhibits a high impedance). Optional path 92 may, if desired, be omitted or component 42-2 can be placed in an open state (or operated at a frequency at which component 42-2 exhibits a high impedance). In this mode of operation, a slot antenna with an inner periphery HB1 may be formed.
In a second slot antenna mode of operation, components 42-1 and 42-3 may be closed (low impedance state). Component 42-2 may be open or operating in a high-impedance state due to the operating frequency of the antenna. (Path 92 may also be omitted from antenna 40, if desired.) In this second slot mode of operation, antenna 40 functions as a slot antenna with inner perimeter HB2. The size of perimeter HB2 is smaller than the size of perimeter HB1, so antenna 40 will resonate in a higher frequency band in the second slot mode of operation than in the first slot mode of operation.
If it is desired to operate antenna 40 in yet a higher frequency band, switch 42-2 may be closed (actively or passively by virtue of operating antenna 40 at a higher frequency), thereby forming a third slot having inner perimeter HB3. The size of inner perimeter HB3 is smaller than that of perimeter HB2, causing the third slot to resonate at a higher frequency band than the second slot.
If desired, an antenna of the type shown in
This example, in which two inverted-F antenna operating modes and three slot antenna modes are supported by the conductive structures and components 42 of antenna 40 is merely illustrative. Fewer antenna modes or more antenna modes may be supported in antenna 40 if desired. Moreover, the frequencies of coverage may be adjusted by selecting appropriate lengths for the perimeter and main branches of the antenna slots and antenna resonating elements of antenna 40. Passive components such as resonating element components may be used in forming low-impedance and high-impedance paths at differing operating frequencies and/or switch-based components may be actively open and closed as appropriate by control circuitry in device 10 (i.e., to actively place antenna 40 in desired antenna modes depending on which frequency ranges are to be covered during operation of device).
The foregoing is merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
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