This relates generally to electronic devices, and, more particularly, to antennas in electronic devices.
Electronic devices such as portable computers and handheld electronic devices are often provided with wireless communications capabilities. For example, electronic devices may have wireless communications circuitry to communicate using cellular telephone bands and to support communications with satellite navigation systems and wireless local area networks.
It can be difficult to incorporate antennas and other electrical components successfully into an electronic device. Some electronic devices are manufactured with small form factors, so space for components is limited. In many electronic devices, the presence of conductive structures can influence the performance of electronic components, further restricting potential mounting arrangements for components such as antennas.
It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide improved electronic device antennas.
An electronic device may have an antenna for providing coverage in wireless communications bands of interest such as a low frequency communications band, a middle frequency communications band, and a high frequency communications band. Slot structures in the antenna that might reduce efficiency in the high frequency communications band may be avoided while maintain a compact antenna size by capacitively loading the antenna and omitting meandering paths in the antenna.
A capacitor may be coupled between an antenna ground formed from a metal housing structure and an antenna resonating element having a curved shape that conforms to the shape of the edge of the electronic device. The capacitor may have interdigitated fingers that are formed from a metal trace that forms the antenna resonating element. The capacitor may be an adjustable capacitor that includes multiple fixed capacitors and switching circuitry for configuring which capacitors are switched into use. Adjustments to the adjustable capacitor may be used to tune the antenna.
The electronic device may have a housing. A display may be mounted on a front portion of the housing. A rear surface of the housing may have metal housing walls that form part of the antenna ground. The display may be covered by a display cover layer. An interior surface of an inactive portion of the display cover layer may be coated with an opaque masking material. The antenna may transmit and receive radio-frequency signals through the opaque masking material on the display cover layer and may transmit and receive radio-frequency signals through a dielectric portion of the housing such as a plastic antenna window in the metal housing walls. Portions of the antenna may be used to form capacitive proximity sensor electrode structures.
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 antennas, and other electronic components. An illustrative electronic device in which electronic components such as antenna structures may be used is shown in
Housing 12 may be formed from conductive materials such as metal (e.g., aluminum, stainless steel, etc.), carbon-fiber composite material or other fiber-based composites, glass, ceramic, plastic, or other materials. A radio-frequency-transparent window such as window 58 may be formed in housing 12 (e.g., in a configuration in which the rest of housing 12 is formed from conductive structures). Window 58 may be formed from plastic, glass, ceramic, or other dielectric material. Antenna structures, and, if desired, proximity sensor structures for use in determining whether external objects are present in the vicinity of the antenna structures may be formed in the vicinity of window 58. If desired, antenna structures and proximity sensor structures may be mounted behind a dielectric portion of housing 12 (e.g., in a configuration in which housing 12 is formed from plastic or other dielectric material).
Device 10 may have user input-output devices such as button 59. Display 50 may be a touch screen display that is used in gathering user touch input. The surface of display 50 may be covered using a display cover layer such as a planar cover glass member or a clear layer of plastic. The central portion of display 50 (shown as region 56 in
An opaque masking layer such as opaque ink or plastic may be placed on the underside of display 50 in peripheral region 54 (e.g., on the underside of the display cover layer). This layer may be transparent to radio-frequency signals. The conductive touch sensor electrodes and display pixel structures and other conductive structures in region 56 tend to block radio-frequency signals. However, radio-frequency signals may pass through the display cover layer (e.g., through a cover glass layer) and opaque masking layer in inactive display region 54 (as an example). Radio-frequency signals may also pass through antenna window 58 or dielectric housing walls in a housing formed from dielectric material. Lower-frequency electromagnetic fields may also pass through window 58 or other dielectric housing structures, so capacitance measurements for a proximity sensor may be made through antenna window 58 or other dielectric housing structures, if desired.
With one suitable arrangement, housing 12 may be formed from a metal such as aluminum. Portions of housing 12 in the vicinity of antenna window 58 may be used as antenna ground. Antenna window 58 may be formed from a dielectric material such as polycarbonate (PC), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), a PC/ABS blend, or other plastics (as examples). Window 58 may be attached to housing 12 using adhesive, fasteners, or other suitable attachment mechanisms. To ensure that device 10 has an attractive appearance, it may be desirable to form window 58 so that the exterior surfaces of window 58 conform to the edge profile exhibited by housing 12 in other portions of device 10. For example, if housing 12 has straight edges 12A and a flat bottom surface, window 58 may be formed with a right-angle bend and vertical sidewalls. If housing 12 has curved edges 12A, window 58 may have a similarly curved exterior surface along the edge of device 10.
A cross-sectional view of device 10 taken along line 1300 of
The antenna resonating element formed from structures 204 may be based on any suitable antenna resonating element design (e.g., structures 204 may form a patch antenna resonating element, a single arm inverted-F antenna structure, a dual-arm inverted-F antenna structure, other suitable multi-arm or single arm inverted-F antenna structures, a closed and/or open slot antenna structure, a loop antenna structure, a monopole, a dipole, a planar inverted-F antenna structure, a hybrid of any two or more of these designs, etc.). Configurations in which antenna structures 204 form a capacitively loaded inverted-F antenna are sometimes described herein as an example.
Housing 12 may serve as antenna ground for an antenna formed from structure 204 and/or other conductive structures within device 10 and antenna structures 204 may serve as ground (e.g., conductive components, traces on printed circuits, etc.).
Structures 204 may include patterned conductive structures such as patterned metal structures. The patterned conductive structures may, if desired, be supported by a dielectric carrier. The conductive structures may be formed from a coating, from metal traces on a flexible printed circuit, or from metal traces formed on a plastic carrier using laser-processing techniques or other patterning techniques. Structures 204 may also be formed from stamped metal foil or other metal structures. In configurations for antenna structures 204 that include a dielectric carrier, metal layers may be formed directly on the surface of the dielectric carrier and/or a flexible printed circuit that includes patterned metal traces may be attached to the surface of the dielectric carrier. If desired, conductive material in structures 204 may also form one or more proximity sensor capacitor electrodes.
During operation of the antenna formed from structures 204, radio-frequency antenna signals can be conveyed through dielectric window 58. Radio-frequency antenna signals associated with structures 204 may also be conveyed through a display cover member such as cover layer 60. Display cover layer 60 may be formed from one or more clear layers of glass, plastic, or other materials. Display 50 may have an active region such as region 56 in which cover layer 60 has underlying conductive structure such as display module 64. The structures in display module 64 such as touch sensor electrodes and active display pixel circuitry may be conductive and may therefore attenuate radio-frequency signals. In region 54, however, display 50 may be inactive (i.e., module 64 may be absent). An opaque masking layer such as plastic or ink 62 may be formed on the underside of transparent cover glass 60 in region 54 to block antenna structures 204 from view by a user of device 10. Opaque material 62 and the dielectric material of cover layer 60 in region 54 may be sufficiently transparent to radio-frequency signals that radio-frequency signals can be conveyed through these structures during operation of device 10.
Device 10 may include one or more internal electrical components such as components 23. Components 23 may include storage and processing circuitry such as microprocessors, digital signal processors, application specific integrated circuits, memory chips, and other control circuitry. Components 23 may be mounted on one or more substrates such as substrate 79 (e.g., rigid printed circuit boards such as boards formed from fiberglass-filled epoxy, flexible printed circuits, molded plastic substrates, etc.). Components 23 may include input-output circuitry such as sensor circuitry (e.g., capacitive proximity sensor circuitry), wireless circuitry such as radio-frequency transceiver circuitry (e.g., circuitry for cellular telephone communications, wireless local area network communications, satellite navigation system communications, near field communications, and other wireless communications), amplifier circuitry, and other circuits. Connectors such as connector 81 may be used in interconnecting circuitry 23 to communications paths such as transmission line path 212.
Conductive structures for antenna structures 204 may be supported by a dielectric carrier. Antenna structures 204 may, for example, have conductive structures such as metal structures that are supported by a hollow plastic member or other dielectric carrier. The conductive structures may be metal traces that are formed on the surface of a dielectric carrier using laser-based deposition techniques, physical vapor deposition techniques, electrochemical deposition, blanket metal deposition followed by photolithographic patterning, ink-jet printing deposition techniques, etc. The conductive structures may also be metal traces that are formed on a rigid printed circuit board (e.g., a printed circuit board formed from a substrate such as fiberglass-filled epoxy), metal traces that are formed on a flexible printed circuit (e.g., a printed circuit formed from a layer of polyimide or a sheet of other polymer) that is mounted on a dielectric carrier (e.g., a carrier formed from molded plastic or other material), may be other metal structures supported by a carrier (e.g., patterned metal foil), or may be other conductive structures.
Dielectric carriers for supporting metal antenna traces or a flexible printed circuit or other structure that includes metal antenna traces may be formed from a dielectric material such as glass, ceramic, or plastic. As an example, a dielectric carrier for antenna(s) in device 10 may be formed from plastic parts that are molded and/or machined into a desired shape such as a rectangular prism shape (rectangular box shape), a three-dimensional solid shape with one or more curved surfaces (e.g., a box shape with a curved outer surface that matches a corresponding curved housing edge 12A, or other shapes. In general, dielectric carrier shapes such as box or prism shapes with different numbers of sides and/or one or more curved surfaces or other three-dimensional carrier shapes may be used for antenna structures 204. The illustrative configuration of
A schematic diagram of an illustrative configuration that may be used for electronic device 10 is shown in
Control circuitry 29 may be used to run software on device 10, such as operating system software and application software. Using this software, control circuitry 29 may, for example, transmit and receive wireless data, tune antennas to cover communications bands of interest, and perform other functions related to the operation of device 10.
Input-output devices 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 communications circuitry such as wired communications circuitry. Device 10 may also use wireless circuitry such as transceiver circuitry 206 and antenna structures 204 to communicate over one or more wireless communications bands.
Input-output devices 30 may also include input-output components with which a user can control the operation of device 10. A user may, for example, supply commands through input-output devices 30 and may receive status information and other output from device 10 using the output resources of input-output devices 30.
Input-output devices 30 may include proximity sensor circuitry 224 such as capacitive proximity sensor circuitry that uses portions of antenna structures 204 or other conductive structures in device 10 as capacitive proximity sensor electrodes. Proximity sensor circuitry 224 may be coupled to proximity sensor electrode structures in antenna structures 204 or elsewhere in device 10 using paths such as path 226. A capacitive proximity sensor may, for example, be used to determine when a user's body or other external object is in the vicinity of antenna structures 204. Proximity sensors for device 10 may also be formed using light-based proximity sensor structures, acoustic proximity sensor structures, etc.
Input-output devices 10 may also include sensors and status indicators such as an ambient light sensor, a temperature sensor, a pressure sensor, a magnetic sensor, an accelerometer, and light-emitting diodes and other components for gathering information about the environment in which device 10 is operating and providing information to a user of device 10 about the status of device 10. Audio components in devices 30 may include speakers and tone generators for presenting sound to a user of device 10 and microphones for gathering user audio input.
Devices 30 may include one or more displays such as display 50 of
Wireless communications circuitry 34 may include radio-frequency (RF) transceiver circuitry such as transceiver circuitry 206 that is formed from one or more integrated circuits, power amplifier circuitry, low-noise input amplifiers, passive RF components, one or more antennas such as antenna structures 204, and other circuitry for handling RF wireless signals. Wireless signals can also be sent using light (e.g., using infrared communications).
Wireless communications circuitry 34 may include radio-frequency transceiver circuits for handling multiple radio-frequency communications bands. For example, circuitry 34 may include transceiver circuitry 206 for handling cellular telephone communications, wireless local area network signals, and satellite navigation system signals such as signals at 1575 MHz from satellites associated with the Global Positioning System. Transceiver circuitry 206 may handle 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands for WiFi® (IEEE 802.11) communications or other wireless local area network communications and may handle the 2.4 GHz Bluetooth® communications band. Circuitry 206 may use cellular telephone transceiver circuitry for handling wireless communications in cellular telephone bands such as the bands in the range of 700 MHz to 2.7 GHz (as examples).
Wireless communications circuitry 34 can include circuitry for other short-range and long-range wireless links if desired. For example, wireless communications circuitry 34 may include wireless circuitry for receiving radio and television signals, paging circuits, 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 also include circuitry for handing near field communications.
Wireless communications circuitry 34 may include antenna structures 204. Antenna structures 204 may include one or more antennas. Antenna structures 204 may include inverted-F antennas, patch antennas, loop antennas, monopoles, dipoles, single-band antennas, dual-band antennas, antennas that cover more than two bands, or other suitable antennas. Configurations in which at least one antenna in device 10 is formed from an inverted-F antenna structure such as a capacitively loaded dual band inverted-F antenna are sometimes described herein as an example.
To provide antenna structures 204 with the ability to cover communications frequencies of interest, antenna structures 204 may be provided with one or more tunable components or other tunable circuitry. Discrete components such as capacitors, inductors, and resistors may be incorporated into the tunable circuitry. Capacitive structures, inductive structures, and resistive structures may also be formed from patterned metal structures (e.g., part of an antenna).
If desired, antenna structures 204 may be provided with adjustable circuits such as tunable circuitry 208 of
A fixed or adjustable component such as a capacitor (e.g., a fixed capacitor coupled to antenna structures 204 and/or a tunable capacitor in tunable circuitry 208) may be used to help antenna structures 204 exhibit antenna resonances in communications bands of interest with desired antenna efficiencies.
Transceiver circuitry 206 may be coupled to antenna structures 204 by signal paths such as signal path 212. Signal path 212 may include one or more transmission lines. As an example, signal path 212 of
Transmission line 212 may be coupled to antenna feed structures associated with antenna structures 204. As an example, antenna structures 204 may form an inverted-F antenna having an antenna feed with a positive antenna feed terminal such as terminal 218 and a ground antenna feed terminal such as ground antenna feed terminal 220. Positive transmission line conductor 214 may be coupled to positive antenna feed terminal 218 and ground transmission line conductor 216 may be coupled to ground antenna feed terminal 220. Other types of antenna feed arrangements may be used if desired. The illustrative feeding configuration of
Tunable circuitry 208 may be formed from one or more tunable circuits such as circuits based on capacitors, resistors, inductors, and switches. Tunable circuitry 208 may be implemented using discrete components mounted to a printed circuit such as a rigid printed circuit board (e.g., a printed circuit board formed from glass-filled epoxy) or a flexible printed circuit formed from a sheet of polyimide or a layer of other flexible polymer, a plastic carrier, a glass carrier, a ceramic carrier, or other dielectric substrate. As an example, tunable circuitry 208 may be coupled to a dielectric carrier of the type that may be used in supporting antenna resonating element traces for antenna structures 204 (
Arm 252 may be characterized by length 234 (e.g., a length extending from the antenna feed formed from terminals 240 and 242 at one end of arm 252 to the opposing end of arm 252). A fundamental antenna resonant peak may be associated with a signal frequency where a quarter of a wavelength is equal to length 234. To help implement antenna 228 in a compact size, antenna resonating element arm 252 of
An antenna design for device 10 that can be used to avoid the use of the meandering path configuration of
There may be one or more layers of metal traces 256 in antenna 204. If desired, proximity sensor circuitry 224 (
Inverted-F antenna resonating element 254 may avoid the use of meandering paths of the type shown in
Capacitor 262 (or other suitable coupling circuit) may couple tip portion 276 to antenna ground 264, thereby capacitively loading antenna 204. Capacitor 262 may be, for example, a surface mount technology component that exhibits a fixed or a tunable capacitance value. One terminal of capacitor 262 may be connected to portion 276 of metal trace 256. The other terminal of capacitor 262 may be coupled to trace segment 272, which is coupled to antenna ground 264 by electrical connections 268 (e.g., a weld, solder, a screw, or other fastener).
With a capacitively loaded inverted-F antenna resonating element configuration of the type shown in
In
Capacitor 262 of antenna 204 of
Various capacitor values may be achieved by adjusting switches SW1, SW2, and SW3 using control signals from control circuitry 29. When switches SW1, SW2, and SW3 are all closed, the capacitance of capacitor 262 will be maximized (C1+C2+C3). When switches SW1, SW2, and SW3 are all open, the capacitance of capacitor 262 will be zero. Intermediate values of capacitance may be produced with other switch settings. For example, when one of the switches such as switch SW1 is closed while the other switches are opened, a single capacitor (e.g., capacitor C1) will be switched into use while the other capacitors (C2 and C3) will be switched out of use.
If desired, other numbers of fixed capacitors may be used in adjustable capacitor 262. The example of
It may be desirable to implement capacitor 262 using metal structures separated by a gap. The metal structures may be, for example, metal traces such as portions of metal trace 256 and 272 of
Antenna 204 may be implemented using a curved flexible printed circuit substrate that is supported by a plastic carrier with a curved surface or other surface shape and/or using metal traces formed directly on the surface of a plastic carrier with a curved surface or other surface shape (e.g., metal traces deposited using electrochemical deposition techniques or other metal deposition techniques).
If desired, other types of mounting arrangements may be used for antennas 204 in device 10. The configurations of
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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