This invention relates generally to antennas that receive electromagnetic radiation. This invention relates more specifically to antennas adapted to be placed in the vicinity of an active electromagnetic radiation emission source to reduce undesirable radiation that emanates from the active emission source.
Many devices transmit electromagnetic radiation when in operation. For example, wireless communication devices intentionally emanate electromagnetic radiation when transmitting. Other devices transmit inadvertently, for example when a microwave oven is cooking, microwaves may inadvertently escape the oven. The widespread acceptance and use of hand-held, portable cellular telephones has been accompanied by increasing concern regarding possible harmful effects of such radiation. New hand-held cellular telephones typically have an elongated housing with an internal antenna, and older hand-held cellular telephones typically have an elongated housing with an antenna extending upward vertically from the housing. When using either type of telephone, the user's head comes into close proximity to the antenna when his head is placed adjacent to the cellular telephone. The antenna emanates radiation when the cellular telephone is transmitting, and such an antenna is referred to herein as a transmitting antenna. Thus, when the user is talking, the device is emanating radiation from the transmitting antenna, and a substantial amount of electromagnetic energy is projected directly onto the user's head at close range.
Each cellular telephone has to meet certain government guidelines as to the amount of radiation the user is exposed to. The amount of RF radiation absorbed by the body is measured in units known as SARs, or specific absorption rates. It would be desirable to reduce the SARs without significantly adversely affecting the operation of the telephone.
There have been attempts to shield the body from the electromagnetic energy emanating from the transmitting antenna. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,221 issued to Hunt discloses a conductive strip placed between the transmitting antenna and the user's head, to conduct radiation away from the user's head. There have also been some attempts to move the source of electromagnetic energy away from the body by changing the transmitting antenna location or radiation pattern. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,356,773 issued to Rinot removes the transmitting antenna from the phone and places it atop the user's head. An insulating shield is disposed between the transmitting antenna and the user's head, like a cap, for blocking emissions so that they do not penetrate through to the user. U.S. Pat. No. 6,031,495 issued to Simmons et alia uses a conducting strip between two poles of a transmitting antenna to create an end fire bi-directional pattern away from the user's head. Others have tried to reduce exposure to harmful emission by canceling the radiation. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,314,277 issued to Hsu et alia, is a cellular telephone antenna that cancels transmitted radiation of the cellular telephone with an absorbent directional shield by feeding the signal back into the cellular telephone.
One method of reducing electromagnetic radiation is to capture the radiation with an antenna, convert it to an electric current, and then dissipate the current, as described in U.S. Published Patent Application 2008/0014872. Antennas, however, are designed to receive RF signals in particular frequency bands, and cellular telephones operate generally in one or more of four different bands. For example, in Europe, GSM cellular telephones operate in the 900 MHz and 1800 MHz bands. In the United States, GSM and CDMA cellular telephones operate in the 850 MHz or 1900 MHz bands. It would be desirable to design an antenna for electromagnetic dissipation devices that is capable of capturing radiation across most or all of the cellular telephone frequency bands.
Meander antennas have become popular for receiving cellular telephone signals due to their small size, light weight, ease of fabrication, and omni-directional radiation patterns. Meander antennas generally comprise a folded wire printed on a dielectric substrate such as a printed circuit board (PCB). Meander antennas have resonance in a particular frequency band in a much smaller space than many other antenna designs. The resonant frequency of a meander antenna decreases as the total wire length of the meander antenna element increases. In addition, if the turns in the meander antenna are very close so as to have strong coupling, there can also be capacitive loading of the antenna, which will increase bandwidth. Total antenna geometry, wire length, and layout must be optimized for each given antenna's purpose. It would be desirable to design a meander antenna for use with an electromagnetic radiation dissipation device that is effective across the cellular telephone frequency bands.
Therefore, it is an object of this invention to provide an antenna design to be used with a device that decreases the SARs to the user of an active emission source without significantly adversely affecting the desired performance of the emission source. It is a particular object to provide an antenna design specifically tuned for reducing the undesirable radiation a user is exposed to from a cellular telephone. It is a further object to provide an antenna design that can capture electromagnetic radiation from a cellular telephone operating in any of the four predominant frequency bands allotted for cellular telephone communication. It is another object to provide an antenna design that generates enough current to power a device that notifies the user that electromagnetic radiation is present.
The present invention is an extended varying angle antenna to be used with an electromagnetic radiation dissipation device that reduces exposure to undesirable electromagnetic radiation or with a device that indicates the presence of known or unknown electromagnetic radiation. The dissipation device uses a varying angle antenna having a meandering portion with an extension to capture radiation from an active emission source, such as a cellular telephone when it is transmitting. The device converts the captured radiation into an electric current and dissipates the collected current by spending it to operate a dissipation assembly, which may be a thermal, mechanical, chemical or electrical device, or combination thereof. The extended antenna generates a larger electric current than the existing meandering antenna, enabling the dissipation device to operate the dissipation assembly at a higher current and serving to better notify the user that electromagnetic radiation is present or that the device used to reduce SARs is working.
The extended varying angle antenna is a PCB trace antenna comprising a microstrip having a meandering portion with several serially connected meandering segments and an extension. In the meandering portion, one or more meandering segments include 90-degree bends in the microstrip, and one or more meandering segments include bends of more and less than 90 degrees. Horizontal portions of the microstrip in the meandering portion are all parallel, while vertical portions of the microstrip in the meandering portion can be parallel or angled, depending on the bend angle. Additionally, near the center of the meandering portion, the microstrip segments are narrower than the microstrip segments near the ends of the meandering portion. In general, the meandering segments include varying angles, which maximizes the operation of the antenna for absorbing undesirable electromagnetic radiation from cellular telephones. The extension is also a microstrip, having at least one horizontal portion and at least one vertical portion, connected by 90-degree bends. The extension may be integrated into the meandering portion, connected in series to the meandering portion, or connected in parallel to the dissipation device, as desired, to provide additional current to the dissipation device than what the meandering portion provides. In a preferred embodiment, the meandering portion is about 3.8 inches long and the extension adds about 2.4 inches, for a total microstrip length of about 6.2 inches.
The present invention is an extended varying angle antenna 14 for use with an electromagnetic radiation dissipation device 10 that reduces undesirable radiation. Dissipation device 10 comprises extended antenna 14 and a dissipation assembly 17, as illustrated in
As is known in the art, an antenna is any conducting mass that functions as a receiver or collector of electromagnetic energy. Additionally, antennas have a number of important parameters; those of most interest include the gain, radiation pattern, bandwidth and polarization. In a receiving antenna, the applied electromagnetic field is distributed throughout the entire length of the antenna to receive the undesirable radiation. If the receiving antenna that the signal strikes has a certain length relative to the wavelength of the received radiation, the induced current will be much stronger. The desired length of the antenna can be determined by using the well-known equation:
(λ)(f)=c
where λ is the wavelength of the incident radiation, f is the frequency of the incident radiation, and c is the speed of light. For example, if a signal at 1900 MHz travels through the air, it completes a cycle in approximately 32 cm. If the signal strikes a 32 cm antenna or certain fractions of it (½ or ¼ or 1/16 wavelength), then the induced current will be much higher than if the signal struck a target antenna that was not some appreciable fraction of the wavelength.
Typically, cellular phones and other wireless communications technologies such as PCS, G3 or Bluetooth® emit radiation in the radio or microwave ranges, or both, when transmitting. These and other consumer products often emit multiple wavelengths (at correspondent frequencies). Cellular telephones, in particular, emit radiation in the 450 MHz, 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, and 1900 MHz ranges when transmitting. This means that the extended varying angle antenna 14 must perform well over a range of frequencies. The corresponding wavelengths and frequencies for cellular telephone frequencies are summarized below:
The extended varying angle antenna 14 herein is a receiving antenna and does not intentionally transmit electromagnetic energy. Extended varying angle antenna 14 comprises a meandering portion 60 and an extension 61. The meandering portion 60 and extension 61 form a PCB trace antenna comprised of a 1 oz copper microstrip arranged in a serpentine or meandering pattern. PCB trace antennas, microstrips, and methods for making them are well known in the art. PCB 30 has a top surface that includes the microstrip. In the preferred embodiments, the PCB is a standard 0.8 mm FR4 substrate material that is nonconducting at 1.8 GHz. For increased flexibility, a 0.5 mm substrate may be substituted. For example, to allow the PCB antenna to mount to an irregular or rounded cellular telephone or other device, a PCB thickness of 0.5 mm or less is desirable. Rather than using a ground plane in the present device, the antenna 14 is connected to a bridge rectifier which turns the alternating current into direct current for lighting an LED. The microstrip on the top surface of the PCB 30 is preferably less than 0.020 inches wide, and more preferably 0.007 inches wide.
In a preferred embodiment of the extended varying angle antenna 14, the overall length of the meandering portion 60 in the microstrip is about 3.8 inches, and preferably 3.862 inches. The preferred overall antenna area of copper in the meandering portion 60 is less than 0.08 inches squared. The pattern of the meandering portion 60, as shown in
The dimensions given for the preferred embodiment shown in
For the sake of convenience and with respect to
In another embodiment, the extension 60 is incorporated into the meandering portion 60 of the extended antenna 14 by lengthening one or more of the vertical or horizontal portions in the meandering portion. The effective length of the incorporated extension is preferably a certain length relative to the wavelength of the received radiation. For example, as explained above, if the signal strikes a 32 cm antenna or certain fractions of it (½ or ¼ or 1/16 wavelength), then the induced current will be much higher than if the signal struck a target antenna that was not some appreciable fraction of the wavelength. Increased current is thus applied to the dissipation assembly 17, enabling it to operate longer, brighter, or other ways that utilize a larger current.
In another embodiment, the extension 61 is connected in parallel with the meandering portion 60 to the dissipation assembly 17. This embodiment may be particularly useful if more than one dissipation assembly is used, and enables the voltage drop to remain uniform across both dissipation assemblies.
Extended varying angle antenna 14 cooperates with dissipation assembly 17 of dissipation device 10 to effectively decrease the SARs to the user of a cellular telephone without significantly adversely affecting the transmission from the cellular telephone to the cell tower, or base station. As shown in
The collected current can be used to operate any dissipation assembly 17, which is defined as one or more users of current. For example, the dissipation assembly 17 can be one or more of a buzzer, bell or any other transducer that converts electrical energy to sound; motor or any other transducer that converts electrical energy to motion; heater or any other transducer that converts electrical energy to heat; lamp or any transducer that converts electrical energy to light; or a combination thereof. The current may be used to catalyze a chemical reaction. In the preferred embodiment, the current is directed to an LED that lights up when supplied with the current, serving a secondary purpose of showing the user when the device 10 is working or when electromagnetic radiation is present. In another embodiment, the current is directed to an LCD display. The dissipation assembly 17 may be used to operate one or more users of current within the emission source 11. Adding the extension 61 to the meandering portion 60 enables more radiation to be captured than in a meandering portion 60 alone, thus generating a larger electric current in the antenna 14 than in the meandering portion 60 alone. This in turn enables the device to power dissipation assemblies requiring more current or voltage. For example, when an LED is used as the dissipation assembly, more current will cause the LED to shine brighter, indicating to the user more robust operation.
In addition to use with cellular telephones, the present invention may be used with other emission sources such as other wireless communication devices such as satellite phones, BlackBerry® and other email-transmitting devices; wide area wireless local area networks; microwave ovens; portable radios, music players, and video players; automatic garage door and building door openers; police radar guns; short-wave and other ham radios; televisions or other cathode ray tube and plasma displays; power transmission lines; radioactive chemicals; or any other emission source. The present invention may also be used to indicate when electromagnetic radiation is present yet the emission source is unknown.
While there has been illustrated and described what is at present considered to be the preferred embodiment of the present invention, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the true scope of the invention. Therefore, it is intended that this invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 13/094,166 filed Apr. 26, 2011, which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/868,287, filed Aug. 25, 2010, which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,973,736 on Jul. 5, 2011, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 12/215,231, filed Jun. 26, 2008, which issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,800,554 on Sep. 21, 2010.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 12868287 | Aug 2010 | US |
Child | 13094166 | US | |
Parent | 12215231 | Jun 2008 | US |
Child | 12868287 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 13094166 | Apr 2011 | US |
Child | 13549142 | US |