The present invention relates to the field of satellite antennas and particularly to the application of satellite communication for asset tracking.
More than a billion tons of goods are transported in freight containers each year, over both land and sea. Increasingly, operators who provide freight container transport, as well as their customers, are interested in tracking their valuable assets when in transit.
Many methods of tracking include the use of satellite communications, both for ocean freight and for multimodal transport. To support such communications, satellite communication antennas are often mounted on the roofs of containers, giving them a wide view of the sky for transmission and reception. An example of such a configuration is described in U.S. Pat. No. 10,118,576 to Breed, “Shipping container information recordation techniques,” which indicates a roof-mounted satellite system for transmitting location and other sensor data. Similarly, the Satellite Data Modem (SDM) from Omnitracs™ is a roof-mounted antenna for tracking assets. The SDM is typically mounted on a freight truck cabin roof.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,965,181 to Rana et al., describes having multiple antennas mounted on multiple respective sides of a freight container. A signal combiner/selector is configured to use the antenna that has the strongest received signal. In another scenario, signal combiner/selector can be configured to combine the signals received from the multiple antennas to produce a more reliable signal. The Next4™ sensor and tracker by Traxens™ has an integrated antenna that is designed to fit onto an edge of a freight container door, remaining in place when the door is shut.
Embodiments of the present invention provide an antenna device and methods for satellite communications. The antenna device, also referred to herein as a container side-mounted antenna, is configured to be mounted on freight container sides. The antenna device may include one or more printed circuit boards (PCBs), including a patch layer having a 2×2 patch layout and a transmission line layer with striplines configured to set an upward beam steering direction. In some embodiments, the upward beam steering is at least 30 degrees above the horizon. The striplines are further configured to provide circular polarization of transmission. The patch layer and transmission line layer provide an antenna gain greater than 0 dBi for 0 to 60 degrees above the horizon, in an uplink range of at least 1525-1559 MHz, and in a downlink range of at least 1626-1661 MHz. The case depth may be designed to be less than or equal to a door recess depth of 33 mm. In some embodiments, the spacing between patch centers is 54 mm (+/−10%), The patch layer is on an FR-4 dielectric substrate, and the FR-4 dielectric substrate typically has a thickness of 0.6 cm+/−10%.
In some embodiments, the device thickness may be set to 30-32 mm.
The case may be tapered, from front to back, and may include a first taper, conforming to a narrow recess taper, and a second taper, conforming to a wider recess taper, of respective first and second types of corrugated door recess.
Typically, the case perimeter has at least two mounting holes at each horizontal end.
The PCB may include a component layer, on which a modem may be mounted. The modem may be configured to generate data transmissions, which are transmitted from the patch layer, and to receive data transmissions received from the patch layer.
Each patch may have square dimensions. Such dimensions may be 42 mm (+/−10%).
For a better understanding of various embodiments of the invention and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example, to the accompanying drawings. Structural details of the invention are shown to provide a fundamental understanding of the invention, the description, taken with the drawings, making apparent to those skilled in the art how the several forms of the invention may be embodied in practice. In the accompanying drawings:
In the following description, various aspects of the present invention are described. For purposes of explanation, specific configurations and details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will also be apparent to one skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without the specific details presented herein. Furthermore, well known features may have been omitted or simplified in order not to obscure the present invention. With specific reference to the drawings, it is stressed that the particulars shown are by way of example and for purposes of illustrative discussion of the present invention only and are presented in the cause of providing what is believed to be the most useful and readily understood description of the principles and conceptual aspects of the invention. In this regard, no attempt is made to show structural details of the invention in more detail than is necessary for a fundamental understanding of the invention, the description taken with the drawings making apparent to those skilled in the art how the several forms of the invention may be embodied in practice.
In order to facilitate better access for mounting and maintenance, as well as to ensure better protection from possible damage, the present invention provides a “container side-mounted antenna,” which is designed for communications with low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellites when the antenna is positioned on a container door. As described further hereinbelow, the configuration of the present invention provides better gain and better angular beam range than known antennas.
The present invention provides a container side-mounted antenna 24, which may be positioned as shown in
The layer closest to the front side 28A of the case is the antenna patch layer 31, on which an antenna patch configuration is manufactured as described further hereinbelow with respect to
The next layer, a patch substrate layer 32, provides a dielectric layer between the antenna patch layer 31 and a ground layer 33. The dielectric substrate, in an exemplary embodiment, is an FR4 material. The FR4 substrate has a dielectric constant of ˜4.2, and the results described below for the antenna performance are based on a thickness of 0.6 cm (+/−10%) for the FR4 substrate. A range of other materials may be applied with the layer thickness modified according. However, such modifications, such as use of alumina with a dielectric constant of ˜9.6, may also require modification of components on the component layer described below, in order to maintain the overall case size described below.
Behind the ground layer 33, is a second substrate layer 34. Under this substrate layer is a feed network or transmission line layer 35 that includes buried striplines. Buried striplines, as opposed to an external microstrip layer, provide a clear external layer available for component placement and routing. In alternative embodiments, the transmission line layer 35 may be implemented as an external layer with microstrips in place of striplines, and the term “stripline” is to be understood to refer herein to either striplines or to microstrips.
The transmission line layer is on third substrate layer 36 under which is a second ground layer 37. A fourth substrate layer 38 then provides a base for a components layer 39, that is, a layer on which components are placed. Additional layers, not shown, may also be provided for routing of component traces. The components layer typically includes a modem and other standard transceiver components. In some embodiments, the antenna can work in either of two modes, in a mode of communications with an L-band, LEO satellite network, or as a GPS receiver. A controller on the components layer may switch between drivers for the two alternative modes. A battery may also be installed in the case in space 40 behind the PCB to power the components. In alternative configurations, the antenna 24 is configured without the modem, controller, and/or battery, in which case these components are positioned in proximity to the antenna 24. The antenna case may also be configured to hold only the PCB layers 30, without having a tapered back that includes the space 40. Such a case design is particularly appropriate for mounting on non-corrugated container doors.
If the multiple layers are manufactured as a single PCB, vias in the PCB connect the patches to the appropriate locations of the striplines, and the striplines are in turn connected by vias to the electronic components, i.e., the modem components described above, on the components layer. If multiple PCBs are sandwiched together, soldered pins may be used instead of vias.
The container side-mounted antenna of the present invention is designed to have an upward pointing beam, such that a portion of the sky is within the beam range, or is accessible by reflection when there is an obstruction, as indicated in
Striplines 52 of the transmission line layer 35, as shown in
Feed points 54 from the striplines to each of the patches 1-4 are sequentially rotated, that is, each patch is a clone of its adjacent clockwise neighbor with a 90 degree rotation relative to its center, to create a symmetric array feed and, as a result, a more symmetric, circularly polarized radiation pattern. The stripline feed network is an equal-power combining network that combines all patch feed lines to a single stripline output that is connected to a radio frequency (RF) front-end (i.e., the amplifiers, switches, matching networks, etc. between the feed lines and the modem). The stripline combining feed network also equates the phase differences between the patches, which emanate from the sequential rotation of the patches, which also adds 90 degree sequential phase shifts.
A modem connection point 56 is also indicated in the figure. A modem may be configured either internally to the antenna device, as described above, or externally.
As shown in the graph of
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention, but rather as exemplifications of some of the preferred embodiments as defined by the claims. That is, the scope of the present invention includes variations and modifications thereof which would occur to persons skilled in the art upon reading the foregoing description and which are not disclosed in the prior art.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IL2023/050374 | 4/4/2023 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63327062 | Apr 2022 | US |