The present invention relates generally to vehicle antennas and, more particularly, to an antenna formed in association with a transparent ply having an electrically conductive coating.
Antennas have been proposed which use the theory of operation of quarter or half wavelength antenna in combination with a vehicle window having a thin IR reflective film or conductive coating on or between the layers of the glass window. For example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,849,766, 4,768,037, and 4,864,316 illustrate a variety of antenna shapes that are formed by a thin film on a vehicle window. U.S. Pat. No. 5,670,966 discloses an automotive antenna having several electrically interconnected coating regions. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,083,135 and 5,528,314 illustrate a vehicle antenna having a transparent coating in the shape of a “T”. U.S. Pat. No. 6,448,935 discloses an antenna having a two-piece conductive coating that is used as AM and FM antenna that are separated to reduce AM noise and improve system performance.
Other designs include a slot antenna that is formed between the metal frame of a window and a conductive transparent film or coating that is bonded to the window wherein an outer peripheral edge of the transparent film is spaced from the inner edge of the window frame to define a slot antenna. Such antennas are illustrated in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,707,700 and 5,355,144. U.S. Pat. No. 5,898,407 purports to improve transmission and reception of radio frequency waves by use of a conductive coating with at least one edge that overlaps the window frame of the vehicle body to establish a short to ground by coupling for high frequency signals. U.S. Pat. No. 7,764,239 B2 discloses the use of a laser beam to create a slot antenna by removing the conductive coating. Since the antenna feeding cable has to cross the slot, a large space on the window is required to conceal the antenna feed structure, thus restricting the antenna location to top of the window. U.S. Pat. No. 6,320,276, B1 discloses an antenna feeding structure that uses a capacitive coupling apparatus in which wires are capacitively coupled to the slot antenna.
From an aesthetic point of view, a slot antenna is generally preferred because the antenna is invisible so that it has broader application. Another advantage of slot antennas is heat load reduction because the slot antenna involves removal of an area of the heat reflective coating that is relatively small compared to many other antenna designs. However, slot antennas also present several technical challenges, especially when used in connection with the vehicle windshield window. First, the area around the window perimeter for locating the antenna elements is limited. That limitation makes it difficult to design an antenna that meets typical performance requirements. Secondly, the size and dimensions of the slot antenna lend window slot antennas more to use with the VHF frequency band. At the UHF band, the slot antenna generally has a much weaker resonance and gain because the UHF band is carried in the higher order modes of the slot for which impedance is much higher and impedance matching of the antenna more difficult. For example, the perimeter of the window defines the maximum slot length. Maximum slot length determines the fundamental mode and the lowest frequency for the antenna. Usually that frequency is in the VHF band. Typical windshield and back glass window slot antennas can cover the FM frequency band, but not the TV VHF and UHF bands (47 MHz-860 MHz).
Therefore, it would be advantageous to provide an antenna, particularly a windshield antenna, that is hidden and that also supports a wide frequency band for different applications.
The presently disclosed invention concerns a slot antenna that is suitable for use in vehicle applications. The disclosed antenna has improved impedance matching and frequency tuning capability. The slot antenna affords improved performance in the VHF and UHF bands while also retaining the solar benefits of the heat reflective coating and excellent aesthetics.
The slot antenna is formed between the metal frame of a ply and an electrically conductive film layer or coating that is bonded to the ply. In the particular embodiment that is further disclosed herein, the presently disclosed invention is a ply of laminate window wherein both the ply and the conductive film layer or coating are transparent. However, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the presently disclosed invention can also encompass laminate plys and electrically conductive coatings or film layers in a panel that is not optically transparent to human vision. In the example of the disclosed embodiment, a window includes a transparent ply and a transparent film that is bonded to the window ply. The transparent film has an outer peripheral edge that is spaced from the inner edge of the window frame. The slot dimension is designed to support fundamental modes within frequency bands of interest. Preferably, the total slot length is one wavelength for an annular shaped slot or one half-wavelength for non-annular shaped slot for the fundamental excitation mode.
The slot antenna is excited by a voltage source such as a balanced parallel transmission line that is connected to the opposite edges of the slot or by a coaxial transmission line that is connected to the opposite edges of the slot. Energy applied to the slot antenna causes electrical current flow in the conductive coating and metal frame of the window. The electrical currents are not confined to the edges of the slot, but rather spread out over the conductive sheet. Radiation then occurs from the edges and both sides of the conductive sheet.
The IR reflective coatings have one or more layers of silver and typically have a sheet resistance of about 3Ω/□ for an optical transmission of about 75%. Electrical currents that flow on the coating surface result in resistance losses that impair antenna performance. To increase antenna efficiency, a bus bar such as silver or copper is printed onto the surface of the glazing near the edge of the slot antenna and is electrically connected to the conductive IR coating. The electrical conductivity of the bus bar is high relative to the conductive coating such that the slot antenna is defined by the edge of the conductive coating, the bus bar and the edge of the window frame. Most of the electrical current flows and concentrates on the high conductive bus bar so that resistance loss is relatively low. The increased conductivity in the current flow path also increases antenna radiation efficiency.
The slot antenna is fed by a thin conductive line that is situated in the middle of the slot and oriented parallel with the edge of the bus bar that defines the slot. The antenna feed point is where the feed line is connected to the bus bar. For high-frequency applications, the feed point is preferably near the top of the window. The thin conductive line in combination with the conductive coating and window frame form a coplanar waveguide (CPW). The CPW line not only provides a convenient antenna feed at any point around the perimeter of the window slot, but also affords opportunity for improved antenna tuning and impedance matching. The characteristic impedance of the CPW line can be designed to cause the slot antenna impedance to match the impedance of a coaxial cable or the input impedance of the electronic device which often defined as 50Ω.
The CPW lines also can feed the slot antenna at both sides and at the bottom. Different feed locations will excite different modes of the slot antenna with different field distribution so as to provide antenna diversity in a system or different antenna characteristics for different applications.
For a more complete understanding of the disclosed invention, reference should now be had to the embodiments illustrated in greater detail in the accompanying drawings and described below by way of examples of the invention. In the drawings:
Windshield 20 is a laminated vehicle windshield formed of outer and inner glass plies 14 and 12 bonded together by an interposed layer 18, preferably of a standard polyvinylbutyral or similar plastic material. Outer glass ply 14 has an outer surface 140 (conventionally referred to as the number 1 surface) on the outside of the vehicle and an inner surface 142 (conventionally referred to as the number 2 surface). Inner glass ply 12 has an outer surface 122 (conventionally referred to as the number 3 surface) on the inside of the window glass 20 and an inner surface 120 (conventionally referred to as the number 4 surface) internal to the vehicle. The interlayer 18 is between surfaces 142 and 122.
As shown in
Windshield 20 further includes an electro-conductive coating or element 16 that occupies the daylight opening of the transparency. The conductive coating 16 is incorporated into automotive window glass for use as solar shield to reduce the transmission of infrared and ultraviolet radiation through the window. The element 16 is preferably transparent electro-conductive coatings that are applied on surface 142 of the outer glass ply 14 (as shown in
Near the edge 21 of the window 20 and partially within the black paint band 22, the conductive coating is removed either by mask deletion or laser deletion to deletion line 17 to prevent corrosion and undesired radio frequency coupling to the window frame. The coating deletion is required for the antenna to be functional. A high conductive bus bar 41 is screen printed onto surface 142 of coated glass ply 14 around the deletion edge 17 of conductive coating 16. Bus bar 41 partially overlays side edge 17 of coating 16 such that bus bar 41 is electrically connected to coating 16 as a solid metal sheet. The bus bar 41 is located partially on the surface of the transparent ply 14. Bus bar 41 has a greater electrical conductivity than the electrical conductivity of the transparent electrically conductive coating 16. Bus bar 41 has a first edge 19 that is spaced between the outer peripheral edge 17 of the electrically conductive coating 16 and the inner edge 11 of the electrically conducting member 30 of the vehicle. The bus bar 41 also has a second edge that is spaced apart from the outer peripheral edge 17 of the electrically conductive coating 16 and over said electrically conductive coating 16 such that the bus bar 41 at least partially overlaps the outer peripheral edge 17 of the electrically conductive coating 16. The bus bar 41 cooperates with the electrically conducting member 30 and with the electrically conductive coating 16 to define a slot antenna between the first edge 19 of the bus bar 41 and the peripheral edge 11 and surface 31 of the electrically conducting member 30.
Windshield 20 and its associated body structures define an annular antenna slot 13 between the window frame edge 11 and surface 31 on one side and the bus bar edge 19 in combination with coating edge 17 on the opposite side. The slot width must be sufficiently large that the capacitive effects across it at the frequency of operation are negligible so that the signal is not shorted out. The slot width is preferably greater than 10 mm. The preferred length of the slot is an integer multiple of wavelength for an annular shaped slot or an integer multiple of one half of the wavelength for a non-annular shaped slot with respect to resonant frequency of application. For a windshield of a typical vehicle, the slot length is such as to resonate at the VHF band and also can be used for the TV VHF band and FM applications.
The slot antenna is fed by a thin conductive line 40 that is situated half-way between edge 21 of glass 14 and the edge 19 of bus bar 41 and is in parallel with edge 19 of bus bar 41. The feed line 40 is connected to bus bar 41 near the top of the window by a vertical line 42 that defines the antenna feed point. Line 40 along with the conductive coating 16, bus bar 41, and window frame 30 forms a coplanar waveguide (CPW).
As illustrated in
When the slot antenna is excited by the CPW feed line 40, electrical current flows in the conductive coating 16 and metal frame 30 of the window. The currents concentrate at the edges of the slot and spread out over the conductive sheet. Radiation occurs from the edges and both sides of conductive sheet 16.
The edges and surfaces of coating 16 have relatively low conductivity such that current flow on the coating edges and surfaces results in resistive losses that compromise antenna performance. For a slot antenna, the electrical current concentrates near the antenna feed point and the edges of the slot resulting in significant resistance losses on the surfaces and edges of conductive coating 16. In order to increase antenna efficiency, a high conductive bus bar 41 such as silver or copper is printed on the high current density area along the edge of the slot antenna and in contact with the IR coating. The high conductive bus bar 41 causes the slot antenna to be defined by the edge 19 of bus bar 41 and the edge 11 and surface 31 of the window frame 30. Most of the current flows and concentrates on the high-conductive material of bus bar 41 resulting in low loss. The increased conductivity of the current path increases antenna radiation efficiency. The wider bus bar 41 also provides uniform current distribution and avoids high current density to further reduce signal resistance loss. Preferably, the bus bar 41 covers the entire length of the edge of the slot for best performance. However, the most significant portion of the current path is about one-half wavelength to one wavelength from the antenna feed point where the current density is the highest. In the embodiment of
The CPW antenna feeding network not only provides a convenient means to feed the antenna at any point along the antenna slot, but also affords an opportunity for antenna tuning and impedance matching to maximize radio frequency energy transfer. Normally, slot antenna impedance is much higher than 50Ω. The antenna feeding structure 40, 41, 42 presents an impedance transfer into the slot antenna modes with its own impedance, which is a function of feed position, frequency and mode. The characteristic impedance of the CPW line can be designed to transform the slot antenna impedance to match the impedance of a coaxial cable or the input impedance of the electronic device which are often defined as 50Ω. Referring to
An embodiment similar to that illustrated in
When the antenna slot is excited by an electromagnetic wave, the field distribution in the slot can be represented by a set of orthogonal resonate modes. Depending on the antenna feed location and feed method, a combination of multiple modes resonating at different frequencies can be excited. Referring to
The embodiment of
While the invention has been described and illustrated by reference to certain preferred embodiments and implementations, it should be understood that various modifications may be adopted without departing from the spirit of the invention or the scope of the following claims.
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