High Gain And Wideband Complementary Antenna

Abstract
An antenna is disclosed as including at least one dipole connected with at least one shorted patch antenna, and at least two feeding sources.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates to an antenna, in particular an antenna suitable for, but not limited to, transmitting and receiving radio frequency signals. Such an antenna may also be used as an antenna element for constructing antenna arrays.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

There are normally two points of emphasis in the design of base station antennae for modern wireless communications, namely the operating bandwidth and the gain. Base station antennae with wider bandwidth can cover more frequency channels, increase the channel capacity, and enhance manufacturing tolerances. On the other hand, constructing antenna arrays is the simplest and an effective way to increase the gain. If the gain of the array element increases by 3 dB, for the same overall gain, the total number of array elements can be reduced by half, thus reducing the array antenna size. Therefore, it is important to provide an antenna element with wideband and high gain characteristics. There are several known techniques for enhancing bandwidth and gain. However, most of such techniques cannot be used at the same time. In addition, even if the antenna element is wideband and high gain at the same time, the structure is usually very complicated or bulky.


It is thus an object of the present invention to provide an antenna and an antenna array in which the aforesaid shortcomings are mitigated or at least to provide a useful alternative to the trade and public.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided an antenna including at least one dipole connected with at least one shorted patch antenna, and at least two feeding sources.


According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided an antenna array formed of a plurality of antennae, at least one of said antennae including at least one dipole connected with at least one shorted patch antenna, and at least two feeding sources.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Embodiments of the present invention will now be described, by way of examples only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:



FIG. 1A is a schematic diagram showing the current direction of the electric dipole of an antenna according to the present invention;



FIG. 1B is a schematic diagram showing the current direction of the magnetic dipole of the antenna schematically shown in FIG. 1A;



FIG. 2A is a perspective view of an antenna according to an embodiment of the present invention, being in wideband mode;



FIG. 2B is a top view of the antenna of FIG. 2A;



FIG. 2C is a front view of the antenna of FIG. 2A;



FIG. 3 shows measured and simulated standing wave ratios (SWR) against frequency of the antenna of FIG. 2A;



FIG. 4 shows measured and simulated gain against frequency of the antenna of FIG. 2A;



FIGS. 5A to 5H show measured and simulated radiation patterns of the antenna of FIG. 2A;



FIG. 6A is a perspective view of an antenna according to a further embodiment of the present invention, being in high gain mode;



FIG. 6B is a top view of the antenna of FIG. 6A;



FIG. 6C is a front view of the antenna of FIG. 6A;



FIG. 7 shows measured and simulated SWR against frequency of the antenna of FIG. 6A;



FIG. 8 shows measured and simulated gain against frequency of the antenna of FIG. 6A;



FIGS. 9A to 9F show measured and simulated radiation patterns of the antenna of FIG. 6A;



FIGS. 10A and 10B show antennae according to further embodiments of the present invention, with planar dipoles of different shapes;



FIGS. 11A and 11B show folded antennae according to additional embodiments of the present invention;



FIGS. 12A to 12C show feeding probes of various shapes which may be adopted in antennae according to the present invention;



FIGS. 13A to 13C show ground planes of various shapes which may be adopted in antennae according to the present invention; and



FIGS. 14A and 14B show configurations of dual polarization antennae according to yet further embodiments of the present invention.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

The basic principle of construction of an antenna according to an embodiment of the present invention is shown schematically in FIGS. 1A and 1B. More particularly, FIGS. 1A and 1B show a dual fed complementary antenna, generally designated as 10, with a planar dipole 12 and a patch antenna 14 shorted in electrical sense. Such a combination results in a wideband antenna which is excellent in all electrical characteristics, including low back radiation, low cross polarization, symmetrical radiation pattern, high in gain and stable radiation pattern over the frequency bandwidth.


In this embodiment, the antenna 10 has two feeding sources, which are located at positions A and B marked by dotted lines in FIG. 2A, and are in phase with each other. Many balun devices can be used as the feeding source, such as coaxial balun, coupled line balun and Marchand balun.


As shown in FIGS. 1A and 1B, each feeding source generates one electric dipole ({right arrow over (J)}A or {right arrow over (J)}B) and one magnetic dipole ({right arrow over (M)}A or {right arrow over (M)}B). The magnitudes of the two feeding sources are the same ({right arrow over (J)}A={right arrow over (J)}B={right arrow over (J)} and {right arrow over (M)}A={right arrow over (M)}B={right arrow over (M)}). As there are two excitation sources in the antenna 10, two electric and two magnetic dipoles are effectively generated. Their radiation (2{right arrow over (J)}+2{right arrow over (M)}) will be doubled and a gain of 3 dB higher than the conventional magneto-electric dipole antenna is achieved.



FIGS. 2A to 2C show various views of an antenna according to an embodiment of the present invention, generally designated as 50. The antenna 50 is formed by connecting a rectangular planar dipole 52 (with dipole patches 52a, 52b formed of metal plates) to the open end of a shorted patch antenna 54 (comprising a ground plane 56a, and a pair of metal plates 56b, 56c which are parallel to and spaced apart from each other), with a large metal plane 58 located below the patch antenna 54 for back lobe reduction. The dipole 52 is connected with the shorted patch antenna 54 via the two metal plates 56b, 56c. The ground plane 56a of the shorted patch antenna 54 is parallel to the dipole patches 52a, 52b and the large metal plane 58, and is perpendicular to the pair of metal plates 56b, 56c.


The ground plane 56a of the shorted patch antenna 54 is H-shaped and is either electrically or physically connected to the large metal plane 58. Depending on the type of connection between the ground plane 56a of the shorted patch antenna 54 and the ground plane 56a, the large metal plane 58 may be a ground plane or a reflector. If the large metal plane 58 and the ground plane 56a of the shorted patch antenna 54 are electrically connected with each other, the large metal plane 58 is a ground plane. If, on the other hand, the large metal plane 58 and the ground plane 56a of the shorted patch antenna 54 are connected physically but not electrically, the large metal plane 58 is a reflector. The H-shaped ground plane 56a is spaced apart from and above the large metal plane 58 by a distance of H2. A SubMiniature version A (SMA) connector 60 is used for supporting and providing an electrical connection between the H-shaped ground plane 56a and the large metal plane 58.


In this embodiment, each side of the dipole 52 has a width P1 and a length D1. D1 is about 0.25λ0, where λ0 is the free-space wavelength of the center frequency of the antenna 50. The shorted patch antenna 54 has a height of Ht, which is around 0.18λ0. For wideband operation, the separation PS of the two plates 56b, 56c of the shorted patch antenna 54 is close to 0.1λ0, while the width P1 of the dipole 52 and of the shorted patch antenna 54 should be around 0.64λ0. For a given backlobe of less than −20 dBi (or front-to-back ratio of more than 20 dB), the size of the large metal plane 58 can be adjusted and is preferably around 1λ0 by 1λ0.


The antenna 50 has two sources and they are located at position A and position B in FIG. 2A. In this antenna 50, the Marchand balun is used as the feeding source. The feeding mechanism is made up of three portions, namely a pair of L-strips 62, a T-junction microstrip line 64, and the H-shaped ground plane 56a. All these three portions are made of metallic and/or conducting material. The two L-strips 62 are electrically connected to the T-junction microstrip line 64, and they are both located above the H-shaped ground plane 56a. The two L-strips 62 and T-junction microstrip line 64 (which combine to form a feeding network) and the H-shaped ground plane 56a are separated by a substrate 65, such as air or some other dielectric material.


The ground plane 56a has a pair of elongate plates 66 which are joined with each other at their middle portion and spaced apart from each other by a slot 68 at each of the longitudinal ends of the elongate plates 66. Each L-strip 62 has a portion overlapping with the slot 68 on the H-shaped ground plane 56a, and each of these combinations forms a feeding source. The feeding position of the antenna 50 is located at point F. Each source is a balun source which can provide a precise 180° phase shift across the width of the H-shaped slot 68 at C1 and C2 (or G1 and G2) in FIG. 2B, with minimum loss and equal balanced impedances.


The shape of the feeding network, which is the combination of the two L-strips 62 and the T-junction microstrip line 64, is a pair of mirrored T-shaped strips. The impedance of the antenna 50 is typically 50Ω. The T-junction microstrip line 64 is therefore designed with the input port in 50Ω and two output ports in 100Ω. The length of the two L-strips 62 in x- and y-directions can provide inductive and capacitive impedances to the antenna 50, and they are optimized to 100Ω.


Tables 1A and 1B below show exemplary dimensions (in mm and in terms of λ0) of the parameters of the antenna 50 shown in FIGS. 2A to 2C:
















TABLE 1A





Para-









meters
Pw
P1
D1
Ps
Ht
H1
H2







Values
60 mm
60 mm
25.5
9 mm
17 mm
15.5
1.5 mm





mm


mm



0.64λ0
0.64λ0
0.272λ0
0.1λ0
0.18λ0
0.165λ0
0.016λ0






















TABLE 1B





Parameters
Sw
S1
Lh
L1
Tx1
Txs







Values
3 mm
22 mm
6.24
19.6
54.8
1.625





mm
mm
mm
mm



0.032λ0
0.235λ0
0.067λ0
0.209λ0
0.585λ0
0.173λ0









The measured and simulated standing wave ratios (SWR) of a design of the antenna 50 are shown in FIG. 3. It can be seen that the antenna 50 has a wide measured impedance bandwidth of 55% (with SWR less than 2 from 2.37 GHz to 4.18 GHz). FIG. 4 shows that the antenna 50 has an average gain of 10 dBi, varying from 9.5 dBi to 11 dBi, which is only a slight variation.


The measured and simulated radiation patterns and half power beamwidths of the antenna 50 at frequencies of 2.6, 3, 3.5 and 4 GHz are shown in FIGS. 5A to 5H and Table 2 below:












TABLE 2









Half power beamwidth













Measured

Simulated












Plane

90°

90°














2.6 GHz
48.9°
55.7°
48.8°
59°


3.0 GHz
53.3°
51.9°
48.4°
56°


3.5 GHz
48.7°

52°

43.5°
54°


4.0 GHz
28.5°
51.4°

33°

51.8°









In both E and H planes, the broadside radiation patterns are stable and symmetrical. At 3 GHz, the half power beamwidth at φ=0° plane (E-plane) is 53.3° which is slightly higher than the half power beamwidth at φ=90° plane (H-plane), which is 52°. Also, low cross polarization and low back radiation are observed across the entire operating bandwidth.


The antenna 50 can be optimized to have higher gain, with a tradeoff in bandwidth reduction. While the antenna 50 of the configuration discussed in the previous section is the wideband mode, the antenna in the configuration shown in FIG. 6, generally designated as 100, is the high gain mode.


The geometry of the antenna 100 in high gain mode is similar to that of the antenna 50 in wideband mode. A first modification is to reduce the height of the antenna 100 from 0.18λ0 to 0.12λ0. Another modification is the introduction of a pair of stubs extended from the side of the feeding position, namely point F′.


Tables 3A and 3B below show exemplary dimensions (in mm and in terms of λ0) of the parameters of the antenna 100 shown in FIGS. 6A to 6C:
















TABLE 3A





Parameters
Pw
P1
D1
Ps
Ht
H1
H2







Values
60 mm
60 mm
23 mm
14 mm
10.3 mm
8.8 mm
1.5 mm



0.7λ0
0.7λ0
0.268λ0
0.163λ0
0.12λ0
0.103λ0
0.018λ0























TABLE 3B





Parameters
Sw
S1
Lh
L1
Tx1
Txs
a







Values
7 mm
23.5 mm
10.8 mm
16.7 mm
38.6 mm
1.125 mm
3 mm



0.082λ0
0.274λ0
0.126λ0
0.195λ0
0.451λ0
0.013λ0
0.035λ0









The measured and simulated standing wave ratios (SWR) of a typical high gain mode antenna 100 according to the present invention are shown in FIG. 7. It can be seen that the antenna 100 has a wide measured impedance bandwidth of 22% (with SWR less than 2 from 3.115 GHz to 3.89 GHz).



FIG. 8 shows that the antenna 100 has an average measured gain of 11 dBi. The gain varies from 10.8 dBi to 11.5 dBi within the operating bandwidth. The variation is very small, which is only 0.7 dB, and is better than half the variation of 1.5 dB in the wideband mode antenna 50 discussed above.


The measured and simulated radiation patterns and half power beamwidths of the antenna 100 at frequencies of 3.2, 3.5 and 3.9 GHz are shown in FIG. 9 and Table 4 below:












TABLE 4









Half power beamwidth













Measured

Simulated












Plane

90°

90°














3.2 GHz
42.9°
56.3°
42°

55°



3.5 GHz

42°

51.9°
40°
52.5°


3.9 GHz
37.1°
48.6°
37°
48.8°









In both E and H planes, the broadside radiation patterns are stable and symmetrical. At 3.5 GHz, the half power beamwidth at φ=0° plane (E-plane) is 42°, which is narrower than the half power beamwidth of 52° at φ=90° plane (H-plane). The antenna 100 also has low cross polarization and low back radiation across the entire operating bandwidth.


For further reduction of the antenna height, dielectric materials can be loaded below the dipole patches 52a, 52b of the dipole 52 and/or in the portion between the two vertical walls 56b, 56c of the shorted patch 54 of the antenna 50. Dielectric materials can also be loaded below dipole patches 102a, 102b of a dipole 102 and/or in the portion between two vertical walls 106b, 106c of a shorted patch antenna 104 of the antenna 100 to achieve the same effect.


The planar dipole 12, 52, 102 can have different shapes, such as with rounded corners or polygonal in shape, as shown in FIGS. 10A and 10B. For size reduction, the dipole 12, 52, 102 can be instead folded in different ways, as shown in FIGS. 11A and 11B.


Similar performance can be obtained if the L-strips 62 are replaced by metal strips of other shapes, such as polygonal, folded outwardly, or F-shaped, as shown in FIGS. 12A, 12B and 12C respectively.


The antenna 10, 50, 100 can also function if the H-shaped ground plane 56a is replaced by ground planes of other geometries. As shown in FIGS. 13A to 13C, the elongate plates 66 of the ground plane 56a may be polygonal, triangular in shape or T-shaped.


The antenna 10, 50, 100 can be extended to dual-polarization antenna. FIGS. 14A and 14B show two possible antennae 150a, 150b of different configurations. In both configurations, the H-shaped ground plane is replaced by a cross-shaped ground plane 156a, 156b respectively, with some slots cutting on it. A respective feeding line 158a, 158b is placed above the cross-shaped ground plane 156a, 156b; while another feeding line 160a, 160b for the other polarization is located below the cross-shaped ground plane 156a, 156b. In both configurations 150a, 150b, dipole patches 152a, 152b are located at the four corners of the respective antenna 150a, 150b.


It is possible to construct an antenna array with a number of antennae, including at least one antenna 10, 50, 100, 150a, 150b according to the present invention.


2G, 3G, LTE, Wi-Fi and WiMAX demand high gain and wideband unidirectional antennae with low cross-polarization, low back radiation, symmetric radiation pattern and stable gain over the operating frequency range. As an antenna according to the present invention functions as a high gain complementary wideband antenna element, such could fulfill the above requirements, and is thus suitable for modern wireless communication systems. In particular, because of its wideband characteristic, an antenna according to the present invention can cover all 2G, 3G and 4G applications. In addition, its wideband characteristic allows better manufacturing tolerances, which translates into lower tuning cost. At the same time, because of its high gain, an antenna according to the present invention can save cost, space, and energy and is good candidate for green communications.


A high gain complementary wideband antenna according to the present invention has excellent mechanical and electrical characteristics, including low profile, wide impedance bandwidth, high gain and stable radiation pattern. Higher gain translates into fewer elements in the array formed of antennae according to the present invention, thus reducing antenna size and cost. The fact that such an antenna is of low profile would allow for better integration with other active and passive components in the array. A base station antenna constructed on the basis of antennae according to the present invention could provide excellent array performance.


It should be understood that the above only illustrates examples whereby the present invention may be carried out, and that various modifications and/or alterations may be made thereto without departing from the spirit of the invention.


It should also be understood that certain features of the invention, which are, for clarity, described in the context of separate embodiments, may be provided in combination in a single embodiment. Conversely, various features of the invention which are, for brevity, described in the context of a single embodiment, may also be provided separately or in any appropriate sub-combinations.

Claims
  • 1. An antenna including at least one dipole connected with at least one shorted patch antenna, and at least two feeding sources.
  • 2. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said feeding sources are balun sources.
  • 3. The antenna according to claim 2 wherein said balun sources are in phase with each other.
  • 4. The antenna according to claim 2 wherein each said balun source is adapted, in operation, to generate one electric dipole and one magnetic dipole.
  • 5. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said at least two feeding sources are of identical magnitudes.
  • 6. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said at least one shorted patch antenna includes two metal plates and a ground plate.
  • 7. The antenna according to claim 6 wherein said metal plates are substantially perpendicular to said ground plate.
  • 8. The antenna according to claim 6 wherein said ground plane is substantially parallel to said at least one dipole.
  • 9. The antenna according to claim 6 wherein said at least one dipole is connected with said at least one shorted patch antenna via said two metal plates.
  • 10. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said at least one shorted antenna patch is electrically connected to a metal ground plane.
  • 11. The antenna according to claim 10 wherein said ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch is spaced apart from said metal ground plane.
  • 12. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said at least one shorted antenna patch is physically connected to a metal reflector plate.
  • 13. The antenna according to claim 12 wherein said ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch is spaced apart from said metal reflector plate.
  • 14. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch has two elongate plates joined with each other at their substantially middle portion and spaced apart from each other by a slot at or adjacent each of their longitudinal ends.
  • 15. The antenna according to claim 14 wherein said ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch is generally H-shaped.
  • 16. The antenna according to claim 14 wherein each of said elongate plates is of a generally rectangular, triangular, polygonal or T shape.
  • 17. The antenna according to claim 10 wherein each of said feeding sources includes a pair of L-shaped strips, a T-junction microstrip line and said metal ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch.
  • 18. The antenna according to claim 17 wherein said pair of L-shaped strips are connected with said T-junction microstrip line.
  • 19. The antenna according to claim 17 wherein said pair of L-shaped strips and said T-junction microstrip line are spaced apart from said metal ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch.
  • 20. The antenna according to claim 17 wherein said T-junction microstrip line and said L-shaped strips are separated from said metal ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch by a layer of dielectric material.
  • 21. The antenna according to claim 17 wherein a portion of each said L-shaped strip crosses one of said slots of said ground plane of said at least one shorted antenna patch.
  • 22. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said at least one dipole is planar or folded.
  • 23. The antenna according to claim 1 wherein said antenna includes four dipole patches, a cross-shaped ground plane, one feeding line on said cross-shaped ground plane, and one feeding line below said cross-shaped ground plane.
  • 24. An antenna array formed of a plurality of antennae, at least one of said antennae being an antenna including at least one dipole connected with at least one shorted patch antenna, and at least two feeding sources.