The present invention relates to an internal antenna of small volume.
More precisely, the present invention relates to an. antenna which can be disposed axially inside the housing of an electronic appliance of very small thickness, the antenna including its own ground plane, or co-operating, for example, with printed circuits having metallization suitable for acting as the equivalent of a ground plane.
The manufacturers of mobile telephones tend to offer appliances of smaller and smaller size and also of smaller and smaller thickness.
In order to reduce size, so-called “internal” antennas are used, i.e. antennas which are located entirely inside the housing of the mobile telephone.
As internal antennas, it is possible to consider using so-called “PIFA” antennas, which are essentially constituted by a radiating element, and which must necessarily operate together with a ground plane. In order to ensure that the antenna operates well, the ground plane must be disposed at a distance of about 7 millimeters (mm) from the radiating element for the GSM frequency bands of 900 GHz to 1800 GHz. The total thickness of the antenna can be too thick for it to be usable in mobile radiotelephones of very small size. Faced with this difficulty, proposals have been made to use external antennas of very small thickness. The problem which is encountered with such antennas offset from the ground plane is that their performance is degraded if the ground plane is small. In addition, the specific absorption rate (SAR) of the electromagnetic field is high.
An object of the present invention is to provide an internal antenna of very small volume, the ground plane naturally being preferably that of the appliance in which the antenna is mounted.
According to the invention, this object is achieved by a small volume antenna comprising:
It will be understood that in this antenna, a first portion of the radiating element is constituted both by a first conductive surface placed in an antenna plane parallel to the ground plane and by the ground plane itself. A main radiating element constituted by a second conductive surface is disposed in the space defined by said first portion of the radiating element. This configuration can operate in highly satisfactory manner with a distance of 2 mm to 3 mm being provided between the ground plane and the antenna plane in which the first conductive surface and the major part of the second conductive surface are disposed.
The term “not being connected together by any conductive electrical connection” means that the only connection that might possibly exist between the two conductive surfaces consists in capacitance, self-induction, or a combination of these components.
The term “for connecting said first surface at least in the vicinity of the second end of the second surface to the ground plane” means that the electrical connection has one end connected to the first surface either directly at its second end or else close to its second end so that only a small portion of said first surface extends beyond the point of connection.
It will thus be understood that by means of the antenna of the invention, the conductive surfaces forming the radiating element can be disposed at a very small distance from the ground plane, which is naturally preferably the ground plane of the appliance in which the antenna is mounted.
In a first embodiment, the first and second conductive surfaces are made on a face of an insulating support or a dielectric substrate that is substantially parallel to the ground plane.
In a second embodiment, the first and second conductive surfaces are cut-out pieces of metal sheet which are connected to the ground plane and are mounted thereon. These portions may be mechanically connected by an adhesive tape of the high temperature Kapton type.
Preferably, in the second embodiment, said first and second electrical connection means are extensions of the piece of sheet forming the first conductive surface, said extensions being bent through a right angle and having ends bonded to the ground plane.
According to another characteristic of the invention, the opening is formed in said first conductive surface. In another variant embodiment, the opening is made in the ground plane on the electrical path interconnecting said two connection zones.
Also preferably, the antenna includes impedance-matching means between said first and second conductive surfaces.
Also preferably, the antenna has second impedance-matching means which are mounted on the assembly constituted by the first conductive surface and the portion of the ground plane interconnecting the connection zones.
Also preferably, the second impedance-matching means are constituted by an open-ended slot made in the ground plane.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention appear better on reading the following description of various embodiments of the invention given as non-limiting examples. The description refers to the accompanying figures, in which:
With reference initially to
The antenna has a second conductive surface 32 which, in this embodiment, is formed entirely on the top face of the insulating support 12 which is preferably a dielectric substrate made of FR4 type epoxy-impregnated fiberglass. This conductive surface 32 is made on the portion 12a of the insulating support which is partially surrounded by the first conductive surface. In the embodiment shown in
Taking the above-described conductive surfaces as a whole, it can be considered that there is a first conductive assembly constituted by the first metallization 14, by the connection tabs 18 and 20, and by the electrical path 30 interconnecting the two connection zones. This first conductive assembly is provided with an opening 22. In the space surrounded by the first conductive assembly as described above there is disposed the second conductive surface 32 which constitutes the main part of the radiating element of the antenna, the first conductive surface also constituting a radiating element.
Naturally the shielding 44b of the antenna cable 44 is connected to the ground plane 10: in the zone referenced L1 (FIG. 3).
The antenna preferably also has first impedance-matching means represented symbolically by reference 46 between the two conductive surfaces 14 and 32. These first impedance-matching means are preferably obtained by ensuring that the distance e′ between the first conductive surface and the second conductive surface over a given length has a value that is suitable for obtaining the desired impedance.
The embodiment of
The first conductive surface 14 is extended by a short conductive portion 15 which extends away from the connection point 14′a between the tab 18 and said first surface.
With reference now to
In the particular embodiment shown in
This figure also shows an open-ended slot 50 in the ground plane 10 going from the non-metallized zone 52 surrounding the connection point of the antenna to the edge of the ground plane. Functionally, this slot 50 performs exactly the same role as the opening 22. In this figure, there can also be seen a second slot 54 made in the ground plane and constituting second impedance-matching means. This slot 54 is connected to the open slot 50. It is thus itself functionally open.
In this embodiment, the distance e between the conductive surface made on the dielectric substrate 12 and the ground plane lies in the range 2.5 mm to 3 mm, the thickness of the insulating support being about 0.8 mm, and the dimensions of the insulating support substrate 12 possibly being 13 mm by 31 mm. It can thus be seen that the antenna of the invention is effectively of small thickness and also presents a volume that is very small (less than or equal to 1 cubic centimeter (cm3)). By means of its disposition, this antenna includes its own ground plane which, as mentioned above, is preferably the ground plane of the appliance in which the antenna is mounted.
In these figures, L1 represents the point of connection with the shielding of the antenna conductor 44.
Mark 1 corresponds to 880 MHz (megahertz), mark 2 to 960 MHz, mark 4 to 1710 MHz, and mark 5 to 1880 MHz. It can be seen that very wide passbands are obtained in the frequency ranges used in telephony.
The chart shows that in the operating frequency ranges of the antenna, impedance is close or very close to 50 ohms, and the two loops B1 and B2 demonstrate that there are two well-marked frequency bands.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6384786 | Ito et al. | May 2002 | B2 |
6456249 | Johnson et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6600449 | Onaka et al. | Jul 2003 | B2 |
6788257 | Fang et al. | Sep 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 109 251 | Jun 2001 | EP |
1 128 466 | Aug 2001 | EP |
0 814 535 | Jul 2003 | EP |
WO 0250948 | Jun 2002 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050078037 A1 | Apr 2005 | US |