The present invention relates to an antenna comprising a plurality of walls in an electrically conducting material, the walls being arranged to form a low-profile antenna which has a small depth, and which can thus easily be integrated into existing structures in small spaces.
There is a great desire to develop antennas which can be integrated into existing or new structures without needing a great deal of volume or space for the antenna. Preferably, the antenna should offer great versatility regarding, for example, polarization and coverage.
The desire stated above is addressed by the antenna of the present invention in that it discloses an antenna comprising a plurality of walls in an electrically conducting material. The walls comprised in the antenna of the invention are:
According to the invention, the walls are arranged so that the first and second main walls extend parallel to each other and are joined by the first end wall. Additionally, the side walls also join or connect the first and second main walls, so that a structure with a cavity with only one opening is formed. The opening of the cavity is in the form of a rectangular aperture, which can be brought to radiate by a feed connection which is also comprised in the antenna.
Thus, in other words, an electrically conducting box or “trench” is offered by the invention, the box having an opening which can be brought to radiate. This box can easily be integrated into existing or new structures with minimal requirements for space.
As an alternative, the antenna of the invention can also comprise a second end wall which extends from the second main wall towards the first main wall. In this alternative solution, the length of extension of the first main wall is such that the second end wall and the first main wall do not meet. Thus, in this alternative, a box-like structure is created with an aperture which can be brought to radiate by a feed connection which is also comprised in this version of the antenna of the invention. The advantages which are offered by the first embodiment of the invention are also offered by this embodiment. This embodiment is more like a conducting “folded trench” than the “ordinary trench” described above.
Specific applications of these and other embodiments of the invention will be shown in the following detailed description.
The invention will be described in more detail in the following, with reference to the appended drawings, in which
a and 1b show two different basic embodiments of an antenna according to the invention, and
a and 4b show another embodiment of the invention, and
a shows a first embodiment 100 of an antenna of the invention. As shown in this drawing, the antenna 100 comprises a first 110 and a second 120 main wall, with respective lengths of extension d1 and d2. The two main walls are joined, preferably at their one end, by a first end wall 130.
The first and second side walls, 110, 120, as well as the first end wall 130, in this embodiment are flat and thin plates of an electrically conducting material, with the first and second side walls arranged so that they extend in parallel to each other, at a distance from each other, said distance being covered by the first end wall 130 as it joins the two main walls 110, 120. The first end wall has four side edges, a first and a second one of which are in contact with the first and second main walls.
In addition to the walls shown in
Thus, the first embodiment of the antenna of the invention shown in
In the embodiment of
As is also shown in
b shows a second embodiment 100′ of the antenna of the invention. In this embodiment, the same basic principles as that shown in
The side walls are not shown in
Suitably, the second end wall 140 has the same dimensions as the first end wall, at least in the direction from the second main wall towards the first main wall, but since the first main wall is shorter than the second main wall, the second end wall will not connect the two main walls. Both of the end walls should extend perpendicularly from the second main wall towards the first main wall.
Thus, an antenna 100′ with a “folded trench”-structure is created by using the embodiment of
As with the previous embodiment 100, the length of the trench, i.e. the length of the second main wall should be λ/4, where λ is the operating wavelength of the antenna. This is a general principle which is common to all of the embodiments of the present invention. However, if there is a need for smaller antennas than would be allowed by the dielectric constant of air, it is entirely within the scope of the invention to fill at least part of the antenna with a material with a dielectric constant different from that of air.
In
One of the advantages of the invention emerges here: if one has an object such as the cylinder 203 to which one wishes to attach an antenna, this can be done merely by arranging a recess in the cylinder 203 with measurements which at least roughly correspond to the outer dimensions of the antenna.
The antenna is then arranged in the recess and the object 200 shown in
The principles employed for the feed structure shown in
In
Since the only part of the antenna 300 according to the invention which needs to be electromagnetically visible to the outside world is the aperture, 305, the electrically conducting material 309 is then covered by Radar Absorbing Material (RAM) 307, so that the only part of the antenna which is not covered in RAM is the aperture.
In addition, RAM with an electrical thickness which is significantly shorter than λ/4 can be arranged to cover the antenna, including the aperture. The word “significantly” should here be taken to mean at least twice as short, preferably five times shorter
In
In order to achieve the mentioned objectives, the folded trench antenna of the invention has been used. The principles of the antenna will not be described again here, but the general principle is that a flat trench antenna has been created, with an aperture 405 which extends along one side of the antenna. The antenna 400 has then been arranged on the intended surface 470, i.e. the wing of an airplane or the hull of a ship or an airplane. Suitably, the antenna is arranged with the aperture 405 in parallel to a main surface of the hull or wing.
In
The central operating frequency λ of the antenna is defined as λ/4=d, where d is the length of the second main wall of the antenna.
Another feature of the invention is also shown in
The diode or diodes are employed in the following fashion: during Tx or Rx-phases of the antenna, the diode/-s are not made conducting. However, when the antenna is not in Tx or Rx-phase, the diodes are made conducting by applying the proper voltage. This will lead to the diodes creating a conducting mesh across the aperture, which in a known manner will significantly reduce the scattering by the antenna of foreign electromagnetic waves.
The distance d1 between the diodes will then become significant, since d1 should be significantly much smaller than one half of the shortest wavelength which is anticipated to be incident upon the antenna. Again, the word “significantly” should here be taken to mean at least twice as short, and preferably five times shorter
Thus, by positioning the diodes at chosen intervals, and by making them electrically conducting, the RCS of the antenna can be greatly reduced.
b shows another feature which may be incorporated into the antenna 400: the antenna 400 shown in
An antenna according to the invention can easily be integrated into existing structures such as, for example, masts. If the coverage offered by one antenna is not sufficient, more than one antenna may be integrated into one and the same structure. An example of this is shown in
The side walls may also suitably be correspondingly curved, in order to join the first and second main walls to each other. The end wall 530, however, is not curved but straight, and joins the two main walls at one end of the curve. Since the four curved antennas 5001-5004 are joined to each other around a circular mast, end walls can be shared between neighbouring antennas so that, for example, the first end wall 530 of one antenna 5001 can serve as the second end wall of a neighbouring antenna 5002.
The additional feature mentioned previously of the antenna 500 is as follows: in order to reduce the length of extension of the antenna(s), i.e. in the example with curved antennas in order to reduce the circumference, the individual antennas 5001-5004 comprise a third main wall 525, attached to the second end wall, i.e. in the vicinity of the aperture 505 of the individual antenna.
This second main wall 525 is also flat and parallel (concentric in this case) to the second main wall 520 from which it extends. Due to the third main wall, the distance d which determines the operating wavelength λ of the antenna according to the formula λ/4=d is now in effect doubled, since the distance contained by the individual antenna 5001-5004 will be the distance from the second end wall 540 to the first end wall 530 and back.
Another way of expressing this is that the distance which determines the operating wavelength of the antenna now becomes the distance from a point on the second end wall 540 above the third main wall 525 to a point on the first end wall 530, ending in a point on the second end wall 540 below the third main wall 525.
In order to expand the distance d which determines the operating wavelength λ of the antenna according to the formula λ/4=d, the antenna 600 employs one of the principles disclosed in connection with
The example in
Each intermediate wall extends from the side wall to which it is attached towards the other side wall, but has an extension such that the intermediate wall doesn't reach the intermediate wall to which it is not attached. In this way, a labyrinth, in other words a meandering path is created inside the cavity of the antenna 600. The distance d of the formula λ/4=d is thus increased, and will be the total length of the meander path.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/SE2004/001130 | 7/13/2004 | WO | 00 | 2/12/2007 |