The present invention relates to a method of designing weight vectors for a dual beam antenna, wherein the beams have orthogonal polarizations.
Beams for sector covering transmission in mobile telephony communication systems are in case of array antennas generated by means of beamforming for transmission of user specific information. Examples of standards are TD-SCDMA and LTE-TDD, which both typically use, or will use, dual polarized antennas arranged in four columns.
The idea of combining beams, to generate a compound beam, has been disclosed, see U.S. Pat. No. 5,649,287 (reference [1]), which describes combination of beam ports from antennas having orthogonal polarizations. In [1] is disclosed the combination of beam ports associated with antennas having, not only different polarizations but also, different spatial pointing directions, to achieve a compound beam covering a larger area in an azimuth without creating nulls or near null in the combined antenna pattern.
A prior art antenna, as disclosed in
The commonly used method for generating beams by means of a dual polarized array antenna is shown in
The typical problems with the common methods are:
The patent publication WO2006/071153 discloses an antenna device for a radio base station in a cellular telephony system. A further patent publication WO2010/006645 discloses a base station repeater station pair.
Thus there is a need for an improved method for designing weight vectors for dual beam antennas with orthogonal polarizations.
An object with the present invention is to provide a method to achieve dual beams with orthogonal polarizations having improved antenna radiation properties in the power domain compared to prior art solutions.
This object is achieved by a method of generating two beams, having orthogonal polarizations, that both cover a selected area using an antenna having at least three dual-polarized array elements. Each dual-polarized array element has a first phase centre associated with a first polarization and a second phase centre associated with a second polarization, which is orthogonal to the first polarization. The first and second phase centres of the at least three dual-polarized array elements are arranged in a first direction and are symmetrically distributed across a two dimensional antenna surface in relation to a symmetry line, perpendicular to the first direction. Each beam is generated by feeding said multiple dual-polarized array elements, and the method comprises: designing a first weight matrix having a first non-zero weight vector for the first polarization and a second non-zero weight vector for the second polarization; applying the first weight matrix to the dual-polarized array elements to generate a first beam covering the selected area; calculating a second weight matrix based on the weight vectors of the first weight matrix; and applying the second weight matrix to the dual-polarized array elements to generate a second beam covering the selected area.
An advantage with the present invention is that a match between the actual and the desired beam shape is improved compared to prior art antennas.
Further objects and advantages may be found by a skilled person in the art from the detailed description.
The invention will be described in connection with the following drawings that are provided as non-limited examples, in which:
A prior art antenna configuration 10 is shown in
The antenna configuration further comprises an amplifying unit 13 coupled to each antenna element, each amplifying unit 13 comprising power amplifiers PA for downlink transmission and low noise amplifiers LNA for uplink reception as well as filters (not shown) to isolate uplink reception and downlink transmission. Antenna ports A and B are connected to the dual polarized antenna elements 11 via a beam forming network 14 and each respective amplifying unit 13. The beam forming network 14 is conventionally configured to generate two beams by connecting antenna port A and applying suitable weights to the first elements 11A associated with the first polarization, and by connecting antenna port B and applying suitable weights to the second elements 11B associated with the second polarization.
For purposes of diversity it is desired to have two beams with orthogonal polarization covering the same area. The commonly used method for generating beams by means of a dual polarized array antenna is shown in
One example of beam patterns corresponding to the common method is shown in
The corresponding weight matrix for beam 2, which will have orthogonal polarization for all azimuth angles, is found as
Two zero weight vectors, namely W1BT and W2AT used to achieve two orthogonal beams.
The half power beam width (hpbw) for the element is in the example set to 70 degrees and the hpbw for the desired, sector covering beam, is set to 65 deg. Element separation, i.e. the distance between the phase centres (one for each polarization) of adjacent dual polarized antenna elements 11, is set to 0.7 wavelengths.
The amplitude taper over the elements causes the power utilization, assuming all power amplifiers have the same rated output power, to be reduced. The power efficiency figure shows the actual output power relative the total available output power when both beams are transmitting with the same average power allocation per beam. To find the efficiency figure the weight matrixes must be normalized in several steps. The first step is to set the total power equal to 1 in both beams
The second step is to normalize such that the maximum power, over all power amplifiers, is set to 1
The third step is to calculate total output power and normalize to number of power amplifiers which corresponds to the total available output power
The vec(X) operator generates a column vector from the matrix X. The ( )H operator takes the hermitian, i.e. the transpose of the matrix and complex conjugates all elements in the matrix.
The power efficiency for the example in
ηPA=0.667 which corresponds to −1.8 dB.
The basic concept of the invention is to define weight vectors that correspond to desired antenna radiation properties in the power domain. This is achieved by having a sector beam ports connected to both polarizations of the antenna elements weighted by an appropriate weight matrix. For each single beam only the magnitude of the E-fields is of importance (power domain) and therefore considered. This is in contrast to the conventional view where the radiation properties are defined/studied for a polarization that is fixed (the same) in all directions of the corresponding beam.
The weight matrix for each beam may be divided into two weight vectors, which are non-zero weight vectors. Each weight vector has elements associated with antenna elements with the same polarization, as illustrated in more detail below.
However, when two beams shall be generated with orthogonal polarizations, the E-field for the first beam must be considered while designing the weight matrix for the second beam to ensure that polarizations become sufficiently orthogonal for all azimuth angles in the intended coverage area.
An amplifying unit is connected to each antenna element 11A and 11B, and is illustrated by a power amplifier 23 for downlink. A corresponding low noise amplifier LNA (not shown) is also connected to each antenna element for uplink. A beam forming network 24 connects each antenna ports 1 and 2 to all antenna element 11A and 11B via a respective power amplifiers 23 and summation unit 21, as indicated by solid 25 and dotted 26 lines. A weight matrix for each beam is applied to all antenna elements 11A and 11B to generate two orthogonal beams.
It should be noted that the common phase centre 18 of the dual-polarized array elements 11 are located on the straight line 27 in the first direction 12 and are symmetrical relative the symmetry line 22.
Each of the two beams is generated by means of a weight matrix W1T,W2T, which in this example has 8 elements arranged in two weight vectors (one weight vector per set of antenna elements with the same polarization) as illustrated below.
The first weight matrix W1T used for generation of beam 1 may be defined as:
“N” is the number of antenna elements having the same polarization and “A” is the first polarization and “B” is the second orthogonal polarization. W1AT represents a first weight vector applied to antenna elements associated with the first polarization, and W1BT represents a second weight vector applied to antenna elements associated with the second polarization. The second weight matrix W2T used for generation of beam 2 may be similarly defined as:
Thus, each weight matrix has two weight vectors (one for each polarization) with N complex elements as illustrated in Equations (1) and (2). The second weight matrix shall generate a beam that have the same power pattern and orthogonal polarization to beam 1 in all directions, which for the uniform linear array in
F is a matrix that reverses the elements in the vector it operates on.
Thus, the second weight matrix may be defined as:
The operator (X)* is the complex conjugate of X.
The second weight matrix is calculated based on the weight vectors of the first weight matrix, and equation (3) is the mathematical expression of an operation performed on the “N” complex elements of the weight vectors of the first weight matrix to obtain the second weight matrix. In order to fully appreciate the actual operation to generate a second beam with the same power pattern as the first beam, which is essentially orthogonal to each other in all directions, the operation may be divided into three steps to be performed in arbitrary order.
Step 1
Each element of the first weight vector W1AT in the first weight matrix W1T is mirrored in the real axis (i.e. complex conjugate each element) and mirroring each element of the second weight vector W1BT in the first weight matrix W1T is mirrored in the imaginary axis (i.e. complex conjugate each element with a sign shift), as illustrated below:
W1AT=[w11Aw12A . . . w1NA]└(w11A)*(w12A)* . . . (w1NA)*┘
W1BT=[w11Bw12B . . . w1NB][(−w11B)*(−w12B)* . . . (−w1NB)*]
Step 2
The order of the rows is reversed, i.e. “row reversing” the calculated elements, as illustrated below:
Step 3
The order of the columns is reversed, i.e. “column reversing” the calculated row reversed elements to obtain the elements of the first vector W2AT and the second weight vector W2BT in the second weight matrix W2T as illustrated below:
As the applied weight vector matrix includes both polarizations it is possible to design a weight matrix that:
The first weight matrix W1T used for generation of a first beam using four dual-polarized elements as described in connection with
W1AT and W1BT are non-zero weight vectors.
The second weight matrix W2T for the second beam in this example is calculated using equation (3) and becomes:
Resulting in a second weight matrix having non-zero weight vectors W2AT and W2BT.
The half power beam width (hpbw) for the element is in the example set to 105 deg and the hpbw for the desired, sector covering beam, is set to 65 deg. Element separation, i.e. separation between the first phase centres and the second phase centres, respectively, is set to 0.5 wavelengths.
The power utilization figure for this example becomes
ηPA=0.629 which corresponds to −2.0 dB.
As may be noted, the power utilization is lower than the power utilization for the prior art example illustrated in connection with
This size of antenna is used in the following description, but the idea can be applied to other antenna sizes as well. In reality each described antenna element can also be designed as a number of separate antenna element structures (subarrays).
The first phase centres of the first antenna elements 31A and the second phase centres of the second antenna elements 31B are symmetrically arranged in relation to a symmetry line 32.
In this example a first weight matrix having two weight vectors, each with three elements, is provided to obtain a desired power pattern for the first beam, such as:
The corresponding second weight matrix to generate the second beam is:
The weight matrices can be modified by applying an arbitrary polarization rotation without changing the shapes of the power patterns but the polarizations will of course be changed. A polarization rotation can be applied by means of a polarization rotation matrix Φ according to
Wpol
The structure for the polarization rotation matrix is
where β is the spatial angle for the rotation of the polarization.
Further, the weight matrixes can be modified be means of a phase shift, equal for both matrixes (both beams), according to
Wphase
where α is an arbitrary electrical phase angle.
In some specific cases the weight matrix, containing the two weight vectors, becomes very simple. An example is where the shape of the element pattern and the desired pattern are more or less identical.
An example of weight matrixes for this case is:
The corresponding beam pattern is shown in
ηPA=1.00,
which corresponds to 0 dB, i.e., the entire power resource can be utilized if desired.
The polarization parallelity is shown in
In fact there are several other weight vectors that give similar performance. A second examples is
and a third example is
The weight matrixes can of course be subject to polarization rotation as described above.
Also spatial beam steering can be applied, identical for both matrixes (beams) with maintained performance according to
Wspatial=ΨW
where Ψ is a spatial beam steering matrix, here shown for 4 columns assuming that the phase centre separation between the elements is identical, such as a linear phase shift over the array
δ is an electrical phase angle, which (in combination with element separation in wavelengths) defines the scan angle of the beam(s).
An additional effect for the simplified cases is that the weight matrix becomes independent of the element separation, i.e., the same weight matrix can be used for different antennas for which the element spacing is different.
In the examples above, the term “array element” have been used in the meaning of “beam port” to which there exists an associated beam with certain properties, such as phase centres (one for each polarization). A phase centre is defined as: “The location of a point associated with an antenna such that, if it is taken as the centre of a sphere whose radius extends into the farfield, the phase of a given field component over the surface of the radiation sphere is essentially constant, at least over that portion of the surface where the radiation is significant”, see IEEE Standard Definitions of Terms For Antennas, IEEE Std 145-1993 (ISBN 1-55937-317-2).
This application is a 35 U.S.C. §371 National Phase Entry Application from PCT/EP2010/001349, filed Mar. 4, 2010, designating the United States and claiming priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/255,541, filed Oct. 28, 2009, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein in their entirety by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/001349 | 3/4/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/26/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/050866 | 5/5/2011 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120212372 A1 | Aug 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61255541 | Oct 2009 | US |