The present disclosure relates to microstrip antenna elements and arrays, and more particularly to microstrip antenna elements and arrays comprising a shaped nanotube fabric layer used as a radiating structure.
This application is related to the following U.S. patents, which are assigned to the assignee of the present application, and are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety:
Methods of Nanotube Films and Articles (U.S. Pat. No. 6,835,591), filed Apr. 23, 2002;
Methods of Using Pre-Formed Nanotubes to Make Carbon Nanotube Films, Layers, Fabrics, Ribbons, Elements, and Articles (U.S. Pat. No. 7,335,395), filed Jan. 13, 2003;
Devices Having Horizontally-Disposed Nanofabric Articles and Methods of Making the Same (U.S. Pat. No. 7,259,410), filed Feb. 11, 2004;
Non-Volatile Electromechanical Field Effect Devices and Circuits Using Same and Methods of Forming Same (U.S. Pat. No. 7,115,901), filed Jun. 9, 2004;
Patterned Nanowire Articles on a substrate and Methods of Making Same (U.S. Pat. No. 7,416,993), filed Sep. 8, 2004;
Devices Having Vertically-Disposed Nanofabric Articles and Methods of Making Same (U.S. Pat. No. 6,924,538), filed Feb. 11, 2004.
This application is related to the following patent applications, which are assigned to the assignee of the application, and are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety:
Methods of Making Carbon Nanotube Films, Layers, Fabrics, Ribbons, Elements, and Articles (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/341,005), filed Jan. 13, 2003;
High Purity Nanotube Fabrics and Films (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/860,332), filed Jun. 3, 2004;
Two-Terminal Nanotube Devices and Systems and Methods of Making Same (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/280,786), filed Nov. 15, 2005;
Nanotube Articles with Adjustable Electrical Conductivity and Methods of Making Same (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/398,126), filed Apr. 5, 2006;
Anisotropic Nanotube Fabric Layers and Films and Methods of Fowling Same (U.S. patent application No. not yet assigned) filed on even date herewith; and
Anisotropic Nanotube Fabric Layers and Films and Methods of Forming Same (U.S. patent application No. not yet assigned) filed on even date herewith.
Any discussion of the related art throughout this specification should in no way be considered as an admission that such art is widely known or forms part of the common general knowledge in the field.
Antennas are attractive for many commercial and government applications. Antennas include a conductive material layer (a radiating structure) which can send and receive electromagnetic radiation by the acceleration of electrons. Sophisticated antenna technology and designs are required to control the transmitted pattern of said electromagnetic radiation. The geometry of the antenna can be controlled to focus the energy that is either transmitted or received by the antenna in a specific direction, i.e., the antenna's gain. Several important parameters (figures of merit) that are utilized for the design and application of antennas are radiation power density and intensity, directivity, beamwidth, efficiency, beam efficiency, bandwidth, polarization, and gain. Current antenna technology varies widely and the designs of modern antennas are specifically tailored depending on the figures of merit for the antenna application.
Microstrip antenna elements and arrays (sometimes termed microstrip patch antennas or printed antennas) are used within a plurality of electronic devices and systems and are well known to those skilled in the art. There exists an increasing demand for microstrip antenna elements and arrays of such elements in the design of a plurality of portable electronic devices—such as, but not limited to, GPS receivers, satellite radios, cellular telephones, and laptop computers. Microstrip antenna elements and arrays are favorable in such applications due to their low cost, low profile, low weight, high durability, and ease of fabrication as compared with other types of antenna structures. Microstrip antenna elements also can be easily fabricated to confonit to a curved surface—such as, but not limited to, the nose cone of an aircraft or the interior of the shaped case of a portable electronic device. However, as the physical dimensions of a microstrip antenna element are inversely proportional to the resonant frequency of said element—that is, the size of the microstrip antenna will determine the “center frequency” at which the device is most sensitive—microstrip antennas are typically used to transmit and receive UHF frequencies and higher (that is, at frequencies greater than 300 MHz).
A typical microstrip antenna element is comprised of a plurality of coplanar layers, including a shaped conductive material layer which forms a radiating structure, an intermediate dielectric layer, and a ground plane layer. The radiating structure is formed of an electrically conductive material (such as, but not limited to, copper or gold) embedded or photoetched on the intermediate dielectric layer with a specific geometry and is generally exposed to free space. The microstrip antenna element generally radiates in a direction substantially perpendicular to the ground plane layer. However, arrays of microstrip antenna elements can be employed to achieve much higher gains and directivity than would be possible with a single microstrip antenna element.
Referring now to
The height “H” of the dielectric substrate layer is typically not a critical design parameter, but in general the height “H” is limited to a dimension much smaller than the wavelength of operation. That is, H<<1/t, where fc is the resonant (or center) frequency of the antenna element. The dielectric constant “εr” (often termed permittivity by those skilled in the art) of the dielectric substrate layer (110 in
The electric field diagram of
Previously known microstrip antenna elements are formed by providing a shaped conductive metal trace (typically copper or gold) over a dielectric substrate through industry standard lithographic techniques. However, in recent years novel methods and techniques have been introduced for forming and shaping nanotube fabric layers and films over various substrates. These nanotube fabric layers and films are conductive and can be etched (or in some cases directly formed) into specific predetermined geometries over a plurality of dielectric substances.
As described in the incorporated references, nanotube elements can be applied to a surface of a substrate through a plurality of techniques including, but not limited to, spin coating, dip coating, aerosol application, or chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Ribbons, belts, or traces made from a matted layer of nanotubes or a non-woven fabric of nanotubes can be used as electrically conductive elements. The patterned fabrics disclosed herein are referred to as traces or electrically conductive articles. In some instances, the ribbons are suspended, and in other instances they are disposed on a substrate. Numerous other applications for patterned nanotubes and patterned nanotube fabrics include, but are not limited to: memory applications, sensor applications, and photonic uses. The nanotube belt structures are believed to be easier to build at the desired levels of integration and scale (of number of devices made) and the geometries are more easily controlled. The nanotube ribbons are believed to be able to more easily carry high current densities without suffering the problems commonly experienced or expected with metal traces.
Properties of the nanotube fabric can be controlled through deposition techniques. Once deposited, the nanotube fabric layers can be patterned and converted to generate insulating fabrics.
Monolayer nanotube fabrics can be achieved through specific control of growth or application density. More nanotubes can be applied to a surface to generate thicker fabrics with less porosity. Such thick layers, up to a micron or greater, may be advantageous for applications which require lower resistance.
The current invention relates to nanotube based antennas for the reception and transmission of electromagnetic radiation signals. More specifically, the invention relates to the creation of a wide variety of antennas based on nanotube fabric layers and films including, but not limited to, microstrip antennas and reconfigurable antenna arrays.
In particular, the present disclosure provides an antenna element comprising a ground plane layer, a dielectric substrate layer deposited over the ground plane layer, and a shaped nanotube fabric layer deposited over the dielectric substrate layer. The shaped nanotube fabric layer comprises a shaped radiating structure and a transmission line element.
The present disclosure also provides an antenna element comprising a ground plane layer, a dielectric substrate layer deposited over the ground plane layer, at least two electrode elements deposited over the dielectric substrate layer, and a shaped nanotube fabric layer deposited over the dielectric substrate layer. The shaped nanotube fabric layer comprises a shaped radiating structure and a transmission line element, wherein the transmission line element overlies at least two electrode elements to form a nanotube select device.
The present disclosure also provides an antenna array comprising a ground plane layer, a dielectric substrate layer deposited over the ground plane layer, and a shaped nanotube fabric layer deposited over the dielectric substrate layer. The shaped nanotube fabric layer comprises a plurality of shaped radiating structures and a plurality of transmission line elements.
The present disclosure also provides an antenna array comprising a ground plane layer, a dielectric substrate layer deposited over the ground plane layer, at least two electrode elements deposited over the dielectric substrate layer, and a shaped nanotube fabric layer deposited over the dielectric substrate layer. The shaped nanotube fabric layer comprises a plurality of shaped radiating structures and a plurality of transmission line elements, wherein at least one of the plurality of transmission line elements overlies at least two electrode elements to form at least one nanotube select device.
According to one aspect of this disclosure, an antenna is fabricated by using a nanotube fabric layer.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is horizontally disposed.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is vertically disposed.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is both horizontally and vertically disposed.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is a monolayer.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is a multilayered fabric.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is optically transparent.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is suspended.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is conformal to a substrate.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is spin-coated on a substrate.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is spray-coated on a surface.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is disposed on an insulating substrate.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is deposited on a flexible surface.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is deposited on a rigid surface.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is a microstrip antenna.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is patterned to create a wide variety of antenna structures.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, a plurality of nanotube based antennas are used to create an array of such antennas on a substrate.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is patterned to create a fractal antenna design.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the nanotube based antenna is connected to a memory switch to construct a reconfigurable antenna array.
Under another aspect of this disclosure, the memory switch comprises an integrated two terminal nanotube switch.
Other features and advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following description of the disclosure which is provided below in relation to the accompanying drawings.
The following detailed description will be more readily understood in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters refer to like parts throughout, and in which:
The present disclosure involves the creation of antennas, antenna arrays, and reconfigurable antennas from nanotube fabric layers and films.
As will be shown in the following discussion of the present disclosure, nanotube based antennas can be fabricated as stand-alone antennas, flexible antennas applied (or integrated) into other products, or they can be integrated directly in microelectronics devices. Stand alone antennas are fabricated in the field through an application process (for example a spray process) and have many different applications including, but not limited to, remote communications, field deployable antennas, and covert communications. Flexible nanotube based antennas are developed on many different substrates and can be applied to standard products for high performance wireless or communications applications. Nanotube based antennas also may be directly integrated into microelectronics devices (including RF chips), enabling low power devices, high performance, and reconfigurable antennas. Nanotube based antennas also may be used for dual-band dipole antennas. Additionally, new types of secure communications are possible by modulating the antenna and therefore obtaining frequency responses not available with other antennas.
Nanotube based antennas can be fabricated by spin coating or spray coating and the as-produced nanotube fabric layers are conformal to various substrates and can be used for a roll-to-roll process. Various nanotube based antenna applications can be realized such as antenna arrays and if used in conjunction with NRAM switches, reconfigurable nanotube antenna arrays can be constructed. See Y. Wang, K. Kempa, B. Kimball, J. B. Carlson, G. Benham, W. Z. Li, T. Kempa, J. Rybczynski, A. Herczynski and Z. F. Ren, “Receiving and transmitting light-like radio waves: Antenna effect in arrays of aligned carbon nanotubes,” Applied Physics Letters, 85(13), 2607-2609, 2004.
Under certain embodiments of the disclosure, electrically conductive articles may be made from a nanotube fabric, layer, or film. Carbon nanotubes with tube diameters as little as 1 nm are electrical conductors that are able to carry extremely high current densities, see, e.g., Z. Yao, C. L. Kane, C. Dekker, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 2941 (2000). They also have the highest known heat conductivity, see, e.g., S. Berber, Y.-K. Kwon, D. Tomanek, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 4613 (2000), and are thermally and chemically stable, see, e.g., P. M. Ajayan, T. W. Ebbesen, Rep. Prog. Phys. 60, 1025 (1997).
The nanotube antenna of certain embodiments is formed from a non-woven fabric of entangled or matted nanotubes. The switching parameters of the fabric resemble those of individual nanotubes. Thus, the predicted switching times and voltages of the fabric should approximate the same times and voltages of nanotubes. Unlike the nanotube manufacturing which relies on directed growth or chemical self-assembly of individual nanotubes, preferred embodiments of the present disclosure utilize fabrication techniques involving thin films and lithography. This method of fabrication lends itself to generation over large surfaces especially wafers of at least six inches. (In contrast, growing individual nanotubes over a distance beyond sub millimeter distances is currently unfeasible.) Therefore, the nanotube fabric is readily conformable to underlying substrates to which they are applied and formed. This property can be helpful for processing and manufacturing of the nanotube antennas. Specifically, the nanotube fabrics can create flexible antennas that can be applied to a variety of surfaces.
An antenna having a nanotube fabric also should exhibit improved electrical performance and fault tolerances over the use of individual nanotubes, by providing a redundancy of conduction pathways contained with the fabric and ribbons. Moreover, the resistances of the fabrics and ribbons should be significantly lower than that for an individual nanotubes, thus, decreasing its impedance, because the fabrics may be made to have larger cross-sectional areas than individual nanotubes. Creating antennas from nanotube fabrics allows the antennas to retain many if not all of the benefits of individual nanotubes. Moreover, antennas made from nanotube fabric have benefits not found in individual nanotubes. For example, since the antennas are composed of many nanotubes in aggregation, the antenna will not fail as the result of a failure or break of an individual nanotube. Instead, there are many alternate paths through which electrons may travel within a given antenna. In effect, an antenna made from nanotube fabric creates its own electrical network of individual nanotubes within the defined antenna, each of which may conduct electrons. Moreover, by using nanotube fabrics, layers, or films, current technology may be used to create such antennas. For further details on nanotube fabrics, please see the following, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety: U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/030,470 as filed Feb. 13, 2008 and entitled “Hybrid Circuit Having Nanotube Memory Cells;” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/111,582 as filed Apr. 21, 2005 and entitled “Nanotube Films and Articles;” and U.S. Pat. No. 7,264,990 as filed Dec. 13, 2004 and entitled “Methods of Nanotube Films and Articles.”
Not only are nanotube fabrics excellent conductors, but they are also particularly well-suited to antenna applications. For example, the nanotube fabrics operate at extended frequencies. Conventional antennas can operate in the UHF range. However, a nanotube fabric antenna can operate over a large range of frequencies. The nanotube fabric antenna can be made specifically to operate at a variety of frequencies. For example, the thickness of the nanotube fabric layer can be adjusted—such as, but not limited to, over the range of 1 nm to 1000 nm—to provide operation of the antenna at certain frequencies.
Further, nanotube fabric antennas are transparent to various wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation, such as, but not limited to x-rays. As such, a nanofabric antenna would be x-ray transparent and would provide a measure of frequency control over electromagnetic absorption, which is not possible with a metal based antenna. Further, in some instances, the nanotube fabric antennas can be at least partially optically transparent. For example, if the antenna is optically transparent, the antenna can be placed on a surface and would not be visible to the human eye. Therefore in product development and manufacturing, the antenna can be placed on the outside of a package or product without the antenna being visible to a user of the product.
A shaped nanotube fabric layer—such as the exemplary shaped nanotube fabric layers depicted in
Each of the radiating structures 401a-405a within the exemplary microstrip antenna array depicted in
Referring now to
Further, it should be noted that while the two terminal nanotube switch structure shown in
The integrated two terminal nanotube switch (SW1 in
A dielectric substrate layer 610 is deposited over a ground plane layer 620. A plurality of send electrode elements 601d-605d and an elongated return electrode element 650 are further deposited over dielectric substrate layer 610. A continuous shaped nanotube fabric layer 630 is deposited over dielectric substrate layer 610 and is shaped to form a plurality of individual microstrip antenna elements 601-605, each of said individual microstrip antenna elements comprising a radiating structure (601a-605a, respectively) and a transmission line element (601b-605b, respectively). The continuous shaped nanotube fabric layer 630 is deposited such that a portion of the transmission line element (601b-605b) of each individual microstrip antenna element (601-605, respectively) is deposited over both a send electrode element (601d-605d, respectively) and the elongated return electrode element 650, forming a two terminal nanotube switch in series with each radiating structure (601a-605a).
Specifically, first individual microstrip antenna element 601 includes transmission line element 601b which overlies first send electrode element 601d and elongated return electrode element 650. Second individual microstrip antenna element 602 includes transmission line element 602b which overlies second send electrode element 602d and elongated return electrode element 650. Third individual microstrip antenna element 603 includes a transmission line element 603b which overlies third send electrode element 603d and elongated return electrode element 650. Fourth individual microstrip antenna element 604 includes a transmission line element 604b which overlies fourth send electrode element 604d and elongated return electrode element 650. And fifth individual microstrip antenna element 605 includes a transmission line element 605b which overlies fifth send electrode element 605d and elongated return electrode element 650.
The portion of continuous shaped nanotube layer 630 beyond elongated return electrode 650 and elongated return electrode 650 itself form a node which alternatively provides signals to (in a transmit operation) or is responsive to signals from (in a receive operation) the plurality of individual microstrip antenna elements 601-605.
It should be noted that while
A distinct advantage to using a shaped nanotube fabric layer to form the radiating structure of a microstrip antenna is the ease to which such a layer can be conformed to an underlying structure. U.S. Pat. No. 6,924,538 to Jaiprakash et al., incorporated herein by reference, teaches the formation of a nanotube fabric layer (comprised of carbon nanotubes in some embodiments) which substantially conforms to an underlying substrate (including, but not limited to, substrates comprising vertical surfaces). Jaiprakash teaches a plurality of application techniques for forming such a conformal nanotube fabric layer such as, but not limited to, chemical vapor deposition, spin coating suspensions of nanotubes, spray coating of aerosolized nanotube suspensions, and dip coating from a solution of suspended nanotubes. The ability to form nanotube fabric layers which so readily conform to an application surface allows for the creation of vertically and horizontally polarized antennas, as shown in
To this end,
U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______, entitled “Anisotropic Nanotube Fabric Layers and Films and Methods of Forming Same,” filed on even date herewith and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, teaches a plurality of methods of forming shaped anisotropic nanotube fabric layers. In some embodiments, these anisotropic nanotube fabric layers have a relatively high transparency to radiation, including radiation in both the optical and x-ray spectrums, while retaining a relatively low sheet resistance. Further, some embodiments teach methods of forming nanotube fabric layers and films in predetenuined geometries. Such methods include, but are not limited to, flow induced alignment of nanotube elements as they are projected onto a substrate, the use of nematic nanotube application solutions, and the use of nanotube adhesion promoter materials.
To this end,
Although the present invention has been described in relation to particular embodiments thereof, many other variations and modifications and other uses will become apparent to those skilled in the art. It is preferred, therefore, that the present invention, as recited in the following claims, not be limited by the specific disclosure herein.