The present invention relates generally to the field of antennas.
Antennas are used in many fields such as wireless energy harvesting, wireless energy transfer and telecommunications. Antennas enable the transmission and/or reception of energy or signals, depending upon the application. The following characteristics can be important for an antenna:
The present invention aims to provide an antenna with one or more of the above characteristics.
The present invention provides an antenna. The antenna comprises a feedline, a ground plane and a radiator. The feedline has a path in a first plane, the path having a first arm and a second arm perpendicular to the first arm. The ground plane is provided in a second plane spaced apart from, and parallel to, the first plane. The ground plane has a ground plane slot therein with a path in the second plane. The path of the ground plane slot intersects the path of the feedline at a first position on the first arm and a second position on the second arm when the second plane is projected into the first plane. The radiator is separated from the feedline by the ground plane, and is provided in a third plane spaced apart from, and parallel to, the second plane.
The present invention also provides a device comprising an antenna as described above, wherein the radiator is printed or plated onto the case of the device.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which like reference numbers designate the same or corresponding parts and in which:
A first embodiment of the present invention will be described with reference to
The antenna comprises a feedline 101, a ground plane 102 with a ground plane slot 1021 therein and a radiator 103. The feedline 101, ground plane 102 and radiator 103 are all formed from an electrically conductive material, such as copper. It will be understood that, when the antenna is used in an energy collecting mode, for example, during energy harvesting, the radiator 103 acts as a radiation collector.
In this embodiment, the feedline 101 and ground plane 102 are conveniently formed as layers on each side of a substrate 104. The substrate is made from a dielectric material and provides a suitable mechanical support to hold the feedline 101 in a first plane and the ground plane 102 in a second plane spaced apart from, and parallel to, the first plane. Here, it will be understood by the skilled person that parallel to does not mean that the angle between the plane of the feedline 101 and the plane of the ground plane 102 is strictly zero degrees but that variations in the angle up to ±2.5 degrees are encompassed, as such variations will not significantly degrade performance of the antenna. It will be further understood that the substrate is not an essential component and that any suitable mechanical structure can be provided to hold the feedline 101 and the ground plane 102 in their respective planes.
In this embodiment, feedline 101 is a 50 ohm line and is conveniently formed from a microstrip, but could also be formed using a stripline. The feedline 101 has a first arm 1011 acting as an input feed and a second arm 1012, perpendicular to the first arm, that acts as an output feed. Referring to
Here, as throughout the description and claims, a projection is the transformation of points and lines in one plane onto another plane by connecting corresponding points on the two planes with parallel lines perpendicular to the planes. This is equivalent to shining a point light source located at infinity through one of the planes to form an image of whatever is provided on the plane on the other plane.
Each intersection of the projected ground plane slot 1021 with the feedline 101 acts as a source of transverse electromagnetic radiation (TEM). Circular polarisation is achieved when one of the TEM sources is rotated by a right angle (90 degrees) to the other. Accordingly, the first and second arms 1011, 1012 of the feedline are perpendicular to each other. However, it will be understood by the skilled person that perpendicular does not mean that the angle between the first and second arms 1011, 1012 is strictly 90 degrees but that variations in the angle up to ±2.5 degrees are encompassed, as such variations will not significantly degrade performance of the antenna. In addition, to provide the circular polarisation, the ground plane slot 1021 is configured such that the distance between the two intersections of the projected ground plane slot 1021 with the feedline 101 (that is, the distance between the TEM sources) provides a 90 degrees phase shift for the waveband of radiation to be transmitted and/or received. Furthermore, in this embodiment, the ground plane slot 1021 is a circular arc, and the feedline 101 and the ground plane 102 are positioned relative to each other such that the centre of the circular arc of the ground plane slot 1021 is at the intersection of the first arm 1011 and the second arm 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa). Also, referring to
The first embodiment is therefore a single feed antenna. The required two orthogonal resonant modes are possible through series feed.
Turning now to the radiator 103, this is separated from the feedline 101 by the ground plane 102. The radiator 103 is held in a third plane spaced apart from, and parallel to, the ground plane 102. Here, it will again be understood by the skilled person that parallel to does not mean that the angle between the plane of the radiator 103 and the plane of the ground plane 102 is strictly zero degrees but that variations in the angle up to ±2.5 degrees are encompassed, as such variations will not significantly degrade performance of the antenna. The space between the radiator 103 and the ground plane 102 is preferably an air gap, as the inventors have found this improves the return loss of the antenna.
In this embodiment, the radiator 103 is circular and is positioned relative to the feedline 101 such that the centre of the radiator 103 is at the intersection of the first arm 1011 and the second arm 1012 when the plane of the radiator 103 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa).
The diameter on which the first and second radiator slots 2031, 2032 lie forms an angle θ relative to the path of the outgoing feed 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa).
This modification has been found by the inventors to have the effect of further amplifying the circular polarization characteristics of the antenna.
The second embodiment comprises a feedline 101, ground plane 102 and radiator 103, as in the first embodiment. However, to provide dual band transmission and/or reception capability, a second ground plane slot 3022 is provided in addition to the first ground plane slot 1021. Furthermore, the radiator 103 comprises a circular inner section 3030 and an outer section 3032 formed of an outer ring, the inner section 3030 and outer section 3032 being electrically separated by a separating ring 3033. In this embodiment, radiator 103 is formed as one continuous circle of copper (or other conductive material) and then the inner and outer sections 3030, 3032 are formed by removing a ring of copper (or other conductive material) to form the separating ring 3033. However, the inner and outer sections 3030, 3032 could be formed separately, and they could have a separating ring of insulating material therebetween.
The second embodiment provides dual band signal or energy transmission and/or reception capability. By way of non-limiting example, such an antenna could be used to transmit and/or receive signals (or energy) in the waveband of Wi-Fi (operating around 2.4 GHz) and, at the same time, the waveband of GSM (operating around 1.8 GHz—referred to as GSM 1800).
The path of the first ground plane slot 1021 intersects the path of the feedline 101 at a first position on the first arm 1011 and a second position on the second arm 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa). The path of the second ground plane slot 3022 intersects the path of the feedline 101 at a third position on the first arm 1011 and a fourth position on the second arm 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (vice versa).
The second ground plane slot 3022 is configured such that the distance between the two intersections of the projected ground plane slot 3022 with the feedline provides a 90 degrees phase shift for the waveband of radiation in the second waveband to be transmitted and/or received. Furthermore, in this embodiment, the first and second ground plane slots 1021, 3022 are both circular arcs with the same centre. The feedline 101 and the ground plane 102 are positioned relative to each other such that the centre of the circular arcs of the ground plane slots 1021, 3022 is at the intersection of the first arm 1011 and the second arm 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa). Also, both of the ground plane slots 1021, 3022 in this embodiment are orientated such that the bisector 110 of the arc angle (the centre angle) of the first ground plane slot 1021 is also a bisector of the arc angle of the second ground plane slot 3022, and furthermore bisects the angle between the first and second arms 1011, 1021 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa).
Moreover, as shown in
The diameter on which the inner radiator slots 3034, 3035 lie is preferably the same diameter as that on which the outer radiator slots 3036, 3037 lie. The diameter on which the inner radiator slots 3034, 3035, and the outer radiator slots 3036, 3037 lie forms an angle α relative to the path of the outgoing feed 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa).
This modification has been found by the inventors to have the effect of further amplifying the circular polarization characteristics of the antenna.
The present inventors performed experiments to determine parameters of the antenna shown in
Referring to
d1: the width of the first ground plane slot 1021;
d2: the width of the second ground plane slot 3022;
r1: the radius of the first ground plane slot 1021 to the centre of the slot;
r2: the radius of the second ground plane slot 3022 to the centre of the slot;
A1: the arc angle (centre angle) of the first ground plane slot 1021;
A2: the arc angle (centre angle) of the second ground plane slot 3022;
R1: the radius from the centre of the inner section 3030 of the radiator 103 to the outer edge of the inner section 3030;
R2: the distance from the centre of the inner section 3030 of the radiator 103 to the inside edge of the outer ring of the outer section 3032 of the radiator 103;
R3: the distance from the centre of the inner section 3030 of the radiator 103 to the outside edge of the outer ring of the outer section 3032;
R2−R1: the width of the separating ring 3033;
w1: the length of each of the first 3034 and second 3035 inner radiator slots;
w2: the width of the first 3034 and second 3035 inner radiator slots and/or the first 3036 and second 3037 outer radiator slots;
w3: the length of each of the first 3036 and second 3037 outer radiator slots;
L2: the length of the outgoing feed 1012 of the feedline 101; and
A3: the angle between the diameter on which the first and second inner radiator slots 3034, 3035 and the first and second outer radiator slots 3036, 3037 lie and the path of the outgoing feed when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected into the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa).
The present inventors performed simulations to determine a range of values for each respective parameter above that would provide acceptable performance of the antenna. For the purposes of the simulations, the substrate material was modelled with a thickness 0.76 mm and with the electrical characteristics of a low-loss laminate material, such as IS680-345 available commercially from ISOLA Group s.a.r.l.
In the field of antenna design, antennas are performance-rated using S-parameters which describe the input-output relationship of energy or power between ports or terminals of the antenna. One of the most commonly used performance ratings for antennas is the S11 parameter. The S11 parameter is known as the input port voltage reflection coefficient and represents how much power is reflected from the antenna for a given incident power. If Vinc is the voltage amplitude of the incident signal and Vref is the voltage amplitude of the reflected signal then S11=Vref/Vinc. The power reflection coefficient can then be expressed on a decibel (dB) scale as
S11 (dB)=−20·log(S11)
For example if S11=0 dB, then all the power is reflected from the antenna and nothing is radiated, or if S11=−10 dB and 3 dB of power is delivered to the antenna then the reflected power is −7 dB.
Acceptable antenna performance, as recognised by antenna engineers, is achieved for a reflection coefficient (S11) with a magnitude of at least 10 dB.
Accordingly, in the simulations, acceptable antenna performance was taken as having an S11 magnitude of at least 10 dB in at least one of the frequency ranges GSM1800 (1.85 to 1.88 GHz) and Wi-Fi (2.4 to 2.495 GHz). The simulations were performed using an antenna comprising three layers, in which the first layer relates to the radiator 103, as shown
Referring to
The copper thickness was modelled as 35 microns.
The gap between the ground plane 102 and the radiator 103 was modelled as 5 mm.
The simulations of the antenna were performed using CST Microwave®.
The simulation results for each of these parameters will now be described. For each parameter, the simulation results comprise a S11 (dB) graph and a corresponding Smith Chart, which includes a superimposed Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR) circle with value 2:1 representing an S11 magnitude of 9.54 dB normalised for Z0=50 ohms.
In the embodiments described above, each ground plane slot 1021, 3022 is a circular arc. However, instead of being a circular arc, one or both of the ground plane slots may be any shape which intersects with the path of the feedline 101 at a first position on the first arm 1011 and a second position on the second arm 1012 when the plane of the ground plane 102 is projected onto the plane of the feedline 101 (or vice versa). For example a ground plane slot may be formed as a non-circular arc, such as an elliptical arc. The present inventors have found that performance is maximised when a ground plane slot is a circular arc and deteriorates as the arc becomes more elliptical. However, acceptable performance can be achieved when the ground plane slot is only slightly elliptical. Alternatively, the ground plane slot 1021 may be formed of straight lines.
In the embodiments described above, the radiator 103 is circular. However, the present inventors have found that acceptable antenna performance can be achieved when the radiator is slightly elliptical, with an ellipticity between 0.97 and 1.03, the ellipticity of an ellipse being defined as the ratio of the minor diameter of the ellipse and the major diameter of the ellipse. Accordingly, the term “circular” and the like when referring to the radiator should not be construed to mean strictly circular but should instead be construed to encompass such variations.
Any number of ground plane slots may be provided in the ground plane of embodiments, with a ground plane slot being provided for each waveband at which signals or energy is to be transmitted and/or received. For example, a third ground plane slot could be provided in the ground plane to provide tri-band transmission and/or reception capabilities.
In the embodiments described above, the gap between the ground plane 102 and the radiator 103 is an air gap. However, instead, the gap could be filled with foam, textile, rubber, paper, composites, polycarbonate, polyimide, kapton, silicon, or other suitable material.
In the embodiments described above, the outer radiator slots 3036, 3037 are on a diameter of the radiator 103 on opposite sides of the centre of the radiator 103 and on the outer edge of the outer section 3032 of the radiator 103. However, instead, the outer radiator slots 3036, 3037 could be on a diameter of the radiator 103 on opposite sides of the centre of the radiator 103 and on the inner edge of the outer section 3032 of the radiator 103.
A further modification is shown in
The foregoing description of embodiments of the invention has been presented for the purpose of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise form disclosed. Alternations, modifications and variations can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1513565.0 | Jul 2015 | GB | national |
1515664.9 | Sep 2015 | GB | national |
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PCT/EP2016/067893 | 7/27/2016 | WO | 00 |
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20190013591 A1 | Jan 2019 | US |