Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6674406
-
Patent Number
6,674,406
-
Date Filed
Tuesday, October 8, 200222 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, January 6, 200421 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Kasischke; James M.
- Oglo; Michael F.
- Nasser; Jean-Paul A.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 343 700 MS
- 343 767
- 343 770
- 343 7925
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
A microstrip patch antenna with progressive slot loading is provided. A rectangular patch of electrically conductive material has a plurality of slots formed therein with each slot having its center aligned with the centerline of the patch's long dimension. Each slot further has its longitudinal axis perpendicular to the centerline. The slots are arranged in an order starting at a position n=1 that is furthest from the patch's feedpoint so that, for an n-th slot, the inequalities Ln>Ln+1 and Wn
Description
STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT INTEREST
The invention described herein may be manufactured and used by or for the Government of the United States of America for Governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
(1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to patch antennas, and more particularly to a microstrip patch antenna having a plurality of parallel slots formed therein to increase the bandwidth performance of the antenna.
(2) Description of the Prior Art
An ordinary microstrip patch antenna consists of a rectangular metallic “patch” that is printed on top of a grounded slab of dielectric material. It is a very useful antenna, but suffers from limited bandwidth as a result of its resonant properties. Bandwidth of these antennas is typically limited to 2-4% of the antenna's center frequency.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a patch antenna having improved bandwidth characteristics.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a rectangular microstrip patch antenna having improved bandwidth characteristics for a variety of antenna applications.
Other objects and advantages of the present invention will become more obvious hereinafter in the specification and drawings.
In accordance with the present invention, a patch antenna with progressive slot loading is based on a rectangular patch of electrically conductive material with long and short dimensions. A centerline of the patch is defined along the long dimension. The patch has a feedpoint located at one end of the patch at its centerline. A plurality of slots are formed in the patch with each slot having its center aligned with the centerline of the patch. Further, each slot has its longitudinal axis perpendicular to the centerline of the patch. Each slot has a unique length L
n
and width W
n
. The slots are arranged in an order starting at a position n=1 that is furthest from the patch's feedpoint so that, for an n-th slot, the inequalities L
n
>L
n+1
and W
n
<W
n+1
are always satisfied. In general, the length decreases linearly with each successive slot while the width increases exponentially with each successive slot.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon reference to the following description of the preferred embodiments and to the drawings, where corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views of the drawings and wherein:
FIG. 1
is a schematic view of a patch antenna having progressive slot loading in accordance with the present invention; and
FIG. 2
is a graph comparing bandwidth performance of a conventional rectangular patch antenna with that of an embodiment of the progressive slot loaded patch antenna of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT(S)
Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
FIG. 1
, a schematic view of a microstrip patch antenna in accordance with the present invention is shown and is referenced generally by numeral
10
. Typically, a rectangular patch
12
of electrically conductive material is provided (e.g., deposited, printed, etc.) on a base
14
of grounded dielectric material as is well known in the art. Rectangular patch
12
is defined by a long dimension referenced by arrow
16
and a short dimension referenced by arrow
18
. As is known in the art, the rectangular nature of patch
12
defines a dominant mode of current distribution that runs along long dimension
16
. To take advantage of this fact, patch
12
is fed with an electrical input at one end thereof along short dimension
18
. More specifically, for an even current distribution, patch
12
is fed with its electrical input at a feedpoint
20
that is centered at one end
12
A of patch
12
along short dimension
18
. In other words, feedpoint
20
is located along a centerline
22
of patch
12
that extends along long dimension
16
. Feedpoint
20
can be fed by any known feedline structure such as a conductive strip, a coaxial line, etc., the choice of which is not a limitation of the present invention.
In accordance with the present invention, patch
12
has a plurality of slots
30
(i.e., slots
30
1
,
30
2
, . . . ,
30
n
, . . . ,
30
N
) cut or otherwise formed therein. Each of slots
30
is a hole formed all the way through patch
12
, but does not extend into dielectric base
14
. Slots
30
can be formed when patch
12
is formed or after in accordance with any of a variety of well known fabrication techniques. In general, each of slots
30
has a length L that is substantially greater than its width W where length L is perpendicular to centerline
22
and width W is parallel to center line
22
. Typically, each of slots
30
will be rectangular or approximately rectangular depending on the precision of the particular fabrication technique. However, in all cases, each of slots
30
is centered on centerline
22
with its longitudinal axis A (i.e., the axis extending along length L) of each slot
30
being perpendicular to centerline
22
. For clarity of illustration, the slot's longitudinal axis A
n
is only illustrated for slot
30
n
.
For the present invention, each of slots
30
has a unique length L
n
and width W
n
where the index n is referenced to a starting position (i.e., n=1) that is furthest from feedpoint
20
. In general, as slots get closer to feedpoint
20
, their length decreases while their width increases so that the inequalities L
n
>L
n+1
and W
n
<W
n+1
will always be satisfied. On-center spacing between adjacent slots is approximately equal and can be used to fine tune antenna performance.
Testing of the present invention yielded good bandwidth performance when adjacent lengths L
n
decreased linearly from n=1 to N while widths W
n
increased exponentially from n=1 to N. By way of illustrative example, an exponential width relationship that yields good bandwidth performance is
W
n+1
=e
¼
W
n
(1)
where the starting position of n=1 generally has its width W
1
defined by the user.
A tested example of the present invention was based on a 31 millimeter (mm) by 19 mm rectangular patch having a first slot (i.e., slot
30
1
) that was 0.5 mm wide by 15 mm long. Four additional slots were formed with adjacent slots being decreased by 2 mm in length and increased in width predicated on equation (1). Bandwidth performance of this progressive slot loaded antenna is illustrated by curve
40
in FIG.
2
. This graph represents the magnitude of the reflection coefficient looking into the input port of the antenna. Dashed-line curve
42
represents the bandwidth performance of a conventional 31 mm by 19 mm patch with no slots. A lower value on this graph means more energy is getting into the antenna. From this, it is clear that bandwidth performance is substantially improved by the progressive slot loading of the present invention.
The advantages of the present invention are numerous. Bandwidth performance is greatly improved simply by forming slots in a patch antenna. The principles set forth herein can be adapted/scaled to a variety of specific applications and bandwidth requirements simply by scaling the dimensions of the slots, changing the number of slots used, and/or changing the dimensions of the patch.
It will be understood that many additional changes in the details, materials, steps and arrangement of parts, which have been herein described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of the invention, may be made by those skilled in the art within the principle and scope of the invention as expressed in the appended claims.
Claims
- 1. A microstrip patch antenna, comprising:a rectangular patch of electrically conductive material, said patch having a long dimension and a short dimension with a centerline of said patch being defined along said long dimension, said patch having a feedpoint located at one end thereof at said centerline; and a plurality of slots formed in said patch, each of said plurality of slots having a center aligned with said centerline, each of said plurality of slots having a longitudinal axis that is perpendicular to said centerline, each of said plurality of slots having a unique length Ln and width Wn, said plurality of slots being arranged in an order starting at a position n=1 that is furthest from said feedpoint wherein, for an n-th slot from said plurality of slots, Ln>Ln+1 and Wn<Wn+1.
- 2. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 1 wherein each of said plurality of slots is approximately rectangular.
- 3. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 1 wherein spacing between centers of adjacent ones of said plurality of slots is approximately equal.
- 4. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 1 wherein said length changes linearly in said order.
- 5. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 1 wherein said width changes exponentially in said order.
- 6. A microstrip patch antenna, comprising:a rectangular patch of electrically conductive material, said patch having a long dimension and a short dimension with a centerline of said patch being defined along said long dimension, said patch having a feedpoint located at one end thereof at said centerline; and a plurality of slots formed in said patch, each of said plurality of slots having a center aligned with said centerline, each of said plurality of slots having a longitudinal axis that is perpendicular to said centerline, each of said plurality of slots having a unique length Ln and width Wn, said plurality of slots being arranged in an order starting at a position n=1 that is furthest from said feedpoint wherein, for an n-th slot from said plurality of slots, Ln>Ln+1 and Wn+1=e¼Wn, and wherein said width Wn at said position n=1 is known.
- 7. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 6 wherein each of said plurality of slots is approximately rectangular.
- 8. A microstrip-patch antenna as in claim 6 wherein spacing between centers of adjacent ones of said plurality of slots is approximately equal.
- 9. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 6 wherein said length changes linearly in said order.
- 10. A microstrip patch antenna, comprising:a rectangular patch of electrically conductive material, said patch having a long dimension and a short dimension with a centerline of said patch being defined along said long dimension, said patch having a feedpoint located at one end thereof at said centerline; and a plurality of slots formed in said patch, each of said plurality of slots being approximately rectangular and having a center aligned with said centerline, each of said plurality of slots having a longitudinal axis that is perpendicular to said centerline with spacing between centers of adjacent ones of said plurality of slots being approximately equal, each of said plurality of slots having a unique length Ln and width Wn, said plurality of slots being arranged in an order starting at a position n=1 that is furthest from said feedpoint wherein, for an n-th slot from said plurality of slots, Ln>Ln+1 and Wn+1=e¼Wn, and wherein said width Wn at said position n=1 is known.
- 11. A microstrip patch antenna as in claim 10 wherein said length changes linearly in said order.
US Referenced Citations (6)