The present invention relates to dual polarized directional antennas emitting or receiving two orthogonal polarizations such as vertical and horizontal or two 45 degrees slants polarizations. The invention describes a dual polarized antenna having 55-75 degree half power beam width.
One of the first dual polarized antennas is described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,740,754, wherein two dipoles made of metal tubes are disposed at right angles to each other above a reflecting cap and fed by two pairs of coaxial lines. Subsequently, hundreds of different dual polarized antennas were invented to increase operating frequency band.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,184,163 describes a broad band dual polarized antenna wherein dipole arms are made of metal loops having a ring or square frame. U.S. Pat. No. 5,481,272, U.S. Pat. No. 5,952,983, U.S. Pat. No. 6,028,563 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,072,439 describe several types of dipoles including folded grid dipoles, bow tie dipoles, and dipoles with an attached printed circuit board balun.
Several kinds of crossed dipoles containing radiating arms formed of two branches to decrease beam width are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,747,606B2, US2005/0253769A1, US2013/0106668A1, CN201435451Y, CN102025023A, CN201845867U and CN102074781A.
As crossed dipoles create a wide beam at the horizontal (H) plane, more complicated radiators were invented to decrease beam width. U.S. Pat. No. 5,940,044 describes a dual slant polarized antenna having approximately 65 degrees half power beam width in the horizontal plane. This antenna includes a plurality of dipole sub-arrays with each sub-array comprising four dipoles arranged in a diamond shape. Two dipoles of each sub-array are tilted at an angle of +45 degrees from the long edge of the ground plate to form a +45 degree polarized radiating element array. The other two dipoles are arranged at an angle −45 degrees from the long edge of the ground plate to form a −45 degree polarized radiating element array. The dipoles are arranged such that the phase centers of one +45 degree dipole and one −45 degree element line up along a first vertical line which is parallel to the long edge of a ground plate. The phase centers of the other +45 degree dipole and −45 degree element line up along a second vertical line. The main disadvantage of this dipole square is the complicated feed network. For example, four cables have to be used for feeding the dipoles.
EP0973231A2, U.S. Pat. No. 6,333,720B1, U.S. Pat. No. 6,529,172B2 and US2010/0309084A1 describe radiators having a dipole square shape. Baluns of the same dipoles are tilted to the center of the dipole square to simplify manufacturing. In spite of this new shape, these devices are still complicated.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,313,809B1 describes a dual polarized radiator comprising four dipoles preferably arranged above a reflector and forming a dipole square structurally in the top view. Each dipole is fed by means of a symmetrical line characterized by the following features. The radiator radiates electrically in polarizations at an angle of +45 or −45 degrees to the structurally prescribed alignment of dipoles. The ends of symmetrical lines leading to the respective dipole halves are connected in such a way that the corresponding line halves of the adjacent, mutually perpendicular dipole halves are always electrically connected. The electric feeding of the respectively diametrically opposite dipole halves is performed in a decoupled fashion for a first polarization and a second polarization orthogonal thereto.
Other modifications of this dipole square are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,940,465B2, U.S. Pat. No. 7,688,271B2, CN202423543U, CN202268481U, CN101916910A, CN102097677A, CN102694237A, CN102544711A, CN201199545Y, CN102117967A and CN102013560A. WO2007/114620A1 describes a dual polarized radiator comprising four folded dipoles preferably arranged in the same way as dipoles of the radiator described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,313,809B1. Other modifications of a dipole square formed by four folded dipoles are described in CN101707292A, CN201430215Y, CN202178382U, and CN202004160U. Folded dipoles coupled with a dipole square by capacitive coupling are described in CN102377007A, CN201117803Y, CN201117803Y and CN101505007A.
Known radiators containing four usual or folded dipoles arranged as a dipole square provide good patterns at a frequency band up to 30% but need a wide ground plate to provide a good front to back ratio. Its radiating arrangements are placed above a ground plate on a distance about 0.25 wave length corresponding to the middle operating frequency therefore known radiators have big dimensions.
To overcome this disadvantage, many other dual polarized radiators having smaller dimensions were invented. Crossed dipoles having different kinds of dipole arms are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,933,906B2, U.S. Pat. No. 7,132,995B2, US2012/0235873 A1, CN102074779A, CN102157783A, CN101707291A, CN101572346A, CN201741796U, CN101546863A, CN101673881A, CN202150554U, CN102246352A, CN102484321A, CN202423541U, CN102544764A and CN101707287A. At the H plane, a beam of crossed dipoles is too wide. Therefore, big side walls are used to reduce a beam width as shown, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 7,679,576B2.
Folded dipoles formed by a connective portion and connected to oscillator arms act as a dipole square, as described in WO 2007/114620A1.
The dual polarization broadband antenna having a radiating arrangement containing four folded dipoles is described in US2009/0179814 A1, and one such radiator is shown in
Modern wireless communication systems need high quality antennas having small dimensions and providing high quality patterns having big cross polarization ratio and big front to back ratio. Known dual polarized antennas contain wide ground plates to provide big front to back ratio therefore ones have big dimensions. The first objective of the invention is to decrease dimensions of an antenna. The second objective of the invention is to create a small antenna having the same cross polarization ratio and front to back ratio as known antennas having big dimensions. The third objective of the invention is to create a small antenna having a good matching with feeding cables.
The invention provides a dual polarized antenna including the radiating arrangement and conductive members supporting the radiating arrangement above a ground plate and forming two perpendicular baluns. The radiating arrangement excited by two coaxial cables placed in the middle of the radiating arrangement radiates two mutually perpendicular linear electrical fields having E vectors directed parallel to the diagonals of the radiating arrangement.
The present invention describes the radiating arrangement containing four folded dipoles feeding by four symmetrical lines. Adjacent conductors of symmetrical lines are connected together in the middle of the radiating arrangement.
A ground plate of the present invention is smaller than a ground plate of known antennas. The radiating arrangement of the present invention is placed on a smaller distance above a ground plate than radiating arrangements of known antennas and contains additional conductors placed between ends of folded dipoles and above its middle part. These conductors improve front to back ratio and cross polarization ratio and match the radiating arrangement with feeding coaxial cables.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the general description of the invention given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Conductors 10 are placed at corners of a substrate 2 and directed to a ground plate 1. Side walls 11 are placed at edges of a substrate 2.
Top end of supporting conductor 3a is connected to adjacent conductors of symmetrical lines 22c and 22d. Top end of supporting conductor 3b is connected to adjacent conductors of symmetrical lines 22a and 22d. Top end of outer conductor of coaxial cable 4a is connected to adjacent conductors of symmetrical lines 22a and 22b. Top end of outer conductor of coaxial cable 4b is connected to adjacent conductors of symmetrical lines 22b and 22d.
Conductors 10 have capacitive coupling with ends of folded dipoles and with a ground plate 1 therefore RF currents flows along conductors 10 and creates radiation directed along a ground plate with E vectors directed perpendicular to a ground plate. This radiation increases beam width in E plane and partly suppress radiation from folded dipole in back direction. Conductors 12 connected to conductors 10 increase capacitive coupling of conductors 10 with ends of folded dipoles. Thus conductors 10 and 12 increase front to back ratio of an antenna and create radiation with E vectors directed perpendicular to a ground plate. This radiation increases cross polarization ratio at the edges of +/−60 degree sector. As a result an antenna with a small ground plate has the same front to back ratio and cross polarization ratio at the edges of +/−60 degree sector as known antennas having a big ground plate.
Conductive bridges 15a and 15b excite a top conductive plate 6. Dimensions of a top conductive plate 6 are smaller than dimensions of folded dipoles therefore one radiates at high frequencies of operating frequency band. Phase of radiation from a top conductive plate 6 is different from phase of radiation from folded dipoles since ones are excited by ends of symmetrical lines. At high frequencies of operating frequency band difference between phases is enough to partly suppress radiation from folded dipoles. Therefore radiation from a top conductive plate 6 increase beam width of an antenna at high frequencies of operating frequency band. As a result beam width of an antenna having a distance between dipoles and a ground plate less than 0.15 wave length corresponding to the middle operating frequency has the same dependence versus frequency known antennas having this distance about 0.25 wave length corresponding to the middle operating frequency.
A top conductive plate 6 together with conductors 10 and 12 create reflection partly suppressing reflection from folded dipoles. As a result an antenna having a distance between dipoles and a ground plate less than 0.15 wave length corresponding to the middle operating frequency has the same matching width feeding cables as known antennas having this distance about 0.25 wave length corresponding to the middle operating frequency.
Conductors 30 are supported between ends of folded dipoles by dielectric spacers 36. Each conductor 30 is bent at right angle. One its part is placed in dielectric spacers 36 and other part directed towards a ground plate 37 therefore conductor 30 acts as conductors 10 and 12 in
The second embodiment of the present invention shown in
A sample of the dual polarized antenna was designed according to the invention for 1710 to 2200 MHz frequency band. Folded dipoles were paced on dielectric substrate placed on distance 20 mm only above a ground plate having dimensions 120×120 mm. This antenna has 60-68 degree half power beam width and VSWR better than 1.2. A sample of a +/−45 degree slant polarization antenna array containing four this antennas has cross section 45×120 mm only. In the 1710 to 2200 MHz frequency band this array has front to back ratio better than −28 dB for co-polarization and better than −27 dB for cross polarization. Its cross polarization ratio is better than −25 dB at the main direction and −10 dB at the edges of +/−60 degree sector and VSWR better than 1.25.
Thus the present invention provides a small antenna having the same specification as known antennas having bigger dimensions.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/023,557 filed on Mar. 21, 2016.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15023557 | Mar 2016 | US |
Child | 15225749 | US |