The present invention generally relates to an antenna, and more specifically to a mobile phone antenna.
Following the global blooming in mobile communications, various kinds of handheld communication products have been demanded by wireless users. One of the major demands is to minimize the product dimensions. Generally speaking, the dimensions of a communication product can be effectively minimized by using an embedded antenna inside the communication product. However, in the existing communication products, especially those with an embedded antenna, the internal spacing for antenna is usually very limited. Thus, with this spacing limitation, how to achieve good antenna performances and good electromagnetic compatibility with nearby electronic components inside the product has become one of the major design challenges for the final communication product.
For conventional planar inverted-F antennas (PIFAs) applied to mobile phone antennas, the antenna's radiating metal plate is usually horizontally installed above the top portion of the ground plane. A feeding metal pin and a shorting metal pin are electrically connected to and perpendicular to both the radiating metal plate and the ground plane.
A ROC patent publication No. 519780, “Dual-Band and Multi-Band Planar Inverted-F Antenna and the Radiating Metal Plate,” disclosed a planar inverted-F mobile phone antenna This mobile phone antenna comprises one radiating metal plate, one metal ground plane, and one feeding metal line and one shorting metal pin, which are installed perpendicularly to the radiating metal plate and the ground plane. By meandering the resonant path of the radiating metal plate to achieve dual-band operation, the size of the antenna profile can thus be minimized. The drawback of this conventional antenna design, however, is that the antenna is not easy to be integrated with other circuitry systems and associated components. This conventional antenna also requires an isolation distance from the shielding metal box of the radio frequency (RF) circuitry and RF components to reduce the destructive coupling effects on the antenna performances.
Referring to
To overcome the drawback of the conventional mobile phone antenna, the present invention provides an improved mobile phone antenna. The mobile phone antenna according to the present invention comprises one antenna ground plane, one radiating conducting plate, one feeding conducting strip, one shorting conducting strip, and one system ground plane.
The antenna ground plane of the present invention has a first long side and a second long side. The radiating conducting plate, installed perpendicularly to the antenna ground plane, includes one feeding point and one shorting point. The feeding conducting strip, installed between the antenna ground plane and the radiating conducting plate, has two ends, which is electrically connected to the feeding point of the radiating conducting plate and the feeding signal source, respectively, so that the feeding signal can be fed into the radiating conducting plate. The shorting conducting strip, installed between the antenna ground plane and the radiating conducting plate, also has two ends, which is electrically connected to the shorting point on the radiating conducting plate and the antenna ground plane, respectively. Finally, the system ground plane is connected to the second long side of the antenna ground plane.
According to the present invention, the radiating conducting plate, the feeding conducting strip, and the shorting conducting strip can all be fabricated by using a single piece of metal sheet and be formed into a single metal plate. The metal plate is parallel to the system ground plane of the mobile phone. Alternatively, all these three elements can be printed on one dielectric substrate.
The system ground plane, according to the present invention, further comprises the first sub-ground plane and the second sub-ground plane. The first sub-ground plane includes a first short side and a second short side. In the first embodiment of the present invention, the radiating conducting plate is installed adjacent to the first short side of the first sub-ground plane. In the second embodiment of the present invention, the radiation conducting plate is installed adjacent to the second short side of the first sub-ground plane. Other than this, the rest of the configuration of the second embodiment is identical to that of the first embodiment. The mobile phone antenna according to the present invention can be applied to either folded-type mobile phones or bar-type mobile phones. In the third embodiment of the present invention, the system ground plane does not include a second sub-ground plane. Other than this, the rest of the configuration of the third embodiment is identical to that of the first embodiment.
The mobile phone antenna according to the present invention mainly utilizes the antenna ground plane as a metal shielding wall to accomplish a seamless integration between the antenna and the shielding metal box of the RF module and RF circuitry without the need of an isolation distance.
The foregoing and other objects, features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood from a careful reading of a detailed description provided herein below with appropriate reference to the accompanying drawings.
Through a via hole 213 on the antenna ground plane 21, the feeding conducting strip 223 feeds the feeding signal into the radiating conducting plate 22. The system ground plane 23 further includes a first sub-ground plane 231 and a second sub-ground plane 234. The first sub-ground plane 231 has a first short side 232 and a second short side 233, which are perpendicularly connected to the antenna ground plane 21 at the second long side 212 of the antenna ground plane 21. The first sub-ground plane 231 is parallel to the radiating conducting plate 22. The radiating conducting plate 22 is installed adjacent to the first short side 232 of the first sub-ground plane 231. The first sub-ground plane 231 and the second sub-ground plane 234 can be connected with a flexible printed circuit board 235.
According to the present invention, the radiating conducting plate 22, the feeding conducting strip 223, and the shorting conducting strip 224 may be made of material like metal. As shown in
According to the present invention, the center operating frequency of the mobile phone antenna can be determined by adjusting the size of the radiating conducting plate 22. A good impedance matching for the antenna can be achieved by properly selecting the size of the distance between the radiating conducting plate 22 and the system ground plane 23, as well as the proper selection of the shorting position for the shorting conducting strip 224.
Referring to
Using the antenna ground plane 21 as a shielding metal wall, the mobile phone antenna of the present invention can minimize the destructive coupling effects even with the shielding metal box 15 placed in very close proximity to both the antenna ground plane 21 and the radiating conducting plate 22. This thus overcomes the restriction of a required isolation distance to accomplish an effective integration of the antenna and the shielding metal box 15 of the RF module and RF circuitry. Determined by 2:1 VSWR, the corresponding operating bandwidth can well cover the UMTS band.
The mobile phone antenna according to the present invention may be applied to either folded-type or bar-type mobile phones.
In conclusion, the mobile phone antenna of the present convention not only eliminates the need of an isolation distance between the antenna and the shielding metal box, but also accomplishes the ease for integrating the antenna and the shielding metal box with more effective utilization of the internal spacing within a mobile phone.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the details described thereof. Various substitutions and modifications have been suggested in the foregoing description, and others will occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. Therefore, all such substitutions and modifications are intended to be embraced within the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
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94132804 A | Sep 2005 | TW | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070063901 A1 | Mar 2007 | US |