This application is a 371 of PCT/IB2005/053962 filed Nov. 30, 2005, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119 to an application EPO 04257502.7 filed on Dec. 2, 2004, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to the domain of communication devices such as mobile telephones, and more precisely to the mobile telephones adapted to display television pictures.
Some mobile telephones comprise a telephone set to receive and transmit radiotelephone signals, but also a television set to receive radiotelevision signals. Such a television set usually comprises a main television antenna to receive the radiotelevision signals, a television receiver arranged to process these received radiotelevision signals to output television signals to be displayed, and a display means to display these outputted television signals.
The mobile television band extending from approximately 470 MHz to 714 MHz (with a bandwidth of 41% centered at 592 MHz), at the band center frequency half a wavelength is approximately equal to 25 cm which is similar to the size of a “clam-shell” or “flip” mobile telephone when its casing is opened to reveal the inner screen or keypad.
Therefore, the main television antenna generally comprises a retractable rigid or telescopic element housed inside the telephone casing and which must be extracted from it and “unfolded” to extend to a length approximately equal to a quarter of the wavelength signals in order to allow signal reception.
With such an arrangement the quality of the radiotelevision signal reception strongly relies on the ability of the user to correctly unfold and orientate the main television antenna.
Moreover, when this antenna is unfolded it increases the bulkiness of the mobile telephone and the design of the latter may become unaesthetic.
To improve the situation it has been proposed to use a main television antenna built-in inside the telephone casing. More precisely, to allow a signal reception in the mobile television band it has been proposed to use a Planar Inverted F Antenna (PIFA) mounted on the printed circuit board (PCB) of the mobile telephone. Such an arrangement is notably described in patent document US 2001/0050643.
This antenna allows effectively to receive signals in the mobile television band, but its bandwidth is normally too narrow to allow a signal reception over the television band (for the antenna heights allowable in mobile phones). Moreover, since this antenna is not adapted to reject the radiotelephone signals, interference may occur between television and radiotelephone signals, which may induce a quality degradation of the displayed television pictures.
So, the object of this invention is to improve the situation.
For this purpose, the invention provides a mobile telephone comprising a casing housing a telephone set to receive and transmit radiotelephone signals and a television set comprising a main television antenna to receive radiotelevision signals, a television receiver arranged to process these received radiotelevision signals to output television signals to be displayed, and a display means to display these outputted television signals.
This mobile telephone is character in that its main television antenna is made in planar technology, is built-in inside its casing and comprises a filtering slot having chosen dimensions to be resonant around (or approximately at) the frequency of the radiotelephone signals to reject them at least partly.
Such a filtering slot acting as a high quality factor filter, the antenna may efficiently reject the radiotelephone signals.
At least two different types of planar antenna may be envisaged.
A first type comprises a modified PIFA antenna comprising:
This main planar antenna may have a bandwidth depending on the first and second chosen distances. For instance its bandwidth may be approximately proportional to the sum of the first and second chosen distances.
A second type comprises a single-pole antenna which may comprise, for instance:
The second portion of the U-shaped conductor may be shorter than its first portion.
Moreover, the U-shaped conductor may be connected to a series of vias arranged to reduce the power loss in a dielectric part of the printed circuit board.
The mobile telephone according to the invention may have additional characteristics considered separately or combined, and notably:
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on examining the detailed specifications hereafter and the appended drawings, wherein:
The appended drawings may not only serve to complete the invention, but also to contribute to its definition, if need be.
Reference is initially made to
In the following description it will be considered that the mobile telephone is a GSM telephone adapted to radio communication in a GSM network, and more precisely arranged to transmit and receive data packets to and from base stations (BTSs) of the GSM network. But it is important to notice that the invention is not limited to this type of mobile telephone. Indeed the invention concerns any type of mobile telephone adapted to radio communication in any type of (cellular) radio communication network, and notably AMPS, CDMA and UMTS, for example.
Moreover, by “mobile telephone” is meant here any type of communication equipment adapted to exchange (transmit/receive) radiotelephone signals and to receive radiotelevision signals.
The invention mainly relates to the television antenna(s) of the mobile telephone and possibly its television receiver. Therefore hereafter the mobile telephone components that are not related to in the invention and are supposed to be known by those skilled in the art will not be described.
Let be recalled, as illustrated in
All these GSM telephone components are housed, at least partly, inside a casing C1, C2. For instance and as illustrated in
In the illustrated example, the keypad KP, the telephone receiver R1 and the battery B are housed inside the first casing piece C1, while the screen LS, the television receiver R2 and the main television antenna MAN are housed inside the second casing piece C2. It is important to notice that the television receiver R2 and/or the main television antenna MAN might be housed inside the first piece C1.
As illustrated in
The television receiver R2 and the main television antenna MAN are mounted on a printed circuit board PCB provided with a metallic layer defining a ground plane on at least a part of its face.
According to the invention the main television antenna MAN is made in planar technology, is built-in inside the casing (here in the second casing piece C2) and comprises a filtering slot FS (
As will be described in detail hereafter, the planar antenna MAN according to the invention may be a modified Planar Inverted F Antenna (PIFA), such as the one illustrated in
As illustrated in
The short and long portions of the L-shaped radiating element are respectively referenced RE1 and RE2 respectively.
The main PIFA antenna MAN also comprises a feed planar pin P1F-P3F (PF) and a shorting planar pin P1S-P3S (PS).
The feed (planar) pin (PF) comprises a first part P1F connected to the television receiver R2 (
This second distance H2 is also chosen to control at least partly the bandwidth of the main PIFA antenna MAN. In fact in this embodiment the bandwidth is approximately proportional to the sum of the first H1 and second H2 chosen distances.
The shorting (planar) pin (PS) comprises a first part P1S connected to the ground plane GP. This first part P1S runs also approximately in the plane of the ground plane GP over the second chosen distance H2 and substantially parallel to the first part P1F of the feed pin, at a chosen distance D3 from this one.
The feed pin further comprises a second part P2F extending from its first part P1F in a direction perpendicular to the ground plane GP and over the first chosen distance H1.
The shorting pin further comprises a second part P2S extending from its first part P1S in the direction approximately perpendicular to the ground plane GP and over the first chosen distance H1. This second part P2S runs substantially parallel to the second part P2F of the feed pin, at the chosen distance D3 from this one.
The feed pin still further comprises a third part P3F extending from its second part P2F in approximately the first plane (in which the radiating element RE1, RE2 is located) and connected to a first extremity E1 of the short portion RE1 of the L-shaped radiating element. This third part P3F comprises a portion, which runs approximately parallel to a side of the long portion RE2 of the radiating element.
The shorting pin still further comprises a third part P3S extending from its second part P2S in approximately the first plane and connected to a second extremity E2 of the long portion RE2 of the L-shaped radiating element. To reach this second extremity E2 the third part P3S runs along the portion of the third part P3F of the feed pin (parallel to RE2) and then along the short RE1 and long RE2 portions of the radiating element at the chosen distance D3.
With such an arrangement the filtering slot FS is defined between the portion of the third part P3F of the feed pin parallel to RE2) and the short RE1 and long RE2 portions of the L-shaped radiating element. So, in this example the shape of the filtering slot FS is approximately rectangular. But other shapes may be envisaged.
The dimensions D1 and D2 of the filtering slot FS are defined by the L shape of the radiating element RE1, RE2. These dimensions are of importance. The wider dimension D1 can be chosen predominantly to set the correct resonant frequency and then to filter (reject) the GSM signals in the 900 MHz region. The narrower dimension D2 can predominantly be used for impedance matching.
This arrangement allows a better coupling with the printed circuit board PCB and hence a more wideband impedance (from a low profile design).
In order for the main antenna MAN to have a sufficient bandwidth to allow reception of television signals in at least three sub-bands, the following values can be used:
To switch from one sub-band to another, the television receiver R2 may comprise a switching circuit SC such as the one illustrated in
This switching circuit SC is adapted to an antenna having sufficient bandwidth to be matched at a small number of sub-bands within the total band. It corresponds, for instance, to an antenna MAN installed near the top or bottom of the clam-shell phone UE (
In the example shown, one of three matching networks is switched in via simple single-pole, single-throw (SPST) switches S1-S4 which could, for example, be PIN diodes, GaAs FETs or MEMS devices (“Micro ElectroMechanical Systems”).
At the lowest sub-frequency band SPST switches S1, S3 and S4 are closed while SPST switch S2 is open. The inductors L1 and L2 tune the antenna resonant frequency to the lowest sub-band. At this point the antenna MAN is predominantly series resonant. Two coupled microstrip lines CL1 and CL2 act as an impedance transformer in combination with a shunt inductor not shown. This shunt inductor is tuned out by a shunt capacitor that is made of a combination of three capacitors C2, C3 and C4 mounted in parallel, in this example. This has the effect of double-tuning the antenna MAN, hence increasing the bandwidth.
In the second sub-band SPST switches S2 and S3 are closed while SPST switches S1 and S4 are open.
In the third, highest frequency, sub-band SPST switch S2 is closed while SPST switches S1, S3 and S4 are open. When the SPST switch S1 is open the capacitor C1 tunes the antenna MAN to a higher frequency.
These SPST switches may have an ON resistance of 1Ω and an OFF capacitance of 0.4 pF having a quality factor (Q) approximately equal to 5.
An efficiency greater than 60% may be achieved over the DVB-H band. Greater efficiency could be achieved by increasing the effective height of the antenna MAN (both parallel and perpendicular to the PCB) and by improving the switch losses, for example, using MEMS devices.
It is possible that other circuits be used to cover the TV band by switching over a number of sub-bands. In other words the number of matching networks in the switching circuit depends on the number of sub-bands that are necessary to cover the chosen TV band.
Moreover, varactor diodes can be employed to continuously tune across the band. Each switch may be also combined with a varactor diode.
Reference is now made to
The illustrated main single-pole antenna MAN comprises a U-shaped conductor ML, which is mounted above the printed circuit board PCB which provides a ground plane GP. More precisely, the printed circuit board PCB comprises a main rectangular part having a narrow extension PCBE above which the U-shaped conductor ML is mounted.
This conductor ML comprises four portions P1-P4.
The first P1 and second P2 portions define the two parallel branches of the U shape. The first portion P1 comprises an extremity E3 connected to the television receiver R2 through a dedicated integrated circuit (not shown) provided on the main rectangular part of the printed circuit board PCB. The second portion P2 comprises an extremity E4 that is not connected to the ground plane GP.
The first portion P1 of the U-shaped conductor ML extends over the whole length L3 of the single-pole antenna MAN.
Preferably the second portion P2 of the U-shaped conductor ML is shorter than its first portion P1 so that the extremity E4 is sufficiently far from the ground plane that it is disconnected (i.e. with minimal capacitance). This difference in length is referenced L4 in
The third portion P3 defines the perpendicular branch of the U shape. It runs perpendicularly between the extremities of the first and second parallel portions P1, P2 that are opposed to their respective extremities E3 and E4.
The fourth portion P4 is a shorting portion running perpendicular between the first and second parallel portions P1, P2 at an intermediate level located at a first chosen distance D1 of the second portion extremity E4.
With such an arrangement the filtering slot FS is defined between the shorting portion P4 and the parts PP1 and PP2 of the first P1 and second P2 portions of the U-shaped conductor ML, which comprise the extremities E3 and E4. So, in this example the shape of the filtering slot FS is approximately rectangular. But other shapes may be envisaged.
The location of the intermediate level (first distance D1), where the shorting portion P4 stands, can be chosen predominantly to set the correct resonant frequency and then to filter (reject) the GSM signals in the 900 MHz region. The second distance D2 of the filtering slot FS is defined between the first P1 and second P2 portions of the U-shaped conductor ML and can predominantly be used for impedance matching.
When the U-shaped conductor ML is formed on either side of a dielectric support, it preferably comprises a series of vias V distributed over its four portions P1-P4 in order to reduce the power loss in the dielectric part of the printed circuit board PCB. Alternatively, the conductors defining the U-shaped conductor ML is formed from solid metal with minimal supporting dielectric material (to maintain the spacing (or second distance) D2).
These vias are metalized holes, which pass through the printed circuit board PCB and lead to the U-shaped conductor ML provided on one of its faces and to corresponding metalized lines provided on the opposite face.
For the main single-pole antenna MAN to have a sufficient bandwidth to allow reception of television signals, one can use the following values:
The switching circuit SC illustrated in
The invention is not limited to the embodiments of mobile telephone described above, only as examples, but it encompasses all alternative embodiments as for instance, any communication devices not necessarily applied to planar antennae, which may be considered by one skilled in the art within the scope of the claims hereafter.
The invention also relates to an antenna as disclosed above.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
04257502 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB2005/053962 | 11/30/2005 | WO | 00 | 8/25/2009 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/059279 | 6/8/2006 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090305738 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |