1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a multi-band printed dipole antenna for a telecommunication signal receiving and/or sending network, capable of radiating radio-frequency fields in a plurality of frequency bands.
Such an antenna is intended to function in a first frequency band of a cellular radio communication network conforming to the DCS-1800 standard and/or of the CDMA type and in a second frequency band for a cellular radio communication system conforming to the GSM-900 standard, for example. The invention may equally be applied to the field of measurement probes.
2. Description of Related Art
According to the French patent 2 713 020 and the article entitled “T Dipole Arrays for Mobile Applications” by Christian Sabatier, IEEE Antennas and Propagation Magazine, Vol. 45, No. 6, December 2003, pages 9 to 26, a printed antenna comprises a T-shaped conductive element that extends on the upper portion of a dielectric substrate and that has an axial slot separating two radiating arms of the T-shape. The conductive element is fed by a coaxial feeder line extending on the lower face of the substrate. This dipole utilizes the double stub adaptation principle and a wide frequency band.
There are also known multi-band antennas that associate by coupling supplementary arms in the same plane as a principal arm.
Other types of multi-band operation can be achieved by the introduction of localized element filters, by feeding a plurality of dipoles in series, or by deformation of a principal arm.
The antenna described in the patent and the article referred to above offers operation only in one frequency band and all the solutions referred to above have the drawback of narrowband multi-frequency operation.
An object of the present invention is to design a compact multi-band printed dipole antenna operating in at least two frequency bands.
A multi-band printed dipole antenna according to the invention comprises first and second dipoles supported by a dielectric substrate and each having, in a manner known from the French patent 2 713 020, a T-shaped conductive element including a stem and two radiating arms separated by a coupling slot made in the stem, and a feeder line that can for the most part extend parallel to the stem.
The invention improves a printed dipole antenna structure with single-band operation through the presence of a second dipole the stem and the arms whereof are respectively longer than the stem and the arms of the first dipole.
The antenna according to the invention is characterized by a superposition of the stem of the first dipole and a base of the stem of the second dipole, an alignment of the coupling slots, and a decoupling cut-out made in the stem of the second dipole and into which the coupling slot of the first dipole opens by superposition. The cut-out made in the second dipole preferably has a far side substantially aligned with the slot of the first dipole.
Thanks to the above features, the antenna according to the invention is very compact at the same time as offering operation in different frequency bands. The antenna can achieve a standing wave ratio less than 2 over more than 50% of the bandwidth in each of the bands. For example, the first dipole radiates in the frequency bands of DCS-1800, UMTS and WLAN networks and the second dipole in the frequency band of the GSM-900 network. The antenna according to the invention retains the bandwidth performance of the antenna known from the French patent 2 713 020 and offers a considerable saving in space thanks to the superposition of the two dipoles, the thickness of the antenna being negligible compared to the length or the width thereof.
In a first embodiment offering high decoupling between the dipoles, the decoupling cut-out completely uncovers the coupling slot of the first dipole, by virtue of their superposition, the dielectric substrate comprises two dielectric layers and the feeder lines of the dipoles extend between facing faces of the two dielectric layers, or the dielectric substrate comprises a dielectric layer for each dipole having faces respectively supporting the feeder line and the conductive element of the dipole, and a dielectric layer extending between the layers supporting the dipoles.
According to another embodiment, the conductive elements of the dipoles extend on a common face of the dielectric substrate, the stem of the first dipole and the base of the stem of the second dipole being coincident, and the feeder lines extend on the other face of the dielectric substrate. This embodiment has the advantage of featuring a single substrate, which procures a saving of space and a smaller overall size. For these embodiments, a metallic plane can extend perpendicularly to the faces of the substrate, the dipole having the arms farthest from the metallic plane operating at the lowest frequencies.
The invention relates also to an array of antennas comprising a plurality of antennas, each printed antenna being supported by a dielectric substrate and comprising first and second dipoles each having a T-shaped conductive element including a stem and two radiating arms separated by a coupling slot made in the stem, and a feeder line, the stem and the arms of the second dipole being respectively longer than the stem and the arms of the first dipole.
The array is characterized in that in each antenna, the stem of the first dipole and a base of the stem of the second dipole are superposed, the coupling slots are aligned, and a decoupling cut-out is made in the stem of the second dipole and the coupling slot of the first dipole opens by superposition into the decoupling cut-out, and the faces of the substrates of the antennas are parallel to each other and the coupling slots of the dipoles are oriented in a parallel manner.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent from a study of the following specification, when viewed in the light of the accompanying drawing, in which:
A two-band printed dipole antenna according to the first embodiment of the invention is described in detail hereinafter with reference to
The antenna comprises two stacked rectangular dielectric substrate layers CS1 and CS2 and two superposed printed dipoles D1 and D2. The dipoles radiate in different frequency bands BF1 and BF2 and therefore have different dimensions. The smaller first dipole D1 is on the lower face of the first layer CS1 and is adapted to radiate in a first frequency band BF1 from about 1.5 GHz to about 2.5 GHz, for example, in order to cover a band combining the DCS-1800, UMTS and WLAN bands. The second dipole D2 extends on the upper face of the second layer CS2 and is adapted to radiate in a second frequency band BF2 that is below the first frequency band BF1 and lies between about 0.7 GHz and about 1.0 GHz, for example, to cover the GSM-900 band. A printed feeder line LA1 with integral diplexer feeds the first dipole D1 and a printed feeder line LA2 with integrated diplexer feeds the second dipole D2. The feeder lines LA1 and LA2 extend between the facing faces of the first and second dielectric layers CS1 and CS2. Thus the facing faces of the dielectric layers are the faces opposite the faces on which the dipoles lie, and all the faces of the layers are parallel to each other. The layers CS1 and CS2 consist of a Duroid substrate, for example, with a relative dielectric permittivity of 2.2 and a thickness of about 0.75 mm. Alternatively, the layers CS1 and CS2 consist of substrates with different relative dielectric permittivities and/or different thicknesses.
As shown in
The lateral arms B1, B2 of each dipole D1, D2 preferably have identical lengths. The sum of the lengths of the arms is substantially equal to half the wavelength corresponding to the center frequency of the operating band of each dipole. As the center frequency of the first band BF1 is higher than the center frequency of the second band BF2, the arms B1 of the first dipole D1 are shorter than the arms B2 of the second dipole D2. Similarly, the length of the stem J1, J2 is equal to approximately half said wavelength, although this length of the stem is less critical because it does not make a dominating contribution to the radiation from the antenna. The width of the stems J1, J2 is substantially twice the width W1, W2 of the lateral arms B1, B2, for example, so that the stems cover the longitudinal feeder lines LA1 and LA2 between the stems. The feeder lines LA1 and LA2 are parallel to the stems of the dipoles D1 and D2 and are printed with the dipoles using the triplate technology for which the stems J1 and J2 serve as ground plane.
The feeder line LA1 of the first dipole D1 on the stem J1 extends between an access end E11 and a U-shaped end E12, symmetrically to the line LA2 with respect to an axial longitudinal plane P of the antenna common to the stems and to the coupling slots. The access end E11 is situated at the edge of the antenna and is connected by a connector to a first microwave signal generator for the band BF1. The U-shaped end E12 has a core crossing the coupling slot FC1 perpendicularly by virtue of their superposition and situated axially under the origin of the arms B1, and is terminated by a short terminal branch substantially parallel to the coupling slot FC1 and in the vicinity of the feeder line LA2. The end E12 is bent in a U-shape toward the feeder line LA2 of the second dipole in order to keep the antenna very compact by avoiding moving apart the juxtaposed parallel feeder lines LA1 and LA2 between the dielectric layers CS1 and CS2 and therefore widening the stems J1 and J2, at the same time as ensuring effective excitation of the arm B1 over which the other feeder line LA2 passes and therefore of the two quarter-wave arms B1 coupled by a slotted line FC1. The length of the coupling slot FC1 and the dimensions of the U-shaped end E12 of the feeder line LA1 are chosen to adapt the dipole D1 to a wide band BF1.
The feeder line LA2 of the second dipole D2 extends under the stem J2 between an access end E21 and an end E22 bent at a right angle, symmetrically to the line LA1. The access end E21 is situated at the edge of the antenna and is connected by a connector to a second microwave signal generator for the band BF2. The U-shaped end E22 is terminated by a short rectilinear section situated axially under the origin of the arms B2, and crossing the coupling slot FC2 perpendicularly by virtue of their superposition so as also to lie under the arm B2 on the same side of the axial longitudinal plane P of the antenna, and thereby to excite the two radiating arms B2 as quarter-wave stubs coupled by a slotted line FC2.
A decoupling cut-out ED, which is rectangular, for example, is provided in the stem J2 of the second dipole D2 (
The printed dipole antenna according to the first embodiment of the invention combines compactly two superposed and decoupled printed dipoles D1 and D2 operating in the frequency bands BF1 and BF2, respectively, in accordance with the double stub adaptation principle. The printed dipole antenna typically has a maximum length of about 150 mm and a maximum width of about 150 mm, preferably in accordance with a square shape, and has a thickness of approximately 1.5 mm to offer a minimum overall size.
Measurements have shown that the printed dipole antenna described hereinabove offered a standing wave ratio less than 2 over more than 50% of the bandwidth in each of the two frequency bands BF1 and BF2, and guaranteed a decoupling level better than −20 dB between the access end E21 for the band BF1 (GSM) and the access end E11 for the band BF2 (DCS+UMTS+WLAN).
According to a variant of the first embodiment, and in an analogous manner to
The second embodiment offers more decoupling between the dipoles D1b and D2b but at the cost of a thicker antenna compared to the first embodiment shown in
Alternatively, the conductive element of the dipole D1b and the feeder line LA1b are interchanged, the conductive element of the dipole D1b being situated between the layers CS1 and CS2 and the feeder line LA1b being situated under the layer CS1, on the outside of the stack of layers, and/or the conductive element of the dipole D2b and the feeder line LA2b are interchanged, the feeder line LA2b being situated between the layers CS3 and CS2 and the conductive element of the dipole D2b being situated on the layer CS3, on the outside of the stack of layers.
The decoupling cut-out EDc, which can again be rectangular, is made in the edge of the stem J2c of the second dipole D2c in front of the arm B1 at the line end E12c and situated between that arm B1 and the far side of the coupling slot FC2c. The far side of the cut-out EDc is set back relative to the aligned slots FC1c and FC2c in order for the coupling slot FC1c of the first dipole D1c to open into the cut-out EDc and for the first dipole D1c to be able to radiate.
To accentuate the decoupling between the two dipoles D1c and D2c, an axial second coupling slot F1 analogous to the first slot FC1c is made in the base of the stem J1c opposite the first slot FC1c and colinearly therewith, and two slots F2 are formed at the end of a stem portion J2c of the dipole D2c situated in front of the arm B1 under which the feeder line LA1c and LA2c pass to narrow the stem J2c in a corner of the cut-out EDc to the width of the feeder line LA2c above the latter.
To this end, the larger arms B2 of the antenna radiating at the lowest frequencies are the farthest from the ground plane PS. The ground plane PS is typically situated at a distance from the rear access side CA of the antenna that is about one third of the wavelength corresponding to the highest frequency in the operating band of the antenna and thus the frequency band BF1 of the smaller dipole.
Alternatively, the antenna is introduced into a metallic cavity CV or a waveguide, as represented in dashed outline in
The radio-frequency performance of the two-band printed dipole antenna described hereinabove is preserved if a plurality of two-band printed dipole antennas according to the invention are juxtaposed to form an array for frequency bands BF1 and BF2.
This array can constitute an antenna for a base station for GSM, DCS and UMTS radio communication networks, for example, and a station for a WLAN (IEEE 802.xx) network. Depending on the orientation of the antenna, it has a directional diagram in elevation DE and a wide diagram in azimuth DA for both frequency bands BF1 and BF2.
Alternatively, an array of antennas (not shown) with double polarization and two frequency bands consists of a first column of first two-band printed dipole antennas that are oriented in the same way as in
The dual polarization and therefore two-dimensional array can comprise a plurality of parallel columns alternating on a plane.
Although the invention has been described with reference to two-band operation, the antenna according to the invention can be extended to a multiband structure by introducing the same number of levels of dipoles as required operating bands and the same number of dielectric layers as required operating bands for the first embodiment, the same number of pairs of dielectric layers as required operating bands for the second embodiment, or the same number of dipoles as required operating bands for the third embodiment. It is then necessary for one or more decoupling cut-outs to be made in the stems of the dipoles of the higher levels in order for them not to cover the coupling slots of the dipoles of lower levels.
While in accordance with the provisions of the Patent Statutes the preferred forms and embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that changes may be made without deviating from the invention described above.
This application is a continuation of the PCT International Application No. PCT/FR2006/050099 filed Feb. 3, 2006, which is based on the French Application No. 0501814 filed Feb. 18, 2005.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6094176 | Van Hoozen | Jul 2000 | A |
6281849 | Brachat | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6310584 | Reece et al. | Oct 2001 | B1 |
6529172 | Zimmerman | Mar 2003 | B2 |
6621464 | Fang | Sep 2003 | B1 |
7095382 | Surducan et al. | Aug 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2713020 | Feb 1996 | FR |
WO 2004019445 | Mar 2004 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080030418 A1 | Feb 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/FR2006/050099 | Feb 2006 | US |
Child | 11888756 | US |