Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6801165
-
Patent Number
6,801,165
-
Date Filed
Sunday, March 2, 200321 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, October 5, 200420 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 343 700 MS
- 343 727
- 343 725
- 343 729
- 343 767
- 343 770
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
A multi-patch antenna that can transmit radio signals with two frequencies includes a PCB and two stacked-patches. The PCB includes a substrate, a metal layer formed on an upper side of the substrate, and a microstrip line formed on a lower side of the substrate for transmitting radio signals to two slots. The radio signals resonate within the two slots and the stacked-patches, and are then emitted from the stacked-patches in a direction normal to the stacked-patches.
Description
BACKGROUND OF INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a multi-patch antenna, and more specifically, to a multi-patch antenna that can provide two frequency service.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The rapid development of the Internet has allowed data and information to accumulate rapidly, and the circulation and sharing of large amounts of technology and knowledge is becoming increasingly efficient. Recently, developments in wireless networks allow users to access network resources whenever and wherever they want. Information is entering every aspect of our work and our lives. One feature of wireless networks is to remove the cables associated with traditional network infrastructure. Using electromagnetic waves or infrared signals to transfer data between network terminals, users can connect to a wireless network and access network resources. Under wireless network system architecture, all network servers transmit and receive wireless data signals via an access point, and provide network resources and service wirelessly. Similarly, in order to utilize the resources and services provided by wireless networks, the connecting terminals need the ability to transmit and receive wireless data signals. Terminals such as PCs or notebook computers can be expanded to have wireless network functions by installing wireless LAN cards.
The service range and area of a wireless network is largely influenced by the design of an access point. The design of an internal antenna in the access point plays a very important part. If a multi-patch structure is used, the antenna can benefit from the effects of high gain and high bandwidth.
Please refer to
FIG. 1
, which is an exploded perspective view of a prior art multi-patch antenna
10
. The multi-patch antenna
10
comprises a stacked-patch
18
, a PCB
30
, and a feed line
37
. The stacked-patch
18
comprises a first substrate
20
, a first filling layer
22
, a second substrate
24
, and a second filling layer
26
in an arrangement that yields an ability to operate using a wide bandwidth. An upper layer of the PCB
30
comprises a ground layer
28
. Below the ground layer
28
is a substrate
32
, and below the substrate
32
is a microstrip line
34
electronically connected to the feed line
37
for receiving input radio signals at one end. Further provided is a slot
36
in the ground layer
28
directly beneath the stacked-patch
18
and crossing the microstrip line
34
. When multi-patch antenna
10
is required to send out a radio signal, the radio signal is input from feed line
37
.
The multi-patch antenna
10
is an application of mature technology. Take for example a 2.4 GHz frequency according to IEEE802.11b, a gain of the antenna
10
can reach approximately 6 dBi to 9 dBi, with a bandwidth that is about 15% above average. The same design principle can also be applied to a high gain antenna conforming to a 5.25 GHz band of IEEE 802.11a. Currently, IEEE 802.11 module chip design has led to an intelligent module that can use either the 2.4 GHz or 5.25 GHz frequencies to communicate with IEEE 802.11b or IEEE 802.11a modules at other access points. But under these circumstances, the multi-patch antenna
10
described above is inadequate. The use of microwave bands is becoming increasingly complicated. For instance, the most general IEEE 802.11 standard currently used for wireless networks has the common 2.4 GHz ISM wave band in IEEE 802.11b and an improved version of the 5.25 GHz in IEEE 802.11b. Furthermore, 5.4 GHz˜5.8 GHz is now in application in a European standard of HyperLan-2. A key reason why we must develop a antenna with the capability to receive and transmit with multiple frequencies is to reduce access point design complexity and cost.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
It is therefore a primary objective of the claimed invention to provide a multi-patch antenna with the capability for dual frequency service, fulfilling the need for a single antenna to transmit two frequencies simultaneously.
The multi-patch antenna comprises a PCB and two stacked-patches. The PCB includes a substrate, a metal layer formed on an upper side of the substrate, and a microstrip line formed on a lower side of the substrate. The microstrip line transmits radio signals through two slots above the metal layer, the two slots being covered by the two stacked patches. The radio signals resonate within the two slots and the two stacked patches covering the two slots, and are then emitted from the stacked-patches in a direction normal to the stacked-patches.
It is an advantage that the claimed invention can receive and transmit two frequencies simultaneously.
It is an advantage of the claimed invention that the structure of the multi-patch antenna causes it to be highly unidirectional. It can not only be used in outdoor point-to-point communication, but can also be used indoors as a wall-hanging or ceiling-fastened device. With its high gain and unidirectionality, the claimed invention flat patch antenna design boosts communication quality.
These and other objectives of the claimed invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is an exploded perspective view of a prior art multi-patch antenna.
FIG. 2
is an exploded perspective view of a present invention multi-patch antenna.
FIG. 3
is a graph of a dual frequency voltage standing wave ratio measured result for the multi-patch antenna of FIG.
2
.
FIG. 4
is an antenna pattern plot for the multi-patch antenna of
FIG. 2
at 2.4 GHz.
FIG. 5
is an antenna pattern plot for the multi-patch antenna of
FIG. 2
at 5.25 GHz.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Please refer to
FIG. 2
showing an exploded perspective view of a multi-patch antenna
38
according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The multi-patch antenna
38
comprises a first stacked-patch
40
, a second stacked-patch
50
, a PCB
64
, and a feed line
72
. The first stacked-patch
40
includes a first A flat patch layer
42
, a first A filling layer
44
, a second A flat patch layer
46
, and a second A filling layer
48
. The second stacked-patch
50
includes a first B flat patch layer
52
, a first B filling layer
54
, a second B flat patch layer
56
, and a second B filling layer
58
. The first stacked-patch
40
and the second stacked-patch
50
give the present invention multi-patch antenna
38
a wide bandwidth. The upper layer of the PCB
64
comprises a ground layer
66
. Below the ground layer
66
is a substrate
68
, and below the substrate
68
is a microstrip line
70
. The microstrip line
70
is electronically connected to the feed line
72
, and receives input radio signals at one end. The ground layer
66
has a first slot
62
located under the first stacked-patch
40
, and a second slot
60
located under the second stacked-patch
50
. These two slots
62
and
60
sit across the microstrip line
70
. A first resonant cavity is formed between the first slot
62
and the first stacked-patch
40
. A second resonant cavity is formed between the second slot
60
and the second stacked-patch
50
. The first slot
62
is smaller than the second slot
60
. Similarly, an area of the first stacked-patch
40
covering the first slot
62
is smaller an area of the second stacked-patch
50
covering second slot
60
. The reason for this is that the first resonant cavity is for higher frequency radio wave signals, and the second resonant cavity is for lower frequency radio wave signals. In the preferred embodiment, the radio signal with a higher frequency is on a 5.25 Ghz carrier wave according to the IEEE 802.11a specification, and the radio signal with a lower frequency is on a 2.4 GHz carrier wave according to IEEE 802.11b.
When the multi-patch antenna
38
is required to transmit a dual-frequency radio signal, it first transfers the dual-frequency radio signal into the microstrip line
70
via the feed line
72
, and then transfers this signal in the direction of the first slot
62
and the second slot
60
. A higher frequency 5.25 GHz component of the radio signal resonates in the first resonant cavity formed by the first slot
62
, and is then emitted from the stacked-patch
40
in a direction normal to the first stacked-patch
40
. A lower frequency 2.4 GHz component of the radio signal resonates in the second resonant cavity formed by the second slot
60
, and is then emitted from the stacked-patch
50
in a direction normal to the second stacked-patch
50
.
The present invention dual-frequency antenna
38
uses a single input port and a single feed point to achieve dual bandwidth. Consider the previous examples of 2.4 GHz and 5.25 GHz, using the same feed line to reach different feed points, and using different resonant structures to create different frequency resonance. This concept uses the feed shown in
FIG. 2. A
signal enters the microstrip antenna, when it passes through the slot
62
, higher frequency signals such as 5.25 GHz signals of IEEE 802.11a resonate in the first resonant cavity, while lower frequency signals such as 2.4 GHz signals of IEEE 802.11b resonate in the second resonant cavity. Whether high or low frequency signals resonate with a slot depends on the geometric shape of the slot and the overall structure resistance. In the preferred embodiment, the first slot
62
has a resistance matching a high frequency of 5.25 GHz, and the second slot
60
has a resistance matching a low frequency of 2.4 GHz. The geometric shape of the stacked-patches
40
,
50
and the lengths of the first and second slots
62
,
60
are adjusted according to the frequencies to resonate, with preferred lengths of the first and second cavities being about λ
high
/2 and λ
low
/2 respectively.
There is a great difference in the wavelengths of the two radio signals (2.4 GHz and 5.25 GHz) serviced by the antenna
38
. The 2.4 GHz signal does not have too much variation to the resistance for this lower frequency radio signal when it passes through first slot
62
. Signals still follow the microstrip line shown in FIG.
2
and transfer to the feed point of the second slot
60
, and not much reflection loss occurs in the first slot
62
because of resistance mismatch. But in other embodiments, where the dual frequency is very close (that is if the corresponding wavelengths λ
h
and λ
z
for two frequencies f
h
and f
z
are close to each other), the lower frequency radio signal λ
low
will generate reflection when passing slot
62
causing signal attenuation. In order to lower frequency signal transfers in the microstrip line
70
(supposing a resistance of 50 Ω) through slot
62
without reflection, a tuning stub
80
is installed on the microstrip line
70
between first slot
62
and second slot
60
. A resistance of the tuning stub
80
is determined by the combination of resistance of slots, servicing frequency, and microstrip line
70
. According to this resistance, the corresponding geometric shape and the location of the installation is determined, so that the lower frequency radio signal can use the 50 Ω microstrip line
70
and enter the second slot
60
with a matching resistance. The tuning stub
80
can be an open stub or a grounding short stub. The microstrip line
70
within first slot
62
and second slot
60
can function as transformer.
Please refer to FIG.
3
.
FIG. 3
is a graph of a dual-frequency voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) measured result of the present invention multi-patch antenna
38
. Please refer to FIG.
4
and FIG.
5
.
FIG. 4
is an antenna pattern plot for the present invention multi-patch antenna
38
at 2.4 GHz;
FIG. 5
is an antenna pattern plot for the present invention multi-patch antenna
38
at 5.25 GHz.
FIG. 3
shows the VSWR of a dual frequency signal corresponding to predetermined service under IEEE 802.11b and IEEE 802.11a by the multi-patch antenna
38
. The measured result shows that 3 dBi bandwidth of 2.4 GHz and 5.25 GHz can provide over a 15% improvement. According to FIG.
4
and
FIG. 5
, a dual-frequency pattern gain and antenna gain values of the present invention can reach 60 degrees for a beamwidth of 3 dBi. Hence, the present invention multi-patch antenna
38
is highly unidirectional and capable of high bandwidth and high gain to cover a larger service area. Wireless network products applying the present invention will utilize the features of larger service area coverage and highly unidirectional dual-frequency functionality to fulfill requirements of Internet connections everywhere. The present invention antenna can be installed anywhere, not only in common office environments, but also in general households.
Described above is only the preferred embodiment of the present invention. Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
Claims
- 1. A patch antenna comprising:a PCB comprising: a substrate; a metal layer formed on an upper side of the substrate, the metal layer including a first slot and a second slot; and a microstrip line formed on a lower side of the substrate for transmitting radio signals to the first and second slots to resonate; a first stacked-patch formed above the first slot for making a first resonant cavity with the first slot; and a second stacked-patch formed above the second slot for making a second resonant cavity with the second slot.
- 2. The patch antenna of claim 1 wherein each of the stacked-patch comprises two parallel patch layers and two filling layers.
- 3. The patch antenna of claims 1 wherein the first slot is smaller than the second slot, and the first slot is fed a higher frequency of radio signals than the second slot to generate resonance.
- 4. The patch antenna of claim 3 wherein the first slot is fed radio signals of approximately 5.25 GHz frequency to generate resonance, and the second slot is fed radio signals of approximately 2.4 GHz frequency to generate resonance.
- 5. The patch antenna of claim 1 wherein the microstrip line is across the two slots.
- 6. The patch antenna of claim 5 wherein the microstrip line is perpendicular to the two slots.
- 7. The patch antenna of claim 1 wherein the microstrip line comprises a tuning stub.
- 8. The patch antenna of claim 1 wherein the radio signals are fed to the microstrip line by a transmission line.
- 9. The patch antenna of claim 1 wherein the metal layer is connected to ground.
- 10. A patch antenna comprising:a substrate; a metal layer formed on a first side of the substrate, the metal layer including a first slot and a second slot; a microstrip line crossing the first slot and the second slot on a second side of the substrate for feeding signals to the first slot and the second slot; a first patch coupling with the first slot for generating a first resonant frequency band of the patch antenna; and a second patch coupling with the second slot for generating a second resonant frequency band of the patch antenna.
- 11. The patch antenna of claim 10 further comprising a tuning stub installed on the microstrip line.
- 12. A patch antenna comprising:a first conductive piece located on a first substrate piece in which a first slot is formed within the first conductive piece, a second conductive piece located on a second substrate piece in which a second slot is formed within the second conductive piece, a microstrip line attached to the first and second substrate pieces for transmitting radio signals to the first and second slots; a metal layer formed on an upper side of the substrate, the metal layer including a first slot and a second slot that is larger than the first slot; and a first stacked-patch formed above the first slot to constitute a first resonant cavity with the first slot; and a second stacked-patch formed above the second slot to constitute a second resonant cavity with the second slot.
- 13. The patch antenna of claim 12 wherein the first and second substrate pieces are formed on a single substrate layer and the first and second conductive pieces are formed on a single conductive layer.
- 14. The patch antenna of claim 13 wherein the microstrip line comprises a tuning stub.
- 15. The patch antenna of claim 14 wherein the microstrip line is perpendicular to the two slots.
- 16. The patch antenna of claim 15 wherein each of the first and second stacked-patches comprises two parallel patch layers and two filling layers.
- 17. The patch antenna of claim 16 wherein the first slot is fed radio signals of approximately 5.25 GHz frequency to generate resonance, and the second slot is fed radio signals of approximately 2.4 GHz frequency to generate resonance.
- 18. The patch antenna of claim 12 wherein the microstrip line comprises a tuning stub.
- 19. The patch antenna of claim 18 wherein the tuning stub is disposed between the first slot and the second slot.
- 20. The patch antenna of claim 19 wherein each of the first and second stacked-patches comprises two parallel patch layers and two filling layers.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
91118038 A |
Aug 2002 |
TW |
|
US Referenced Citations (6)