This application claims priority to Finland Patent Application No. 20055621 filed Nov. 24, 2005 and entitled “Multiband Antenna Component”, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This application is related to co-owned and co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/544,173 filed Oct. 5, 2006 and entitled “Multi-Band Antenna With a Common Resonant Feed Structure and Methods”, also incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material that is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent files or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever.
1. Field of Invention
The invention relates to a dielectric antenna component, in one embodiment by which an internal multiband antenna of a small-sized radio device can be implemented. The invention also pertains to such an entire antenna.
2. Description of Related Technology
In many small-sized radio devices, such as most models of mobile phones, the antenna is placed inside the casing of the device for convenience. A very common internal antenna type is the planar antenna, which has a radiating plane and a ground plane, isolated from each other by air. Efforts are naturally made to make the internal antenna as small as possible. The size compared to an air-insulated antenna can be reduced by using dielectric material under the radiating plane. The central part of the antenna is then a chip component partly coated with conductive material, which can be mounted on the circuit board of a radio device. The higher the permittivity of the material is, the smaller the antenna element having a certain electrical size is physically.
When a radio device must operate in at least two systems, the frequency bands of which are relatively far from each other, the antenna structure becomes more complicated in comparison to a single-band antenna. One solution is to use two separate antennas for example in such a way that there is one chip-type antenna component for each band, in which case the bands can be formed and tuned independently of each other. However, the additional space required by the other antenna on the circuit board of the device is a drawback. In addition, the feed of the antennas from a shared antenna port requires additional components, which take their space and increase the costs.
The lower operating band of the antenna is based on the resonance of the main element 120, and the upper operating band is based on the resonance of the smaller parasitic element 130. In addition, the harmonic frequency of the main element can be utilized in certain cases by arranging it in the range of the upper operating band for widening it. The harmonic ratio can be adjusted by means of perforation provided in the basic element. The parasitic element is also perforated, which provides one possibility for tuning the resonance frequency of the parasitic element.
The component included in the solution according to
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide an improved antenna component (and antenna) solution that is space efficient, and which substantially decouples the antenna elements in order to facilitate easier tuning and matching.
The present invention addresses the foregoing needs by disclosing apparatus and methods for a multiband antenna, including an antenna component.
In a first aspect of the invention, an antenna is disclosed. In one embodiment, the antenna comprises a multi-band antenna comprising: a dielectric element having a longitudinal direction and a transverse direction, said element being deposited at least partially on a ground plane; a conductive coating deposited on the dielectric element, the conductive coating having a first portion and a second portion; a feed structure coupled to the conductive coating; and a resonant structure formed between the first portion and the second portion to electrically isolate the first portion and the second portion at a first frequency, and to form first and second resonators. In one variant, said first resonator is formed between the first portion and the ground plane, and is structured so as to operate within the first frequency band, while the second resonator is formed between the first portion and the second portion and the ground plane, and is structured so as to operate within a second frequency band.
In another variant, the resonant structure comprises: a conductive element that connects the first portion to the second portion along at least one adjacent edge of the first and second portions; and a capacitive element to at least partly resonate with the conductive element.
In another embodiment, the antenna comprises: an antenna component having a dielectric substrate and a conductive layer, the conductive layer forming a radiating element having at least first and second resonances for implementing at least first and second operating bands respectively; wherein the first resonance is based on substantially all of the radiating element; and wherein the second resonance is based on only a portion of the radiating element.
In a second aspect of the invention, a radio frequency device is disclosed. In one embodiment, the device comprises: a multi-band antenna deposited on a dielectric substrate, the multi-band antenna comprising a first portion and a second portion; a feed structure coupled to the at least one of the first portion and the second portion; and a resonant structure formed between the first portion and the second portion to electrically isolate the first portion and the second portion within a first frequency band, and to form a first resonator and a second resonator. The first resonator and the second resonator are substantially electrically isolated from each another with respect to at least frequency tuning.
In a third aspect of the invention, a multi-band antenna is disclosed. The antenna is manufactured according to the method comprising: mounting a dielectric substrate at least partially on a ground plane; disposing conductive material as a first portion and a second portion on the dielectric substrate; disposing a resonant structure between the first portion and the second portion to produce a first resonator and a second resonator; and disposing a feed structure on at least one of the first portion and the second portion.
In a fourth aspect of the invention, a mobile radio frequency device is disclosed. In one embodiment, the device comprises: a transceiver; and an antenna in signal communication with said transceiver, said antenna having: a first conductive portion deposited on a dielectric substrate; a second conductive portion deposited on the dielectric substrate; and a resonant structure formed between the first conductive portion and the second conductive portion; wherein the first conductive portion forms, with the dielectric substrate, a first resonator that resonates within a first frequency band.
In a fifth aspect of the invention, a method of tuning a multiband antenna having at least first and second operating frequency bands is disclosed. In one embodiment, the antenna comprises first and second portions of a radiating element, and the method comprises: varying the electrical size of the first portion of the radiating element to achieve tuning of the first operating band; varying the electrical size of the second portion of the radiating element to achieve tuning of the second operating band. Varying the electrical size of the second portion does not significantly affect the tuning of the first operating band.
In a sixth aspect of the invention, an antenna component for implementing an antenna of a radio device is disclosed. In one embodiment, the antenna has at least a lower and an upper operating band, and the component comprises: a dielectric substrate with a longitudinal and a transverse direction; and a conductive coating of the substrate forming a radiating element having a feed end for signal communication with a feed conductor of the antenna. The radiating element is formed into at least a head part and a tail part, said head part proximate said feed end, said head and tail parts being coupled to each other only through at least one interconnecting conductor formed from the conductive coating of the substrate, said at least one conductor providing an inductance between the head part and the tail part, said head and tail parts further being capacitively coupled to each other via at least one non-conductive slot on the substrate.
In a seventh aspect of the invention, a radio device is disclosed. In one embodiment, the device comprises a circuit board, a conductive surface of which functions as a ground plane, and an antenna, the antenna comprising an antenna component having at least a lower and an upper operating band, said component comprising: a dielectric substrate with a longitudinal and a transverse direction; and a conductive coating of the substrate forming a radiating element having a feed end for signal communication with a feed conductor of the antenna. The radiating element is formed into at least a head part and a tail part, said head part proximate said feed end, said head and tail parts being coupled to each other only through at least one interconnecting conductor formed from the conductive coating of the substrate, said at least one conductor providing an inductance between the head part and the tail part, said head and tail parts further being capacitively coupled to each other via at least one non-conductive slot on the substrate. The antenna component is disposed substantially on the circuit board with its lower surface against the circuit board and with the feed end of the radiating element is connected to the feed conductor of the antenna.
In another aspect of the invention, an improved mobile communication device is disclosed. In one embodiment, the device comprises a cellular telephone or personal communication device comprising the aforementioned multiband antenna (with antenna component).
In another aspect of the invention, a method of operating a multiband antenna is disclosed. In one variant, the method comprises disposing said antenna within a mobile communication device; and performing at least one of transmitting or receiving a signal within one or more of the multiple frequency bands associated with the antenna.
These and other aspects of the invention shall become apparent when considered in light of the disclosure provided herein.
In the following, the invention will be described in detail. Reference will be made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Reference is now made to the drawings wherein like numerals refer to like parts throughout.
As used herein, the terms “wireless”, “radio” and “radio frequency” refer without limitation to any wireless signal, data, communication, or other interface or radiating component including without limitation Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3G (3GPP/3GPPS), HSDPA/HSUPA, TDMA, CDMA (e.g., IS-95A, WCDMA, etc.), FHSS, DSSS, GSM, UMTS, PAN/802.15, WiNMAX (802.16), 802.20, narrowband/FDMA, OFDM, PCS/DCS, analog cellular, CDPD, satellite systems, millimeter wave, or microwave systems.
Overview
In one salient aspect, the present invention discloses an improved multiband antenna configuration that provides several advantages over prior art approaches. In the exemplary embodiment of this antenna, the central part of the antenna comprises an antenna component having a dielectric substrate. The conductive coating of the substrate forms a radiating element, which has two resonances for implementing two separate operating bands. The lower resonance is based on the entire element and the upper resonance on the head part of the element as seen from the feed end. The conductive coating has a pattern, which functions as a parallel resonance circuit between the head and tail part of the element. The natural frequency of this parallel resonance circuit is in the range of the upper operating band of the antenna.
The exemplary embodiment has the advantage that, inter alia, only one radiating element and one feed is needed in a multiband antenna. In addition, the resonance frequencies of the antenna (and thus its operating bands) can be tuned to the desired values independently of each other so that the tuning cycle need not be repeated. This is due to the fact that because of the parallel resonance circuit, the tail part of the element becomes electrically isolated from the head part at the frequencies of the upper operating band. The upper operating band can then be tuned first by influencing the resonance frequency of the head part of the radiating element, and the lower operating band then by influencing the tail part of the radiating element.
Furthermore, the invention has the advantage that the space required by the antenna is relatively small because of the small size of the antenna component. This again is due to the fact that the radiating element is partly shared between the operating bands, and the permittivity of the substrate can be chosen as relatively high.
Yet another advantage of the invention is the fact that the structure according to it is comparatively simple and reliable.
Description of Exemplary Embodiments
Detailed discussions of various exemplary embodiments of the invention are now provided. It will be recognized that while described in terms of particular applications (e.g., mobile devices including for example cellular telephones), materials, components, and operating parameters (e.g., frequency bands), the various aspects of the invention may be practiced with respect to literally any wireless or radio frequency application.
The antenna of the example has two operating bands, the lower and the upper. In order to form these, it naturally has two significant resonances. It is substantial for the invention that these resonances, which are the basis of the radiation, are relatively independent of each other, although there is only one antenna element. The antenna element 220 is shaped so that as viewed from its feed end, it is “seen” as smaller at the frequencies of the upper operating band than on the lower frequencies. The pattern of the antenna element divides it, starting from its feed end, to the head part 221 and the tail part 222 in a way that there is inductance and capacitance parallelly disposed between these parts. The inductance is caused by a narrow interconnecting conductor 223, through which only the head part and the tail part are galvanically connected to each other. In this example, the interconnecting conductor is straight and follows the longitudinal direction of the substrate on the central area of its upper surface as viewed in the transverse direction.
The capacitance is caused by the head part and the tail part extending close to each other at the interconnecting conductor on both sides thereof. Because of the inductance and the capacitance, there is functionally a parallel resonance circuit between the head part and the tail part of the antenna element. The pattern of the element has been designed such that the resonance frequency of this parallel resonance circuit is in the range of the upper operating band of the antenna. It follows from this that at the frequencies of the upper operating band, there is a high impedance between the head part and the tail part, and consequently the tail part is electrically isolated from the head part and the antenna feed. Together with the substrate and the ground plane, the head part forms a quarter-wave resonator, which is in resonance in the upper operating band.
The equivalent circuit of the antenna is formed by the impedance in resonance of the resonator based on the head part only, or by the radiation resistance of the corresponding radiator in an ideal case. At the frequencies of the lower operating band, the impedance of the paralleled resonance circuit is low, in which case the head part and the end part form a functionally united radiator. Together with the substrate and the ground plane, the whole radiator 220 forms a quarter-wave resonator, which is in resonance in the lower operating band. The lower operating band is then based on the resonance of the whole radiating element.
On grounds of the above, the tuning of the antenna does not require repeated tuning steps in the nature of iteration. First is tuned the upper operating band by influencing the electrical size of the head part of the radiating element in some way. Then the lower operating band is tuned by influencing the electrical size of the end part of the radiating element in some way. The latter tuning does not have an effect on the former.
In addition, a separate coil 216 connected between the feed conductor 215 and the ground near the feed end of the radiating element 220 is seen in
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It has been found be the Assignee hereof that by placing the antenna on the circuit board at the end of the board instead of the long side, its characteristics are slightly deteriorated in the lower operating band and remain the same in the upper operating band.
In this description and the claims, the qualifiers “lower”, “upper” and “from above” refer to a relative position of the device, in which the antenna component is on top of a horizontal circuit board. Naturally, the antenna can be in any relative or absolute position when used.
An antenna component and an antenna according to the invention have been described above. Their structural parts may differ in the details from those presented. For example, the shape of the antenna element can vary greatly.
While the above detailed description has shown, described, and pointed out novel features of the invention as applied to various embodiments, it will be understood that various omissions, substitutions, and changes in the form and details of the device or process illustrated may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. The foregoing description is of the best mode presently contemplated of carrying out the invention. This description is in no way meant to be limiting, but rather should be taken as illustrative of the general principles of the invention. The scope of the invention should be determined with reference to the claims.
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