This invention relates generally to electronic devices, and more particularly, to antennas for electronic device such portable electronic devices.
Electronic devices such as handheld electronic devices and other portable electronic devices are becoming increasingly popular. Examples of handheld devices include handheld computers, cellular telephones, media players, and hybrid devices that include the functionality of multiple devices of this type. Popular portable electronic devices that are somewhat larger than traditional handheld electronic devices include laptop computers and tablet computers.
Due in part to their mobile nature, portable electronic devices are often provided with wireless communications capabilities. For example, handheld electronic devices may use long-range wireless communications to communicate with wireless base stations. Cellular telephones and other devices with cellular capabilities may communicate using cellular telephone bands at 850 MHz, 900 MHz, 1800 MHz, 1900 MHz, and 2100 MHz. Portable electronic devices may also use short-range wireless communications links. For example, portable electronic devices may communicate using the Wi-Fi® (IEEE 802.11) bands at 2.4 GHz and 5.0 GHz and the Bluetooth® band at 2.4 GHz. Global positioning system signals at 1575 MHz may also be received by cellular telephones.
Although it is desirable to provide handheld devices with a broad range of wireless capabilities, it can be difficult to do so in the relatively small amount of space available in many portable devices. Portable devices may have conductive housings and conductive components that can impede satisfactory antenna operation. Often an antenna can be formed in a portable device only by making a design compromise that involves relocating other components. If there is insufficient space available to relocate a conductive structure, it may be necessary to enlarge the electronic device or make other device modifications, some of which may not be aesthetically or functionally desirable.
It would therefore be advantageous to be able to provide electronic devices with improved antennas.
An electronic device such as a handheld electronic device or other portable electronic device may be provided that has wireless communications capabilities. An antenna may be used to transmit and receive radio-frequency signals. The signals may be associated with cellular telephone communications bands. With one suitable arrangement, a slot antenna may be provided that handles multiple cellular telephone bands. The slot antenna may be, for example, a pentaband slot antenna.
Conductive structures in the electronic device and conductive housing portions may be used in defining the shape of the slot antenna. The housing portions may include conductive housing sidewalls. The conductive structures in the device may include structural members and electronic device components such as buttons, flex circuit data paths, connectors, speakers, and printed circuit boards. The housing sidewalls and conductive structures may be configured to form a slot with an elongated slot shape for the slot antenna. The elongated slot shape may be substantially rectangular and may include one or more bends. The bends may be used to ensure that the entire length of the slot fits within the confines of the housing of the electronic device.
The slot may have a shape such as a U shape or an L shape in which elongated regions of the slot run parallel to the edges of the portable electronic device. A U-shaped antenna may have first and second arms of equal length (i.e., a symmetric configuration) or first and second arms of unequal length (i.e., an asymmetric configuration). An L-shaped slot may have a first elongated portion with a longitudinal axis that runs parallel to one of the housing sidewalls in the device (e.g., the right-hand sidewall). This type of L-shaped slot may also have a second elongated portion having a longitudinal axis that runs perpendicular to the first longitudinal axis. The slot may be routed around conductive components in the device such as a data connector and its associated flex circuit data path. Conductive components such as a speaker may be formed within the slot so as to be completely surrounded by the slot. This type of arrangement may form branch paths within the slot, so that the slot has multiple associated lengths.
Further features of the invention, its nature and various advantages will be more apparent from the accompanying drawings and the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
The present invention relates generally to electronic devices, and more particularly, to antennas in portable electronic devices such as handheld electronic devices. The antennas may be slot antennas that cover one or more communications bands of interest. If desired, other (non-slot) antenna types may be used in conjunction with a slot antenna either to form a hybrid antenna or to form one or more optional separate antennas for an electronic device.
The use of antenna structures that can handle radio-frequency signals in more than one band helps to reduce the number of separate antennas required in an electronic device. The use of multiband slot antennas is therefore sometimes described herein as an example. If desired, slot antennas may be formed that cover single bands of interest.
The electronic devices that contain the multiband slot antennas may be portable electronic devices such as laptop computers or small portable computers of the type that are sometimes referred to as ultraportables. Portable electronic devices may also be somewhat smaller devices. Examples of smaller portable electronic devices include wrist-watch devices, pendant devices, headphone and earpiece devices, and other wearable and miniature devices. With one suitable arrangement, the portable electronic devices may be handheld electronic devices.
The electronic devices may be, for example, handheld wireless devices such as cellular telephones, media players with wireless communications capabilities, handheld computers (also sometimes called personal digital assistants), remote controllers, global positioning system (GPS) devices, and handheld gaming devices. The electronic devices may also be hybrid devices that combine the functionality of multiple conventional devices. Examples of hybrid portable electronic devices include a cellular telephone that includes media player functionality, a gaming device that includes a wireless communications capability, a cellular telephone that includes game and email functions, and a portable device that receives email, supports mobile telephone calls, has music player functionality and supports web browsing. The electronic device may be a cellular telephone such as the iPhone® cellular telephone available from Apple Inc. of Cupertino, Calif. These are merely illustrative examples.
An illustrative portable electronic device in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is shown in
Device 10 may have housing 12. Housing 12, which is sometimes referred to as a case, may be formed of any suitable materials including, plastic, glass, ceramics, metal, or other suitable materials, or a combination of these materials. In some situations, housing 12 or portions of housing 12 may be formed from a dielectric or other low-conductivity material, so that the operation of conductive antenna elements that are located in proximity to housing 12 is not disrupted. As an example, planar front and rear surfaces may be formed from dielectric or all or some of the sidewalls of housing 12 may be formed from dielectric. Housing 12 or portions of housing 12 may also be formed from conductive materials such as metal. For example, a conductive rear portion may cover all or part of the rear planar surface of housing 12. All or part of the sidewalls of housing 12 may also be formed from conductive materials such as metal. Metal structures may be formed from elemental metals (e.g., aluminum with or without an oxide coating) or from metal alloys (e.g., stainless steel). An advantage of forming all or part of housing 12 from a dielectric material such as plastic is that this may help to reduce the overall weight of device 10. An advantage of forming all or part of housing 12 from a conductive material such as metal is that metal is durable and, if an antenna is designed properly, the conductive nature of the housing may be exploited by using portions of the housing itself to form the antenna. In an antenna slot configuration, for example, all or some of the slot may be defined by portions of housing 12.
Other components in device 10 may also be used in defining the shape of a slot antenna. For example, conductive device components such as batteries, printed circuit boards, circuits, radio-frequency shielding enclosures for integrated circuits, switches, and flexible printed circuit board structures (“flex circuits”), display structures, speakers, and other conductive structures may impact antenna performance and may help to define the shape of a slot antenna in device 10.
Housing 12 may have a conductive structure 14 that helps form the sidewall portions of housing 14. Conductive sidewall structure 14 may be formed from a separate conductive member such as a rectangular metal ring or may be formed as an integral portion of other housing structures. For example, the rear surface of housing 12 may be formed from the same piece of metal that is used in forming sidewalls 14. If desired, multiple structures may be connected to each other to form sidewall structure 14. All or some of sidewalls 14 may surround display 16. In this respect, some or all of the structures associated with sidewalls 14 may serve as a bezel. This type of bezel and other suitable bezel structures for device 10 may be formed from a conductive material and may be used as part of the antennas in device 10. For example, sidewall 14 may be used to define part of the inner perimeter shape for a slot in a slot antenna. Slot antennas may also be formed within internal structures in device 10 (i.e., in printed circuit boards, etc.).
Device 10 may have a display such as display 16. Display 16 may be a liquid crystal display (LCD), an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display, a plasma display, an electronic ink display, or any other suitable display. The outermost surface of display 16 may be formed from one or more plastic or glass layers. If desired, touch screen functionality may be integrated into display 16. An advantage of integrating a touch screen into display 16 to make display 16 touch sensitive is that this type of arrangement can save space and reduce visual clutter. Touch screen displays such as display 16 may be formed from capacitive touch sensors or any other suitable touch sensors (e.g., resistive touch sensors, touch sensors based on light or sound waves, etc.). An advantage of capacitive touch sensors is that they may be used to sense the presence of an object even when the object is not in direct contact with display 16.
Display screen 16 (e.g., a touch screen) is merely one example of an input-output device that may be used with electronic device 10. If desired, electronic device 10 may have other input-output devices. For example, electronic device 10 may have user input control devices such as button 19, and input-output components such as port 20 and one or more input-output jacks (e.g., for audio and/or video). Button 19 may be, for example, a menu button. Port 20 may contain a 30-pin data connector (as an example). Openings 22 and 24 may, if desired, form speaker and microphone ports. Speaker port 22 may be used when operating device 10 in speakerphone mode. Opening 23 may also form a speaker port. For example, speaker port 23 may serve as a telephone receiver that is placed adjacent to a user's ear during operation. In the example of
A user of electronic device 10 may supply input commands using user input interface devices such as button 19 and touch screen 16. Suitable user input interface devices for electronic device 10 include buttons (e.g., alphanumeric keys, power on-off, power-on, power-off, and other specialized buttons, etc.), a touch pad, pointing stick, or other cursor control device, a microphone for supplying voice commands, or any other suitable interface for controlling device 10. Although shown as being formed on the top face of electronic device 10 in the example of
Components such as display 16 and other user input interface devices may cover most of the available surface area on the front face of device 10 (as shown in the example of
In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, slot antenna structures may be formed to cover one or more communications bands of interest. The slots in the slot antennas may be routed around conductive components such as display 16 in a way that helps maximize internal space for components in device 10 while meeting desired performance criteria.
A cross-sectional end view of an illustrative device is shown in
In the
If desired, sidewalls 14 may be formed as an integral portion of housing 12. This type of arrangement is shown in
A schematic diagram of illustrative circuitry that may be used in device 10 is shown in
Device 10 may have input-output circuitry 34. Input-output circuitry 34 may be used to allow data to be supplied to device 10 and may be used to allow data to be provided from device 10 to external devices. Display screen 16, button 19, microphone port 24, speaker port 22, and dock connector port 20 of
Input-output circuitry 34 may also include user input-output devices such as buttons, touch screens, joysticks, click wheels, scrolling wheels, touch pads, key pads, keyboards, microphones, cameras, etc. A user can control the operation of device 10 by supplying commands through circuitry 34.
Wireless communications circuitry 36 may include one or more antennas 38 and communications circuitry such as radio-frequency (RF) transceiver circuitry 40. Circuitry 36 may be used in transmitting and receiving radio-frequency signals and may be formed from one or more integrated circuits, power amplifier circuitry, passive RF components, and other circuitry for handling RF wireless signals.
Any suitable antenna structures may be used in device 10. For example, device 10 may have one antenna or may have multiple antennas. If multiple antennas are used, slot antennas and other antenna types may be used in device 10. The antennas in device 10 may each be used to cover a single communications band or each antenna may cover multiple communications bands. If desired, one or more antennas may cover a single band while one or more additional antennas are each used to cover multiple bands.
In arrangements in which antennas are needed to support communications at more than one band, the antennas may have shapes that support multi-band operations. For example, slot antenna may have a slot with one or more arms of various different lengths. The antenna slots in device 10, may, if desired, be combined with other antenna structures in device 10. For example, hybrid antenna structures may be formed by combining antenna slots with other antenna resonating element antenna structures such as inverted-F antenna elements, planar inverted-F antenna elements, strip antennas, patch antennas, etc.
A slot antenna may be formed from a conductive structure that contains an opening that forms a slot. The opening may be filled with a dielectric. The conductive structure that surrounds the opening may be formed from one or more conductive elements (e.g., rigid and flexible printed circuit board structures, conductive housing portions, conductive portions of device components, etc.). The opening in the conductive portion of the slot antenna may be filled with a dielectric such as air or a solid dielectric such as plastic or epoxy.
An advantage of filling the opening with a solid dielectric material is that this may help prevent intrusion of dust, liquids, or other foreign matter that might affect antenna performance. When an opening is formed from a conductor on a flex circuit, the opening may be filled with or placed on top of flex circuit material (polyimide). Similarly, when slot antenna openings are formed from rigid printed circuit board traces, the dielectric within the openings or immediately adjacent to the openings is composed of printed circuit board dielectric (e.g., fiberglass-filled epoxy). Dielectrics such as these may also be used in support structures for antenna elements (e.g., when supporting a flex circuit antenna element), or may be used in surrounding device structures in which it is desired not to block radio-frequency signals.
In general, any suitable dielectric material can be used as an antenna support and any suitable dielectric can be used to fill the openings associated with the slot antennas. The dielectric material may be, for example, a solid dielectric, a porous dielectric, a foam dielectric, a gelatinous dielectric (e.g., a coagulated or viscous liquid), a dielectric with grooves or pores, a dielectric having a honeycombed or lattice structure, a dielectric having spherical voids or other voids, a combination of such non-gaseous dielectrics, etc. The dielectric material can also be a gaseous dielectric such as air. Hollow features in solid dielectrics may be filled with air, other gases, or other low-dielectric-constant materials. For example, dielectrics such as epoxy and polyimide may be provided with voids such as gas bubbles or low-dielectric-constant microspheres. Porous dielectric materials used in device 10 can be formed with a closed cell structure (e.g., with isolated voids) or with an open cell structure (e.g., a fibrous structure with interconnected voids). Foams such as foaming glues (e.g., polyurethane adhesive), pieces of expanded polystyrene foam, extruded polystyrene foam, foam rubber, or other manufactured foams can also be used. If desired, the dielectric materials that are used in supporting the antennas and that are used in filling the slot openings of the antennas can include layers or mixtures of different substances such as mixtures including small bodies of lower density material. Slot antenna arrangements in which the openings in the slots are filled with air are sometimes described herein as an example. Air-filled slots are, however, merely one illustrative type of dielectric-filled slot that may be used for the slot antennas of devices such as device 10.
An illustrative slot antenna 38 is shown in
Antenna 38 may be fed using any suitable antenna feed arrangement. In the example of
A radio-frequency transmission line path such as path 56 may be used to route radio-frequency signals between radio-frequency transceiver 40 and feed 50. Paths such as path 56 that are used to route signals between transceiver 40 may include impedance matching networks, components such as switches, etc. Path 56 may be based on transmission line structures such as microstrip transmission lines, coaxial cables, etc. Transceiver circuitry 40 may include one or more integrated circuits that are mounted on one or more printed circuit boards. Structures such as transceiver 40, path 56, and feed 50 are sometimes not shown to avoid over-complicating the drawings.
As the diagram of
The shape of the slot and the location of the slot feed may be selected to adjust the frequency response of the antenna. The width of the slot may be, for example, 0.5 to 10 mm and the length of the slot may be, for example, 2-25 cm (as an example). As shown in
The location of feed 50 along the length of slot 48 affects antenna performance. Consider, as an example, antenna 38 of
The frequency response of antenna 38 when using antenna feed positions A and B is shown in
An antenna with a SWR value that is below a given minimum standing-wave-ratio value SWRM in both low band LB and high band HB of
As this example demonstrates, proper selection of the feed location (i.e., feed location B) and the slot shape (e.g., to produce a perimeter P that creates a fundamental resonance at a suitable frequency) may make it possible to satisfy performance criteria in all communications bands of interest.
In general, any suitable number of communications bands may be covered by antenna 38 in this way.
More bands or fewer bands may be covered if desired. Moreover, different bands at different frequencies may be covered. The illustrative pentaband slot antenna arrangement of
Slot 48 may be formed in a symmetrical or asymmetrical shape. In a typical symmetrical arrangement, slot 48 may be laid out in a roughly U-shaped arrangement. As shown in
An illustrative asymmetrical shape that may be used for slot 48 of antenna 38 is shown in
Bends, widened portions, and other irregular shapes can be incorporated into slot 48 to tune the frequency response of antenna 48. Each portion of an irregularly shaped slot antenna may contribute to the antenna's performance. For example, short sections of a slot may behave as impedance matching structures. When combined in slot 48, the resulting antenna performance may exhibit resonances at desired wavelengths. Multiple arms and stubs (short arms) may also be provided to enhance resonances at multiple wavelengths of interest.
If desired, slot 48 may exhibit mirror symmetry with respect to horizontal axis 80 of device 10, as shown in
Another possible layout for antenna 38 is shown in
In the example of
It may be advantageous to feed slot 48 using a feed arrangement that is located at a vertical midpoint of sidewall 14. This type of arrangement is shown in
In the portion of slot 48 that is shown in
In the example of
As shown in
If desired, a spring that is formed from a bent metal structure or other suitable conductor may be used in forming antenna feed 50. This type of arrangement is shown in
In antenna arrangements in which the antenna feed is located at an intermediate height along sidewall 14, the vertical extent of sidewall 14 may help to shield antenna 38 from contact with external objects such as the fingers of a user's hand or other body parts. The potential ability of sidewall 14 to shield antenna 38 from proximity effects such as these is illustrated in the cross-sectional view of
Display 16 may be mounted under a dielectric cover such as transparent glass 97. Dielectric cover 97 may permit radio-frequency signals to be transmitted and received by slot antenna 38. Sidewall 14 may have a height H2. The magnitude of height H2 may be selected to provide sufficient interior volume in device 10 to house desired electrical components. As an example, height H2 may be about 7 mm, about 9 mm, less than 7 mm, more than 7 mm, less than 9 mm, more than 9 mm, or any other suitable size. Height H2 may be larger than or smaller than the width W of slot 48. Particularly in scenarios in which height H2 is relatively large and width W is relatively small (e.g., when height H2 is equal to or larger than W), sidewall 14 may serve to shield slot 48 and feed 50 from proximity effects due to the presence of external objects such as a user's hand (shown as object 98 in
As shown in
As shown in
As described in connection with
The foregoing is merely illustrative of the principles of this invention and various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
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