The present invention relates to an antenna having a multi-filar construction.
Most antennas for satellite communication systems require circular polarization with a good axial ratio, large frequency bandwidth and low cost. Quadrifilar Helical Antennas (QHA) have been extensively used since they are well suited for such applications as they have good axial ratio good over a broadband. In particular, they are preferred over patch antennas for handset applications where helices show better multipath rejection in the absence of large ground planes.
One of the primary design goals for handset applications is reducing the size of the antenna. For helix antennas, the reduction in size can be reducing the height or radius of the helix.
Various techniques are proposed in the literature to reduce the height of helix antennas, ranging from meanders to sinusoidal profiles. These techniques are mostly applied to antennas with radial or iso-flux patterns, whose height may be between one and two wavelengths thus demanding for some reduction. Size reductions up to 50% are reported with acceptable gain degradation. The main problem is that the length of each arm should be an odd quarter wave length multiple (i.e. nλ/4, n=1, 3, 5 . . . ) for open ended arms or even quarter wave length multiple for short ended helices. (
The present invention adds four grounded parasitic arms in between the arms of a conventional air core quadrifilar antenna to negate the problems of mis-matching and strong mutual coupling for quarter-wave small helices. The invention, ultra compact air core helix antenna does not suffer from typical dielectric loading effects. A grounded parasitic element is helically located essentially equidistant between two adjacent radiating helix arms to form the invention octofilar structure.
The invention is now discussed with reference to the figures.
Consider an arm of a quadrifilar helix and its adjacent parasitic elements as a three-port network shown in
If the parasitic element is grounded then V1=V3=0 and the impedance of the port 2 can be calculated as
For the case of a helix arm with two adjacent grounded parasitic elements, equation (2) can be simplified using the symmetry of the structure and reciprocity properties. Assuming identical parasitic elements located symmetrical with respect to main arm, one c an assume that (Z12=Z21=Z23=Z33, Z11=Z33). Under these assumptions, equation 2) will be reduced to
It can be observed by adjusting the second term in equation 3 one can match the main element impedance. For case of helix antenna this is achieved by adjusting the length of the grounded element. In addition, simulation and measured results show that these parasitic grounded elements reduce the mutual coupling between adjacent main elements as well.
The helix arms can be printed on a foldable thin printed circuit board. Alternatively, the arms can be built from wires shaped accordingly as shown in
In order to show the improvement of octafilar helix over quadrifilar helix with same structure, the performance of two helices compared in
The same idea can be used for dual band applications where a parallel LC circuit can be implemented on each arm (main and parasitic) to open up the line at LC resonant and make the effective length of each arm shorter as shown in
The above design options will sometimes present the skilled designer with considerable and wide ranges from which to choose appropriate apparatus and method modifications for the above examples. However, the objects of the present invention will still be obtained by that skilled designer applying such design options in an appropriate manner.
The invention more generally comprises an ultra compact octafilar air core helix antenna comprising four radiating helix arms and four grounded parasitic elements in between. In addition, this ultra compact octafilar air core helix can be used for dual band applications by adding adjacent passive circuit elements on the helical arms. The helix can be printed on a foldable printed circuit board or be built from wire. The radiating elements will be fed with four inputs with same amplitude and appropriate quadrature phase difference (0, 90 180 and 270). A 4-way LTCC hybrid was used in this invention. The invention additionally comprises a method of suppressing mutual coupling between helix arms by placing grounding parasitic elements.
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WO9711507 | Mar 1997 | WO |
Entry |
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Investigation of an octafilar helix antenna, by Zainud et al., Aug. 2002. |
Octafilar Helical Antenna for Handheld UHF RFID Reader, by Zainud et al., Apr. 2011. |