The present invention relates to antennas and more particularly to a dual frequency band antenna with omni-directional radiation patterns.
Dual band omnidirectional antenna systems are useful for various wireless communications applications, particularly cellular infrastructure networks. Prior known dual band omnidirectional antenna arrays have been designed with two antenna arrays vertically stacked within a radome. Such vertically stacked arrays result in a long antenna. Other prior known dual band omnidirectional antennas, to reduce the overall length of a antenna, have two antennas arrays placed side-by-side within the same radome. Such side-by-side antenna arrays generally result in distorted radiation patterns for both bands in the azimuth plane due to interference effects that both antennas arrays experience from each other.
An omni-dualband antenna system includes an elongated cylindrical radome with an antenna inside the radome. The antenna has a linear first array of driven elements in a first plane, a linear second array of driven elements aligned with the first array and in a second plane that is parallel to the first plane, a linear third array of parasitic elements aligned with the elements of the second array and in a third plane that is parallel to the second plane, and a diplexer connected to the first and second arrays. The second plane is spaced a selected first distance from the first plane, and the third plane is spaced a selected second distance from the second plane. The elements of the first array are sized for first frequency band, and the elements of the second and third arrays are sized for a second frequency band that is higher than the first frequency band.
Details of this invention are described in connection with the accompanying drawings that bear similar reference numerals in which:
Referring to
Describing the specific embodiments herein chosen for illustrating the invention, certain terminology is used which will be recognized as being employed for convenience and having no limiting significance. For example, the terms “horizontal”, “vertical”, “upper”, and “lower” refer to the illustrated embodiment in its normal position of use. Further, all of the terminology above-defined includes derivatives of the word specifically mentioned and words of similar import.
As shown in
Referring to
In the illustrated embodiment, the first elements 31 are bifurcated dipoles. The first elements 31 each include two first portions 37 and two second portions 38. The first and second portions 37 and 38 are relatively narrow, vertical strips of flat, conductive material. The first portions 37 are attached on the first side 28 on opposite sides of the first feed line 33, each connecting at an end to a side feed 36 and extending upwardly. The second portions 38 are attached on the second side 29 on opposite sides of the second feed line 34, each connecting at an end to a side feed 36 and extending downwardly. The second feed line 34 is connected to the first feed line 33 by a conductive via 39 that extends through the first substrate 27 near the upper end of the second feed line 34, to ground the first array 22 and thereby DC isolate the first array 22.
Referring to
The second elements 46 shown are bifurcated dipoles. The second elements 46 each include two first portions 52 and two second portions 53. The first and second portions 52 and 53 are relatively narrow, vertical strips of flat, conductive material. The first portions 52 are attached on the first side 43 on opposite sides of the first feed line 48, each connecting at an end to a side feed 50 and extending upwardly. The second portions 53 are attached on the second side 44 on opposite sides of the second feed line 49, each connecting at an end to a side feed 50 and extending downwardly. The second feed line 49 is connected to the first feed line 48 by a conductive via 54 that extends through the second substrate 42 near the upper end of the second feed line 49, to ground the second array 23 and thereby DC isolate the second array 23.
The first and second elements 31 and 46 are shown in the illustrated embodiment as bifurcated dipoles formed by printed circuit methods or printed on the first and second substrates 27 and 42, respectively. The first and second elements 31 and 46 can be other types of dipole, other patch elements on a substrate or other types of elements without the substrate. Although the first and second 31 and 46 are shown and described above as serially connected, the first and second feed structures 30 and 45 can be serial, corporate or a combination of both.
The first elements 31 are sized for a first frequency band. The second and third elements 46 and 59 are sized for a second frequency band. By way of example, and not as a limitation, for a cellular infrastructure network, the first frequency band is centered about 850 MHz and the second frequency band is centered about 1900 MHz. Preferably the first frequency band is lower than the second frequency band. A lower frequency band antenna is electrically large relative to a higher frequency band antenna, and the higher frequency band will typically be influenced by the lower frequency band antenna. Therefore the higher frequency band radiation pattern will be more distorted than the lower frequency band. The size, shape and spacing of the third elements 59, relative to the second elements 46, is selected to couple with the second elements 46 to reshape and correct the radiation pattern for the second frequency band.
The second array feed path 66 connects to the upper end of the common feed path 64 and extends upwardly in a somewhat meandering manner on the right half of the first side 62, first going right, then up, then slanting up and left, and then up to terminate at a second aperture 72 near the upper end of the first side 62. A conductive third stub 73 is attached to the first side 62 and connects to the middle of the second array feed path 66, extending leftwardly, then curving downwardly, and then curving leftwardly again. A conductive fourth stub 74 is attached to the first side 62 and connects to the upper end of the second array feed path 66, extending leftwardly and then curving downwardly. The lengths of the first array feed path 65 and the first and second stubs 69 and 70 are selected so that signals in the first frequency band are transmitted along the first array feed path 65 and signals in the second frequency band are rejected. The lengths of the second array feed path 66 and the third and fourth stubs 73 and 74 are selected so that signals in the second frequency band are transmitted along the second array feed path 66 and signals in the first frequency band are rejected. The second side 63 is covered with a ground plane 76.
The antenna 13 is assembled with the first feed line 33 of the first array 22 connected to the first array feed path 65 at the first aperture 68 and the second feed line 34 of the first array 22 connected to the ground plane 76. The first feed line 48 of the second array 23 is connected to the second array feed path 66 at the second aperture 72 and the second feed line 49 of the second array 23 connected to the ground plane 76. Coaxial cable or other transmission line can be used to connect the diplexer 25 to the first and second arrays 22 and 23. The connector 20 connects to the lower end of the common feed path 64 and to the ground plane 76. The diplexer 25 provides common connection of the first and second arrays 22 and 23 to a single transmission line. Alternatively, the antenna 13 can be made without the diplexer 25 and two separate transmission lines can be used to connect to the first and second arrays 22 and 23.
Referring again to
Although the present invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is understood that the present disclosure has been made by way of example and that changes in details of structure may be made without departing from the spirit thereof.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of the U.S. provisional patent application No. 60/507,627 filed Oct. 1, 2003.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60507627 | Oct 2003 | US |