Many different organizations and industries can use wireless communications. In one example, wireless communications can be along a specific frequency. As a specific example of wireless communication, a radio station can broadcast at a specific frequency. There can be benefits to improving wireless communication.
In one embodiment, a system comprises a first patch antenna element configured to operate at a first base frequency and operate with a first resistance and a first inductance. In addition, the system comprises a first parasitic feed pad configured to produce a first capacitance configured to at least partially cancel the first inductance. Also, the system comprises a second patch antenna element configured to operate at a second base frequency and operate with a second resistance and a second inductance, where the first base frequency and the second base frequency are different frequencies. Additionally, the system comprises a second parasitic feed pad configured to produce a second capacitance configured to at least partially cancel the second inductance,
In another embodiment, a method comprises causing excitation of a first patch antenna element to operate at a first base frequency and operate with a first resistance and a first inductance. In this embodiment, the method also comprises causing excitation of a second patch antenna element to operate at a second base frequency and operate with a second resistance and a second inductance. A parasitic feed pad set, comprising a first parasitic feed pad and a second parasitic feed pad, produces a capacitance that compensates for the first inductance and the second inductance.
In yet another embodiment, a system comprises a first impedance calculation component, a second impedance calculation component, a first capacitance calculation component, a second capacitance calculation component, a distance calculation component, an output component. The first impedance calculation component can be configured to calculate an anticipated first impedance of a first patch antenna element. The second impedance calculation component can be configured to calculate an anticipated second impedance of a second patch antenna element. The first capacitance calculation component can be configured to calculate an anticipated first capacitance of a first parasitic feed pad. The second capacitance calculation component can be configured to calculate an anticipated second capacitance of a second parasitic feed pad. The distance calculation component can be configured to calculate a distance set based, at least in part, on the anticipated first impedance, the anticipated second impedance, the first anticipated capacitance, and the second anticipated capacitance. The output component can be configured to output the distance set to a construction component configured to construct a patch antenna in accordance with the distance set. The distance set can comprise a distance between the first patch antenna element and the first parasitic feed pad, a distance between the first parasitic feed pad and the second patch antenna element, and a distance between the second patch antenna element and the second parasitic feed pad. The construction component can be configured to construct the patch antenna as a stack antenna. The patch antenna can comprise the first patch antenna element, the first parasitic feed pad, the second patch antenna element, and the second parasitic feed pad. The first parasitic feed pad can separate the first patch antenna element and the second patch antenna element in the stack. The second patch antenna element can separate the first parasitic feed pad and the second parasitic feed pad in the stack. The first impedance calculation component, the second impedance calculation component, the first capacitance calculation component, the second capacitance calculation component, the distance component, the output component, or a combination thereof can be implemented, at least in part, by way of non-software.
Incorporated herein are drawings that constitute a part of the specification and illustrate embodiments of the detailed description. The detailed description will now be described further with reference to the accompanying drawings as follows:
Antennas can have an inductance. The inductance can be introduced by an antenna element (e.g., dipole antenna element) or other features, such as a probe feed used to excite the antenna elements. This inductance can be undesirable as it can limit a bandwidth for the antenna.
To counteract this inductance, a capacitance can be introduced. One way of introducing this capacitance is by adding a parasitic feed pad. The probe feed can connect directly to the parasitic feed pad and excite the parasitic feed pad. This excitement can cause the antenna element to also be excited in a parasitic manner. The inductance of the antenna element, as well as other introduced inductance, can be cancelled by the capacitance of the parasitic feed pad.
To achieve greater performance, multiple antenna elements can be introduced along with multiple parasitic feed pads in a single stack antenna. These elements and pads can be precisely sized and spaced to achieve desired (e.g., optimal) performance. This can allow for a net inductance and capacitance for the entire stack antenna to be near zero.
The following includes definitions of selected terms employed herein. The definitions include various examples. The examples are not intended to be limiting.
“One embodiment”, “an embodiment”, “one example”, “an example”, and so on, indicate that the embodiment(s) or example(s) can include a particular feature, structure, characteristic, property, or element, but that not every embodiment or example necessarily includes that particular feature, structure, characteristic, property, or element. Furthermore, repeated use of the phrase “in one embodiment” may or may not refer to the same embodiment.
“Computer-readable medium”, as used herein, refers to a medium that stores signals, instructions and/or data. Examples of a computer-readable medium include, but are not limited to, non-volatile media and volatile media. Non-volatile media may include, for example, optical disks, magnetic disks, and so on. Volatile media may include, for example, semiconductor memories, dynamic memory, and so on. Common forms of a computer-readable medium may include, but are not limited to, a floppy disk, a flexible disk, a hard disk, a magnetic tape, other magnetic medium, other optical medium, a Random Access Memory (RAM), a Read-Only Memory (ROM), a memory chip or card, a memory stick, and other media from which a computer, a processor or other electronic device can read. In one embodiment, the computer-readable medium is a non-transitory computer-readable medium.
“Component”, as used herein, includes but is not limited to hardware, firmware, software stored on a computer-readable medium or in execution on a machine, and/or combinations of each to perform a function(s) or an action(s), and/or to cause a function or action from another component, method, and/or system. Component may include a software controlled microprocessor, a discrete component, an analog circuit, a digital circuit, a programmed logic device, a memory device containing instructions, and so on. Where multiple components are described, it may be possible to incorporate the multiple components into one physical component or conversely, where a single component is described, it may be possible to distribute that single component between multiple components.
“Software”, as used herein, includes but is not limited to, one or more executable instructions stored on a computer-readable medium that cause a computer, processor, or other electronic device to perform functions, actions and/or behave in a desired manner. The instructions may be embodied in various forms including routines, algorithms, modules, methods, threads, and/or programs, including separate applications or code from dynamically linked libraries.
The first patch antenna element 110A can be configured to operate at a first base frequency (center frequency for the first band) and operate with a first resistance and a first inductance. Similarly, the second patch antenna element 110B can be configured to operate at a second base frequency, different from the first base frequency, and operate with a second resistance and a second inductance. Inductance can be undesirable because the inductance can limit the range of the first band and second band.
To at least partially remove the inductance, the stack antenna includes parasitic feed pads 120A and 120B. The first parasitic feed pad 120A can be configured to produce a first capacitance configured to at least partially cancel the first inductance. Similarly, the second parasitic feed pad 120B can be configured to produce a second capacitance configured to at least partially cancel the second inductance. This means that the second capacitance can reduce, but not eliminate the inductance, the second capacitance can perfectly eliminate the inductance, or the second capacitance can overcompensate for the inductance such that there is excess capacitance (the excess capacitance can negatively influence the frequency band.
Mathematically, the resistance can be considered a real part and the inductance/capacitance can be an imaginary part. A frequency band can be improved when the imaginary part is about zero. For example, without the feed pads 120A and 120B, the frequency bands can be about ±2-3%. However, inclusion of the feed pads 120A and 120B can cause the frequency bands to be about ±5% or greater, such as when elimination is perfect the spread can be about ±15% or greater (e.g., perfect elimination is when the imaginary part is zero).
While the stack antenna may appear to simply be a repetition of a single antenna element-feed pad scenario, the actual implementation can be more complex. With a stack antenna, it can be desirable to have a low physical profile. With this, it can be desirable to have the elements as close together as possible. Two influences on how the feed pads 120A and 120B eliminate inductance of the elements 110A and 110B are distance from the elements 110A and 110B as well as the physical shape (e.g., size) of the feed pads 120A and 120B. However, when the elements 110A and 110B and the pads 120A and 120B are close together, they can start to interfere with one another. As an example, when the stack is close together, the first capacitance can influence the first and the second impedance. Therefore, simply stacking antennas may not produce a useful result. To obtain a useful result, the elements 110A and 110B and the pads 120A and 120B can be tuned to work together—with this tuning, distances can be selected between elements and pads, the elements, and the pads to produce a reduced (e.g., zero) inductance and capacitance. With this, the first capacitance can be configured to at least partially cancel the second inductance (e.g., along with the first inductance) and the second capacitance can be configured to at least partially cancel the first inductance (e.g., along with the second inductance).
The probe feed 130 configured to excite the first patch antenna element 110A, the first parasitic feed pad 120A, the second patch antenna element 110B, and the second parasitic feed pad 120B. Excitement of the probe feed 130 can be such that right hand polarization is achieved, left hand polarization is achieved, or linear polarization is achieved. The probe feed 130 can be at the center of the ground plane 140 or be off-center (illustrated off-center). In one embodiment, the probe feed directly coupled with the feed pads 120A and 120B, but not directly with the elements 110A and 110B. In one embodiment, the probe feed 130 can introduce its own inductance and at least one of the feed pads 120A and/or 120B can cancel the probe feed inductance as well.
The stack antenna can be configured to alternate between a feed pad 120 and an antenna element 110. With this configuration, the first parasitic feed pad 120A can separate the first patch antenna element 110A and the second patch antenna element 110B in the stack. Also with this configuration, the second patch antenna element 110B can separates the first parasitic feed pad 120A and the second parasitic feed pad 120B. Additionally, the configuration can be such that the second parasitic feed pad 120B separates the second patch antenna element 110B from the ground plane 140.
In response to being excited, the first patch antenna can operate at a first band (L1) with a center of about the first base frequency. The first band has a spread of greater than 3% of the first base frequency. Similarly, in response to being excited, the second patch antenna can operate at a second band (L2) with a center of about the second base frequency. Due to the inclusion of the feed pads 120, the spread of the bands is greater than about 3% of the respective base frequency.
In one example, the first base frequency can be about 1575 GHz. The spread can be about 5% (e.g., achieved when the first inductance and the first capacitance about perfectly cancel each other out). With this, the bandwidth of the first band L1 can be about 78.75 megahertz (MHz). The second base frequency can be at about 1.227 GHz. With the spread being about 5%, the bandwidth for the second band L2 can be about 61.35 MHz.
Frequency bandwidth (BW) can be defined as BW=(Fh−Fl)/Fo×100%. The Fh stands for high end of the working frequency band, Fl stands for low end of the working frequency band, and Fo standards for the center working frequency.
In one embodiment, the first band L1 and second band L2 are adjacent (e.g., perfectly adjacent or about adjacent). In one embodiment, the first band L1 and second band L2 are not adjacent and not overlap. With this, the stack antenna can function with two distinct bands.
The stack antenna can be part a sub-array that is part of a larger antenna array. In one example, multiple stack antennas can be placed on a vehicle. The different stack antennas can allow for a greater overall Frequency BW to be observed.
In one embodiment, the substrate material 210 (collectively referring to the substrates 210A and 210B) is used to secure the probe feed wire 130 of
The substrate material 210 can be a printed circuit board material with copper on each side of the board and an object of a certain thickness in between both layers of copper. The patch antenna element 110 can be etched or milled onto one side of the copper board and likewise the parasitic feed pad can 120 be on the opposite side of the board. The thickness of the board can be selected such that it creates the desired separation distance between the patch antenna element 110 and the parasitic feed pad 120. Substrate material thickness can have a great influence on the capacitance introduced to the system 200 as well as the ability for the parasitic feed pad 120 to couple energy onto the patch antenna element 110 (e.g., radiating patch element). The substrate thickness can be tightly controlled since the manufacturing tolerance of commercial printed circuit boards can typically be extremely reliable. Once both sides of the printed circuit board are etched or milled, the probe wire feed 130 of
The first impedance calculation component can be configured to calculate an anticipated first impedance of the first patch antenna element 110A of
The first capacitance calculation component can be configured to calculate an anticipated first capacitance of a first parasitic feed pad 120A of
The distance calculation component can be configured to calculate a distance set based, at least in part, on the anticipated first impedance, the anticipated second impedance, the first anticipated capacitance, and the second anticipated capacitance. The distance set can comprise a distance between the first patch antenna element and the first parasitic feed pad, a distance between the first parasitic feed pad and the second patch antenna element, and a distance between the second patch antenna element and the second parasitic feed pad. Impedance and capacitance may be impacted by physical distances. The anticipated impedances and capacitances can be initially determined with no distance between the antenna elements 110 of
The output component 320 can be configured to output the distance set to a construction component. The construction component can be configured to construct a patch antenna in accordance with the distance set. With this, the construction component can be configured to construct the patch antenna as a stack antenna, such as what is illustrated in
What is given above can be considered how to space items when their sizes are fixed. However, it can be possible to customize the antenna. For example, the calculation component can have a component configured to design a size of the antenna elements 110 of
The distance component can use the size of the first parasitic feed pad 120A of
A parasitic feed pad set (e.g., one or more feed pads, such as the first parasitic feed pad 120A of
For the feed pads 120 of
With set sizes and distances, there can be a proposed antenna that is evaluated at 630. Evaluation can be performed through mathematical modeling to determine if the sizes and distances cause the impedances and capacitances to cancel one another out to an acceptable level. A check 640 can take place on if the evaluation indicates an acceptable level. If not, then the method can return to action 610 and change at least one size or skip action 610 and change a distance at 620. If the level is acceptable (e.g., the net capacitance/inductance meets a threshold), then at 650 the size and distance can be outputted and the antenna can be constructed (e.g., by the CNC machine).
While the methods disclosed herein are shown and described as a series of blocks, it is to be appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art that the methods are not restricted by the order of the blocks, as some blocks can take place in different orders. Similarly, a block can operate concurrently with at least one other block.
The innovation described herein may be manufactured, used, imported, sold, and licensed by or for the Government of the United States of America without the payment of any royalty thereon or therefor.
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