1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to dynamically controlled, digitally-phased, multiple antenna elements for generating a dynamically enhanced electromagnetic field for orientation-independent tag detection and digital synthesis techniques which improves signal sensitivity of electronic article surveillance (EAS) systems.
2. Description of Related Art
An electronic article surveillance (EAS) system typically consists of (a) tags, (b) interrogation antenna(s), and (c) interrogation electronics, each playing a specific role in the overall system performance.
An EAS loop antenna pedestal(s) is typically installed near the exit of a retail store and would alarm upon the unauthorized removal of an article from the store, based on the detection of a resonating tag secured to the article. The system comprises a transmitter unit for generating an electromagnetic field adjacent to the pedestal, and a receiver unit for detecting the signal caused by the presence of the resonating tag in the interrogating field.
Some desired features in EAS include: no blind spot or null region exists in the detection zone; the interrogating field be sufficiently strong near the antenna for detecting the presence of a resonating tag in noisy environments, but sufficiently weak far away for regulatory compliance, and that the detection performance be unaffected by the orientation of the resonating tag.
One approach to suppress far field emission is to mechanically twist an O-loop antenna 180° in the middle to form an 8-loop. However, a detection null is created in the area near the intersection of the figure eight crossover due to the magnetic field lines running in parallel to the plane of the tag. This causes significantly reduced detection as optimal detection is achieved when the magnetic field lines run perpendicular to the plane of the tag.
Another approach, EP 0 186 483 (Curtis et al.), utilizes an antenna system that includes a first O-loop antenna and a second 8-loop antenna which is coplanar to the first. In such an arrangement, a circular-polarized, interrogating field is created when both antennas are driven concurrently with a phase shift such that the energy received by the tag is the same regardless of its orientation.
A different antenna structure, disclosed in EP 0 579 332 (Rebers), comprises two-loop antenna coils, wherein one coil is part of a series resonance circuit and the other coil is part of a parallel resonance circuit; the series and parallel resonance circuits are interconnected to form an analog phase-shift network which is driven by a single power source.
An equivalent analog phase-shift network is incorporated in EP 1 041 503 (Kip) that relates to a phase insensitive receiver for use in a rotary emission field.
Another approach, U.S. Pat. No. 6,166,706 (Gallagher III, et al.), generates a rotating field comprising a magnetically coupled center loop located coplanar to an electrically driven 8-loop while overlapping a portion or both of the upper and lower 8-loops. With this antenna configuration, magnetic induction produces a 90° phase difference between the phase of the 8-loop and the phase of the center loop such that a rotary field is created.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,836,216 (Manov, et al.), the direction of current flow in four antenna coils is separately controlled to generate a resultant magnetic field that is polarized in some preferred orientations (vertical, perpendicular, or parallel to the exit aisle) within the interrogation zone.
A plurality of antenna configurations is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,081,238 (Alicot) whereby the antennas are phased 90° apart from each other to improve the interrogating field distribution.
All EAS systems utilize resonance effects, such as magnetoelastic resonance (e.g., acoustomagnetostrictive or AM) and electromagnetic resonance (RF coil tag). EAS tags exhibit a second-order response to an applied excitation, and the resonance behavior is mathematically described by an impulse response in time-domain and a frequency response in frequency-domain. The impulse response and frequency response from a Fourier transform pair that provides two alternative means of tag interrogation: pulse-listen interrogation and swept-frequency interrogation.
EAS antennas are electrically small when compared to the wavelength at the operating frequency, typically below 10 MHz, and the interrogation zone which is within the near-field region, where the inductive coupling dominates. Planar loops are most commonly used because of its simplicity and low cost. Tag excitation requires the magnetic flux to be substantially tangential to the length of an AM tag and perpendicular to an inductive coil tag. A single antenna loop element inevitably generates an uneven interrogation zone with respect to tag position and orientation. In practice, at least two antenna elements are used to switch the field direction, thus creating a more uniform interrogation zone.
Previous solutions to the orientation problem include either simultaneously phasing or sequentially alternating multiple antenna elements.
EP 0 186 483 (Curtis, et al.) discloses an antenna structure (see
EP 0 645 840 (Rebers) proposes an improved structure (see
EP 1 041 503 (Kip) discloses a receiver (see
U.S. Pat. No. 6,081,238 (Alicot) discloses an antenna structure (see
Disclosed in the same patent is a practical implementation (see
Disclosed in the same patent is a solution by dividing the single loop into four equal-area elements assigned with phase of 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270°, as shown in
The aforesaid methods and implementations have their specific issues and limitations. Curtis ignores the receiver and far-field cancellation. EP 0 579 332 (Rebers) uses an RC phase-shifting circuit that not only introduces insertion loss but also causes resonance problems if used in a pulse-listen system. Also, an RC phase-shifting circuit may not work well across a frequency range due to its limited bandwidth. For a pulse-listen system, it is simpler to sequentially alternate the 2-loop and 3-loop in terms of transmission and receiving. Alicot also uses a phase-shifting circuit for quadrature receiver. As for far-field cancellation, Alicot divides the single loop into four equal-area elements. As detection performance is largely dependent upon the size of each loop element, the four-element antenna with far-field cancellation will have reduced detection compared to the two-element antenna without far-field cancellation.
All references cited herein are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
It is the object of this invention to eliminate the analog phase-shifting circuit for both transmission and receiving, thus eliminating the insertion loss and hence improving the signal-to-noise ratio. The received signals from each antenna elements are digitized or processed using appropriate digital processing techniques.
Another object of this invention to increase the size of the antenna element while achieving substantial far-field cancellation for regulatory compliance.
For two elements driven 90° out of phase, the vector summation is not zero in far field, as shown in
An improved phasing method, of the present invention, are three antenna elements that, when driven 120° out of phase, result in zero vector summation in far field, as shown in
An electronic article surveillance system is provided which comprises an antenna structure including three or more loops each connected to an independent transmission driver for generating a corresponding electromagnetic field wherein the transmission drivers are arranged to drive the loops in such a way that a vector sum of the electromagnetic fields of the independent transmission drivers is null in a far field and wherein no vector is separated from another vector by 180° of phase.
A dynamically controlled electronic article surveillance system for detecting security tags is provided wherein an array of antenna elements is digitally phased and actively driven for concurrent transmission to generate a plurality of electromagnetic fields having respective vectors and wherein the system changes the phases between each of the vectors for interacting with security tags for effecting tag detection.
An electronic article surveillance system comprising a plurality of antenna structures, wherein each antenna structure includes three or more loops and wherein each antenna structure is connected to a single transmission driver. The transmission drivers are arranged to drive the loops of the antenna structure in such a way that the vector sum of the electromagnetic fields of the transmission drivers is null in a far field and wherein no vector is separated by another vector by 180° of phase.
An electronic article surveillance system comprising a plurality of antenna structures, wherein each antenna structure includes three or more loops which are wound around an electromagnetic core structure and wherein each antenna structure is connected to a single transmission driver. The transmission drivers are arranged to drive the loops wound around said electromagnetic core structure of the antenna structure in such a way that the vector sum of the electromagnetic fields of the transmission drivers is null in a far field and wherein no vector is separated from another by 180° of phase.
The invention will be described in conjunction with the following drawings in which like reference numerals designate like elements and wherein:
This invention 20 (see
For example, a phase delta of one tenth ( 1/10) and a phase offset of one hundredth ( 1/100) implies that in 10 time samples, one sinusoid is completed with a phase shift of 360/100 degrees. The DDS output is then presented to a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) 107 and a low-pass filter 108 to yield the analog, transmit waveform. Different phase offset registers are used, one for each antenna element, to produce a digital phasing network such that the same lookup table can be time-division multiplexed to produce a plurality of RF waveforms. Furthermore, with the availability of both the sine and cosine outputs from the same lookup table, a pair of transmit signals are readily generated with a phase separation of 90°.
In another manifestation of the invention, active phasing of multiple antenna elements for concurrent transmission is performed using a digital phase-shift, up-convert network. A template in-phase (I) and quadrature (Q) baseband signal is first designed and presented to a digital phase shift network followed by a digital up-converter (DUC).
where [i, q] represents the template I/Q waveform,
[îk, {circumflex over (q)}k] represents the rotated waveform for antenna element k, and
θk represents the phase shift for antenna element k.
sk(n)={tilde over (x)}k(n)cos(ω0n)−{tilde over (y)}k(n)sin(ω0n)
where [{tilde over (x)}k, {tilde over (y)}k] represents the CIC output for antenna element k
[cos(ω0n)sin(ω0n)] represents the DDS output, and
ω0 represents the desired angular frequency of the RF waveform.
The same DDS is employed to perform the frequency up shifting for all of the transmit antenna elements. Unlike an analog phase-shift network that is appropriate for use only at a single (or narrowband) frequency, the same digital phase shift network 200 (of
In another facet of the invention, to achieve substantial far-field suppression for regulatory compliance, the vector summation of the plurality of phase shift employed to drive the transmit antenna array must equal zero in the far field. The choice of phase shifts employed to drive the transmit antenna array is crucial not only to the pattern of the interrogating field generated, but also to the field strength far away from the antenna. In order that the far-field energy is suppressed for regulatory purposes, a constraint is imposed here as shown in
For another facet of the invention, the plurality of RF/IF receive signals from the antenna array are digitally processed using a down-convert, phase-shift network. The received RF signal for each antenna is presented to a digital down-converter (DDC) followed by a digital phase shifter.
For tag detection, a composite receive signal is derived by combining the plurality of down-converted, phase-shifted, receive signals using a coherent envelope detector that performs the square-of-sum operation.
For n identical elements, the summation gives a sensitivity that is n times the sensitivity of a single element. The effect of the coherent summation is to rotate and align the I/Q-vectors from the plurality of receiving antenna elements along the same direction such that the resulting vector summation equals the magnitude sum of the induced voltage on the receiving antenna elements. By varying the choice of the rotation angles, one can adjust the spatial sensitivity or directivity of the receive field as needed to detect a resonating label at different spatial coordinate and orientation with respect to the antenna array structure. This is particularly appropriate in cases where the mutual coupling between the antenna elements must be accounted for. In addition, as the angle of flux line intersection between the emitted fields vary continuously in space, the induced voltage on the receive antennas can have a mutual phase difference that depends on the location and orientation of the tag.
The invention is also possible of creating, for tag detection, a plurality of composite receive signals derived from the many down-converted, phase-shifted, receive signals using a coherent envelope detector that performs the square-of-sum 500 operation. Because the choice of the phase shifts employed in the receive mode determines the spatial sensitivity or directivity of the receive field, different sets of phase shifts may be required to best detect a tag entering the interrogating field at different locations, especially when the signal-to-noise ratio is poor.
As another embodiment of the invention, for tag detection, a composite receive signal is derived from the plurality of down-converted signals using an incoherent envelope detector that performs the sum-of-square operation.
The individual frequency and phase of the plurality of transmit signals are dynamically altered to allow for automated manipulation (steering) of the transmit field pattern. With the use of high-speed computer control (microcontroller, microprocessor, FPGA, etc) and a phased array antenna system, the transmit field pattern can be rapidly scanned by controlling the phasing and excitation of the individual antenna element.
The individual frequency and phase of the plurality of receive signals are dynamically altered to allow for automated manipulation (steering) of the receive field sensitivity.
For wide aisle antenna configuration, the antenna elements are arranged to form a pedestal pair such that half of the elements having a phase shift of 0≦φi<π are located coplanar on one side of the exit aisle while the other half of the antenna elements having a phase shift of π≦φj<2π of are located coplanar on the other side of the exit aisle. In particular,
The antenna structures for the dynamic EAS system can be constructed in a variety of ways. For instance, rather than being constructed as air-loops, the antenna elements 210 may consist of windings 206 about electromagnetic cores 204, such as a ferrite ceramic material, separated by non-ferrous spacers 202, such as shown in
By way of example only,
While the invention has been described in detail and with reference to specific examples thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.
This Continuation-in-Part application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §120 of application Ser. No. 12/134,827 filed on Jun. 6, 2008 entitled DYNAMIC EAS DETECTION SYSTEM AND METHOD which in turn claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/942,873 filed on Jun. 8, 2007 entitled DYNAMIC EAS DETECTION and all of whose entire disclosures are incorporated by reference herein.
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