The present invention relates to a radiating element designed to operate in an electrically small antenna.
This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. § 119 of French Patent Application 05/50347, filed Feb. 7, 2005.
Such electrically small antennas, that is, with a size substantially smaller than the wavelength of the signals that they receive and transmit, are particularly used in the portable reception of FM radio waves. Hence such an antenna must be able to be integrated in a unit of small dimensions to meet portability constraints.
Now, it is known that an antenna, irrespective of its type or the technology used to realise it, must have a minimum dimension in the order of the wavelength and typically greater than the quarter wavelength to be able to operate correctly.
For FM frequencies, the wavelength is in the order of 3 meters at 100 MHz, the FM radio band spreads out around this value. For example, in France, the FM band ranges from 88 MHz to 108 MHz. In order to obtain an effective reception, whip antennas are generally used on which the orientation and length is adjusted, that is typically 75 cm for a quarter wavelength at 100 MHz, for the best reception. However this type of antenna cannot be used for the portable applications. Use is therefore made of loop type antennas, which are electrically small antennas whose efficiency is generally very poor. This is expressed in the following equation:
where Rrad is the radiation resistance and Rohm is the ohmic loss resistance.
To improve the efficiency, the techniques used consist of increasing the radiation resistances by increasing the volume occupied by the antenna while providing optimum coupling conditions. This is for example shown in Small Antennas, by Harold Wheeler, IEEE Trans. Ant. Propagation, Vol. AP23, July 1975. AP23, July 1975. As soon as the conducting material used for the radiating element has an acceptable conductivity and the dielectric losses are low, the ohmic loss generally remains low in relation to the radiation resistance. This is not the case when the efficiency is low, which is the case for small antennas.
Hence, this involves proposing a radiating element that can be used in an electrically small antenna and that can obtain a correct antenna efficiency.
The present invention relates to a band type antenna, namely an electrically small antenna constituted by a conducting strip folded N times like a bellows and in the form of a loop.
It is indeed observed that for a regular folding of the conducting strip in the manner of a bellows, the efficiency is thus multiplied by N. The folding maintains the overall dimensions of the antenna at a similar size to that obtained with an antenna of the same size and realised with a standard conducting strip. The bellows folding can be rectilinear and parallel or not according to the antenna shape factor to respect depending on the volume available.
In one embodiment, the folding angle is determined so as to adjust the impedance of the radiating element.
The folding of the tape introduces a capacitive component in the antenna behaviour which, when it has small dimensions, is strongly inductive. This therefore enables the impedance to be matched.
In one embodiment, the conductive strip is a thin sheet metal strip.
In one embodiment, the conducting strip is constituted by a layer of metallization realised on one side of a substrate made of a thin plastic material.
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention will emerge on reading the description of different non-restrictive embodiments, the description being made with reference to the annexed drawings wherein:
Such antennas are traditionally used for the reception of FM frequencies in portable equipment. Indeed, in portable equipment, it is not possible to use antennas with a length in the order of the wavelength, which is 3 m at 100 MHz. The loop antennas are, electrically, small antennas, namely that their length L is much less than the wavelength. Taking into account their low electrical dimensions, the efficiency of these antennas is generally poor. This is expressed in the following equation:
where Rrad is the radiation resistance and Rohm is the ohmic loss resistance.
The invention proposes to improve the efficiency of the antenna by reducing the resistance of the ohmic loss, without modifying the size of the antenna.
According to the invention, this strip is folded N times like a bellows as shown in
Finally, in the example of the loop antenna, once the radiating element 30 is folded it is given the form of a loop antenna whose perimeter is then equal to L and the width to w=W/N. The width w can be modified if necessary.
An antenna obtained in this manner according to the invention and thus showing dimensions of perimeter L and width w has a radiation resistance almost identical to that of the standard loop of the size shown in
For example, the antenna can be dimensioned in the following manner W=50 mm; N=10;e=0.1 mm; L=10 cm.
It is known that the current running through a conductive strip of width w and thickness e remains confined in a thin layer dose to the surface having a thickness δ known as skin depth, shown in
where f is the operating frequency in Hz, μ=4π×10−7 H/m, and σ is the conductivity of the material (equal to 5.813×107 S/m for copper).
Hence, for a copper conductor at the frequency of 100 MHz, the skin depth is 6.6 μm. It is noted that the conductive strip must be of thickness e, greater than 2δ. Taking into account the typical values of e and δ, this condition is widely met.
The ohmic loss resistance is thus written as:
where Seff is the effective conducting surface for the strip, namely Seff=2(W+e)δ.
Thus, the ohmic loss resistance is
for the loop antenna according to the invention, shown in
for the standard loop antenna, represented in
Therefore, for W>W/N>>e, a condition widely realised for the typical values selected W=500×e and N =10,
Hence the equation:
So the invention makes it possible to reduce the ohmic loss resistance.
This is useful in the antennas for which the ohmic loss and, if necessary, the dielectric loss is non-negligible, which is the case in small antennas where the efficiency is generally poor.
Hence, for an antenna efficiency in the order of −20 dB, a standard efficiency obtained for a loop type antenna, the reduction of the ohmic loss enables an improvement of the efficiency of the antenna that is almost proportional to the reduction of the ohmic loss.
Thus, the antenna efficiency is inversely proportional to the loss resistance Rohm. In these conditions, the division of the loss resistance Rohm by a factor of 10 improves the antenna efficiency by 10 dB. This is a very good margin of improvement
Hence, the invention significantly improves the efficiency of the small antennas, particularly loop type antennas, while keeping a very low antenna volume.
In an advantageous embodiment, the folding angle is determined so as to adjust the impedance value of the antenna. Hence, the invention improves the impedance matching of the antenna. Indeed, it is known that the impedance presented by a small loop is highly inductive, which makes matching difficult. The folding of the strip introduces a capacitive component that has the effect of reducing the inductive behaviour of the loop and thus making impedance matching easier. The capacitive component can also be adjusted by the folding angle. Indeed, the folding of the metal strip forms V-shaped capacitive elements and one can show by analogy with the known calculation of the capacitance of a capacitor (C=εS/e where ε is the permittivity of the dielectric, S the surface of the conducting plates and e the thickness of the dielectric) that the capacitance varies with the folding angle (angle between the two metal parts of each V-shape of the folded strip).
In an embodiment illustrated by
The invention is not limited to the embodiments described and those skilled in the art will recognise the existence of different embodiment variants such as for example the metal strip can be a strip of thin sheet metal that is folded in a zigzag as shown in the invention, the folding profile, its form, its regularity, its periodicity, the length and profile of the loop that can notably be single or multiple to improve the antenna efficiency.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05 50347 | Feb 2005 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1971303 | Mann | Aug 1934 | A |
3231894 | Nagai | Jan 1966 | A |
3369243 | Greiser | Feb 1968 | A |
3576566 | Cover et al. | Apr 1971 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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2077046 | Sep 1981 | GB |
2001298319 | Oct 2001 | JP |
2003332820 | Nov 2003 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060176234 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |