This application is a national phase application of International Application No. PCT/JP03/00116 filed on Jan. 9, 2003, and claims priority of Japan Patent Application No. 2002-093871 filed on Mar. 29, 2002.
The present invention relates to a radio communication method and system operating in a millimeter wave band, and more specifically, to a reception antenna used therein.
A radio communication apparatus for transmitting a high-speed digital signal or a broadband analog signal generally consists of a transmitter in which a product of an intermediate-frequency-band modulated signal (IF) and a local oscillation signal (LO) is obtained for up conversion, and a thus-generated radio-frequency modulated signal (RF) is transmitted; and a receiver in which the RF signal is received, and a product of the RF and an LO is obtained for down conversion, whereby an IF is produced. In such a case, in order to maintain the quality of a transmitted signal, the IF input to the transmitter and the IF generated in the receiver must have a known constant frequency difference therebetween, and variation in the phase difference with time must be small. Therefore, local oscillators for generating the LOs in the transmitter and the receiver must be high in frequency stability and low in phase noise. In particular, in a microwave or millimeter wave band in which radio waves are of high frequency, stable, low-noise local oscillators are realized by making use of a dielectric resonator or a PLL (Phase Lock Loop) circuit.
However, with an increase in the frequency to be used (e.g., in a millimeter wave band of 30 GHz or higher), the stable, low-noise oscillators become difficult to realize, and their production cost increases. For example, in the case of a dielectric resonator, its Q value (Quality Factor) decreases and fails to exhibit a desired performance. In the case of a PLL circuit, the configuration of a frequency divider becomes particularly difficult. In another method, a signal from a low-frequency oscillator is frequency-multiplied so as to obtain an LO. However, this method generally requires an amplifier for increasing the signal strength, which raises various problems, including increases in cost, size, and consumption of electrical power.
In order to solve these problems, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open (kokai) NO. 2001-53640 has proposed a radio communication apparatus and a radio communication method (self-heterodyne scheme) as shown in sections (A) and (B) of
Moreover, Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open (kokai) NO. 2002-9655 discloses a system and method in which the above-described radio communication technique is applied to bi-directional radio communications.
However, several problems arise when an actual radio system is designed and constructed. At high frequencies; for example, in a millimeter wave band, signal propagation loss is large, and, as compared with a conventional up-converter scheme, the above-mentioned self-heterodyne scheme suffers greater deterioration in sensitivity. As a result, at least an antenna for reception must have a relatively high gain. When an antenna which has a high gain at high frequencies; for example, in a millimeter wave band, is to be realized, a plurality of antenna elements are arranged in an array, and signals obtained by means of the respective antenna elements are mixed in phase (such an antenna is called an array antenna). However, in order to enable the in-phase mixing of the signals from the antenna elements of the antenna array, in the millimeter wave band, the antenna elements must be machined with sufficiently high accuracy; i.e., with dimensional errors much smaller than one millimeter, in view that wavelengths are very short in the millimeter wave band. This requirement increases cost of such an antenna and makes it difficult to obtain a high gain as expected.
When the gain of an antenna is increased through employment of an array arrangement, although the antenna typically has a high gain in the direction of maximum radiation, it has a very narrow pencil beam which has a relative gain characteristic (directional characteristic) with respect to its radiation angle such that the antenna has a high gain in a certain direction only, and has a radiation pattern with side lobes and null points at which no antenna gain is attained. In other words, fabrication of a wide beam antenna which has high gain and is easy to use has generally been very difficult.
The present invention is directed to a reception antenna which is applicable to a radio communication system and in which reception and detection functions are integrated. In the present invention, a receiver receives an RF-band modulated signal transmitted from a transmitter, along with a local oscillation signal whose phase noise characteristic is coherent with the RF-band modulated signal, and generates a product of these two signal components, to thereby reproduce an IF-band transmission source signal. In the present invention, a plurality of unit reception circuits are disposed on the receiver. Each unit reception circuit includes a small planar antenna having a wide beam characteristic, such as a single-element patch antenna; an amplifier formed on a very small planar circuit by means of an MMIC technique; and a mixer circuit. Detection outputs of the respective unit reception circuits are power-mixed, whereby the reception antenna can function as a high-gain antenna with a detection function, and realize a wide beam radiation characteristic comparable to that of a single-element antenna.
Sections (A) and (B) of
Section (A) of
Sections (A) and (B) of
Sections (A) and (B) of
Sections (A) and (B) of
Section (B) of
Sections (A) and (B) of
According to the present invention, a radio communication apparatus or a radio communication method which utilizes the above-mentioned self-heterodyne scheme is realized. Therefore, the transmitter can use a low-cost local oscillator whose frequency stability is poor and whose phase noise is large, and the receiver does not require a local oscillator. Accordingly, a very low cost radio communication system can be configured. Moreover, since the above-mentioned frequency instability is cancelled at the time of detection, transmission of high-quality signals is possible.
According to the present invention, since in-phase mixing of signals obtained by means of the respective antenna elements of an array can be performed in the IF band whose frequency is sufficiently lower than the radio frequency, machining and formation of wiring for in-phase mixing do not require very high accuracy, and therefore, such in-phase mixing can be easily realized.
According to the present invention, base unit reception circuits can be disposed very close to one another, and phase differences of RF-band reception signals among the respective antenna elements of an array attain substantially ignorable levels as measured at the detection output points of the respective reception circuits. Therefore, the present invention can realize a reception antenna which has a very wide beam, a high gain, and an angle versus relative gain characteristic close to that of a single-element antenna.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2002-093871 | Mar 2002 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP03/00116 | 1/9/2003 | WO | 00 | 9/21/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/084093 | 10/9/2003 | WO | A |
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