The present application claims the benefit of priority of Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-073054 filed on Apr. 5, 2018, the disclosure of which is totally incorporated herein by reference.
This disclosure generally relates to a technique for reducing an effect of a reflected wave.
A reflective array, as taught in patent literature 1, is equipped with a plurality of elements which reflect incident waves, and works to control phase differences in reflective waves between the elements which are arranged adjacent each other in an x-axis direction and phase differences in reflective waves between the elements which are arranged adjacent each other in a y-axis direction, thereby reflecting incident waves coming from a first direction to a second direction.
PATENT LITERATURE 1 Japanese patent first publication No. 2014-45378
The reflected waves may adversely impinge on radio wave environments. For instance, when an emitted light which has been reflected by an object is returned and then reflected again, such a re-reflected wave may interfere with an emitted wave, so that the emitted wave attenuates. The use of the reflective array, as taught in patent literature 1 in order to control the adverse effect of the reflected wave causes the reflected wave to be oriented in a direction different from that of the emitted wave, thereby reducing the adverse effect of the reflected wave. After careful consideration, the inventor of this application, however, has found that the reflective array in patent literature 1 works only to change a direction of wave reflection into a direction of wave incidence rather than reduction in reflected wave which may cause the adverse effect, and thus found a difficulty in eliminating the adverse effect completely.
One aspect of this disclosure is preferably provide a reflection reducing apparatus which effectively reduce adverse effects of a reflected wave.
According to one aspect of this disclosure, there is provided a reflection reducing apparatus which comprises: (a) a dielectric base plate that has a first surface and a second surface; (b) a first patch group that is disposed on the first surface and includes a plurality of first conductive patches; (c) a second patch group that is disposed on the first surface and includes a plurality of second conductive patches; and (d) a ground plane that is arranged on the second surface and works as a grounding surface. The plurality of first conductive patches are electrically insulated from each other. Each of the first conductive patches in which electrical currents, as excited by incoming waves that are radio waves arriving from outside the reflection reducing apparatus, resonates in directions at least including a first direction and a second direction. Each of the first conductive patches is of a patch shape in which resonant lengths are different between the first and second directions. The second conductive patches are equipped with two or more kinds of conductive patches including at least one first direction-oriented patch and at least one second direction-oriented patch. The second conductive patches are arranged along an outer edge of the first patch group at an interval away from the first patch group. The first direction-oriented patch has a shape in which the electrical current resonates only in the first direction. The second direction-oriented patch has a shape in which the electrical current resonates only in the second direction and which has a resonant length different from that of the first direction-oriented patch.
According to this disclosure, the first patch group and the second patch group are disposed on the first surface of the dielectric base plate. The plurality of first conductive patches of the first patch group each have the excited electrical currents resonating at least in the first direction and the second direction and also have a shape in which resonant lengths in the first and second directions are different from each other. A reflection phase of the first conductive patch in the first direction is, therefore, different from that of the first conductive patch in the second direction. This causes a direction of polarization of a reflected wave arising from reflection of the incoming wave by the first conductive patches to be rotated from a direction of polarization of the incoming wave. The first patch group, therefore, works to reduce adverse effects of the reflected wave. The plurality of second conductive patches of the second patch group work to change the direction of polarization of the reflected wave to a direction different from the direction of polarization of the incoming wave with aid of a combination of the first direction-oriented patch and the second direction-oriented patch, thereby reducing the adverse effects of the reflected wave.
Each of the first direction-oriented patch and the second direction-oriented patch is shaped to resonate only in one direction and smaller in size than the first conductive patches which resonate at least two directions. This enables the first direction-oriented patch and the second direction-oriented patch to be disposed in spaces which are too narrow to arrange the first conductive patches. In other words, it is possible to arrange the first direction-oriented patch and the second direction-oriented patch in a region outside the first patch group wherein there is no space for installation of the first conductive patches. This facilitates the reduction in adverse effects of the reflected wave.
Exemplified embodiments which embody this disclosure will be described below with reference to the drawings.
The structure of the reflection reducing device 50 in this embodiment will be described below with reference to
The reflection reducing device 50 also includes the ground plate or plane 40, a first patch group, and a second patch group in addition to the dielectric base plate 30. The ground plane 40 is attached to the base plate reverse surface 30b. The first patch group and the second patch group are disposed on the base plate front surface 30a. The ground plane 40 is made in the form of a copper pattern and covers the whole of a surface of the base plate reverse surface 30b. The ground plane 40 serves as a grounding surface.
The first patch group includes a plurality of first conductive patches 10. The first conductive patches 10 are periodically two-dimensionally arranged in the form of a passive pattern. The first conductive patches 10 are each designed in the form of a rectangular copper pattern. Each of the first conductive patches 10 is arranged to have each side inclined at 40° to the x-axis. Specifically, each of the first conductive patches 10 has first sides and second sides. In the following discussion, a direction in which the first sides extend will be referred to as an a direction. A direction in which the second sides extend will be referred to as a β direction. The a direction and the β direction are oriented perpendicular to each other. Each of the first conductive patches 10 has a length La1 in the a direction and a length Lβ1 in the β direction. The length La1 is different from the length Lβ1.
The first conductive patches 10 are electrically insulated from each other and inclined at the same angle. The first conductive patches 10 are arranged at equal intervals away from each other both in the a direction and in the β direction. As many first conductive patches 10 as possible are disposed on the base plate front surface 30a. In other words, an area on the base plate front surface 30a which is unoccupied by the first conductive patches 10 is so small so that the first conductive patches 10 cannot be disposed.
The second patch group includes a plurality of second conductive patches 20. The second conductive patches 20 include at least one first direction-oriented patch 20a and at least one second direction-oriented patch 20b. The first direction-oriented patch 20a is designed in the form of a copper pattern extending linearly in the a direction. The second direction-oriented patch 20b is designed in the form of a copper pattern extending linearly in the β direction. The first direction-oriented patch 20a has a length La2 which is identical with the length La1 of the first conductive patches 10. The second direction-oriented patch 20b has a length Lβ2 which is identical with the length Lβ1 of the first conductive patches 10.
The second patch group is arranged along an outer edge of the first patch group at an interval away from the first patch group on the base plate front surface 30a. The outer edge of the first patch group includes a plurality of sides extending in the a direction and a plurality of sides extending in the β direction. The first direction-oriented patch 20a extends along the a direction-oriented side of the outer edge of the first patch group at an interval away from the outer edge of the first patch group. The second direction-oriented patch 20b extends along the β direction-oriented side of the outer edge of the first patch group at an interval away from the outer edge of the first patch group. The first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b are located adjacent each other.
A plurality of first direction-oriented patches 20a and a plurality of second direction-oriented patches 20b may be arranged to extend along the outer edge of the first patch group and located adjacent each other. As many first direction-oriented patches 20a and the second direction-oriented patches 20b as possible are disposed adjacent each other between the outer edge of the first patch group and a periphery of the base plate front surface 30a. Specifically, the first direction-oriented patches 20a and the second direction-oriented patches 20b are smaller in size than the first conductive patches 10 and thus arranged to occupy space too narrow to be occupied by the first conductive patches 10.
Here, it is assumed that radio waves (which will be referred to below as incoming waves) coming from outside the reflection reducing device 50 include a horizontally polarized wave oriented in the x-direction. In other words, the directions a and β are inclined at an angle to the direction of polarization of the incoming waves. When the incoming waves enter the reflection reducing device 50, it will cause electrical currents, as excited by the incoming waves, to flow both in the a direction-oriented sides and in the β direction-oriented sides of the first conductive patches 10 and resonate in the a direction and the β direction. The length La1 of the a direction-oriented sides is different from the length of Lβ1 of the β direction-oriented sides, so that resonant lengths in the a direction and the β direction are different from each other, thus resulting in a difference in reflection phase between the a direction and the β direction. This causes a direction of polarization of reflected waves arising from reflection of the incoming waves to changed or different from that of the incoming waves by the first conductive patches 10.
Specifically, the lengths La1 and Lβ1 are selected to have a 180° phase difference Δθ1 in reflection phase between the a direction and the β direction of the first conductive patches 10 in a condition where the incoming wave has a predetermined wave length. In other words, the first conductive patches 10 are shaped to resonate in opposite phases between the a direction and the β direction.
The first direction-oriented path 20a of the second conductive patches 20 has the length La2 which is equal to the length La1. The second direction-oriented patch 20b has the length Lβ2 which is equal to the Lβ1. The phase difference Δθ2 in reflection phase between the first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b is, therefore, 180°. The second conductive patch 20, therefore, functions to orient the direction of polarization of the reflection wave to that of vertical polarization along the y-axis direction using the first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b which are arranged adjacent each other.
Each of the first conductive patches 10 itself offers an insufficient polarized wave changing effects, but all the first conductive patches 10 periodically arranged work to produce sufficient polarized wave changing effects as a whole. In the absence of the second patch group on the base plate front surface 30a, there is an unoccupied area around the outer edge of the first patch group, which will produce insufficient polarized wave changing effect. In contrast to this, this embodiment has the small-sized first direction-oriented patch 20a and second direction-oriented patch 20b which are disposed on an area of the base plate front surface 30a where it is impossible to place the first conductive patches 10. Specifically, the reflection reducing device 50 is designed to have the periodic structure arranged outside the outer edge of the first patch group, thereby achieving sufficient polarized wave changing effect and offering reflection reducing effects higher than when there is no second patch group.
If the reflection reducing device 50 is designed not to have the first patch group and to have additional second conductive patches 20 arranged instead of the first conductive patches 10, it will result in an increased area between the second conductive patches 20 as compared with use of the first conductive patches 10 and the second conductive patches 20, which will result in a reduction in polarized wave changing effect. It is, therefore, advisable that as many of the first conductive patches 10 as possible be arranged on the base plate front surface 30a, and as many of the second conductive patches 20 be disposed in a void between the outer edge of the first patch group and the periphery of the base plate front surface 30a.
The above described first embodiment offers the following beneficial advantages.
1) The first conductive patches 10 are in the shape of a pattern which resonates both in the a direction and in the β direction and in which resonant lengths are different between the a direction and in the β direction. This results in a difference in reflection phase of the first conductive patches 10 between the a direction and in the β direction, thereby causing a direction of polarization of a reflected wave arising from reflection of the incoming wave by the first patch group to be different from a direction of polarization of the incoming wave. The second conductive patches 20 also work to orient the direction of polarization of the reflected wave to a direction different from the direction of polarization of the incoming wave with aid of combinations of the first direction-oriented patches 20a and the second direction-oriented patches 20b.
Each of the first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b is in the shape of a pattern which resonate only in one direction and smaller in size than the first conductive patches 10 which resonate in two directions. It is, therefore, possible to place the first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b in space which is too narrow to arrange the first conductive patches 10. Specifically, the first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b are arranged in an area which is located outside the first patch group and in which the first conductive patches 10 cannot be disposed. This greatly reduces the adverse effects of the reflected wave as compared with when only the first conductive patches 10 are mounted on the base plate front surface 30a.
2) The a direction and the β direction are perpendicular to each other. The first conductive patches 10 are each shaped to resonate with opposite phases in the a direction and the β direction. The first conductive patches 10, therefore, works to turn the direction of polarization of the reflected wave by 90° from the direction of polarization of the incoming wave. The first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b of the second conductive patches 20 resonate in phases opposite each other. The second conductive patch 20 made up of a combination of the first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b, thus, function to turn the direction of polarization of the reflected wave by 90° from that of the incoming wave.
3) The first conductive patches 10 are all inclined at the same angle and arranged at equal intervals away from each other. The whole of the first conductive patches 10, therefore, functions to orient the direction of polarization of the reflected wave in a direction different from that of the incoming wave.
4) The first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b are arranged adjacent each other and thus function together to orient the direction of polarization of the reflected wave in a direction different from that of the incoming wave.
The second embodiment is identical in basic structure with the first embodiment. Explanation of the same parts will, thus, be omitted, and differences will be mainly discussed below. The same reference numbers as employed in the first embodiment will represent the same parts to which the previous explanation will refer.
The reflection reducing device 150 in the second embodiment is different from the reflection reducing device 50 in the first embodiment in that the reflection reducing device 150 is equipped with the antenna portions 60. The structure of the reflection reducing device 150 will be described below with reference to
The reflection reducing device 150, as illustrated in
The second patch group is, as can be seen in
The reflection reducing device 150 is designed to be mounted in a place where a portion of a wave emitted from the antenna portions 60 is reflected by an object which exists in a direction of emission of the wave from the antenna portions 60 and then reaches the antenna portion 60 as the incoming wave. Specifically, the reflection reducing device 150 is, as demonstrated in
When the reflection reducing device 150 is located in the bumper 80, a portion of a wave emitted from the antenna portions 60 of the reflection reducing device 150 passes through the bumper 80, while a portion of the wave is reflected by the bumper 80 and then returned back to the reflection reducing device 150 as the incoming wave. The incoming wave is reflected again on the reflection reducing device 150. Interference of the reflected wave arising from reflection of the incoming wave with a radiated wave may cause the radiated wave to attenuate. A polarized wave of the reflected wave resulting from the reflection on the reflection reducing device 150 is rotated 90° from a horizontally polarized wave of the radiated wave. A polarized component of the reflected wave, therefore, has a relatively large vertically polarized component and a relatively small horizontally polarized component, thereby minimizing the interference between the reflected wave and the radiated wave.
The above described second embodiment offers the following beneficial effects in addition to the effects 1) to 4) in the first embodiment.
5) The first direction-oriented patch 20a and the second direction-oriented patch 20b which are smaller in size than the first conductive patches 10 are disposed in a region near the antenna portions 60 and in the periphery-inside region of the base plate front surface 30a where there is no space large enough to have the first conductive patches 10 arranged therein. This layout largely reduces the interference of a reflected wave with a radiated wave as compared with when the base plate front surface 30a has only the first conductive patches 10 arranged thereon.
6) The installation of the reflection reducing device 150 in the bumper 80 causes a portion of a wave radiated from the antenna portion 60 to be reflected by the bumper 80 and reach the reflection reducing device 150 in the form of the incoming wave. The first patch group and the second patch group work to turn the direction of polarization of a reflected wave arising from reflection of the incoming wave by 90°, thereby reducing the interference of the reflected wave with a wave emitted from the antenna portion 60 to minimize the attenuation of the emitted wave.
The embodiments embodying this disclosure have already been described, but this disclosure is not limited to the above embodiments and may be modified in various ways.
a) In the above embodiments, the first conductive patches 10, the first direction-oriented patches 20a, and the second direction-oriented patches 20b are inclined at 45° to the direction of polarization of the incoming wave, but such inclination is not limited to 45°. The reflection reducing devices 50 and 150 are effective to have the highest degree of polarized wave turning effects when the inclination is set to 45°. For instance, the polarized wave turning effects may be achieved by selecting the a direction and the β direction to lie in a range of 35° to 55° to the direction of polarization of the incoming wave.
b) in the above embodiments, a difference in reflection phase between the a direction and the β direction is set to 180°, but such a phase difference is not limited to 180° and may be greater than 0°. In other words, the reflection reducing devices 50 and 150 may be designed to turn the direction of polarization of the incoming wave at an angle less than 90° to produce a reflected wave. The adverse influence of the reflected wave may be reduced as long as there is a difference in direction of polarization between the reflected wave and the incoming wave.
c) In the above embodiments, the first conductive patches 10 are of a rectangular shape, but not limited to the same. For instance, the first conductive patches 10 may be, as illustrated in
Each of the first conductive patches 10 may alternatively be, as illustrated in
Each of the first conductive patches 10 may alternatively be, as illustrated in
d) A plurality of functions of one component of the structure of each of the above embodiments may be realized by a plurality of components. Alternatively, a single function of one component of the structure of each of the embodiments may be achieved by a plurality of components. A plurality of functions of a plurality of components of the structure of each of the embodiments may also be realized by a single component. A single function performed by a plurality of components of the structure of each of the above embodiments may be realized by a single component. A portion of the components of each of the embodiments may be omitted. At least a portion of components of each of the embodiments may be added to or replaced with a component(s) of another embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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JP2018-073054 | Apr 2018 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20180366818 | Kawaguchi | Dec 2018 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2014-045378 | Mar 2014 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210028551 A1 | Jan 2021 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/JP2019/014841 | Apr 2019 | US |
Child | 17038625 | US |