The invention relates to small broadband antennas, and more particularly helical antennas that may be used with wireless microphones.
Wireless applications are becoming even more prevalent with the growing utilization of untethered computers, wireless telephones, and other wireless devices. However, in order to effectively support wireless applications, a RF signal is typically transmitted or received between wireless devices through a radio antenna. Radio antennas are typically bulky and incur a cost that may adversely increase the price of a wireless device. A “rubber ducky” antenna is an example of a radio antenna that is popularly used in wireless applications. A “rubber ducky” antenna is often constructed by wrapping wire around a core insulator and covered by protective material. Consequently, a “rubber ducky” antenna is often bulky, obstructive, and costly. Moreover, the electrical characteristics of a “rubber ducky” antenna may be insufficient. For example, the operating frequency bandwidth tends to be narrow, while many wireless applications may require broadband operation. Additionally signal loss due to the proximity of a user's hand may be excessive.
The approaches of the prior art, as described heretofore, provide antenna assemblies having construction attributes, electrical characteristics and associated costs that are often lacking for wireless applications. Thus, there is a real need in the market place to provide a radio antenna, e.g., a helical antenna, that is low cost, small, easy to assemble, and broadband with low sensitivity to hand proximity.
Aspects of the invention provide solutions to at least one of the issues mentioned above, thereby enabling one to construct a radio antenna with conductive material that is affixed on tape. The tape is secured to a base material.
With one aspect of the invention, a helical antenna assembly is constructed by placing a metallic tape strip diagonally onto a rectangular piece of non-metallic tape. The tape assembly is then rolled on a dielectric core. The metallic tape strip is then coupled to an electrical connector.
With another aspect of the invention, a center conductor is inserted through the center of the dielectric core. The center conductor is electrically coupled to an electrical connector. The tape assembly includes one or two tabs that bend over the ends the dielectric core to prevent the tape assembly from separating from the dielectric core. The tabs may be further pinned by eyelets.
With another aspect of the invention, the pitch of the conductive portion of the tape assembly is determined to provide desired electrical characteristics when the tape assembly is wrapped around the dielectric core.
With another aspect of the invention, the conductive portion of the tape assembly is trimmed in length to obtain desired electrical characteristics, including the center operating frequency. Parasitic effects of surrounding components may be compensated when tuning the antenna assembly.
With another aspect of the invention, a helical antenna is formed by determining a length of a conductive portion to obtain desired characteristics of the helical antenna, laminating the conductive portion to a base portion to form a tape assembly in which the conductive portion is diagonally placed on the base portion, wrapping the tape assembly around a dielectric core, and electrically coupling an electrical connector to the conductive portion.
With another aspect of the invention, a helical antenna assembly includes a dielectric core, a tape assembly that is wrapped around the dielectric core where the tape assembly further includes a base portion and a conductive portion, and an electrical connector that is coupled to the conductive portion of the tape assembly. The conductive portion is diagonally placed on the base portion with a determined pitch and has a length and a width in order to obtain desired electrical characteristics.
With another aspect of the invention, a double-helical antenna assembly includes a dielectric core, a tape assembly that is wrapped around the dielectric core where the tape assembly further includes a base portion and a conductive portion, and an electrical connector that is coupled to a center feed-point of the conductive portion. The conductive portion includes two diagonal conductive sections that join at the center feed-point with a determined pitch. Each diagonal conductive portion has a length and a width to obtain desired electrical characteristics.
As shown in
Tape assembly 101 comprises tab 111, although other embodiments of the invention may support more than one tab (e.g., tabs 211a and 211b as shown in
As will be discussed, tape assembly 101 is wrapped around dielectric core 107 (corresponding to top view 107a and side view 107b). Center conductor 109 (corresponding to top view 109a and side view 109b) is located at essentially the center of dielectric core 107 and extends through the entire length of dielectric core 107. The length of center conductor 109 is typically longer than the length of dielectric core 107 so that the ends of center conductor 109 extend beyond dielectric core 107 for mechanical and electrical coupling. As will be discussed, an eyelet flange and a SMA connector may be attached to the ends of center conductor 109. In the embodiment, the length of dielectric core 107 is approximately 14 mm (to match the width of tape assembly 101) and the diameter of dielectric core 107 is approximately 0.680 to 0.684 inches.
In an embodiment of the invention, dielectric core 107 is formed from Texin® 285 urethane thermoplastic elastomer (manufactured by Bayer MaterialScience). Texin® 285 possesses fairly constant consistent dielectric properties with a dielectric constant between 5.6 and 6.5 and a good electrical strength of approximately 445 Kv/in.
Tape assembly 201 includes tabs 211a and 211b which form holes 205a and 205b, respectively. Hole 205a is formed through conductive portion 203, an electrical connector may be electrically coupled to conductive portion 203 near hole 205a by soldering an electrical connector (e.g., SMA connector 315 as shown in
Tape assembly 201 (shown as side view 201b) is wrapped around dielectric core 207. (An adhesive may be applied to tape assembly 201 to prevent tape assembly 201 from detaching from dielectric core 207.) In the embodiment, dielectric core 207 is wrapped from right to left in order to show indicia (not shown) that may be on tape assembly 201. The indicia may be used for identification purposes of the antenna assembly. However, tape assembly 201 may be wrapped from left to right without significantly altering the electrical characteristics of the antenna assembly.
After tape assembly 201 is wrapped around dielectric core 207, tabs 211a and 211b are bent to be flush with the ends of dielectric core 207. In the exemplary embodiment shown in
In the embodiment, the pitch of conductive portion 203 is selected so that conductive portion 203 does not overlap when tape assembly 201 is wrapped around dielectric core 207.
Antenna assembly 321 utilizes one tab (corresponding to conductive extension 311). However, other embodiments of the invention may use more than one tab (e.g., tabs 211a and 211b as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Each tape assembly 601a-601e uses the same pitch. However, the length of the conductive portions is adjusted to provide the desired electrical characteristics. An approximate length is determined without the parasitic effects of the antenna cover and microphone case. For example, the shape and material of the antenna cover and microphone case will affect the electrical characteristics. However, the parasitic effects are not typically large and may be compensated by trimming the conductive portion (e.g., the laminated copper tape) of the tape assembly.
An antenna assembly (e.g., antenna assembly 527) has broadband frequency characteristics with a bandwidth greater than 10% with center frequencies greater than 500 MHz. The embodiments exhibit low sensitivity to hand placement or hand proximity.
The embodiments shown in
The embodiment shown in
In the embodiments shown in
While the embodiments shown in
While the embodiments shown in
While the invention has been described with respect to specific examples including presently preferred modes of carrying out the invention, those skilled in the art will appreciate that there are numerous variations and permutations of the above described systems and techniques that fall within the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
This application claims priority to provisional U.S. Application Ser. No. 60/650,249 (“Small Broadband Helical Antenna”), filed Feb. 4, 2005.
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4442438 | Siwiak et al. | Apr 1984 | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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8-78945 | Mar 1996 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060176237 A1 | Aug 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60650249 | Feb 2005 | US |