The present application claims the benefit of the earlier filing date of Australian Provisional Patent Application No. 2014904064 in the name of Andrew LLC, filed on 10 Oct. 2014, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates generally to antennas and, in particular, to a dual polarization antenna that produces a rectangular radiation pattern for use in a stadium.
Stadiums and other large venues require high capacity antennas to cater for the high number of mobile users during events. Conventional base station antennas can be used for such a purpose, but requires installation of additional antennas. However, installing additional antennas on base stations is not efficient, due to wasted spectrum, coverage overlap, and poor quality of service.
Thus, a need exists to provide an antenna having a high capacity and efficient use of spectrum.
Disclosed is an antenna which seeks to address the above problems by having a targeted radiation pattern, as well as low side lobes and high front to back (F/B) radiation ratio. The disclosed antenna is also capable of multiple-inputs multiple-outputs (MIMO) functionality.
According to a first aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an antenna for use in a stadium capable of producing a rectangular radiation pattern, the antenna comprising: a ground plane; a feed network for processing, radio-frequency (RF) signals in a plurality of frequency bands to or from two or more sets of antenna feeds, each set of antenna feeds providing or receiving RF signals on a respective one of the plurality of frequency bands; at least two arrays of radiating elements, each array being fed by a respective one of the two or more sets of antenna feeds of the feed network for producing the rectangular radiation pattern in a respective one of the plurality of frequency bands, each array comprising a plurality of dual polarization radiating elements for producing dual, polarization of the rectangular radiation pattern, the at least two arrays of radiating elements being suspended above one side of the ground plane, the feed network feeding the at least two arrays on the other side of the ground plane.
Other aspects of the invention are also disclosed.
At least one embodiment of the present invention is described hereinafter with reference to the drawings and, appendices, in which:
Where reference is made in any one or more of the accompanying drawings to features, which have the same reference numerals, those features have for the purposes of this description the same function(s), unless the contrary intention appears.
It is to be noted that the discussions contained in the “Background” section should not be interpreted as a representation by the present inventor(s) or the patent applicant that such discussion in any way form part of the common general knowledge in the art.
Each of the antenna arrays 120A, 120B, and 120C, which are collectively referred to as antenna arrays 120 hereinafter, is fed by the feed network 130 through the ground plane 110 and produces a dual polarization radiation beam. Each array 120 also generates a rectangular radiation pattern with a half-power beamwidth of 50 degrees in both the azimuth and elevation planes, which is effectively a square radiation pattern. The antenna arrays 120 are described further in relation to
When the antenna 100 is transmitting, the feed network 130 receives radio-frequency (RF) signals in separate, multiple frequency bands at a feed interface 132. Alternatively, the feed network 130 may receive RF signals in the multiple frequency bands at multiple feed interfaces (not shown), where each feed interface receives RF signals in each of the multiple frequency bands. The feed network 130 then distributes the received RF signals to sets of antenna feeds 140A, 140B, and 140C, which are collectively referred to as the sets of antenna feeds 140 hereinafter. Each set of antenna feeds 140 provides RF signals in one of the multiple frequency bands to a respective one of the, arrays 120. For example, antenna feeds 140A, 140B, 140C provide RF signals to antenna arrays 120A, 120B, 120C, respectively, where the RF signals in different frequency bands are provided to the respective arrays 120A, 120B, 120C.
When the antenna 100 is receiving, the feed network 130 receives RF signals from the antenna arrays 120 in multiple frequency bands, and combines the multiple frequency bands to the feed interface 132. Alternatively, tire feed network 130 has multiple feed interfaces such that the received RF signals in the multiple frequency bands do not need to be combined. In this alternative implementation, each of the frequency bands is provided to a separate feed interface (not shown).
When in use, the antenna 100 is placed on, or affixed to, ceilings or roofs of a stadium so that the rectangular radiation beam of the antenna 100 is directed downward to illuminate a section of mobile users in the stadium. Each section of mobile users may correspond to a seat bay in the stadium. However, the size of the area covered by a stadium antenna depends on its distance from the seating, so how many seating bays can be covered by one antenna may vary. The rectangular radiation pattern also provides sharp cut-offs at the edges of the radiation pattern to provide minimum interference between adjacent illuminated sections. Such a defined radiation pattern with sharp cut-offs allows efficient sector planning of placements of the antennas 100 at the stadium.
The antenna 100 also produces low side- and back-lobes to minimize the interference between adjacent antennas 100 and improve the quality of service of the wireless communication, Less interference between adjacent antennas 100 reduces the size of soft handover zones and also improves the signal-to-interference-and-noise ratio (SINR) of the wireless service, The maximum achievable data throughput is therefore increased, resulting in improved user experience.
The antenna 100 provides MEMO functionalities through the dual polarization radiation beam, which provides as much as twice the capacity compared to a single polarization antenna. The additional polarization effectively provides an additional wireless channel, which is known as polarisation diversity. High isolation—better than 30 dB—between the polarizations also provides minimum interference between the signals on orthogonal polarizations of the antenna 100.
Alternatively, the additional polarization can be used to improve quality of coverage by minimising multipath fading of signal within the beam coverage area. That is, the antenna 100 can be used to transmit or receive multiple versions of a signal with dual polarisation to minimise multipath fading and avoid co-channel interference. Such a performance improvement is known as “diversity gain” Within the antenna field.
The antenna 100 supports multiple frequency bands, capable of supporting multiple wireless telecommunication standards such as 2G, 3G, 4G and 3GPP Long Term Evolution (LTE).
In the example shown, the antenna 100 is capable of radiating in three separate frequency bands of: 790 MHz to 960 MHz 1710 MHz to 2170 MHz, and 2300 MHz to 2690 MHz. However, the antenna 100 can be designed to radiate in as little as two separate frequency bands or as many frequency bands as required.
Each of the radiating elements 122 has two dipoles placed transversely relative to each other (i.e., crossed dipoles) to provide the dual polarization. The centres of the dipoles are fed by the antenna feeds 140. Each dipole is designed to operate at different frequency bands and thus, as can be seen from
Alternatively, each of the radiating elements 122 can be a dual polarization patch,
To provide the rectangular radiation pattern, the right amplitudes and phase distribution within the 5×5 array must be provided. In
The arms of the dipoles operating in the lowest frequency band are angled downward in order to increase the F/B ratio. The dipoles may be angled down, not only near the edges of the ground plane, but in all of the elements in the lowest frequency band array. This may be done mainly to improve the front-to-back ratio of the low frequency band pattern. Improved front-to-back minimizes the interference with other sectors. The remaining radiating elements 122B and 122C, which operate at higher frequency bands, do not have such problems.
To divide the RF signals into twenty five RF signals, the power divider 510 receives the RF signals from one of the outputs 414 and divides the received RF signals into five RF signals of predetermined amplitudes and phase distribution. Each of the divided RF signals is, in turn, fed into each of the remaining power dividers 520A, 520B, 520C, 520D, and 520E. Each of the power dividers 520A, 520B, 520C, 520D, and 520E further divides the RF signals into five RF signals of predetermined amplitude and phase distribution to provide the RF signals of required amplitude and phase at each antenna feed of the antenna feeds 140A. Similarly, antenna feeds 140B and 140C have their own corresponding second part of the feed network 130 for feeding the arrays 120B and 120C, respectively, with the amplitude arid phase distribution as stated hereinbefore and in
The power dividers 510, 520A, 520B, 520C, 520D, and 520E may be constituted from Wilkinson power dividers. Other power dividers may be practiced. Practically, Wilkinson power dividers are preferred due to improved isolation provided between output ports. The power divider 510 forms the radiation beam of the arrays 120 in the elevation plane, while the power dividers 520A, 520B, 5200, 520D, and 520E form the radiation beam of the arrays 120 in the azimuth plane. Basically, in construction, the power dividers 510, 520A-520E are identical. Therefore, the power dividers all provide the same amplitude distribution. To adjust the phase, the cable lengths can be changed.
As can be seen in
The arrangements described are applicable to the wireless communication industries and particularly for the antenna industry. The increased capacity provided by the antenna 100 reduces the need to use additional antennas to increase the capacity of the base station antennas, thereby preventing overload of towers or stadium roofs with weight of additional antennas while also reducing visibility of antennas to users.
The foregoing describes only some embodiments of the present invention, and modifications and/or changes can be made thereto without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention, the embodiments being illustrative and not restrictive,
In the context of this specification, the word “comprising” means “including principally but not necessarily solely” or “having” or “including”, and not “consisting only of”. Variations of the word “comprising”, such as “comprise” and “comprises” have correspondingly varied meanings.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2014904064 | Oct 2014 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/AU2014/001138 | 12/17/2014 | WO | 00 |