Wireless stations may benefit from wireless communications in the unlicensed 60 GigaHertz (GHz) frequency band, as the relatively large spectrum of this band allows for a data transmission rate as large as 7 Gigabits per second (Gbps). Due to the significant attenuation of high frequency wireless signals (e.g., signals in the 60 GHz band) caused by walls and other objects, wireless communications in the 60 GHz frequency band are typically transmitted and received in a highly directional manner. Advantageously, lower-power transceiver hardware may be used for directional communications, as compared to transceiver hardware that is associated with omnidirectional communication.
For directional communications between a pair of wireless stations, a process called “beamforming” may be used to directionally steer the antenna beams of the stations toward each other. In this manner, the beamforming process results in the wireless stations identifying directivities for their antenna beam patterns so that the stations may steer the main lobes of the antenna beam patterns toward each other.
A wireless station may have a phased array antenna, which is formed from a spatially arranged array of antenna elements and a beamforming circuit that combines signals that are communicated with the elements in a way that allows the main lobe of the antenna beam that is associated with the array to be steered in a particular direction. In this manner, the beamforming circuit may include amplifiers and variable phase shifters that are controlled to apply selected gains and phase shifts to the signals to direct the main lobe in a given direction.
The beamforming circuit for a phased array antenna may include variable phase shifters, which shift the phases of signals that are communicated with antenna elements of the array to steer an antenna beam in a desired direction. Due to phase and amplitude variations that are introduced by the variable phase shifters, however, it may be challenging for such a beamforming circuit to produce an antenna beam having a sufficiently fine resolution to avoid strong interferers. Moreover, in general, achieving a finer granularity in the beamforming may involve using multiple stages of variable phase shifters, which may introduce temperature instabilities and relatively high power losses. According to aspects of the present disclosure, a phased array antenna has antenna elements that are arranged in sub-arrays in a way that allows a beamforming circuit to control a directivity of the associated antenna beam without using variable phase shifters. In this manner, in accordance with aspects of the present disclosure, each sub-array may include a pair of antenna elements that communicate orthogonal signals, and the amplification of these orthogonal signals may be controlled to set the main lobe angle for the antenna beam, all without using variable phase shifters. Accordingly, in accordance with example implementations, the phased array antenna may be relatively easy to calibrate, may exhibit more stability to temperature fluctuations and may be relatively less complex, as compared to phase array antennas that rely on variable phase shifters.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided a technique that includes communicating orthogonal signals with an antenna array. The antenna array includes a plurality of pairs of antenna elements. The technique includes amplifying the orthogonal signals and controlling the amplification of the orthogonal signals to regulate a directivity of a beam pattern of the antenna array.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an apparatus that includes a planar array of antenna elements; a beamforming circuit and a controller. The antenna elements are grouped into a plurality of sub-arrays, and the beamforming circuit includes a plurality of amplifiers. The beamforming circuit, for each sub-array, communicates a first signal with a first antenna element of the sub-array and communicates a second signal with a second antenna element of the sub-array. The first and second signals are orthogonal relative to each other. The controller regulates the gains of the amplifiers to regulate a directivity of a beam pattern that is associated with the array.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, there is provided an apparatus that includes a radio; a continuous phased array antenna; a beamforming circuit; and a controller. The continuous phased array antenna is coupled to the radio to radiate electromagnetic energy and sense radiated electromagnetic energy. The phased array antenna includes a planar array of antenna elements that are arranged in pairs. Each pair of antenna elements is associated with an amplitude value and a phase value associated with an antenna beam pattern. The beamforming circuit includes, for a given pair of antenna elements of the antenna elements, a first communication path and a second communication path. The first communication path includes a first amplifier, and the first communication path communicates a first signal with a first element of the given pair of antenna elements. The second communication path includes a second amplifier, and the second communication path communicates a second signal with a second element of the given pair of antenna elements. The beamforming circuit includes at least one fixed phase shifter that is disposed in one of the first and second communication paths to cause the first and second signals to be orthogonal to each other. The controller to, for the given pair of antenna elements, set a first gain of the first amplifier and set a second gain of the second amplifier to regulate a directivity of the antenna beam pattern.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, communicating orthogonal signals with the pairs includes communicating a first signal of the orthogonal signals using a first communication path that includes a fixed phase shifter and an amplifier; and communicating a second signal of the orthogonal signals using a second communication path that includes a second amplifier.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, communicating the first signal includes receiving the first signal from a first antenna element of a given pair of antenna elements and providing the first signal to the first communication path. Communicating the second signal includes receiving the second signal from a second antenna element of the given pair of antenna elements and providing the second signal to the second communication path.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, communicating the first signal includes receiving the first signal from the first communication path and providing the first signal to a first antenna element of a given pair of antenna elements. Communicating the second signal include receiving the second signal from the second communication path and providing the second signal to a second antenna element of the given pair of antenna elements.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, communicating the first signal using the first communication path includes setting a gain of the first amplifier based on the cosine of a phase angle. Communicating the second signal using the second communication path includes setting a gain of the second amplifier based on the sine of the phase angle.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, communicating the first signal using the first communication path includes setting a gain of the first amplifier based on the product of an amplitude and cos(θk−ε). Communicating the second signal using the second communication path includes setting a gain of the second amplifier based on the product of the amplitude and sin(θk+ε).
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, the antenna elements of the given pair of antenna elements are associated with a spacing | between the elements of the given pair. A main lobe of the beam pattern is associated with an angle θ0. The first and second signals are associated with a wavelength λ; and ϵ represents π·|·sin(θ0)/λ.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, adjacent pairs of the pairs of antenna elements are separated by a spacing d; and θk represents 2π·(k−1)·d·sin(θ0)/λ, where θ0 represents a main lobe of the beam pattern, λ represents a wavelength associated with the first and second signals, and k represents an integer.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, the phase shifter may be a fixed ninety degrees phase shifter.
Optionally, in any of the preceding aspects, in another implementation, the phased array antenna may be a continuous phased array antenna or a digital phased array antenna.
In the present disclosure, use of the term “a,” “an”, or “the” is intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. Also, the term “includes,” “including,” “comprises,” “comprising,” “have,” or “having” when used in this disclosure specifies the presence of the stated elements, but do not preclude the presence or addition of other elements.
A given pair of wireless stations may communicate with each other in a frequency band (the 60 GHz band, for example), which is highly directional. As such, the pair of wireless stations may employ “beamforming,” which refers to a process to determine how the antenna beams of the stations should be directed, or steered, for purposes of communicating data between the wireless stations. In this manner, a wireless station may have one or multiple antennas that may be controlled by the station to control the direction of its antenna beam pattern to steer a main lobe (the main beam) of the antenna gain pattern in a particular direction (along a particular azimuth, for example). In general, beamforming may involve the wireless stations transmitting and receiving electromagnetic energy in a process that determines an optimum antenna beam direction for each wireless station for its subsequent data communications with the other station.
In accordance with example implementations, the wireless station has a phased array antenna, which contains an array of antenna elements. In a transmit mode of operation for the wireless station, the antenna elements are driven by electrical signals to cause the elements to emit electromagnetic radiation, and in a receive mode of operation for the wireless station, the antenna elements provide electrical signals that represent electromagnetic radiation received by the antenna elements.
A beamforming circuit of the phased array antenna combines signals that are communicated with the antenna elements in way to form an antenna beam pattern that has certain characteristics, such as a main lobe of the beam pattern being oriented in a certain direction, the beam pattern having a certain number of side lobes and nulls, the side lobes and nulls being located at certain locations, the beam pattern having a certain envelope characterizing prominence of the side lobes relative to the main lobe, and so forth. In general, the beamforming circuit applies a set of complex values to signals that are communicated with the antenna elements to form a beam pattern, or gain, for the antenna. One way to do this is to route the signals through variable phase shifters and amplifiers. In this manner, the gains of the amplifiers and the phase shifters that are introduced by the variable shifters may be controlled to correspondingly control the application of the complex values to the signals to regulate the antenna beam pattern.
However, unlike conventional arrangements, in accordance with example implementations, a phased array antenna does not employ variable phase shifters. Instead, as described herein, the antenna elements of the phased array antenna are grouped, or arranged, in pairs (i.e., in sub-arrays each having two antenna elements); and the beamforming circuit includes fixed phase shifters to establish the orthogonal signals with the elements of each pair. As described herein, due to this configuration, the antenna beam pattern for the phased array antenna may be guided, or steered, solely by controlling the amplitudes of the signals that are communicated with the antenna elements, all without the use of variable phase shifters. In the context of this application, communicating signals with the antenna elements refers to either providing signals to the antenna elements (for purposes of transmission) or receiving signals from the antenna elements (for purposes of reception).
As further described herein, in accordance with example implementations, amplifiers are coupled in-line with the antenna element signals; and the beamforming circuit controls the amplifications, or gains, that are applied by the amplifiers to steer the antenna beam pattern in a given direction (i.e., to control a directivity of the antenna beam pattern).
In accordance with example implementations that are described herein, the beamforming circuit includes analog amplifiers, and the phased array antenna is a continuous phased array antenna. However, in accordance with further example implementations, the beamforming circuit may include digital power amplifiers, and the phased array antenna may be a digital phased array antenna.
As a more specific example,
The wireless station 100 may communicate over any of a number of different frequency bands. For example, in accordance with some implementations, the wireless station 100 may communicate using wireless signaling within a spectrum at or near 60 Gigahertz (GHz). Depending on the particular implementation, the wireless communications by the wireless station 100 may be within a licensed or an unlicensed spectrum. Moreover, as examples, the wireless communications may involve cellular network communications, cellular backhaul communications and non-cellular network communications, such as, for example, wireless communications over the 60 GHz band that comply with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.11ad specification (also referred to as the WiGig specification).
In accordance with some implementations, the wireless station 100 may be a mobile wireless device, which communicates with other wireless stations using synchronized units of wireless communication called “super frames,” or “beacon intervals.” In this manner, an initial part of the beacon interval may be dedicated to the beamforming process, and a subsequent part of the beacon interval may be dedicated to communicating data using antenna configurations that were determined using the beamforming process. The inclusion of beamforming in each beacon interval accommodates movements of mobile wireless stations. For example, the WiGig specification defines a beamforming protocol for purposes of selecting antenna sectors for an initiator (a wireless access point, for example) and a responder (a mobile wireless station, for example). In this manner, at the conclusion of the beamforming part of the beacon interval, the responder and the initiator have identified the best antenna sectors of the initiator and responder for purposes of communicating data with each other.
In accordance with example implementations, the wireless station 100 includes a phased array antenna 110. In general, the phased array antenna 110 includes an array 120 of antenna elements 134, which, for purposes of transmissions, radiate electromagnetic energy in response to signals being communicated to the elements 134; and for purposes of reception, the antenna elements 134 provide electrical signals representing electromagnetic radiation that is sensed by the elements 134.
In accordance with some implementations, the array 120 of antenna elements 134 lies in a plane to define a planar array; and more specifically, as depicted in
In accordance with example implementations, the antenna elements 134 are arranged, or grouped, into N sub-arrays 130 (example antenna sub-arrays 130-1, 130-2 and 130-N, being depicted in
In accordance with example implementations, each sub-array 130 is associated with a transmission channel 144 that communicates a transmission signal from a power splitter 150 of the beamforming circuit 111. The transmission channel 144, in turn, is coupled to orthogonal signal communication paths, or transmission channels, which are referred to as “signal channels 137 and 139” herein. The signal channels 137 and 139 communicate orthogonal transmission signals to respective antenna elements 134 of the associated sub-array 130. In this manner, the signal channel 137 is coupled to the transmission channel 144 to communicate a transmission signal to one of the antenna elements 134 of the sub-array 130, which is in-phase with the transmission signal of the transmission channel 144 (i.e., the signals have the same phases); and the other signal channel 139 is coupled to the transmission channel 144 and contains a fixed ninety degree phase shifter 146 to communicate a signal with the other antenna element 134, which is orthogonal relative to the transmission signal of the transmission channel 144 (and relative to the in-phase signal of the channel 137).
As depicted in
In accordance with further example implementations, a fixed phase shifter other than a ninety degree phase shifter may be used to create the orthogonal signals for the orthogonal signal channels 137 and 139. For example, in accordance with further implementations, one of the channels 137 and 139 may include a fixed phase shifter that introduces a phase lag of forty-five degrees, and the other channel 137, 139 may contain a fixed phase shifter that introduces a phase lead of forty-five degrees.
For a conventional phased array antenna having a linear array of antenna elements, each antenna element may be associated with an amplitude value called “Ak” herein (wherein “k” is an array element index) and a phase value called “θk” herein. In this manner, a narrowband assumption may be made (an assumption that the propagation delay across the array is much smaller than the reciprocal of the signal bandwidth) so that the delays that are applied to the array elements may be represented by the θk phase values. For the conventional phased array antenna, a set of Ak and θk values may be determined to form a given antenna beam pattern; and accordingly, the phase of the signal that is communicated with the kth antenna element of the linear array is shifted by a variable phase shifter by the θk phase value, and the signal is amplified by the Ak value.
For the phased antenna array 110 of
GainAMPLIFIER 140=Ak cos(θk), and Eq. 1
GainAMPLIFIER 142=Ak sin(θk). Eq. 2
Thus, for example, the gains of the amplifier 140 and 142 for the sub-array 130-1 are A1 cos(θ1) and A1 sin(θ1), respectively.
As a more specific example, in accordance with some implementations, the θk phase value may be described as follows:
where “λ” represents the signal wavelength, i.e. the wavelength of the signals that are communicated with the antenna elements 134. Moreover, for the case in which the inter sub-array spacing distance d is much greater than the intra sub-array spacing distance l (l≤0.1d, for example), the antenna gain (called “P(θ0)” herein) may be described as follows, which is the theoretical gain for a conventional phased array antenna having continuous variable phase shifters:
In Eq. 4, “j” denotes an imaginary number; and “N” is an integer that represents the number of sub-arrays 130. As the inter sub-array spacing distance d approaches the intra sub-array spacing distance l, the antenna gain may experience an increasing amount of side lobe energy. However, the gains of the antennas 140 and 142 may be calculated and set using a different methodology, which makes the antenna gain invariant to the intra sub-array spacing distance l, as further described below in connection with
Referring to
In this manner, in accordance with example implementations, the processor(s) 170 determine the Ak and θk values; determine amplifications, or gains to be applied by the amplifiers 140 and 142 for the entire array 120, pursuant to Eqs. 1 and 2 based on the the Ak and θk values; and write values corresponding to the gains to one or multiple registers 180 of the controller 168. Moreover, in accordance with example implementations, the controller 168 may include one or multiple digital-to-analog converters (DACs) 182, which provide analog outputs 184 representing the gain, or amplification, values for the amplifiers 140 and 142.
In this manner, the outputs 184, in turn, in accordance with example implementations, control the gains of the amplifiers 140 and 142 of the phased array antenna 110. For example, in accordance with some implementations, the outputs 184 may control the biasing of current sources and/or current mirrors of the power amplifiers 140 and 142 to correspondingly control the gains of the amplifiers 140 and 142.
In accordance with some implementations, the controller 168 may include a memory 172, which stores, for example, program instructions 174 that are executed by the processor(s) 170 for performing processor functions, as described herein, as well as data 176 involved in calculating the gains for the amplifiers 140 and 142 for a given main lobe angle θ0. In general, the memory 172 may be formed from non-transitory memory devices, such as semiconductor devices, memristors, phase change memory devices, volatile memory devices, non-volatile memories, a combination of one or more of these storage technologies, and so forth.
In accordance with further example implementations, the controller 168 may not be processor-based and may instead be formed from one or multiple hardwired circuits, such as one or multiple field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) or application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), for example.
Among its other features, in accordance with example implementations, the wireless station 100 may include a radio 164, part of the physical layer 160, which communicates transmission and reception signals with the phased array antenna 110 through the transmission channels 144 and reception channels (not shown in
Although
Referring to
More specifically, referring to
In accordance with example implementations, although the gains of the amplifiers 140 and 142 may be based in part on the relationships that are set forth in Eqs. 1 and 2, the actual gains may be slightly different due to calibration adjustments. In this manner, in accordance with example implementations, the controller 168 may look up calibrated values for the amplifier gains from a table, the controller 168 may look up calibration factors to apply to calculated values for the gains, and so forth. After the gains of the amplifiers 140 and 142 are set, the controller 168 may then acknowledge to the MAC layer 186 that the phased array antenna has been configured, pursuant to block 420.
Referring to
More specifically, in accordance with example implementations, the gains for the amplifiers 140 and 142 for the kth sub-array 130 may be described as follows:
GainAMPLIFIER 140=Ak cos(θk−ε), and Eq. 5
GainAMPLIFIER 142=Ak sin(θk+ε). Eq. 6
The phase offset ε of Eqs. 5 and 6 may be described as follows:
It is noted that Eqs. 5 and 6 depict the general relationship of the amplifier gains to the phase value θk and the phase offset ε; and if for the case in which l<<d, the phase offset ε can be ignored, and Eqs. 5 and 6 may be simplified to Eqs. 1 and 2, respectively. Using the gains for the amplifiers 140 and 142 as described in Eqs. 5 and 6, the P(θ0) antenna gain may be described as follows:
A particular advantage of phased array antenna 510 of
Referring to
The controller 168 may then determine (block 612) the ε and θk values using Eqs. 7 and 3, respectively. Based on the Ak, θk and ε values, the controller 168 may then determine (block 616) amplifier weights for the amplifiers 140 and 142 (pursuant to Eqs. 5 and 6) and set the gains of the amplifiers 140 and 142, pursuant to block 620. In accordance with example implementations, determining the amplifier gains may involve the controller 168 looking up calibrated gains from a table and/or applying calibration correction factors. Lastly, after setting the amplifier gains, the controller 168 may acknowledge to the MAC layer 186 that the phase array antenna 510 has been configured, pursuant to block 624.
While the present disclosure has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, those skilled in the art, having the benefit of this disclosure, will appreciate numerous modifications and variations therefrom. It is intended that the appended claims cover all such modifications and variations.