The present invention relates generally to radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic signal broadcast antennas. More particularly, the present invention relates to traveling-wave linear array transmitting antennas.
There has recently been an industry focus on digital streaming of content to mobile, portable, and handheld receivers through terrestrial broadcast systems. This type of broadcasting is being developed for implementation in licensed UHF frequency bands such as 0.7 GHz to 1.0 GHz (upper L-Band: TV channels 52 and above; mobile radio) and 1 GHz to 2 GHz (lower S-band).
At L-Band frequencies, the preferred method of transmission is vertical polarization. There are at present two styles of vertically polarized antennas that are readily available for commercial use in transmission at these microwave frequencies, namely panel and whip antennas. Panel antennas are intrinsically directional in nature and are typically used to cover sectors of space. Whip antennas are nominally omnidirectional and are used preferentially in applications requiring substantially equal radiation in all azimuths.
The shortcomings of a vertically polarized collinear dipole antenna include limited capacity to realize beam tilt. Increased input loading with additional dipoles constrains input transformer performance for both power and bandwidth. Structural support is provided largely by the radome.
The shortcomings of panel antennas include requirements to provide extensive systems of power dividers and feed lines where multiple panels must transmit carefully phased inputs, a panel or an array of panels pointing in each direction (typically four quadrants for omnidirectional capability, with overall antenna gain dependent on array size), use of a tower with multiple discrete units mounted thereon, and accommodation of wind loading from multiple units.
The vertically polarized traveling wave antenna apparatus, means, and design methods disclosed in the '644 application permit production of an omnidirectional antenna that permits simplicity in its mechanical construction, minimal design adaptation to vary beam tilt and null fill, matched input impedance substantially independent of the number of elements, excellent azimuth pattern circularity, and moderate power capability.
Some omnidirectional antennas are useful in many but not all applications. For example, in an open environment in a city, need for mobile broadcast service may surround a transmitter site, so that an omnidirectional antenna is appropriate. However, in other environments, such as along highways, it may be preferable to supply service only or primarily in line with the roadway, which can allow narrower focus of the same energy, permitting fewer or less power-consuming devices to achieve a level of coverage.
The known antennas for providing such patterns are largely limited to the above-referenced panel radiators and arrays thereof. Such panels are effectively unidirectional, with a single beam having breadth that depends on the intrinsic gain of the individual panel, increasingly narrow as the number of cofiring panels in an array increases. If a single site is intended for placement midway along a substantially straight section of road, for example, it is necessary to place two panels (or stacks of panels) back-to-back to provide a so-called “peanut” propagation pattern. This produces deep nulls to the sides, which are potentially unacceptable for mobile coverage, and may necessitate adding one or more auxiliary panels oriented in the short-range directions.
As the desired gain/range/beam narrowness of the transmitter site increases, and thus the number of panels, complexity increases. Each panel must be fed, so the original signal must be split using power dividers and feed lines. Each added connection has the potential to reduce system reliability. Feed for auxiliary panels must be provided at power levels suited to the desired azimuth pattern.
Panel antennas may also be more configurationally complex than traveling wave dipoles in some embodiments. Thus, there are significant limitations in some antenna types when considered for the power, economy, and coverage of broadcasting applications to which the invention is directed.
The foregoing disadvantages are overcome, to a great extent, by the invention, wherein in one aspect a vertically polarized traveling wave antenna is provided that in some embodiments of the invention affords simplicity in mechanical construction, reduced need for design modification to vary beam tilt and null fill, matched input impedance substantially independent of the number of elements, and moderate power capability, while providing a desirable azimuth pattern for selected non-omnidirectional applications.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, an antenna system for radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic signals over a frequency range is presented. The antenna includes a substantially vertical and linear coaxial transmission line having an outer conductor and an inner conductor with a common longitudinal axis. The transmission line originates at an origination node and ends at a terminal node. A plurality of vertically polarized dipoles that form a first bay occupy a first longitudinal position, proximal to the origination node. The first bay dipoles include elements coupled to the inner conductor at a plurality of azimuthal and longitudinal positions, jointly providing impedance cancellation at least in part. A combination of azimuthal position and relative longitudinal position of the first bay dipoles realizes substantially a non-omnidirectional pattern of RF signal strength and gain.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, a vertically polarized traveling wave antenna system for radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic signals over a frequency range is presented. The antenna includes a rotating-phase RF signal emitter that exhibits an azimuthal propagation pattern having two substantially equal principal lobes on opposite sides of a longitudinal axis of the emitter and two smaller intermediate lobes therebetween.
The antenna further includes a coaxial transmission line from an origination node to a terminal node. The coaxial transmission line has a substantially vertically-oriented longitudinal axis, and further has a first RF signal coupler that couples an applied signal in part radially away from the coaxial transmission line. The first RF signal coupler is located at a prescribed distance from the origination node. The coaxial transmission line further has a second RF signal coupler that couples the applied signal in part radially away from the coaxial transmission line. The second RF signal coupler is located at substantially the same prescribed distance from the origination node as the first RF signal coupler. The first RF signal coupler lies in a first half-plane bounded by the longitudinal axis of the coaxial transmission line. The second RF signal coupler lies in a second half-plane bounded by the longitudinal axis of the coaxial transmission line. The first and second half-planes are substantially coplanar and noncoincident.
The antenna further includes a first dipole for radiating RF signal energy coupled from the coaxial transmission line with a first axis of vertical polarization, and a second dipole for radiating the RF signal energy coupled from the coaxial transmission line with a second axis of vertical polarization parallel to and inverted with respect to the first polarization axis. The first and second dipoles lie in the half-planes of the respective first and second RF signal couplers.
The antenna further includes a third RF signal coupler for coupling the RF signal in part radially away from the coaxial transmission line. The third RF signal coupler is located at a distance from the origination node equal to the distance of the first RF signal coupler, plus an additional increment sufficient to provide impedance cancellation at least in part, plus yet another increment sufficient to provide added phase shift to a prescribed extent. The third RF signal coupler lies in a third half-plane bounded by the longitudinal axis of the coaxial transmission line and perpendicular to the half-planes of the first and second RF signal couplers. The antenna further includes a fourth RF signal coupler for coupling the RF signal in part radially away from the coaxial transmission line. The fourth RF signal coupler is located at substantially the same distance from the origination node as the third RF signal coupler. The fourth RF signal coupler lies in a fourth half-plane bounded by the longitudinal axis of the coaxial transmission line. The third and fourth half-planes are substantially coplanar and noncoincident.
The antenna further includes a third dipole for radiating RF signal energy coupled from the coaxial transmission line with a third axis of vertical polarization, wherein the third axis is parallel to one of the first axis and the second axis, and fourth dipole for radiating RF signal energy coupled from the coaxial transmission line with a fourth axis of vertical polarization, parallel to and inverted with respect to the third polarization axis, wherein the prescribed extent of RF signal phase shift is sufficient to attenuate the RF signal from the third and fourth dipoles to a prescribed extent relative to the RF signal from the first and second dipoles, and wherein the third and fourth dipoles lie in the half-planes of the respective third and fourth RF signal couplers.
In accordance with still another embodiment of the invention, a method for coupling electromagnetic energy with vertical polarization from a transmitting apparatus to a region of space above generalized terrain is presented. The method includes propagating an RF signal from an origination node to a terminal node, with reference to a longitudinal axis of propagation, and capacitively coupling portions of the RF signal radially away from the longitudinal axis in substantially equal parts at a first point, a second point, a third point, and a fourth point within a first bay. The respective capacitive couplings are substantially radially distributed and are located at a plurality of prescribed distances from the origination node. The respective radial capacitive couplings occur within a first, a second, a third, and a fourth half-plane bounded by the longitudinal axis of propagation.
The method further includes positioning paired first and second coupling points and paired third and fourth coupling points with near-quarter-wave spacing between the pairs, wherein the spacing provides impedance canceling at least in part, radiating RF signal energy as coupled from the longitudinal axis at the first, second, third, and fourth coupling points using respective first, second, third, and fourth dipoles. The respective dipoles are individually oriented to emit at near-90-degree phase intervals, and provide phase rotation with respect to the longitudinal axis. The respective dipole orientations establish, by an extent of deviation of dipole spacing from paired quarter-wave longitudinal spacing and 90 degree azimuthal spacing, an azimuth lobe pattern including a first primary lobe and a second primary lobe, opposite one another in both azimuth and phase. The first and second primary lobe signals propagate away from the longitudinal axis with roughly equal magnitude. The respective dipole orientation deviations further establish first and second secondary lobes having intermediate phase and having respective peak magnitudes lower than the primary lobes. The respective dipole orientation deviations further establish a first null and a second null having respective minima that provide a prescribed degree of interlobe fill at all azimuths with reference to the primary lobe maxima.
There have thus been outlined, rather broadly, the more important features of the invention in order that the detailed description thereof that follows may be better understood, and in order that the present contribution to the art may be better appreciated. There are, of course, additional features of the invention that will be described below and which will form the subject matter of the claims appended hereto.
In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and to the arrangements of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments, and of being practiced and carried out in various ways. It is also to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein, as well as the abstract, are for the purpose of description, and should not be regarded as limiting.
As such, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conception upon which this disclosure is based may readily be utilized as a basis for the designing of other structures, methods, and systems for carrying out the several purposes of the present invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
The invention will now be described with reference to the drawing figures, in which like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout. The invention provides an apparatus and method that in some embodiments provides an antenna that supports a substantially single-axis, null-free, vertically-polarized propagation pattern with high gain and moderate power handling capability.
Vertical spacing of bays 14 as shown in
For convenience, the orientation axis 24 next to the antenna 10 in
Far-field signals from phase rotation-type antennas such as those of the '644 application are represented in the signal strength chart 34 of
Signals from phase rotation-type antennas are substantially indistinguishable those emitted from antennas that emit signals simultaneously from a plurality of elements in each bay. An example of the latter antenna is a panel antenna 36, as represented in
As shown in
The respective distances L in
Analysis and test demonstrate that the dipoles 16, 18, 20, and 22, shown in
It is to be understood that an extent of impedance cancellation can be made substantially complete by a combination of equal coupling of dipoles 16, 18, 20, and 22 in a given bay 14 and quarter-wavelength spacing L between the longitudinally displaced dipole couplings within a given bay 14, as described in the '644 application. Variations from this equal-coupling, quarter-wavelength-spacing configuration tend to narrow antenna bandwidth and to increase the extent to which transmission line loading by the radiative elements appears as successive lump impedances across the characteristic transmission line impedance of the coax 12. Each such variation may manifest as resistance plus capacitive or inductive reactance, in series and/or parallel, with the spacing and coupling variation correlated to an extent of phase alteration. The plurality of possible variations, along with differences in the rate of change of emission pattern and line loading with dimension variation, permit an antenna according to the '644 application to be adapted according to the invention disclosed herein to provide non-omnidirectional propagation over a broad range of patterns. Techniques used may include longitudinal and radial shifting of the locations of corresponding dipoles in each bay 14 and adjusting coupling, as disclosed herein.
The component dimensions of the dielectric pads 92 may be substantially uniform in some embodiments. In those embodiments, if the coupling capacitances are roughly equal for all dipoles, the remaining signal level in the center coaxial conductor decreases by logarithmic steps with successive bays, and, as a consequence, successive dipoles tend to couple decreasing amounts of power from the center coax. While desirable in many embodiments, and well known in the art for traveling wave antennas, this can be changed by adjusting coupling in successive bays (thickness of the pads 92) according to a chosen sequence. For example, thickness can be decreased as a function of position (such as the logarithm) in successive bays to yield substantially uniform emission from each bay. Alternatively, in order to increase bay power at the center of the aperture, for example, pad 92 thickness can decrease faster than the above function calls for from bottom to middle of the antenna 10, with uniform pad 92 thickness applied from middle to top. Any comparable strategy, including uniform pad 92 dimensions and log taper of power per bay, may provide a desirable combination of producibility and performance in some embodiments.
Termination of the antenna can be realized with a terminal short-circuit spaced a quarter-wavelength from the bay distal to the feed port; in some embodiments this can cause the termination to reflect as an open. In keeping with this, the dipoles of the distal bay may have thinner pads 92 to increase capacitive coupling and minimize the signal remaining to reach the terminal short-circuit. Various other termination strategies are known in the art for traveling wave antennas; in many embodiments, it is possible to provide at least a substantially nonreactive termination, with a minimally dissipative termination preferred in order to maximize radiated power and minimize losses and reflections.
As noted above, the separation dimension 102 (D) in
As employed in the invention disclosed herein, the one-third wavelength separation dimension 102 (D), i.e., 120 degrees rather than 90 degrees, affects impedance cancellation somewhat and strongly affects lobe balance and lobe skew. Because impedance cancellation changes only slowly with separation 102, while lobe balance and lobe skew vary relatively rapidly, varying separation 102 to affect lobe balance and lobe skew is a useful mechanism for producing antennas that vary widely in lobe shape, orientation, balance, and skew. As a corollary, it may be seen that the dimension 102 (D) is relatively critical in establishing a particular lobe shape, orientation, balance, and skew in at least some embodiments, although it can be obviated or combined with alternative methods of realization in other embodiments. This is shown further in the figures discussed below.
Substantial beam tilt can be established by adjusting the spacing between bays, with a bottom-feed antenna requiring decrease in spacing to depress the main beam below the horizon, and with the opposite case remaining valid—that is, the beam of a bottom-fed antenna can be directed upward by increasing interbay spacing, while a top-fed antenna requires increased interbay spacing for downward direction of the beam, and decreased interbay spacing to direct the beam upward. Null fill can be realized by providing interbay spacing that changes from bay to bay, with the variation determining the extent of null fill over a significant range.
It is to be understood that the software model and prototype test results of
Similarly, rotation of physical azimuth angle, as in
Likewise, longitudinal placement of dipoles with respect to the antenna feed port may be nonsymmetrical in some embodiments. As long as the four dipoles at each bay approximate the equal loading achieved with separation by one-quarter wavelength, impedance cancellation is preserved to at least some extent. Thus, each two dipoles may be above and below a nominal tap point, with a predictably asymmetrical propagation pattern, but without unacceptable degradation of loading.
Although elements in successive bays are suggested by the figures to have uniform spacing in successive bays, so that the beams produced have gain over azimuth that is a function of the number of bays, it is also possible to adjust the element arrangement and thus the beam shape of each bay independently of the other bays, so that the overall antenna nulls and secondary lobes are tailored to a desired profile. Such variations will generally widen the beam and reduce the effective gain by increasing signal cancellation, but may be used in lieu of omnidirectional radiators at freeway interchanges, for example. Development of individual antennas with tailored beam shape will in typical embodiments require recourse to antenna design software prior to fabrication of hardware, and validation by test afterward. Since this potentially adds to development, fabrication apparatus programming, touch labor, and testing costs, it is foreseeable that standard designs such as those of
The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the detailed specification, and, thus, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features and advantages of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation illustrated and described, and, accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to that fall within the scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. nonprovisional patent application Ser. No. 11/499,644 (“the '644 application”), titled, “Vertically Polarized Traveling Wave Antenna System and Method”, filed Sep. 29, 2006, now U.S. Pat No. 7,327,325 which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2338564 | Aram | Jan 1944 | A |
2691102 | Masters | Oct 1954 | A |
2947988 | Masters | Aug 1960 | A |
3665479 | Silliman | May 1972 | A |
4518969 | Bogner | May 1985 | A |
5506591 | Dienes | Apr 1996 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080079647 A1 | Apr 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11499644 | Sep 2006 | US |
Child | 11826102 | US |