Information
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Patent Grant
-
6201506
-
Patent Number
6,201,506
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Date Filed
Tuesday, December 14, 199925 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, March 13, 200124 years ago
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Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
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CPC
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US Classifications
Field of Search
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International Classifications
-
Abstract
A vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus comprises a defogger for defogging a vehicle window, which is constituted of strip conductor at least including a plurality of horizontal wires and a pair of bus bars, the bus bars being arranged on a window glass surface and each opposed to a metal section of a window frame with a bus-bar gap therebetween, a unit for separating the power source line and the defogger from each other in a high-frequency manner, vertical wires crossing the horizontal wires to form the defogger in a mesh pattern having meshes, a length of a longer side of each of the meshes being smaller than a wavelength of received wave, and a driven antenna having a height and provided close and opposite to the defogger with a clearance therebetween in such a manner that one side of the driven antenna is mutually coupled to one side of the defogger, the bus-bar gap being set to 50 mm to 70 mm, the clearance being set to 5 mm to 15 mm, the height of the driven antenna being set to 100 mm to 250 mm, the number of vertical wires being one or more, and the power source line and the bus bars constitute an open circuit therebetween.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus which is mounted on a window of a vehicle such as an automobile.
There is an automobile windowpane antenna apparatus as the most typical one of prior art vehicle windowpane antenna apparatuses. This type of antenna apparatus includes a thin, narrow, strip conductor mounted on a window (usually a rear window) of an automobile, which is employed as an antenna.
In recent automobiles, a defogger is provided almost all over the rear window to serve as a heater for defogging the window. The antenna therefore has to be mounted in a limited space between the defogger and the window frame.
The above prior art automobile windowpane antenna apparatus has the problem that its reception sensitivity cannot be obtained sufficiently in the AM or FM band since a space for mounting the antenna is limited. The apparatus also has the problem that an adjustment for the shape and arrangement of the antenna makes tuning for optimizing the reception performance difficult and a long period of time is required for performing the tuning operation.
In order to resolve the above problems, the present inventors have developed the following vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus and filed it as Japanese Patent Application No. 10-282870 (its corresponding U.S. and EPC applications have been filed). The antenna apparatus comprises a defogger mounted on a vehicle window, for defogging the window, a means for causing the defogger to serve as a slot antenna, and a driven antenna arranged close and opposite to the defogger with a given gap therebetween in such a manner that one side of the driven antenna is mutually coupled to one side of the defogger.
The foregoing vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus has the advantages that its reception sensitivity is high across a wide band and its tuning operation is easy to perform. However, it has the following problem to be solved. When the antenna apparatus is mounted on a rear window of an automobile, it is unclear how to set the dimensions of respective antenna sections and how to arrange these sections in order to obtain the optimum antenna characteristics. It is thus likely that a required antenna characteristic will not be obtained reliably according to the circumstances.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, the object of the present invention is to provide a vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus which has the advantages that its reception sensitivity is high across a wide band and its tuning operation is easy and which is capable of being mounted appropriately on a rear window of an automobile to constantly obtain a required antenna characteristic.
To attain the above object, a vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the present invention has the following features in constitution. The other features will be clarified later in the Description of the Invention.
A vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus comprising:
a defogger for defogging a vehicle window, which is constituted of a thin, narrow strip conductor and includes a plurality of horizontal wires arranged at least in parallel with each other and a pair of bus bars each connected in common to ends of the horizontal wires, the bus bars being arranged on a window glass surface of the vehicle window and each opposed to a metal section of a window frame of the vehicle window with a bus-bar gap therebetween;
a power source line for applying a power to the defogger;
means for separating the power source line and the defogger from each other in a high-frequency manner;
vertical wires crossing the horizontal wires to form the defogger in a mesh pattern having meshes, a length of a longer side of each of the meshes being smaller than a wavelength of received wave; and
a driven antenna having a height and provided close and opposite to the defogger with a clearance therebetween in such a manner that one side of the driven antenna is mutually coupled to one side of the defogger,
the bus-bar gap being set to 50 mm to 70 mm, the clearance being set to 5 mm to 15 mm, the height of the driven antenna being set to 100 mm to 250 mm, the number of vertical wires being one or more, and the power source line and the bus bars constitute an open circuit therebetween.
Additional objects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description which follows, and in part will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and obtained by means of the instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out hereinafter.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate presently preferred embodiments of the invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the preferred embodiments given below, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
FIG. 1
is a view of the constitution of a vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2
is a schematic plan view showing both the dimensions of an antenna of the antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention and the arrangement of the antenna on a rear window;
FIG. 3
is a diagram of characteristics of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention, showing a horizontal surface radiation pattern using a bus-bar gap BG as parameters;
FIG. 4
is a diagram of characteristics of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention, showing a horizontal surface radiation pattern using a mode of a connection circuit as parameters;
FIG. 5
is a diagram of characteristics of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention, showing a horizontal surface radiation pattern using the number W of vertical wires as parameters;
FIG. 6
is a diagram of characteristics of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention, showing a contrast between a horizontal surface radiation pattern using two vertical wires and that using three vertical wires;
FIG. 7
is a diagram of characteristics of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention, showing a horizontal surface radiation pattern using a clearance CG as parameters; and
FIG. 8
is a diagram of characteristics of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention, showing a horizontal surface radiation pattern using the height H of a driven antenna as parameters.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Embodiment
FIG. 1
illustrates the constitution of a vehicle (automobile) windowpane antenna apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention. As shown in
FIG. 1
, a defogger
10
is formed almost all over a window glass surface
110
of a rear window
100
of a vehicle (e.g., an automobile) to serve as a heater for defogging the window.
The defogger
10
includes a plurality of horizontal wires
10
a
arranged in parallel with each other as a basic pattern, and several (three in this embodiment) vertical wires
10
b
which cross the horizontal wires. The horizontal and vertical wires
10
a
and
10
b
are each constituted of a very thin, narrow, strip conductor. The right and left ends of the defogger
10
are constituted of their respective bus bars
10
d
and
10
c
of strip conductors each of which is slightly wider than each of the wires, and they are connected in common to the horizontal wires.
The defogger
10
therefore has a mesh pattern including a number of meshes (openings) as shown in FIG.
1
. The mesh pattern is so formed that the length Lx of a longer side of each mesh is set considerably smaller than the wavelength (1 m or more) of a VHF band, e.g., ½ or ⅓ to {fraction (1/20)} the wavelength. The defogger
10
can thus be considered to be equivalently a single metal thin plate for a received radio wave.
A DC power is applied to the defogger
10
as a heat source from a car-mounted battery
11
through a noise filter
12
(which is constituted of a choke coil and a capacitor as shown) for eliminating high-frequency noise (in the AM band), a DC power source line
13
, and a pair of FM choke coils
14
A and
14
B having a given inductance.
The FM choke coils
14
A and
14
B separate the DC power source line
13
from both ends of the defogger
10
to render these ends in a high-frequency open state (an open-circuit state).
A non-loop driven antenna
20
, which is opened by cutting part (upper central part in
FIG. 1
) of a rectangular loop, is provided in a region above the defogger
10
or a rectangular region above the window glass surface
110
between the uppermost wire
10
U of the defogger
10
and the upper edge portion
120
U of a window frame
120
. In
FIG. 1
, reference numeral
20
a
indicates a bottom portion of the antenna
20
, and numerals
20
b
and
20
c
denote both open end portions thereof. Like the above defogger
10
, the driven antenna
20
is constituted of a very thin, narrow, strip conductor.
The driven antenna
20
is formed very close to the defogger
10
. More specifically, the antenna
20
and defogger
10
are opposed to each other with a small clearance CG therebetween in such a manner that one side of the antenna
20
(the bottom portion
20
a
) is mutually coupled to one side of the defogger
10
(the uppermost one
10
U of the horizontal wires
10
a
) (coupling index K is approximately 1). In
FIG. 1
, MC represents a mutually coupling section between the defogger
10
and driven antenna
20
.
A feeding section
21
is set in position P, which is slightly shifted to the right from the middle of the bottom portion
20
a
of the driven antenna
20
. The feeding section
21
is connected to a receiver set (not shown) through a feeding cable (not shown).
In the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus so constituted, the entire rear window
100
serves as a slot antenna opening area surrounded with a metal section of the window frame
120
which is considered to be an ideal ground (ground plane). In the AM or FM bands, therefore, the periphery of the defogger
10
functions as a slot antenna SA. The coupling capacitance CM of a mutual coupling section MC of the defogger
10
and driven antenna
20
arranged close to each other, is set equal to or larger than 20 PF (CM≧20 PF). The driven antenna
20
is thus coupled to the slot antenna SA by relatively great force, with the result that their interaction decreases a radiation impedance of the driven antenna
20
or an output impedance. Consequently, the frequency characteristics are flattened within a receiving band and the band is broadened.
Since the feeding section
21
of the driven antenna
20
is located in the position P slightly shifted from the middle of the antenna
20
, impedance matching between them is easy to perform.
Since, in the above embodiment, the impedance matching can be performed satisfactorily, most power received by the slot antenna SA is supplied to the receiver set (not shown) such as a radio through the feeding cable (not shown). It is thus thought that the antenna gain of the present antenna apparatus is almost proportional to the area of the whole rear window
100
.
As described above, the antenna apparatus of the above embodiment is excellent in that its reception sensitivity (which is proportionate to the antenna gain) almost corresponds to the effective area of the antenna. Since, moreover, the output impedance of the antenna can be lowered and the value Q of the antenna can be decreased, the frequency characteristic is made constant and the frequency band is broadened. For this reason, the tuning operation (adjustment and modification) of the antenna becomes very easy to perform.
FIG. 2
is a plan view schematically showing both the dimensions of an antenna of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus shown in FIG.
1
and the arrangement of the antenna on the rear window
100
. This view is obtained by electromagnetically analyzing a lattice model of the rear window
100
by antenna simulation using an NEC (Numerical Electromagnetic Code) based on an antenna analysis program employing a method of moment as a computational algorithm.
In
FIG. 2
, BG represents a gap between each of bus bars
10
c
and
10
d
, which are provided at both ends of the defogger
10
, and a metal section
120
M of the window frame
120
. W indicates the number of vertical wires
10
b
. The vertical wires
10
b
constitute the defogger
10
in a mesh pattern such that the defogger
10
can be considered to be equivalently a single metal thin plate for a received radio wave. Moreover, the vertical wires
10
b
are arranged at regular intervals so as to cross the horizontal wires
10
a
. CG represents a gap between one side of the defogger
10
(the uppermost one
10
U of the horizontal wires
10
a
) and one side of the driven antenna
20
(the bottom portion
20
a
). H denotes the height of the antenna
20
, i.e., the distance between the bottom portion
20
a
and each of the end portions
20
b
and
20
c.
In
FIG. 2
, reference numerals
131
and
132
each show a connection circuit for connecting the bus bars
10
c
and
10
d
and the DC power source line
13
.
An appropriate mode of each of the respective sections and circuits will be described below.
FIGS. 3
to
8
are diagrams showing characteristics (horizontal surface radiation patterns) of the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the embodiment of the present invention. The characteristics are obtained on the basis of antenna simulation by the NEC (Numerical Electromagnetic Code).
It is apparent from
FIG. 3
that a good radiation pattern can be obtained if the bus-bar gap BG is set to 50 mm or 70 mm. The gap BG can thus be set to about 50 mm.
It is seen from
FIG. 4
that it makes no great difference in radiation pattern whether the connection circuits
131
and
132
are each an open circuit OC or a short circuit SC. Since, however, the short circuit SC causes so-called null points N
1
and N
2
in the radiation pattern, the open circuit OC is said to be favorable.
If, as shown in
FIG. 5
, the number W of vertical wires is larger than 0, e.g., one or two, a radiation pattern becomes good.
Furthermore, it is seen from
FIG. 6
that it makes no difference whether two vertical wires
10
b
are arranged or three vertical wires
10
b
are arranged at almost regular intervals. It is thus understood from
FIGS. 5 and 6
that the number W of vertical wires
10
b
has only to be set to one or more.
As is apparent from
FIG. 7
, a good radiation pattern is obtained when a clearance CG between the defogger
10
and driven antenna
20
is set to 5 mm rather than 50 mm. In other words, it is desirable that the clearance CG be as small as possible. Actually, however, it can be said to fall within a range from 5 mm to 15 mm in view of manufacturing technology.
As is seen from
FIG. 8
, a good radiation pattern is obtained when the height H of the driven antenna
20
is set to 200 mm rather than 50 mm. It is thus desirable that the height H be as great as possible. Favorably, however, the height H should be set to 100 mm to 250 mm because the driven antenna
20
has to be provided in a limited, small area in the rear window
100
.
Features of the Embodiment
[1] A vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the above embodiment comprises:
a defogger (
10
) for defogging a vehicle window (
100
), which is constituted of a thin, narrow strip conductor at least including a plurality of horizontal wires (
10
a
) arranged in parallel with each other and a pair of bus bars (
10
c
,
10
d
) each connected in common to ends of the horizontal wires (
10
a
), the bus bars (
10
c
,
10
d
) being arranged on a window glass surface (
110
) of the vehicle window (
100
) and each opposed to a metal section (
120
M) of a window frame (
120
) of the vehicle window (
100
) with a bus-bar gap (BG) therebetween;
a power source line (
13
) for applying a power to the defogger (
10
);
means (
14
A,
14
B) for separating the power source line (
13
) and the defogger (
10
) from each other in a high-frequency manner;
vertical wires (
10
b
) crossing the horizontal wires (
10
a
) to form the defogger (
10
) in a mesh pattern having meshes, a length (Lx) of a longer side of each of the meshes being smaller than a wavelength of received wave; and
a driven antenna (
20
) having a height (H) and provided close and opposite to the defogger (
10
) with a clearance (CG) therebetween in such a manner that one side (
20
a
) of the driven antenna (
20
) is mutually coupled (MC) to one side (
10
U) of the defogger (
10
),
the bus-bar gap (BG) being set to 50 mm to 70 mm, the clearance (CG) being set to 5 mm to 15 mm, the height (H) of the driven antenna (
20
) being set to 100 mm to 250 mm, the number of vertical wires (
10
b
) being one or more, and the power source line (
13
) and the bus bars (
10
c
,
10
d
) constitute an open circuit (OC) therebetween.
In the foregoing vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus, since the periphery of the defogger (
10
) functions as a slot antenna (SA), and the driven antenna (
20
) and defogger (
10
) are mutually coupled to each other, the antenna sensitivity is increased in the FM band, and the frequency band can be broadened within a reception band. A tuning operation of the antenna apparatus is therefore very easy to perform. Even in the AM band, the reception performance (sensitivity) is considerably higher than that of the prior art antenna apparatus. Since, in particular, the dimensions of the antenna and the position thereof on the window glass surface (
110
) are determined optimally, the antenna apparatus can exactly be mounted on the rear window (
100
) of an automobile so as to achieve a required antenna characteristic constantly and stably.
[2] In the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the above item [1], the driven antenna (
20
) is constituted of a thin, narrow strip conductor.
[3] In the vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to the above item [1], the vehicle window is a rear window (
100
) of an automobile.
Modification
The present invention is not limited to the above embodiment. In the foregoing embodiment, the present invention is directed to an antenna apparatus for receiving radio waves in the AM or FM bands. However, it can be applied to an antenna apparatus for receiving TV waves in the VHF band.
Additional advantages and modifications will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details and representative embodiments shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents.
Claims
- 1. A vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus comprising:a defogger for defogging a vehicle window, which is constituted of a thin, narrow strip conductor at least including a plurality of horizontal wires arranged in parallel with each other and a pair of bus bars each connected in common to ends of the horizontal wires, the bus bars being arranged on a window glass surface of the vehicle window and each opposed to a metal section of a window frame of the vehicle window with a bus-bar gap therebetween; a power source line for applying a power to the defogger; means for separating the power source line and the defogger from each other in a high-frequency manner; vertical wires crossing the horizontal wires to form the defogger in a mesh pattern having meshes, a length of a longer side of each of the meshes being smaller than a wavelength of received wave; and a driven antenna having a height and provided close and opposite to the defogger with a clearance therebetween in such a manner that one side of the driven antenna is mutually coupled to one side of the defogger, the bus-bar gap being set to 50 mm to 70 mm, the clearance being set to 5 mm to 15 mm, the height of the driven antenna being set to 100 mm to 250 mm, the number of vertical wires being one or more, and the power source line and the bus bars constitute an open circuit therebetween.
- 2. A vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the driven antenna is constituted of a thin, narrow strip conductor.
- 3. A vehicle windowpane antenna apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the vehicle window is a rear window of an automobile.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
10-354696 |
Dec 1998 |
JP |
|
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