The disclosed embodiments of the present invention relate to wireless communication, and more particularly, to a wireless communication device capable of adjusting at least one antenna to improve efficiency of other coexisting antenna(s) and a related wireless communication method.
An antenna is an electrical component that is needed to transmit and receive electromagnetic energy from the space surrounding it in order to establish a wireless connection between two or more electronic devices, such as mobile phone(s), tablet(s), wearable device(s), base station(s) and/or wireless local area network (WLAN) device(s). It is possible that a single device may be configured to support a variety of communication standards. Hence, multiple antennas and multiple communication systems may coexist in the same electronic device. However, multi-antenna coexistence may degrade efficiency of each antenna, especially for the low-frequency band. Hence, there is a need for an innovative design which can avoid/mitigate unnecessary antenna performance degradation.
In accordance with exemplary embodiments of the present invention, a wireless communication device capable of adjusting at least one antenna to improve efficiency of other coexisting antenna(s) and a related wireless communication method are proposed.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, an exemplary wireless communication device is disclosed. The exemplary wireless communication device is used for performing wireless communication via at least one of a plurality of antennas. The antennas include a first antenna and a second antenna. The first antenna includes at least one first controllable component. The exemplary wireless communication device includes at least one communication system and a control circuit. The at least one communication system is used to perform the wireless communication via at least one of the plurality of antennas. The control circuit is arranged to set the at least one first controllable component according to a first setting when the first antenna and the second antenna are active, and set the at least one first controllable component according to a second setting when the first antenna is inactive and the second antenna is active, wherein the second setting is different from the first setting.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, an exemplary wireless communication method is disclosed. The exemplary wireless communication method is used for performing wireless communication via at least one of a plurality of antennas. The antennas include a first antenna and a second antenna. The first antenna includes at least one first controllable component. The exemplary wireless communication method includes: configuring at least one communication system to perform the wireless communication via at least one of the plurality of antennas; when the first antenna and the second antenna are active, setting the at least one first controllable component according to a first setting; and when the first antenna is inactive and the second antenna is active, setting the at least one first controllable component according to a second setting different from the first setting.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
Certain terms are used throughout the description and following claims to refer to particular components. As one skilled in the art will appreciate, manufacturers may refer to a component by different names. This document does not intend to distinguish between components that differ in name but not function. In the following description and in the claims, the terms “include” and “comprise” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “include, but not limited to . . . ”. Also, the term “couple” is intended to mean either an indirect or direct electrical connection. Accordingly, if one device is coupled to another device, that connection may be through a direct electrical connection, or through an indirect electrical connection via other devices and connections.
In this embodiment, the communication systems 104 and 106 may have RF circuits 114 and 116 for outputting RF signals in the TX mode and receiving RF signals in the RX mode. Hence, the RF circuit 114 may be coupled to the antenna 108 for RF signal transmission and reception, and the RF circuit 116 may be coupled to the antenna 110 for RF signal transmission and reception. In this embodiment, the antenna 108 may have at least one controllable component 118 controlled by the control circuit 112. When the antennas 108 and 110 may be active (e.g. communication systems 104 and 106 may be active), the control circuit 112 may set the at least one controllable component 118 according to a first setting S1. When the antenna 108 may be inactive (e.g., communication system 104 may be inactive) and the antenna 110 may be active (e.g., communication system 106 may be active), the control circuit 112 may set the at least one controllable component 118 according to a second setting S2 different from the first setting S1.
For example, the at least one controllable component 118 may include at least one of a diode, a switch, a tunable capacitor and an impedance matching module (which may be, for example, composed of a switch and a tunable capacitor). In a first case where the at least one controllable component 118 may include a diode, the diode may be controlled by the first setting S1 to be conductive, and may be controlled by the second setting S2 to be non-conductive. In a second case where the at least one controllable component 118 may include a switch, the switch may be controlled by the first setting S1 to be switched on (or switched to one input/output node), and may be controlled by the second setting S2 to be switched off (or switched to another input/output node). In a third case where the at least one controllable component 118 may include a tunable capacitor, the tunable capacitor may be controlled by the first setting S1 to have a first capacitance value, and may be controlled by the second setting S2 to have a second capacitance value different from the first capacitance value. In a fourth case where the at least one controllable component 118 may include an impedance matching module, the impedance matching module may be controlled by the first setting S1 to have a first impedance value, and may be controlled by the second setting S2 to have a second impedance value different from the first impedance value. However, these are for illustrative purposes only, and are not meant to be limitations of the present invention.
As mentioned above, multi-antenna coexistence may degrade efficiency of each antenna.
In this embodiment, the second setting S2 may be set by the control circuit 112 to intentionally degrade the impedance matching of the antenna 108, thereby enforcing the antenna 108 to have poorer antenna efficiency. In this way, the isolation between the antennas 108 and 110 may be improved, thus making the antenna 110 have better antenna efficiency. By way of example, but not limitation, the antenna efficiency may be radiation efficiency which is defined as the ratio of the total power radiated by an antenna to the net power received by the antenna from the connected transmitter.
To put it another way, efficiency of the antenna 108 with the at least one controllable component 118 set according to the second setting S2 may be lower than efficiency of the antenna 108 with the at least one controllable component 118 set according to the first setting S1; isolation between the antennas 108 and 110 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the second setting S2 may be higher than isolation between the antennas 108 and 110 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the first setting S1; and efficiency of the antenna 110 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the second setting S2 may be higher than efficiency of the antenna 110 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the first setting S1.
Please refer to
In a case where the wireless communication device may be a mobile phone, the communication systems implemented in the same wireless communication device may be configured on the basis of the current operation mode of the mobile phone (Step 602). For example, the first antenna ANT1 may be designed to operate in a frequency band ranging from 704 Mhz to 2690 Mhz, and the second antenna ANT2 may be designed to operate in a frequency band ranging from 824 Mhz to 1990 Mhz. Hence, the first antenna ANT1 may be suitable for an LTE data communication, and the second antenna ANT2 may be suitable for a GSM/CDMA2000 (also known as C2K) voice communication. In addition, the first antenna ANT1 may be inactive when the first communication system CS1 is inactive, and the second antenna ANT2 may be inactive when the second communication system CS2 is inactive. When the wireless communication device is configured to operate in an SV-LTE mode, the first communication system CS1 may be active to deal with the LTE data communication via the first antenna ANT1, and the second communication system CS2 may be active to deal with the GSM/CDMA2000 voice communication via the second antenna ANT2. Hence, the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna ANT1 may be set by the first setting to make the first antenna ANT1 have a good impedance matching condition for achieving better antenna efficiency (step 606). When the wireless communication device is configured to operate in a voice communication mode, the first communication system CS1 may be inactive, and the second communication system CS2 may be active to deal with the GSM/CDMA2000 voice communication via the second antenna ANT2. Since the first communication system CS1 may be inactive under the current operation mode of the mobile phone, the first antenna ANT1 may be idle/inactive at this moment. To avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the second antenna ANT2 that is caused by the coexisting first antenna ANT1, the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna ANT1 may be set by the second setting to intentionally make the first antenna ANT1 have a degraded impedance matching condition for achieving poorer antenna efficiency (step 608).
For example, each of the first communication band and the second communication band may be below 1 GHz. Hence, with a proper configuration of the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna, the proposed solution may avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the second antenna in the low-frequency communication band when the first communication system/first antenna may be inactive and the second communication system/second antenna may be active.
For another example, each of the first communication band and the second communication band may be above 1 GHz. Hence, with a proper configuration of the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna, the proposed solution may avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the second antenna in the high-frequency communication band when the first communication system/first antenna may be inactive and the second communication system/second antenna may be active.
As a person skilled in the art can readily understand details of each step shown in
With regard to the embodiment shown in
When the antennas 108 and 708 may be active (e.g., communication systems 104 and 106 may be active), the control circuit 712 may set the at least one controllable component 118 included in the antenna 108 according to the first setting 51, and may set the at least one controllable component 718 included in the antenna 708 according to a third setting S3. When the antenna 108 may be inactive (e.g., communication system 104 may be inactive) and the antenna 708 may be active (e.g., communication system 106 may be active), the control circuit 712 may set the at least one controllable component 118 included in the antenna 108 according to the second setting S2 (S2≠S1), and may set the at least one controllable component 718 included in the antenna 708 according to the third setting S3. When the antenna 108 may be active (e.g., communication system 104 may be active) and the antenna 708 may be inactive (e.g., communication system 106 may be inactive), the control circuit 712 may set the at least one controllable component 118 included in the antenna 108 according to the first setting S1, and may set the at least one controllable component 718 included in the antenna 708 according to a fourth setting S4 different from the third setting S3.
Like the at least one controllable component 118 mentioned above, the at least one controllable component 718 may include, for example, at least one of a diode, a switch, a tunable capacitor and an impedance matching module (which may be, for example, composed of a switch and a tunable capacitor). In a first case where the at least one controllable component 718 may include a diode, the diode may be controlled by the third setting S3 to be conductive, and may be controlled by the fourth setting S4 to be non-conductive. In a second case where the at least one controllable component 718 may include a switch, the switch may be controlled by the third setting S3 to be switched on (or switched to a first input/output node), and may be controlled by the fourth setting S4 to be switched off (or switched to a second input/output node). In a third case where the at least one controllable component 718 may include a tunable capacitor, the tunable capacitor may be controlled by the third setting S3 to have a first capacitance value, and may be controlled by the fourth setting S4 to have a second capacitance value different from the first capacitance value. In a fourth case where the at least one controllable component 718 may include an impedance matching module, the impedance matching module may be controlled by the third setting S3 to have a first impedance value, and may be controlled by the fourth setting S4 to have a second impedance value different from the first impedance value. However, these are for illustrative purposes only, and are not meant to be limitations of the present invention.
As mentioned above, multi-antenna coexistence may degrade efficiency of each antenna. In this embodiment, the first setting S1, the second setting S2, the third setting S3 and the fourth setting S4 may be used for impedance matching adjustment. Hence, the at least one controllable component 118 may be used to adjust the impedance matching of the antenna 108, such that the antenna 108 may have different impedance matching conditions under the first setting S1 and the second setting S2; and the at least one controllable component 718 may be used to adjust the impedance matching of the antenna 708, such that the antenna 708 may have different impedance matching conditions under the third setting S3 and the fourth setting S4.
With the proper control of the impedance matching of the antenna 108, the efficiency degradation of the antenna 708 that is caused by the coexisting antenna 108 can be avoided/mitigated under the condition that the antenna 108 is inactive (e.g., communication system 104 is inactive) and the antenna 708 is active (e.g., communication system 106 is active). In this embodiment, the second setting S2 may be set by the control circuit 712 to intentionally degrade the impedance matching of the antenna 108, thereby enforcing the antenna 108 to have poorer antenna efficiency (e.g., poorer radiation efficiency). In this way, the isolation between the antennas 108 and 708 may be improved, thus making the antenna 708 have better antenna efficiency.
To put it another way, efficiency of the antenna 108 with the at least one controllable component 118 set according to the second setting S2 may be lower than efficiency of the antenna 108 with the at least one controllable component 118 set according to the first setting S1; isolation between the antennas 108 and 708 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the second setting S2 may be higher than isolation between the antennas 108 and 708 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the first setting S1; and efficiency of the antenna 708 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the second setting S2 may be higher than efficiency of the antenna 708 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 118 is set according to the first setting S1.
Similarly, with the proper control of the impedance matching of the antenna 708, the efficiency degradation of the antenna 108 that is caused by the coexisting antenna 708 can be avoided/mitigated under the condition that the communication system 104 is active and the communication system 106 is inactive. In this embodiment, the fourth setting S4 may be set by the control circuit 712 to intentionally degrade the impedance matching of the antenna 708, thereby enforcing the antenna 708 to have poorer antenna efficiency (e.g., poorer radiation efficiency). In this way, the isolation between the antennas 108 and 708 may be improved, thus making the antenna 108 have better antenna efficiency.
To put it another way, efficiency of the antenna 708 with the at least one controllable component 718 set according to the fourth setting S4 may be lower than efficiency of the antenna 708 with the at least one controllable component 718 set according to the third setting S3; isolation between the antennas 108 and 708 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 718 is set according to the fourth setting S4 may be higher than isolation between the antennas 108 and 708 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 718 is set according to the third setting S3; and efficiency of the antenna 108 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 718 is set according to the fourth setting S4 may be higher than efficiency of the antenna 108 under a condition that the at least one controllable component 718 is set according to the third setting S3.
The performance comparison between the wireless communication device 700 with the proposed solution enabled and the wireless communication device 700 with the proposed solution disabled is illustrated in the following table, where the communication system 106 (denoted by CS2) uses the antenna 708 (denoted by ANT2) for RF signal transmission, and the communication system 104 (denoted by CS1) uses the antenna 108 (denoted by ANT1) for RF signal transmission.
In a case where the wireless communication device is a mobile phone, the communication systems implemented in the same wireless communication device may be configured according the current operation mode of the mobile phone (Step 802). For example, the first antenna ANT1 may be designed to operate in a frequency band ranging from 704 Mhz to 2690 Mhz, and the second antenna ANT2 may be designed to operate in a frequency band ranging from 824 Mhz to 1990 Mhz. Hence, the first antenna ANT1 may be suitable for an LTE data communication, and the second antenna ANT2 may be suitable for a GSM/CDMA2000 voice communication. In addition, the first antenna ANT1 may be inactive when the first communication system CS1 is inactive, and the second antenna ANT2 may be inactive when the second communication system CS2 is inactive.
When the wireless communication device is configured to operate in an SV-LTE mode, the first communication system CS1 may be active to deal with the LTE data communication via the first antenna ANT1, and the second communication system CS2 may be active to deal with the GSM/CDMA2000 voice communication via the second antenna ANT2. Hence, the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna ANT1 may be set by the first setting to make the first antenna ANT1 have a good impedance matching condition for achieving better antenna efficiency, and the at least one second controllable component included in the second antenna ANT2 may be set by the third setting to make the second antenna ANT2 have a good impedance matching condition for achieving better antenna efficiency (step 806).
When the wireless communication device is configured to operate in a voice communication mode, the first communication system CS1 may be inactive, and the second communication system CS2 may be active to deal with the GSM/CDMA2000 voice communication via the second antenna ANT2. Since the first communication system CS1 is inactive, the first antenna ANT1 may be idle/inactive at this moment. To avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the second antenna ANT2 that is caused by the coexisting first antenna ANT1, the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna ANT1 may be set by the second setting to intentionally make the first antenna ANT1 have a degraded impedance matching condition for achieving poorer antenna efficiency (step 808).
For example, each of the first communication band and the second communication band may be below 1 GHz. Hence, with a proper configuration of the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna, the proposed solution may avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the second antenna in the low-frequency communication band when the first communication system/first antenna may be inactive and the second communication system/second antenna may be active.
For another example, each of the first communication band and the second communication band may be above 1 GHz. Hence, with a proper configuration of the at least one first controllable component included in the first antenna, the proposed solution may avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the second antenna in the high-frequency communication band when the first communication system/first antenna may be inactive and the second communication system/second antenna may be active.
When the wireless communication device is configured to operate in an LTE data communication mode, the second communication system CS2 may be inactive, and the first communication system CS1 may be active to deal with the LTE data communication via the first antenna ANT1. Since the second communication system CS2 is inactive, the second antenna ANT2 may be idle/inactive at this moment. To avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the first antenna ANT1 that is caused by the coexisting second antenna ANT2, the at least one second controllable component included in the second antenna ANT2 may be set by the fourth setting to intentionally make the second antenna have a degraded impedance matching condition for achieving poorer antenna efficiency (step 810).
For example, each of the first communication band and the second communication band may be below 1 GHz. Hence, with a proper configuration of the at least one second controllable component included in the second antenna, the proposed solution may avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the first antenna in the low-frequency communication band when the first communication system/first antenna may be active and the second communication system/second antenna may be inactive.
For another example, each of the first communication band and the second communication band may be above 1 GHz. Hence, with a proper configuration of the at least one second controllable component included in the second antenna, the proposed solution may avoid/mitigate the performance degradation of the first antenna in the high-frequency communication band when the first communication system/first antenna may be active and the second communication system/second antenna may be inactive.
As a person skilled in the art can readily understand details of each step shown in
The proposed solution can improve the wireless communication performance without adding more production cost and/or printed circuit board (PCB) layout area. The example in
It should be noted that the embodiments shown in
In above embodiments shown in
As a person skilled in the art can readily understand details of the wireless communication devices 900 and 1000 after reading above paragraphs, further description is omitted here for brevity.
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application No. 62/028,947, filed on Jul. 25, 2014 and incorporated herein by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CN2015/085044 | 7/24/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62028947 | Jul 2014 | US |