EP1837950A2 - Raumfüllende runde Flächen mit mehreren Ebenen für Miniatur- und Mehrbandantennen - Google Patents

Raumfüllende runde Flächen mit mehreren Ebenen für Miniatur- und Mehrbandantennen Download PDF

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Publication number
EP1837950A2
EP1837950A2 EP07107431A EP07107431A EP1837950A2 EP 1837950 A2 EP1837950 A2 EP 1837950A2 EP 07107431 A EP07107431 A EP 07107431A EP 07107431 A EP07107431 A EP 07107431A EP 1837950 A2 EP1837950 A2 EP 1837950A2
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
ground
plane
antenna device
antenna
conducting
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP07107431A
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English (en)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP1837950A3 (de
Inventor
Ramiro Quintero Illera
Carles Puente Baliarda
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Fractus SA
Original Assignee
Fractus SA
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Fractus SA filed Critical Fractus SA
Priority claimed from EP01983481A external-priority patent/EP1425820A1/de
Publication of EP1837950A2 publication Critical patent/EP1837950A2/de
Publication of EP1837950A3 publication Critical patent/EP1837950A3/de
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q1/00Details of, or arrangements associated with, antennas
    • H01Q1/36Structural form of radiating elements, e.g. cone, spiral, umbrella; Particular materials used therewith
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q1/00Details of, or arrangements associated with, antennas
    • H01Q1/36Structural form of radiating elements, e.g. cone, spiral, umbrella; Particular materials used therewith
    • H01Q1/38Structural form of radiating elements, e.g. cone, spiral, umbrella; Particular materials used therewith formed by a conductive layer on an insulating support
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q1/00Details of, or arrangements associated with, antennas
    • H01Q1/48Earthing means; Earth screens; Counterpoises
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q5/00Arrangements for simultaneous operation of antennas on two or more different wavebands, e.g. dual-band or multi-band arrangements
    • H01Q5/30Arrangements for providing operation on different wavebands
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q9/00Electrically-short antennas having dimensions not more than twice the operating wavelength and consisting of conductive active radiating elements
    • H01Q9/04Resonant antennas
    • H01Q9/0407Substantially flat resonant element parallel to ground plane, e.g. patch antenna

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to a new family of antenna ground-planes of reduced size and enhanced performance based on an innovative set of geometries.
  • These new geometries are known as multilevel and space-filling structures, which had been previously used in the design of multiband and miniature antennas.
  • a throughout description of such multilevel or space-filling structures can be found in " Multilevel Antennas " (Patent Publication No. WO01/22528 ) and " Space-Filling Miniature Antennas " (Patent Publication No. WO01/54225 ).
  • the current invention relates to the use of such geometries in the ground-plane of miniature and multiband antennas.
  • the size of the device restricts the size of the antenna and its ground-plane, which has a major effect on the overall antenna performance.
  • the bandwidth and efficiency of the antenna are affected by the overall size, geometry, and dimensions of the antenna and the ground-plane.
  • a report on the influence of the ground-plane size in the bandwidth of terminal antennas can be found in the publication " Investigation on Integrated Antennas for GSM Mobile Phones", by D. Manteuffel, A. Bahr, I.
  • ground-planes for instance microstrip, planar inverted-F or monopole antennas
  • the radiating element that is, the microstrip patch, the PIFA element, or the monopole arm for the examples described above
  • ground-plane of an antenna as an integral part of the antenna that mainly contributes to its radiation and impedance performance (impedance level, resonant frequency, bandwidth).
  • impedance performance impedance level, resonant frequency, bandwidth.
  • a new set of geometries are disclosed here, such a set allowing to adapt the geometry and size of the ground-plane to the ones required by any application (base station antennas, handheld terminals, cars, and other motor-vehicles and so on), yet improving the performance in terms of, for instance, bandwidth, Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (hereafter VSWR), or multiband behaviour.
  • VSWR Voltage Standing Wave Ratio
  • multilevel and space-filling structures to enhance the frequency range an antenna can work within was well described in patent publication numbers WO01/22528 and WO01/54225 . Such an increased range is obtained either through an enhancement of the antenna bandwidth, with an increase in the number of frequency bands, or with a combination of both effects.
  • said multilevel and space-filling structures are advantageously used in the ground-plane of the antenna obtaining this way either a better return loss or VSWR, a better bandwidth, a multiband behaviour, or a combination of all these effects.
  • the technique can be seen as well as a means of reducing the size of the ground-plane and therefore the size of the overall antenna.
  • the dimension (D) is often used to characterize highly complex geometrical curves and structures such as those described in the present invention.
  • the box-counting dimension (which is well-known to those skilled in mathematics theory) is used to characterize a family of designs.
  • the advantage of using such curves in the novel configuration disclosed in the present invention is mainly the overall antenna miniaturization together with and enhancement of its bandwidth, impedance, or multiband behaviour.
  • the key point of the present invention is shaping the ground-plane of an antenna in such a way that the combined effect of the ground-plane and the radiating element enhances the performance and characteristics of the whole antenna device, either in terms of bandwidth, VSWR, multiband behaviour, efficiency, size, or gain.
  • the invention disclosed here introduces a new set of geometries that forces the currents on the ground-plane to flow and radiate in a way that enhances the whole antenna behaviour.
  • the basis of the invention consists of breaking the solid surface of a conventional ground-plane into a number of conducting surfaces (at least two of them) said surfaces being electromagnetically coupled either by the capacitive effect between the edges of the several conducting surfaces, or by a direct contact provided by a conducting strip, or a combination of both effects.
  • the resulting geometry is no longer a solid, conventional ground-plane, but a ground-plane with a multilevel or space-filling geometry, at least in a portion of said ground-plane.
  • a Multilevel geometry for a ground-plane consists of a conducting structure including a set of polygons, all of said polygons featuring the same number of sides, wherein said polygons are electromagnetically coupled either by means of a capacitive coupling or ohmic contact, wherein the contact region between directly connected polygons is narrower than 50% of the perimeter of said polygons in at least 75% of said polygons defining said conducting ground-plane.
  • circles and ellipses are included as well, since they can be understood as polygons with infinite number of sides.
  • an Space-Filling Curve (hereafter SFC) is a curve that is large in terms of physical length but small in terms of the area in which the curve can be included. More precisely, the following definition is taken in this document for a space-filling curve: a curve composed by at least ten segments which are connected in such a way that each segment forms an angle with their neighbours, that is, no pair of adjacent segments define a larger straight segment, and wherein the curve can be optionally periodic along a fixed straight direction of space if, and only if, the period is defined by a non-periodic curve composed by at least ten connected segments and no pair of said adjacent and connected segments defines a straight longer segment.
  • a space-filling curve can be fitted over a flat or curved surface, and due to the angles between segments, the physical length of the curve is always larger than that of any straight line that can be fitted in the same area (surface) as said space-filling curve.
  • the segments of the SFC curves included in said ground-plane must be shorter than a tenth of the free-space operating wavelength.
  • some infinite length SFC can be theoretically designed to feature a Haussdorf dimension larger than their topological-dimension. That is, in terms of the classical Euclidean geometry, it is usually understood that a curve is always a one-dimension object; however when the curve is highly convoluted and its physical length is very large, the curve tends to fill parts of the surface which supports it; in that case, the Haussdorf dimension can be computed over the curve (or at least an approximation of it by means of the box-counting algorithm) resulting in a number larger than unity.
  • the box-counting dimension can be computed as the slope of the straight portion of a log-log graph, wherein such a straight portion is substantially defined as a straight segment.
  • said straight segment will cover at least an octave of scales on the horizontal axis of the log-log graph.
  • the current distributes over the ground-plane in such a way that it enhances the antenna performance and features in terms of:
  • any of the general and newly described ground-planes of the present invention can be advantageously used in any of the prior-art antenna configurations that require a ground-plane, for instance: antennas for handheld terminals (cellular or cordless telephones, PDAs, electronic pagers, electronic games, or remote controls), base station antennas (for instance for coverage in micro-cells or pico-cells for systems such as AMPS, GSM900, GSM1800, UMTS, PCS1900, DCS, DECT, WLAN, ...), car antennas, and so on.
  • antennas for handheld terminals cellular or cordless telephones, PDAs, electronic pagers, electronic games, or remote controls
  • base station antennas for instance for coverage in micro-cells or pico-cells for systems such as AMPS, GSM900, GSM1800, UMTS, PCS1900, DCS, DECT, WLAN, ...), car antennas, and so on.
  • Such antennas can usually take the form of microstrip patch antennas, slot-antennas, Planar Inverted-F (PIFA) antennas, monopoles and so on, and in all those cases where the antenna requires a ground-plane, the present invention can be used in an advantageous way. Therefore, the invention is not limited to the aforementioned antennas.
  • the antenna could be of any other type as long as a ground-plane is included.
  • an antenna assembly In order to construct an antenna assembly according to embodiments of our invention, a suitable antenna design is required. Any number of possible configurations exists, and the actual choice of antenna is dependent, for instance, on the operating frequency and bandwidth, among other antenna parameters. Several possible examples of embodiments are listed hereinafter.
  • FIG 3A shows in a manner already known in prior art a Planar Inverted-F (22) Antenna (hereinafter PIFA Antenna) being composed by a radiating antenna element 25, a conventional solid surface ground-plane 26, a feed point 24 coupled somewhere on the patch 25 depending upon the desired input impedance, and a short-circuit 23 coupling the patch element 25 to the ground-plane 26.
  • the feed point 24 can be implemented in several ways, such a coaxial cable, the sheath of which is coupled to the ground-plane and the inner conductor 24 of which is coupled to the radiating conductive element 25.
  • the radiating conductive element 25 is usually shaped like a quadrangle, but several other shapes can be found in other patents or scientific articles.
  • Shape and dimensions of radiating element 25 will contribute in determining operating frequency of the overall antenna system. Although usually not considered as a part of the design, the ground-plane size and geometry also has an effect in determining the operating frequency and bandwidth for said PIFA.
  • PIFA antennas have become a hot topic lately due to having a form that can be integrated into the per se known type of handset cabinets.
  • the newly disclosed ground-plane 31 according to Fig. 3B is composed by multilevel and space-filling structures obtaining this way a better return loss or VSWR, a better bandwidth, and multiband behaviour, along with a compressed antenna size (including ground-plane).
  • the particular embodiment of PIFA 27 is composed by a radiating antenna element 30, a multilevel and space-filling ground-plane 31, a feed point 29 coupled somewhere on the patch 30, and a short-circuit 28 coupling the patch element 30 to the ground-plane 31.
  • multilevel ground-plane 31 For the sake of clarity but without loss of generality, a particular case of multilevel ground-plane 31 is showed, where several quadrangular surfaces are being electromagnetically coupled by means of direct contact through conducting strips and said polygons, together with an SFC and a meandering line. More precisely, the multilevel structure is formed with 5 rectangles, said multilevel structure being connected to a rectangular surface by means of SFC (8) and a meandering line with two periods. It is clear to those skilled in the art that those surfaces could have been any other type of polygons with any size, and being connected in any other manner such as any other SFC curve or even by capacitive effect. For the sake of clarity, the resulting surfaces defining said ground-plane are lying on a common flat surface, but other conformal configurations upon curved or bent surfaces could have been used as well.
  • the edges between coupled rectangles are either parallel or orthogonal, but they do not need to be so.
  • several conducting strips can be used according to the present invention. The position of said strips connecting the several polygons can be placed at the center of the gaps as in Fig. 6 and drawings 2, 50, 51, 56, 57, 62, 65, or distributed along several positions as shown in other cases such as for instance drawings 52 or 58.
  • larger rectangles have the same width (for instance Fig.1 and Fig. 7) but in other preferred embodiments they do not (see for instance drawings 64 through 67 in Fig.8).
  • Polygons and/or strips are linearly arranged with respect an straight axis (see for instance 56 and 57) in some embodiments while in others embodiments they are not centered with respect to said axis.
  • Said strips can also be placed at the edges of the overall ground-plane as in, for instance, drawing 55, and they can even become arranged in a zigzag or meandering pattern as in drawing 58 where the strips are alternatively and sequentially placed at the two longer edges of the overall ground-plane.
  • Said multiple strip arrangement allows multiple resonant frequencies which can be used as separate bands or as a broad-band if they are properly coupled together.
  • said multiband or broad-band behaviour can be obtained by shaping said strips with different lengths within the same gap.
  • conducting surfaces are connected by means of strips with SFC shapes, as in the examples shown in Fig. 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 14, or 15.
  • SFC curves can cover even more than the 50% of the area covered by said ground-plane as it happens in the cases of Fig. 14.
  • the gap between conducting surfaces themselves is shaped as an SFC curve as shown in Fig. 12 or 13.
  • SFC curves feature a box-counting dimension larger than one (at least for an octave in the abscissa of the log-log graph used in the box-counting algorithm) and can approach the so called Hilbert or Peano curves or even some ideally infinite curves known as fractal curves.
  • FIG. 4A shows a prior art antenna system 32 composed by a monopole radiating element 33 over a common and conventional solid surface ground-plane 34.
  • Prior art patents and scientific publications have dealt with several one-piece solid surfaces, being the most common ones circular and rectangular.
  • multilevel and space-filling structures can be used to enhance either the return loss, or radiation efficiency, or gain, or bandwidth, or a combination of all the above, while reducing the size compared to antennas with a solid ground-plane.
  • Figure 4B shows a monopole antenna system 35 composed by a radiating element 36 and a multilevel and space-filling ground-plane 37.
  • the arm of the monopole 33 is presented as a cylinder, but any other structure can be obviously taken instead (even helical, zigzag, meandering, fractal, or SFC configurations, to name a few).
  • Figure 5A shows an antenna system 38 that consist of a conventional patch antenna with a polygonal patch 39 (squared, triangular, pentagonal, hexagonal, rectangular, or even circular, multilevel, or fractal, to name just a few examples) and a common and conventional one-piece solid ground-plane 40.
  • Figure 5B shows a patch antenna system 41 that consists of a radiating element 42 (that can have any shape or size) and a multilevel and space-filling ground-plane 43.
  • the ground-plane 43 being showed in the drawing is just an example of how multilevel and space-filling structures can be implemented on a ground-plane.
  • the antenna, the ground-plane or both are disposed on a dielectric substrate. This may be achieved, for instance, by etching techniques as used to produce PCBs, or by printing the antenna and the ground-plane onto the substrate using a conductive ink.
  • a low-loss dielectric substrate (such as glass-fibre, a teflon substrate such as Cuclad ® or other commercial materials such as Rogers ® 4003 well-known in the art) can be placed between said patch and ground-plane.
  • Other dielectric materials with similar properties may be substituted above without departing from the intent of the present invention.
  • the antenna feeding scheme can be taken to be any of the well-known schemes used in prior art patch antennas as well, for instance: a coaxial cable with the outer conductor connected to the ground-plane and the inner conductor connected to the patch at the desired input resistance point; a microstrip transmission line sharing the same ground-plane as the antenna with the strip capacitively coupled to the patch and located at a distance below the patch, or in another embodiment with the strip placed below the ground-plane and coupled to the patch through an slot, and even a microstrip transmission line with the trip co-planar to the patch.
  • the essential part of the present invention is the shape of the ground-plane (multilevel and/or space-filling), which contributes to reducing the size with respect to prior art configurations, as well as enhancing antenna bandwidth, VSWR, and radiation efficiency.
  • ground-plane geometry can be used in shaping the radiating element in a substantially similar way. This way, a symmetrical or quasymmetrical configuration is obtained where the combined effect of the resonances of the ground-plane and radiating element is used to enhance the antenna behaviour.
  • a particular example of a microstrip (127) and monopole (128) antennas using said configuration and design in drawing 61 is shown in Fig. 19, but it appears clear to any skilled in the art that many other geometries (other than 61) could be used instead within the same spirit of the invention.
  • Drawing 127 shows a particular configuration with a short-circuited patch (129) with shorting post, feeding point 132 and said ground-plane 61, but other configurations with no shorting post, pin, or strip are included in the same family of designs.
  • the feeding post is 133.

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  • Variable-Direction Aerials And Aerial Arrays (AREA)
  • Waveguide Aerials (AREA)
EP07107431A 2001-09-13 2001-09-13 Raumfüllende runde Flächen mit mehreren Ebenen für Miniatur- und Mehrbandantennen Withdrawn EP1837950A3 (de)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP01983481A EP1425820A1 (de) 2001-09-13 2001-09-13 Mehrfach abgestufte und flächenausfüllende masse-ebenen für miniatur- und mehrband-antennen

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EP1837950A2 true EP1837950A2 (de) 2007-09-26
EP1837950A3 EP1837950A3 (de) 2007-10-17

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7872605B2 (en) 2005-03-15 2011-01-18 Fractus, S.A. Slotted ground-plane used as a slot antenna or used for a PIFA antenna
US7932863B2 (en) 2004-12-30 2011-04-26 Fractus, S.A. Shaped ground plane for radio apparatus
RU2486644C1 (ru) * 2012-02-03 2013-06-27 Открытое акционерное общество "Научно-исследовательский институт космического приборостроения" (ОАО "НИИ КП") Самолетная антенна
EP2884580A1 (de) 2013-12-12 2015-06-17 Electrolux Appliances Aktiebolag Antennenanordnung und Küchenvorrichtung

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
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US5262792A (en) * 1991-09-11 1993-11-16 Harada Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Shortened non-grounded type ultrashort-wave antenna
JPH10261914A (ja) * 1997-03-19 1998-09-29 Murata Mfg Co Ltd アンテナ装置
EP0892459A1 (de) * 1997-07-08 1999-01-20 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. Doppelresonanzantennenstruktur für mehrere Frequenzbereiche
WO1999008337A1 (en) * 1997-07-28 1999-02-18 Telenor As Antenna and method using tuning stub
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EP1148581A1 (de) * 2000-04-17 2001-10-24 Kosan I & T Co., Ltd. Mikrostreifenleiterantenne
EP1211750A2 (de) * 2000-11-30 2002-06-05 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Funkgerät mit einer Antenne

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US5262792A (en) * 1991-09-11 1993-11-16 Harada Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Shortened non-grounded type ultrashort-wave antenna
US6140975A (en) * 1995-08-09 2000-10-31 Cohen; Nathan Fractal antenna ground counterpoise, ground planes, and loading elements
JPH10261914A (ja) * 1997-03-19 1998-09-29 Murata Mfg Co Ltd アンテナ装置
EP0892459A1 (de) * 1997-07-08 1999-01-20 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd. Doppelresonanzantennenstruktur für mehrere Frequenzbereiche
WO1999008337A1 (en) * 1997-07-28 1999-02-18 Telenor As Antenna and method using tuning stub
EP1026774A2 (de) * 1999-01-26 2000-08-09 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Antenne für funkbetriebene Kommunikationsendgeräte
EP1148581A1 (de) * 2000-04-17 2001-10-24 Kosan I & T Co., Ltd. Mikrostreifenleiterantenne
EP1211750A2 (de) * 2000-11-30 2002-06-05 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Funkgerät mit einer Antenne

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7932863B2 (en) 2004-12-30 2011-04-26 Fractus, S.A. Shaped ground plane for radio apparatus
US7872605B2 (en) 2005-03-15 2011-01-18 Fractus, S.A. Slotted ground-plane used as a slot antenna or used for a PIFA antenna
US8111199B2 (en) 2005-03-15 2012-02-07 Fractus, S.A. Slotted ground-plane used as a slot antenna or used for a PIFA antenna
US8593360B2 (en) 2005-03-15 2013-11-26 Fractus, S.A. Slotted ground-plane used as a slot antenna or used for a PIFA antenna
RU2486644C1 (ru) * 2012-02-03 2013-06-27 Открытое акционерное общество "Научно-исследовательский институт космического приборостроения" (ОАО "НИИ КП") Самолетная антенна
EP2884580A1 (de) 2013-12-12 2015-06-17 Electrolux Appliances Aktiebolag Antennenanordnung und Küchenvorrichtung
WO2015086420A1 (en) 2013-12-12 2015-06-18 Electrolux Appliances Aktiebolag Antenna arrangement and kitchen apparatus

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