[0001] The present invention relates to an antenna structure used in a portable radio device
and, more particularly, to an antenna structure suitable for a portable radio device
operating in a UHF ultra high frequency) band.
[0002] A loop antenna has been employed in a portable radio device, such as a paging receiver,
for its compactness. The loop antenna has strong directivity. Thus, if the radio device
is held so that the loop antenna is in the direction of minimum sensitivity, the signal
reception sensitivity will be deteriorated. This problem will be discussed herein
referring to the accompanying drawings.
[0003] In order to avoid the problem mentioned above, it is known to use a loop antenna
with a slender conductive element which is placed along a line perpendicular to a
plane including the loop antenna and intersecting at a center of the loop antenna
and which is inductively coupled to the loop antenna. This antenna structure is, however,
not suitable for a portable radio device due to its bulkiness.
[0004] An object of the present invention is, therefore, to provide a generally improved
antenna structure which eliminates the above-mentioned problems.
[0005] Another object of the present invention is to provide an antenna structure suitable
for a portable radio device.
[0006] Yet another object of the present invention is to provide an antenna structure having
good directivity.
[0007] Still yet another object of the present invention is to provide an antenna structure
having a loop antenna and a supplemental antenna which structure is compact while
having a high antenna gain even if the loop antenna is positioned to have a minimum
gain.
[0008] According to the present invention, there is provided an antenna structure comprising
a loop antenna electrically connected to a high-frequency circuit of a portable radio
device. The antenna structure also comprises a supplemental antenna including a coil
spring which is used for fixing a dry battery powering the portable radio device,
and a negative cylindrical conductor of the dry battery which conductor is electrically
connected with the coil spring. The coil spring is placed to be inductively coupled
to the loop antenna. The axis line of the dry battery is substantially perpendicular
to a plane including the loop antenna. Thus, deterioration in signal reception sensitivity
due to the directivity of the loop antenna can be compensated by the supplemental
antenna.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0009] The above and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will
become more apparent from the following description referring to the accompanying
drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 is a perspective view showing a prior art antenna structure employed in a portable
radio device;
Fig. 2A and 2B are perspective view for explaining the directivity of the Fig. 1 antenna
structure;
Fig. 3 is a graph illustrating the horizontal gain characteristics of the Fig. 1 antenna
structure;
Fig. 4 is a block diagram of a radio paging receiver embodying the present invention;
Fig. 5 is a schematic circuit diagram showing an antenna structure and a high-frequency
circuit of the receiver shown in Fig. 4;
Fig. 6 is a Smith chart plot of an impedance characteristic of a supplemental antenna
within the antenna structure shown in Figs. 4 and 6;
Fig. 7 is a perspective view showing an antenna structure according to an embodiment
of the present invention;
Figs. 8A and 8B are perspective views for explaining the directivity of the Fig. 7
antenna structure; and
Fig. 9 is a graph illustrating the horizontal gain characteristics of the Fig. 7 antenna
structure.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments
[0010] To better understand the present invention, the prior art antenna structure used
in a radio paging receiver will first be described. In Fig. 1, the radio paging receiver
includes a housing 1 accommodating communication circuitry 2, a loop antenna 3, a
connecting pattern 3a, a dry battery 4 and a printed circuit board 5. The loop antenna
3 is mounted on the printed circuit board 5 and electrically connected through the
connecting pattern 3a to the communication circuitry 2.
[0011] Since the loop antenna 3 has strong directivity, it is mounted on the board 5 so
that the antenna 3 has a maximum gain with respect to a vertical polarized wave A
in a standard use condition shown in Fig. 2A. When the receiver is held by the user
as shown in Fig. 2B, however, the antenna gain is extremely deteriorated and thus
the signal reception sensitivity is decreased, as mentioned earlier.
[0012] Fig. 3 shows the horizontal paging sensitivity characteristics of loop antenna shown
in Figs. 1, 2A and 2B. The gain characteristics were obtained for a prior art antenna
1 mounted on a paging receiver and receiving a signal of 900 MHz. The solid line A1
indicates horizontal sensitivity in free space for the condition of Fig. 2A. Dotted
line B1 indicates horizontal sensitivity in free space for the condition of Fig. 2B.
As can be seen from the Fig. 3 graph, the sensitivity indicated by the dotted line
B1 is deteriorated in all directions, compared with the sensitivity indicated by the
solid line A1. Thus, the prior art antenna structure shown in Figs. 1. 2A and 2B is
not suitable for a portable radio device, such as a paging receiver.
[0013] Fig. 4 shows a block diagram of a paging receiver embodying the present invention.
In Fig. 4, a loop antenna 61 picks up a radio signal and supplies it to a receiver
section 62. The receiver section 62 amplifies, frequency converts and demodulates
the radio signal to produce a demodulated baseband signal. The baseband signal is
supplied to a decoder 63 at which the baseband signal is wave shaped and compared
with a paging number assigned to the paging receiver and stored therein. If the baseband
signal contains a paging number identical with the stored paging number, the decoder
63 will produce an alert signal. Upon the alert signal, a driver 64 drives a speaker
65 to generate an alert sound, so that the user is informed of being paged. The driver
64 and the speaker 65 may constitute an annunciator means.
[0014] A battery 66 applies power through a line 69 to the receiver section 62, decored
63 and driver 64. The positive terminal 66a of battery 66 is connected through a capacitor
68 to common potential. The negative terminal 66b of the battery is connected to the
common potential through a coil spring 67. The negative terminal 66b and the coil
spring 67 constitute a supplemental antenna which is inductively coupled to the loop
antenna 61. A radio signal picked up by the supplemental antenna (66b, 67) is supplied
to the loop antenna 61 and then to the receiver section 62. The supplemental antenna
is arranged to compensate deterioration in the antenna gain due to the directivity
of the loop antenna 61.
[0015] In Fig. 5, a radio signal picked up by the loop antenna 61 and by the supplemental
antenna (66b, 67) is applied to a base of a high-frequency transistor amplifier 73
through a resonance matching circuit composed of a variable capacitor 70 and a capacitor
71. The variable capacitor 70 is connected between the loop antenna 61 and the common
potential. The capacitor 71 is connected between the loop antenna 61 and the base
of transistor 73. The common-emitter transistor 73 amplifies the radio signal and
supplies the amplified signal to a frequency converter within the radio section 62.
A resistor 75 is inserted between the base of transistor 73 and the battery 66. A
capacitor 76 is inserted between the base of the transistor 73 and the common potential.
A resistor 72 is a bias resistor of transistor 73. A pattern inductance element 74
is of a collector load of transistor 73.
[0016] When disconnecting the coil spring 67 from the common potential and measuring the
impedance between the open terminal of spring coil 67 and the common potential, the
measured impedance is plotted on the Smith chart of Fig. 6. The measured impedance
does not change even if the positive terminal 66a is opened, i.e., the capacitor 68
and the line 69 are eliminated from the battery 66. In other words, the measured impedance
is dominated by the negative terminal 66b and coil spring 67 and not affected by the
positive side circuitry of battery 66.
[0017] By inductively coupling the supplemental antenna (66b, 67) to the loop antenna 61,
a high-frequency power induced on the supplemental antenna is passed to the loop antenna
61 and then to the transistor amplifier 73. Furthermore, by making the supplemental
antenna intersect perpendicularly to a plane including the loop antenna 61, the supplemental
antenna compensates for deterioration in the signal reception sensitivity caused by
the directivity of the loop antenna 61.
[0018] In Fig. 7, a housing 11 and communication circuitry 12 are indicated by an imaginary
line and a dotter line, respectively. The circuitry 12 may include the receiver section
62, the decoder 63, the driver 64 and the speaker 65 shown in Fig. 4. A loop antenna
13 is composed of a substantially loop shaped conductor. The loop antenna 13 is connected
with a common potential pattern 12a through a conductive pattern 13a of printed circuit
board 15 and corresponds to the loop antenna 61 of Figs. 4 and 5.
[0019] One end of a coil spring, or helical conductor, 16 is in contact with the negative
terminal 14b of a dry battery 14 whose cylindrical conductor 14c has the same potential
as the negative terminal 14b. The other end of coil spring 16 is connected with the
negative terminal projection 17 which in turn is connected with the the common potential
pattern 12a through a conductive pattern 14a. The coil spring 16 and the battery negative
terminal 14b and 14c constitute a supplemental antenna corresponding to the supplemental
antenna (66b, 67) of Figs. 4 and 5.
[0020] The combined lengths of the battery 14 and the coil spring 16 is set equal to one
quarter of a wavelength used. Thus, the supplemental antenna constitutes a base-loaded
antenna whose electrical length is increased by the addition of loading coil (16)
in series with the antenna (14b) at the common potential. The combined lengths may
instead be set to an odd multiple of one quarter of the used wavelength. It is, however,
not desirable to set the combined lengths to a value other than one quarter of the
wavelength, because the longer the combined lengths becomes, the more bulky the antenna
structure.
[0021] The supplemental antenna having the coil spring 16 and the cylindrical battery conductor
14c is substantially perpendicular to a plane including the loop antenna 13 and substantially
along a line intersecting perpendicularly the center of the loop of loop antenna 13.
In other words, the axis line of the battery substantially perpendicularly intersects
the center of the loop of loop antenna 13. Thus, if the radio device is placed as
shown in Fig. 8A so that the plane including the loop antenna 13 is parallel to the
vertical polarized wave A, the loop antenna 13 operates like the prior art antenna
(Fig. 1) and induces maximum power while the supplemental antenna induces minimum
power. On the other hand, if the radio device is placed as shown in Fig. 8B so that
the axis line of the battery 14 is parallel to the vertical polarized wave A, the
supplemental antenna operates as a main antenna and induces maximum power while the
loop antenna 13 induces minimum power. Since the supplemental antenna, especially
the loading coil 16, is inductively coupled to the loop antenna 13, no deterioration
in the signal reception sensitivity occurs even if the loop antenna 13 is placed to
induce minimum power.
[0022] In Fig. 9, the horizontal paging sensitivity embodying the present invention in free
space are shown. The plot of Fig. 9 is obtained using an antenna according to this
invention mounted on a paging receiver and receiving a signal at a frequency of 900
MHz. Solid line A2 indicates a horizontal sensitivity measured for the paging receiver
placed as shown in Fig. 8A. Dotter line B2 indicates a horizontal sensitivity measured
for the paging receiver placed as shown in Fig. 8B. Because of the supplemental antenna,
no deterioration in either cases occurs.
[0023] By comparing the sensitivity along a common direction, the present antenna (Fig.
7) has been determined to have a gain of -10 dB relative to a half-wave dipole while
the prior art antenna (Fig. 1) has a gain of -30 dB relative to a half-wave dipole.
Thus, the antenna gain of about 20 dB can be improved according to the present invention.
[0024] In practical, the wavelength at 900 MHz is about 33.3 centimeters one quarter of
which is around 8.3 centimeters. The length of the negative cylindrical conductor
of the dry battery is about 4.2 centimeters. Thus, the effective length of the coil
spring 16 is around 4.0 centimeters. One end of the coil spring is in contact with
the negative terminal 14b of the battery. This contact portion of the coil spring
does not contribute to its effective length. The portion other than the contact portion
should be made as thick as possible to reduce the inductance.
[0025] In summary, according to the present invention, the antenna structure has a supplemental
antenna inductively coupling to the loop antenna and including a coil spring and the
battery negative cylindrical conductor which is perpendicularly to a plane including
the loop antenna. Thus, even if the gain of the loop antenna is reduced due to its
directivity, such gain reduction can be compensated by the supplemental antenna.
1. An antenna structure used in a portable radio device, comprising:
battery means for supplying power to said radio device, said battery means having
a negative terminal and a cylindrical conductor electrically connected with said negative
terminal;
loop antenna means, one end of which is connected to a common potential and the other
end of which is connected to said portable radio device, the longitudinal axis of
said battery means being substantially perpendicular to a plane including said loop
antenna; and
coil spring means one end of which is connected to said common potential and the other
end of which is connected to said negative terminal, said coil spring means being
inductively coupled to said loop antenna means.
2. An antenna structure as claimed in claim 1, wherein the sum of the lengths of said
coil spring means and said cylindrical conductor is substantially one quarter of a
wavelength used by said radio device.
3. An antenna structure as claimed in claim 1 or 2, wherein said radio device is a
900 MHZ drive, and wherein the length of said coiled spring means is substantially
equal to 4.0 centimeters, and wherein the length of said cylindrical conductor is
substantially equal to 4.2 centimeters.
4. An antenna structure as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein said radio
device comprises:
receiver section means for receiving a radio signal from said loop antenna and for
demodulating said radio signal to produce a demodulated signal;
decoder means for comparing a paging number contained in said demodulated signal with
a paging number assigned to said radio device and for producing an alert signal if
they are identical; and
annunciator means responsive to said alert signal for generating an alert sound.
5. An antenna structure as claimed in claim 4, wherein said annunciator means comprises
speaker means and driver means responsive to said alert signal for driving said speaker
to generate said alert sound.
6. An antenna structure as claimed in claim 4 or 5, wherein said received section
comprises:
resonant matching circuit means whose input is connected with said other end of said
loop antenna means, and amplifies means for amplifying the output of said resonant
matching circuit means and for supplying the amplified signal to said decoder means.
7. An antenna structure as claimed in claim 6, wherein said resonant matching circuit
means comprises a variable capacitor connected between said other end of said loop
antenna means and said common potential; and a capacitor connected between said other
end of said loop antenna means and the input of said amplifier means.
8. An antenna structure as claimed in claim 6 or 7, wherein said amplifier means comprises
a transistor whose base, emitter and collector are connected with the output of said
resonant matching circuit means, with said common potential and with the output of
said amplifier means, respectively; a resistor connected between said base and said
dry battery means; and an inductance element connected between said collector and
said dry battery means.
9. An antenna used in a portable radio device, comprising:
loop antenna means for picking up a radio signal; and
supplemental antenna means for picking up a radio signal, said supplemental antenna
means having first conductor means inductively coupled to said loop antenna means
and second conductor means electrically connected with said first conductor means
and substantially perpendicular to a plane including said loop antenna means.
10. An antenna as claimed in claim 9, wherein said first conductor means comprises
a helically shaped conductor and said second conductor means comprises a cylindrical
conductor.
11. An antenna as claimed in claim 10, wherein said cylindrical conductor comprises
a negative cylindrical conductor of a battery, said battery supplying power to said
radio device and wherein said helically shaped conductor comprises a negative coil
spring terminal electrically connecting a negative terminal of said battery with said
radio device and fixing said battery.
12. An antenna as claimed in claim 11, wherein said radio device comprises a radio
paging receiver.
13. An antenna as claimed in claim 11 or 12, wherein the sum of the lengths of said
coil spring and said cylindrical conductor is substantially proportional to one quarter
of a frequency used in said radio device.
14. An antenna as claimed in any one of claims 12 to 13, wherein said radio paging
receiver is used at 900 MHz, and wherein the length of said negative spring terminal
is substantially equal to 4.0 centimeters, and wherein the length of said negative
cylindrical conductor is substantially equal to 4.2 centimeters.
15. An antenna comprising:
a first conductor formed as a loop and connected through a resonant matching circuit
to a communication circuit; and
a second conductor arranged along a linear line substantially perpendicular to a plane
including said loop, intersecting said plane at a substantial center of said loop
and having an electric length in its longitudinal direction approximated to an odd
multiple of one-fourth of an operating wavelength, said second conductor including
a negative electrode cylinder of a battery and a helical conductor, said helical conductor
being in contact with an outer surface of a portion of said cylinder to connect a
negative potential of said battery to common potential of said communication circuit.
16. An antenna as claimed in claim 15, wherein said communication circuit operates
at 900 MHz, and wherein said cylinder substantially has the length of 4.2 centimeters,
and wherein said helical conductor substantially has the length of 4.0 centimeters.
17. An antenna as claimed in claim 15 or 16, wherein said communication circuit comprises
a radio paging receiver.
18. A paging receiver comprising:
antenna means for picking up a radio signal;
receiver section means connected to said antenna means for demodulating said radio
signal to produce a baseband signal;
decoder means for detecting from said baseband signal a paging number assigned to
said paging receiver;
annunciator means responsive to the detection of said paging number for generating
an alert signal; and
battery means for supplying power to said receiver section means, decoder means and
annunciator means,
wherein said battery means comprises a dry battery having a cylindrical conductor
and a negative terminal electrically connected with said cylindrical conductor,
and wherein said antenna means comprises:
a loop antenna connected between said receiver section and common potential of said
receiver, the longitudinal axis of said cylindrical conductor being substantially
perpendicular to a plane including said loop antenna; and
a coil spring connected between said negative terminal and said common potential for
fixing said dry battery, said coiled spring being inductively coupled to said loop
antenna.
19. A paging receiver as claimed in claim 18, wherein the sum of the lengths of said
cylindrical conductor and said coil spring is substantially proportional to an odd
multiple of one quarter of a frequency used in said paging receiver.
20. A paging receiver as claimed in claim 19, wherein the number of said odd multiple
is one.
21. A paging received as claimed in any one of claims 18 to 20, wherein the length
of said cylindrical conductor is substantially equal to 4.2 centimeters, and wherein
the length of said coil spring is substantially equal to 4.0 centimeters.
22. An antenna structure comprising:
loop antenna means electrically connected to a high-frequency circuit of a portable
radio device; and
supplemental antenna means having a coil spring which fixes a dry battery powering
said portable radio device, and a cylindrical conductor of said dry battery which
conductor is electrically connected with said coil spring, said coil spring being
placed to be inductively coupled to said loop antenna means, the longitudinal axis
of said cylindrical conductor being substantially perpendicular to a plane including
said loop antenna means.
23. A method of picking up a radio signal for a portable radio device powered by a
battery and including a loop antenna, said method comprising the following steps of:
connecting one end of said loop antenna with common potential of said radio device;
connecting one end of a coil spring with said common potential;
connecting the other end of said coil spring with a negative terminal of said battery;
placing said battery so that the longitudinal axis of a negative cylindrical conductor
of said battery is substantially perpendicular to a plane including said loop antenna;
placing said coil spring so that said coil spring inductively couples to said loop
antenna.
24. A method as claimed in claim 23, further comprising the steps of:
demodulating a radio signal from said loop antenna to produce a demodulated signal;
detecting from said demodulated signal a paging number assigned to said radio device
to produce a detection signal; and
responsive to said detection signal, generating an alert signal.