Field of the invention
[0001] The present invention relates generally to antennas for radio communication terminals
and, in particular, to compact built-in antennas devised to be incorporated into portable
terminals and having a wide bandwidth to facilitate operation of the portable terminals
within different frequency bands.
Background
[0002] Since the end of the 2000
th century the cellular telephone industry has had enormous development in the world.
From the initial analog systems, such as those defined by the standards AMPS (Advanced
Mobile Phone System) and NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephone), the development has during
recent years been almost exclusively focused on standards for digital solutions for
cellular radio network systems, such as D-AMPS (e.g., as specified in EIA/TIA-IS-54-B
and IS-136) and GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications). Different digital transmission
schemes are used in different systems, e.g. time division multiple access (TDMA) or
code division multiple access (CDMA). Currently, the cellular technology is entering
the so called 3
rd generation, providing several advantages over the former, 2
nd generation, digital systems referred to above. Among those advantages an increased
bandwidth will be provided, allowing effective communication of more complex data.
The 3
rd generation of mobile systems have been referred to as the UMTS (Universal Mobile
Telephony System) in Europe and CDMA2000 in the USA, and is already implemented in
Japan to some extent. Furthermore, it is widely believed that the first generation
of Personal Communication Networks (PCNs), employing low cost, pocket-sized, cordless
telephones that can be carried comfortably and used to make or receive calls in the
home, office, street, car, etc., will be provided by, for example, cellular carriers
using the next generation digital cellular system infrastructure.
[0003] One evolution in cellular communication services involves the adoption of additional
frequency bands for use in handling mobile communications, e.g., for Personal Communication
Services (PCS) services. Taking the U.S. as an example, the Cellular hyperband is
assigned two frequency bands (commonly referred to as the A frequency band and the
B frequency band) for carrying and controlling communications in the 800 MHz region.
The PCS hyperband, on the other hand, is specified in the United States to include
six different frequency bands (A, B, C, D, E and F) in the 1900 MHz region. Thus,
eight frequency bands are now available in any given service area of the U.S. to facilitate
communication services. Certain standards have been approved for the PCS hyperband
(e.g., PCS1900 (J-STD-007)), while others have been approved for the Cellular hyperband
(e.g., D-AMPS (IS-136)). Other frequency bands in which these devices will be operating
include GPS (operating in the 1.5 GHz range) and UMTS (operating in the 2.0 GHz range).
Each one of the frequency bands specified for the Cellular and PCS hyperbands is allocated
a plurality of traffic channels and at least one access or control channel. The control
channel is used to control or supervise the operation of mobile stations by means
of information transmitted to and received from the mobile stations. Such information
may include incoming call signals, outgoing call signals, page signals, page response
signals, location registration signals, voice channel assignments, maintenance instructions,
hand-off, and cell selection or reselection instructions as a mobile station travels
out of the radio coverage of one cell and into the radio coverage of another cell.
The control and voice channels may operate using either analog modulation or digital
modulation.
[0004] The signals transmitted by a base station in the downlink over the traffic and control
channels are received by mobile or portable terminals, each of which have at least
one antenna. Historically, portable terminals have employed a number of different
types of antennas to receive and transmit signals over the air interface. For example,
monopole antennas mounted perpendicularly to a conducting surface have been found
to provide good radiation characteristics, desirable drive point impedances and relatively
simple construction. Monopole antennas can be created in various physical forms. For
example, rod or whip antennas have frequently been used in conjunction with portable
terminals. For high frequency applications where an antenna's length is to be minimised,
another choice is the helical antenna. In addition, mobile terminal manufacturers
encounter a constant demand for smaller and smaller terminals. This demand for miniaturisation
is combined with desire for additional functionality such as having the ability to
use the terminal at different frequency bands and different cellular systems.
[0005] It is commercially desirable to offer portable terminals which are capable of operating
in widely different frequency bands, e.g., bands located in the 1500 MHz, 1800 MHz,
1900 MHz, 2.0 GHz and 2.45 GHz regions. Accordingly, antennas which provide adequate
gain and bandwidth in a plurality of these frequency bands will need to be employed
in portable terminals. Several attempts have been made to create such antennas.
[0006] Japanese patent no. 6-37531 discloses a helix which contains an inner parasitic metal
rod. In this patent, the antenna can be tuned to dual resonant frequencies by adjusting
the position of the metal rod. Unfortunately, the bandwidth for this design is too
narrow for use in cellular communications.
[0007] Dual-band, printed, monopole antennas are known in which dual resonance is achieved
by the addition of a parasitic strip in close proximity to a printed monopole antenna.
While such an antenna has enough bandwidth for cellular communications, it requires
the addition of a parasitic strip. Moteco AB in Sweden has designed a coil matching
dual-band whip antenna and coil antenna, in which dual resonance is achieved by adjusting
the coil matching component (1/4.lambda. for 900 MHz and 1/2.lambda. for 1800 MHz).
This antenna has relatively good bandwidth and radiation performances and a length
in the order of 40 mm.
[0008] In order to reduce the size of the portable radio terminals, built-in antennas have
been implemented over the last couple of years. The general desire today is to have
an antenna, which is not visible to the customer. Today different kinds of patches
are used, with or without parasitic elements. The most common built-in antennas currently
in use in mobile phones are the so called planar inverted-F antennas (PIFA). This
name has been adopted due to the fact that the antenna looks like the letter F tilted
90 degrees in profile. Such an antenna needs a feeding point as well as a ground connection.
If one or several parasitic elements are included nearby, they can be either grounded
or dielectrically separated from ground.
[0009] The PIFA can, as mentioned, be built in into a radio terminal antenna, e.g. a mobile
phone, with fairly low profile. However, as mobile phones become smaller and smaller,
the height of the PIFA antennas are still a limiting factor for decreasing the terminal
size. The geometry of a conventional PIFA antenna includes a radiating element, a
feeding pin for the radiating element, a ground pin for the radiating element, and
a ground substrate commonly arranged on a printed circuit board (PCB). Both the feeding
pin and the ground pin are arranged perpendicular to the ground plane, and radiating
element is suspended above the ground plane in such a manner that the ground plane
covers the area under the radiating element. This type of antenna, however, generally
has a fairly small bandwidth in the order of 100 MHz. In order to increase the bandwidth
for an antenna of this design, the vertical distance between the radiating element
and the PCB ground has to be increased, i.e. the height at which the radiating element
is placed above the PCB is increased. This, however, is an undesirable modification
as the height increase makes the antenna unattractive for small communication devices.
One solution to this problem is to add a dielectric element between the antenna and
the PCB, in order to make the electrical distance longer than the physical distance.
[0010] US 6,326,921 to Ying et al discloses a built-in, low-profile antenna with an inverted
planar inverted F-type (PIFA) antenna and a meandering parasitic element, and having
a wide bandwidth to facilitate communications within a plurality of frequency bands.
A main element is placed at a predetermined height above a substrate of a communication
device and the parasitic element is placed on the same substrate as the main antenna
element and is grounded at one end. The feeding pin of the PIFA is proximal to the
ground pin of the parasitic element. The coupling of the meandering, parasitic element
to the main antenna results in two resonances. These two resonances are adjusted to
be adjacent to each other in order to realise a broader resonance encompassing the
DCS (Digital Cross-Connect System), PCS (Personal Communications System) and UMTS
frequency ranges.
[0011] However, prior art antenna designs will still be a limiting factor when developing
radio terminals with adequate bandwidth to cover, for example, all of the DCS, PCS
and UMTS frequency bands, at the same time recognising the desire to provide compact
terminals. The known solutions have mainly dual band performance, e.g. GSM + DCS.
They need a ground plane underneath the antenna structure. The larger distance the
better antenna performance, to a certain degree, and since the mobile phones of today
must be as small and thin as possible, this is a dilemma. A more general problem with
built-in antennas is not only small band width, but also significantly worse gain
performance than a traditional external antenna i.e. some kind of stub antenna.
Summary of the invention
[0012] Hence, it is an object of the present invention to overcome the above-identified
deficiencies related to the prior art, and more specifically to provide a planar antenna
structure suitable for built-in antennas, at the same time having a wide bandwidth
which enables the antenna to be operable at a plurality of frequency bands.
[0013] According to a first aspect, this object is fulfilled by a multi-band radio antenna
device for a radio communication terminal, comprising a flat ground substrate, a flat
main radiating element having a radio signal feeding point, and a flat parasitic element.
Said main radiating element is located in the same plane as said ground substrate,
wherein a first elongated portion of the main radiating element extends in an L shape
away from a side edge of the ground substrate, the longer leg of said L shape extending
substantially parallel to said side edge.
[0014] Preferably, said first elongated portion has a first width and extends into a second
elongated portion having a second width, smaller than said first width. The length
of said first portion preferably corresponds to the resonance of a first radio wavelength
zone and the combined length of said first and second portion corresponds to the resonance
of a second radio wavelength zone, by interaction with the parasitic element.
[0015] Preferably, said flat parasitic element comprises a first L-shaped parasitic member
extending from an electrical connection point to said ground substrate essentially
parallel to said first portion of the main antenna element. In one embodiment, said
flat parasitic element further comprises a second L-shaped parasitic member extending
from an electrical connection point to said ground substrate, essentially parallel
to said first parasitic member. The main radiating element is preferably dielectrically
separated from the ground substrate.
[0016] In a preferred embodiment, said second portion of the main element is meandered,
and preferably, said first width is at least 5 times larger than said second width.
In one embodiment, said first width is at least 10 times larger than said second width.
[0017] According to a second aspect, the object of the invention is fulfilled by a communication
terminal devised for multi-band radio communication, comprising a housing, a user
input and output interface, and in said housing a built-in antenna device including
a flat ground substrate, a flat main radiating element having a radio signal feeding
point, and a flat parasitic element. Said main radiating element is located in the
same plane as said ground substrate, wherein a first elongated portion of the main
radiating element extends in an L shape away from a side edge of the ground substrate,
the longer leg of said L shape extending substantially parallel to said side edge.
[0018] Preferably, said first elongated portion has a first width and extends into a second
elongated portion having a second width, smaller than said first width. The length
of said first portion preferably corresponds to the resonance of a first radio wavelength
and the combined length of said first and second portion corresponds to the resonance
of a second radio wavelength.
[0019] Preferably, said flat parasitic element comprises a first L-shaped parasitic member
extending from an electrical connection point to said ground substrate essentially
parallel to said first portion of the main antenna element. In one embodiment, said
flat parasitic element further comprises a second L-shaped parasitic member extending
from an electrical connection point to said ground substrate, essentially parallel
to said first parasitic member. The main radiating element is preferably dielectrically
separated from the ground substrate.
[0020] In a preferred embodiment, said second portion of the main element is meandered,
and preferably, said first width is at least 5 times larger than said second width.
In one embodiment, said first width is at least 10 times larger than said second width.
[0021] According to a third aspect, the object of the invention is fulfilled by a multi-band
radio antenna for a radio communication terminal, comprising a flat main radiating
element having a radio signal feeding point, and a flat parasitic element, wherein
said antenna is connectable to a flat ground substrate by interconnection with said
parasitic element. Said main radiating element is located in the same plane as said
ground substrate, wherein a first elongated portion of the main radiating element
extends in an L shape away from a side edge of the ground substrate, the longer leg
of said L shape extending substantially parallel to said side edge.
[0022] According to a fourth aspect, the object of the invention is fulfilled by an integrated
multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device for a radio communication terminal,
comprising a flat ground substrate, a flat main radiating element having a radio signal
feeding point, and a flat parasitic element . Said main radiating element is located
in substantially the same plane as said ground substrate, wherein a first elongated
portion of the main radiating element extends in an L shape away from a side edge
of the ground substrate, the longer leg of said L shape extending substantially parallel
to said side edge.
[0023] Preferably, said ground substrate, said main radiating element and said parasitic
element are formed of a single sheet of electrically conductive material, and in one
embodiment they are etched out from a metal layer on a printed circuit board. In one
embodiment, the features of which are equally applicable to any of the previously
mentioned aspects, said ground substrate is formed on one layer of a printed circuit
board, whereas said main radiating element and said parasitic element are formed on
another layer on said printed circuit board. The ground substrate and the antenna
will nevertheless be substantially located in the same plane, particularly compared
to the conventional PIFA design.
[0024] By substantially parallel is here meant that the distance between longer leg of the
radiating element and the edge of the ground substrate is essentially constant over
the extension of said longer leg, within the accuracy given by the used method of
manufacture.
Brief description of the drawings
[0025] The features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent from the
following description of the preferred embodiments with reference to the accompanying
drawings, on which
Fig. 1 schematically illustrates a multi-band radio antenna device according to an
embodiment of the invention;
Fig. 2 shows an enlarged portion of the antenna device according to Fig. 1;
Fig. 3 schematically illustrates an exemplary communication terminal implementing
an antenna design according to an embodiment of the invention;
Fig. 4 schematically illustrates an integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground
substrate device according to an embodiment of the invention;
Figs 5A to 5C schematically illustrates the use of a communication terminal according
to Fig. 3;
Fig. 6A illustrates the voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) characteristics for the
antenna design of the present invention in operation oriented according to Fig. 5A;
and
Fig. 6B illustrates the VSWR characteristics for the antenna design of the present
invention in operation oriented according to Fig. 5B.
Detailed description of preferred embodiments
[0026] The present description refers to radio terminals as a device in which to implement
a radio antenna design according to the present invention. The term radio terminal
includes all mobile equipment devised for radio communication with a radio station,
which radio station also may be mobile terminal or e.g. a stationary base station.
Consequently, the term radio terminal includes mobile telephones, pagers, communicators,
electronic organisers, smartphones, PDA:s (Personal Digital Assistants), vehicle-mounted
radio communication devices, or the like, as well as portable laptop computers devised
for wireless communication in e.g. a WLAN (Wireless Local Area Network). Furthermore,
since the antenna as such is suitable for but not restricted to mobile use, the term
radio terminal should also be understood as to include any stationary device arranged
for radio communication, such as e.g. desktop computers, printers, fax machines and
so on, devised to operate with radio communication with each other or some other radio
station. Hence, although the structure and characteristics of the antenna design according
to the invention is mainly described herein, by way of example, in the implementation
in a mobile phone, this is not to be interpreted as excluding the implementation of
the inventive antenna design in other types of radio terminals, such as those listed
above. Furthermore, it should be emphasised that the term comprising or comprises,
when used in this description and in the appended claims to indicate included features,
elements or steps, is in no way to be interpreted as excluding the presence of other
features elements or steps than those expressly stated.
[0027] Several of the larger mobile phone manufacturers, e.g. Ericsson® and Nokia®, have
launched mobile phones for cellular communication networks and implementing built-in
antennas for both dual band and triple band operation. By built-in is here meant that
the antenna is placed inside, or adjacent to, the housing or chassis of the mobile
phone without protruding elements. The principles of the Planar Inverted F Antenna
type have been briefly discussed above. Although it may be embodied in different ways,
it is basically defined by the following features:
- Dual or triple band capacity;
- Patch parallel to the printed circuit board (PCB), i.e. the ground plane;
- Air or some dielectric material between antenna and PCB;
- Sizes are in the neighbourhood of L*W*H = 40*18*8 mm;
- The distance (H) between antenna and PCB is critical for good VSWR and gain, and normal
distance is 7 - 10 mm between these two planes;
- The antenna needs both feeding and grounding.
[0028] The present invention provides an antenna design which does not need a ground plane
underneath the antenna structure. This makes it possible to make a very thin product.
Computer simulations with surprisingly good results have been made. These simulations
have been performed using the tool IE3D, distributed by Zeland Inc. This tool uses
the Moment Method as a mathematical solver, and simulation results obtained correlate
well with measurement tests on prototypes disclosed in Fig. 6A and 6B, which will
be explained further down.
[0029] An antenna concept or design is described herein, comprising the antenna structure,
its relation to ground, and its implementation in a radio terminal, with reference
to the accompanying drawings. Some features of one embodiment of the antenna design
are a very wide feeding and two parasitic elements without feeding. Fig. 1 discloses
an antenna device 1, comprising an antenna 12 and a ground plane or substrate 20.
The length of the ground plane 20, i.e. the height in Fig. 1, is preferably approximately
equal to one third of the wavelength for the lower radio frequency band for which
the multi-band antenna 12 is tuned. The ground plane length can be calculated as:

wherein L is the ground plane length, c is the speed of light in vacuum and f is
the radio frequency. In one example said lower band is f = 900 MHz, wherein the ground
plane length can be calculated to approximately 11 cm.
[0030] Fig. 2 illustrates the upper part of Fig. 1 in enlargement, with only a part of the
ground plane 20 showing. The antenna in Fig. 2 comprises several parts, and discloses
an embodiment according to the example above, i.e. tuned for a lower frequency band
of 900 MHz.
[0031] The main radiating element of the antenna comprises a first flat elongated member
2, which extends from a position 4 close to the upper edge 21 of ground plane 20.
In the preferred and disclosed embodiment, this elongated member is bent 90 degrees
in order to make the total length of the antenna device 1, including the ground plane
20, as short as possible. The main radiating element is fed at a feeding point 3 at
or near its base 4, adjacent to the edge 21 of the ground plane 20, but it is dielectrically
separated from the ground plane 20, e.g. by a gap.
[0032] The elongated member 2 has a large width, in the disclosed embodiment about 5.4 mm.
This large width contributes to the large bandwidth shown in Fig. 6A and 6B. The total
length of the wide elongated member 2 is about 35 mm from 4 to 10. At this end 10,
the main radiating element extends into a considerably longer, meandered member 9,
which has a significantly smaller width than member 2. The barrier obtained by the
bottleneck at 10 creates one resonance dependent on the length of the wide member
2, and another resonance dependent on the entire length of the main radiating element
2,9 from end 4 at the feeding point 3 to the end point 11. The relation between the
width of member 2 and member 9 is at least 5:1, and preferably about 10:1. This relation
is hence important in order to get the multi-band performance. At the end 11 of the
meandered portion 9, yet another radiating element may be added, electrically interconnected
to portion 9, although not shown, a so called capacitive end piece.
[0033] A thin parasitic element member 5 is connected to the ground plane 20 at 7, and runs
parallel with the main antenna member 2. The width of this first parasitic element
member 5 is approximately 1 mm, and it is positioned close to, about 1 mm, the electrically
fed antenna element 2,9. The total length of the first parasitic member 5 is approximately
21.1 mm in the disclosed embodiment.
[0034] Another thin parasitic element 6, likewise connected to the ground plane at 8, extends
parallel with parasitic member 5. The approximate length of this second parasitic
member 6 is 21 mm in the disclosed embodiment. The width of member 6 and the distance
between member 6 and 5 is of the same order as the width of member 5 and the distance
between member 5 element 2, respectively.
[0035] Fig. 3 illustrates a communication radio terminal in the embodiment of a cellular
mobile phone 30 devised for multi-band radio communication. The terminal 30 comprises
a chassis or housing 35, carrying a user audio input in the form of a microphone 31
and a user audio output in the form of a loudspeaker 32 or a connector to an ear piece
(not shown). A set of keys, buttons or the like constitutes a data input interface
33 is usable e.g. for dialling, according to the established art. A data output interface
comprising a display 34 is further included, devised to display communication information,
address list etc in a manner well known to the skilled person. The radio communication
terminal 30 includes radio transmission and reception electronics (not shown), and
is devised with a built-in antenna device 1 inside the housing 35, which antenna device
is indicated in the drawing by the dashed line as an essentially flat object. According
to the invention, this antenna device 1, corresponding to Fig. 1, includes a flat
ground substrate 20, a flat main radiating element 2,9 having a radio signal feeding
point 3, and a flat parasitic element 5,6. The main radiating element 2,9 is dielectrically
separated from the ground substrate, and located adjacent to and in the same plane
as said ground substrate. The other features of the antenna design according to the
present invention described above are naturally equally valid for the radio terminal
implemented embodiment of Fig. 3.
[0036] Fig. 4 illustrates another aspect of the present invention. As described previously,
with reference mainly to Figs 1 and 2, the antenna 12 and ground plane 20 of the antenna
device 1 are located adjacent to each other in the same plane. Not all parts of the
antenna device are electrically interconnected, e.g. not the main radiating element
2,9 and the ground plane 20, but they may nevertheless be formed as a single integrated
element. Alternatively, the ground substrate 20 and the antenna element 2,9 may be
located on different layers of a printed circuit board, which board defines the plane
in which they are arranged. Hence, according to this aspect Fig. 4 illustrates an
integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device 40 for a radio communication
terminal. This integrated device 40 comprises a flat ground substrate 20, a flat main
radiating element 2,9 having a radio signal feeding point 3, and a flat parasitic
element 5,6, wherein said main radiating element is dielectrically separated from
the ground substrate, and located adjacent to and in the same plane as said ground
substrate. The elements 2,9,5,6,20 comprised in the integrated device 40 are bonded
by an underlying dielectric substrate 41, such as a PCB, wherein said PCB 41 preferably
carries radio terminal electronics on its opposite side and optionally on intermediate
layers thereof. According to this aspect of the invention, the ground substrate 20,
the main radiating element 2,9 and the parasitic element 5,6 are, in one embodiment,
formed of a single sheet of electrically conductive material. In such a design, the
interconnections 7 an 8 between the parasitic members 5,6 and the ground plane 20
are preferably simply formed by said parasitic members extending into the ground plane
20, being an integral part thereof. Furthermore, the feeding point 3 (see Fig. 2)
may be a direct contact between the main radiating element 2 and the relevant leads
on the PCB 41, wherein no auxiliary antenna connector is needed. In one embodiment,
the integrated multi-band radio antenna 12 and ground substrate 20 is etched out from
a metal layer on a printed circuit board 41, including the ground substrate, the main
radiating element and the parasitic element.
[0037] As can be seen from Fig. 4, a vertical arrow illustrates the position of the antenna
12 in relation to the ground plane 20, where the apex of the arrow indicates the end
of the antenna device 1 at which the antenna 12 is located. Figs 5A and 5B illustrate
exemplary talking positions of a mobile phone 30 when operated by a user A. In Fig.
5A, the mobile phone is designed in the common way with the antenna 12 at the top
of the phone 30, i.e. closest to the listening end of the phone 30 carrying the loudspeaker
32. In Fig. 5B, the mobile phone is designed with the antenna device 1 in the opposite
way, with the antenna 12 at the bottom of the phone 30, closest to the speaking end
of the phone 30 carrying the microphone 31. Fig. 5C illustrates schematically the
mobile phone 30 in operation by the user A, where the user A holds the phone 30 in
his hand 50. If the antenna 12 is oriented in the way indicated in Fig. 5B, the hand
50 will effect the performance of the antenna 12, whereas for a design according to
Fig. 5A the effect influence of the hand will probably be less noticeable.
[0038] Figs 6A and 6B illustrates the VSWR performance of the presented antenna design,
in an embodiment as described in conjunction with Figs 1 and 2, with a ground plane
of 11 cm, i.e. a third of the wavelength of the lowest resonance frequency 900 MHz.
The results come from a hand-made prototype, with the aid of the IE3D tool mentioned
above. Markers point towards one of the curves in each drawing, and the frequency
at each of those markers is illustrated in the respective drawing.
[0039] Fig. 6A relates to measurements with a top-mounted antenna 12. The black line indicates
the VSWR measured when the mobile phone 30 is placed in free space FS. The grey line,
to which the triangular markers 1 to 5 point, represents talking position TP, as illustrated
in Fig 5C, with the orientation of the phone 30 as illustrated in Fig. 5A. Since the
antenna is located in the upper part of the phone 30, the antenna 12 is ideally not
covered by the hand. A slight difference can be detected between the curves, due to
the proximity of the hand and head rendering an enlarged ground plane to the antenna
12.
[0040] Contrary to the preceding figure, Fig. 6B relates to measurements with a bottom-mounted
antenna 12, i.e. the phone is in operative position oriented as shown in Fig. 5B.
Once again, the black line indicates the VSWR measured when the mobile phone 30 is
placed in free space FS, i.e. with no human tissue close to the antenna. The grey
line, to which the triangular markers 1 to 5 point, represents talking position TP,
as illustrated in Fig 5C, with the orientation of the phone 30 as illustrated in Fig.
5B. The antenna is now partly or fully covered by the hand. The effect is considerably
larger than in the case displayed in Fig. 6A, with a much more significant difference
between FS and TP. In VSWR point this is to the better.
[0041] The results of the VSWR measurements show excellent results for both the antenna
orientation according to Fig. 5A and the antenna orientation according to Fig. 5B.
It is noticeable that the hand influences the matching positively. It loads the antenna
and steals some energy, but the head is further away from the antenna so the efficiency
is probably better.
[0042] Consequently, one way to get a really low SAR (Specific Absorption Rate) value is
to have the antenna near the mouth rather than the ear, an "upside down concept",
as in Fig. 5B. As mentioned before, a ground plane of length about 11 cm, equal to
one third of the wavelength at 900MHz, has been found to give the best results. Other
lengths may also be used.
[0043] Tests have also been performed on the gain, and indicate a good performance compared
to the designs available today. Those experiments were also made with additional ground
planes parallel to the antenna structure 12, behind it. Distances between 5mm and
10mm were tested, with the ground planes either hanging freely or grounded to the
PCB ground 20. The best result was achieved without any additional ground plane, i.e.
with the antenna design proposed in this description, with the antenna upside down
as in Fig. 5B. Exactly how much a hand influences the gain has not been tested, though,
since it is very individual how to hold a mobile phone.
[0044] Several effects and advantages are obtained by the invention. As evidenced by the
graphs of Figs 6A and 6B, a multi-band performance in frequency point of view is reached,
suitable for e.g. AMPS, EGSM, DCS, PCS, UMTS and BT. Furthermore, there is broad band
performance on each band. The gain and efficiency is also good compared to the market
products.
[0045] No ground plane is needed underneath the antenna 12, which is otherwise the common
case for the built-in antennas existing on the market. The built-in antenna is fairly
small and very thin. Furthermore, it is possible to manufacture antenna 12 and PCB
41, having a ground plane 20, in one piece 40, which is mechanically very robust.
The antenna structure can be etched out from the PCB directly. No grounding of the
antenna is needed, only the parasitic elements 5,6 need ground. The design also has
capabilities of rendering a low cost manufacture process, since no antenna connector
is needed, and in that the antenna device 1 may be formed from a single film of e.g.
copper.
[0046] With the antenna device 1 arranged upside down, it is also possible to obtain very
low SAR. It is however important that the user A realises how to hold the mobile phone
properly.
[0047] The proposed design does not have an antenna volume in an ordinary sense, since the
height to the ground plane is zero. A very thin mobile phone 30 can therefore be built.
The antenna 12 area is approximately 41*20 mm, and is preferably etched on the PCB.
The antenna 12 comprises two parasitic elements 5,6 which are parallel with the main
antenna structure 2, and with each other. They are not meandered and do not have any
capacitive end load.
[0048] The foregoing has described the principles, preferred embodiments and modes of operation
of the present invention. However, the invention should not be construed as being
limited to the particular embodiments discussed above. For example, while the antenna
of the present invention has been discussed primarily as being a radiator, one skilled
in the art will appreciate that the antenna of the present invention would also be
used as a sensor for receiving information at specific frequencies. Similarly, the
dimensions of the various elements may vary based on the specific application. Thus,
the above-described embodiments should be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive,
and it should be appreciated that variations may be made in those embodiments by workers
skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention as defined
by the following claims.
1. A multi-band radio antenna device (1) for a radio communication terminal, comprising
a flat ground substrate (20), a flat main radiating element (2,9) having a radio signal
feeding point (3), and a flat parasitic element (5,6), characterised in that said main radiating element is located in the same plane as said ground substrate,
wherein a first elongated portion (2) of the main radiating element extends in an
L shape away from a side edge (21) of the ground substrate, the longer leg of said
L shape extending substantially parallel to said side edge.
2. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 1, characterised in that said a first elongated portion (2) has a first width, and extends into a second elongated
portion (9) having a second width, smaller than said first width.
3. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 2, characterised in that the length of said first portion corresponds to the resonance of a first radio wavelength
and the combined length of said first and second portion corresponds to the resonance
of a second radio wavelength.
4. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 1, characterised in that said flat parasitic element comprises a first L-shaped parasitic member (5) extending
from an electrical connection point (7) to said ground substrate essentially parallel
to said first portion of the main antenna element.
5. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 4, characterised in that said flat parasitic element comprises a second L-shaped parasitic member (6) extending
from an electrical connection point (8) to said ground substrate essentially parallel
to said first parasitic member (7).
6. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 1, characterised in that said main radiating element is dielectrically separated from the ground substrate.
7. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 2, characterised in that said second portion (9) is meandered.
8. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 2, characterised in that said first width is at least 5 times larger than said second width.
9. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 2, characterised in that said first width is at least 10 times larger than said second width.
10. The multi-band radio antenna device as recited in claim 1, characterised in that the length of said ground substrate is approximately one third of the wavelength
of a radio frequency band for which said antenna device is tuned.
11. A communication terminal (30) devised for multi-band radio communication, comprising
a housing (35), a user input (31,33) and output (32,34) interface, and in said housing
a built-in antenna device (1) including a flat ground substrate (20), a flat main
radiating element (2,9) having a radio signal feeding point (3), and a flat parasitic
element (5,6), characterised in that said main radiating element is located in the same plane as said ground substrate,
wherein a first elongated portion (2) of the main radiating element extends in an
L shape away from a side edge (21) of the ground substrate, the longer leg of said
L shape extending substantially parallel to said side edge.
12. The communication terminal as recited in claim 11, characterised in that said first elongated portion (2) has a first width, and extends into a second elongated
portion (9) having a second width, smaller than said first width.
13. The communication terminal as recited in claim 12, characterised in that the length of said first portion corresponds to the resonance of a first radio wavelength
and the combined length of said first and second portion corresponds to the resonance
of a second radio wavelength.
14. The communication terminal as recited in claim 11, characterised in that said flat parasitic element comprises a first L-shaped parasitic member (5) extending
from an electrical connection point (7) to said ground substrate essentially parallel
to said first portion of the main antenna element.
15. The communication terminal as recited in claim 14, characterised in that said flat parasitic element comprises a second L-shaped parasitic member (6) extending
from an electrical connection point (8) to said ground substrate essentially parallel
to said first parasitic member (7).
16. The communication terminal as recited in claim 11, characterised in that said main radiating element is dielectrically separated from the ground substrate.
17. The communication terminal as recited in claim 12, characterised in that said second portion (9) is meandered.
18. The communication terminal as recited in claim 12, characterised in that said first width is at least 5 times larger than said second width.
19. The communication terminal as recited in claim 12, characterised in that said first width is at least 10 times larger than said second width.
20. The communication terminal as recited in claim 11, characterised in that the length of said ground substrate is approximately one third of the wavelength
of a radio frequency band for which said antenna device is tuned.
21. A multi-band radio antenna (12) for a radio communication terminal, comprising a flat
main radiating element (2,9) having a radio signal feeding point (3), and a flat parasitic
element (5,6), characterised in that said antenna is connectable to a flat ground substrate (20) by interconnection with
said parasitic element such that said main radiating element is located in the same
plane as said ground substrate, wherein a first elongated portion (2) of the main
radiating element extends in an L shape away from a side edge (21) of the ground substrate,
the longer leg of said L shape extending substantially parallel to said side edge.
22. An integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device (40) for a radio
communication terminal, comprising a flat ground substrate (20), a flat main radiating
element (2,9) having a radio signal feeding point (3), and a flat parasitic element
(5,6), characterised in that said main radiating element is located in substantially the same plane as said ground
substrate, wherein a first elongated portion (2) of the main radiating element extends
in an L shape away from a side edge (21) of the ground substrate, the longer leg of
said L shape extending substantially parallel to said side edge.
23. The integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device as recited in
claim 22, characterised in that said ground substrate, said main radiating element and said parasitic element are
formed of a single sheet of electrically conductive material.
24. The integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device as recited in
claim 22, characterised in that said ground substrate, said main radiating element and said parasitic element are
etched out from a metal layer on a printed circuit board (41).
25. The integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device as recited in
claim 22, characterised in that said ground substrate is formed on one layer of a printed circuit board (41), and
said main radiating element and said parasitic element are formed on another layer
on said printed circuit board.
26. The integrated multi-band radio antenna and ground substrate device as recited in
claim 22, further comprising any of the features of claims 2 - 9.