OBJECT OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a novel loaded antenna which operates simultaneously
at several bands and featuring a smaller size with respect to prior art antennas.
[0002] The radiating element of the novel loaded antenna consists on two different parts:
a conducting surface with a polygonal, space-filling or multilevel shape; and a loading
structure consisting on a set of strips connected to said first conducting surface.
[0003] The invention refers to a new type of loaded antenna which is mainly suitable for
mobile communications or in general to any other application where the integration
of telecom systems or applications in a single small antenna is important.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0004] The growth of the telecommunication sector, and in particular, the expansion of personal
mobile communication systems are driving the engineering efforts to develop multiservice
(multifrequency) and compact systems which require multifrequency and small antennas.
Therefore, the use of a multisystem small antenna with a multiband and/or wideband
performance, which provides coverage of the maximum number of services, is nowadays
of notable interest since it permits telecom operators to reduce their costs and to
minimize the environmental impact.
[0005] Most of the multiband reported antenna solutions use one or more radiators or branches
for each band or service. An example is found in
U.S. Patent No. 09/129176 entitled "Multiple band, multiple branch antenna for mobile phone".
[0006] One of the alternatives which can be of special interest when looking for antennas
with a multiband and/or small size performance are multilevel antennas, Patent
WO0122528 entitled "Multilevel Antennas", and miniature space-filling antennas, Patent
WO0154225 entitled "Space-filling miniature antennas".
[0007] A variety of techniques used to reduce the size of the antennas can be found in the
prior art. In 1886, there was the first example of a loaded antenna; that was, the
loaded dipole which Hertz built to validate Maxwell equations.
[0009] More recently,
U.S. Patent No.5,847,682 entitled "Top loaded triangular printed antenna" discloses a triangular-shaped printed
antenna with its top connected to a rectangular strip. The antenna features a low-profile
and broadband performance. However, none of these antenna configurations provide a
multiband behaviour. In Patent No.
W00122528 entitled "Multilevel Antennas", another patent of the present inventors, there is
a particular case of a top-loaded antenna with an inductive loop, which was used to
miniaturize an antenna for a dual frequency operation. Also, W.Dou and W.Y.M.Chia
(
W.Dou and W.Y.M.Chia, "Small broadband stacked planar monopole", Microwave and Optical
Technology Letters, vol. 27, pp. 288-289, November 2000) presented another particular antecedent of a top-loaded antenna with a broadband
behavior. The antenna was a rectangular monopole top-loaded with one rectangular arm
connected at each of the tips of the rectangular shape. The width of each of the rectangular
arms is on the order of the width of the fed element, which is not the case of the
present invention.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0010] The key point of the present invention is the shape of the radiating element of the
antenna, which consists on two main parts: a conducting surface and a loading structure.
Said conducting surface has a polygonal, space-filling or multilevel shape and the
loading structure consists on a conducting strip or set of strips connected to said
conducting surface. According to the present invention, at least one loading strip
must be directly connected at least at one point on the perimeter of said conducting
surface. Also, circular or elliptical shapes are included in the set of possible geometries
of said conducting surfaces since they can be considered polygonal structures with
a large number of sides.
[0011] Due to the addition of the loading structure, the antenna can feature a small and
multiband, and sometimes a multiband and wideband, performance. Moreover, the multiband
properties of the loaded antenna (number of bands, spacing between bands, matching
levels, etc) can be adjusted by modifying the geometry of the load and/or the conducting
surface.
[0012] This novel loaded antenna allows to obtain a multifrequency performance, obtaining
similar radioelectric parameters at several bands.
[0013] The loading structure can consist for instance on a single conducting strip. In this
particular case, said loading strip must have one of its two ends connected to a point
on the perimeter of the conducting surface (i.e., the vertices or edges). The other
tip of said strip is left free in some embodiments while, in other embodiments it
is also connected at a point on the perimeter of said conducting surface.
[0014] The loading structure can include not only a single strip but also a plurality of
loading strips located at different locations along its perimeter.
[0015] The geometries of the loads that can be connected to the conducting surface according
to the present invention are:
a) A curve composed by a minimum of two segments and a maximum of nine segments which
are connected in such a way that each segment forms an angle with their neighbours,
i.e., no pair of adjacent segments define a larger straight segment.
b) A straight segment or strip
c) A straight strip with a polygonal shape
d) A space-filling curve, Patent No. PCT/ES00/0041-1 entitled "Space-filling miniature antennas".
[0016] In some embodiments, the loading structure described above is connected to the conducting
surface while in other embodiments, the tips of a plurality of the loading strips
are connected to other strips. In those embodiments where a new loading strip is added
to the previous one, said additional load can either have one tip free of connection,
or said tip connected to the previous loading strip, or both tips connected to previous
strip or one tip connected to previous strip and the other tip connected to the conducting
surface.
[0017] There are three types of geometries that can be used for the conducting surface according
to the present invention:
a) A polygon (i.e., a triangle, square, trapezoid, pentagon, hexagon, etc. or even
a circle or ellipse as a particular case of polygon with a very large number of edges).
b) A multilevel structure, Patent No. WO0122528 entitled "Multilevel Antennas" .
c) A solid surface with an space-filling perimeter.
[0018] In some embodiments, a central portion of said conducting surface is even removed
to further reduce the size of the antenna. Also, it is clear to those skilled in the
art that the multilevel or space-filling designs in configurations b) and c) can be
used to approximate, for instance, ideal fractal shapes.
[0019] Fig.1 and Fig.2 show some examples of the radiating element for a loaded antenna
according to the present invention. In drawings 1 to 3 the conducting surface is a
trapezoid while in drawings 4 to 7 said surface is a triangle. It can be seen that
in these cases, the conducting surface is loaded using different strips with different
lengths, orientations and locations around the perimeter of the trapezoid, Fig.1.
Besides, in these examples the load can have either one or both of its ends connected
to the conducting surface, Fig.2.
[0020] The main advantage of this novel loaded antenna is two-folded:
- The antenna features a multiband or wideband performance, or a combination of both.
- Given the physical size of radiating element, said antenna can be operated at a lower
frequency than most of the prior art antennas.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021]
Fig.1 shows a trapezoid antenna loaded in three different ways using the same structure;
in particular, a straight strip. In case 1, one straight strip, the loading structure
(1a) and (1b), is added at each of the tips of the trapezoid, the conducting surface
(1c). Case 2 is the same as case 1, but using strips with a smaller length and located
at a different position around the perimeter of the conducting surface. Case 3, is
a more general case where several strips are added to two different locations on the
conducting surface. Drawing 4 shows a example of a non-symmetric loaded structure
and drawing 5 shows an element where just one slanted strip has been added at the
top of the conducting surface. Finally, cases 6 and 7 are examples of geometries loaded
with a strip with a triangular and rectangular shape and with different orientations.
In these cases, the loads have only one of their ends connected to the conducting
surface.
Fig. 2 shows a different particular configuration where the loads are curves which
are composed by a maximum of nine segments in such a way that each segment forms an
angle with their neighbours, as it has been mentioned before. Moreover, in drawings
8 to 12 the loads have both of their ends connected to the conducting surface. Drawings
8 and 9, are two examples where the conducting surface is side-loaded. Cases 13 and
14, are two cases where a rectangle is top-loaded with an open-ended curve, shaped
as is mentioned before, with the connection made through one of the tips of the rectangle.
The maximum width of the loading strips is smaller than a quarter of the longest edge
of the conducting surface.
Fig.3 shows a square structure top-loaded with three different space-filling curves.
The curve used to load the square geometry, case 16, is the well-known Hilbert curve.
Fig.4 shows three examples of the top-loaded antenna, where the load consist of two
different loads that are added to the conducting surface. In drawing 19, a first load,
built with three segments, is added to the trapezoid and then a second load is added
to the first one.
Fig. 5 includes some examples of the loaded antenna where a central portion of the
conducting surface is even removed to further reduce the size of the antenna.
Fig. 6 shows the same loaded antenna described in Fig.1, but in this case as the conducting
surface a multilevel structure is used.
Fig.7 shows another example of the loaded antenna, similar to those described in Fig.2.
In this case, the conducting surface consist of a multilevel structure. Drawings 31,32,
34 and 35 use different shapes for the loading but in all cases the load has both
ends connected to the conducting surface. Case 33 is an example of an open-ended load
added to a multilevel conducting surface.
Fig.8 presents some examples of the loaded antenna, similar to those depicted in Fig.3
and 4, but using a multilevel structure as the conducting surface. Illustrations 36,
37 and 38, include a space-filling top-loading curve, while the rest of the drawings
show three examples of the top-loaded antenna with several levels of loadings. Drawing
40 is an example where three loads have been added to the multilevel structure. More
precisely, the conducting surface is firstly loaded with curve (40a), next with curves
(40b) and (40c). Curve (40a) has both ends connected to conducting surface, curve
(40b) has both ends connected to the previous load (40a), and load (40c), formed with
two segments, has one end connected to load (40a) and the other to the load (40b).
Fig.9 shows three cases where the same multilevel structure, with the central portions
of the conducting surface removed, which is loaded with three different type of loads;
those are, a space-filling curve, a curve with a minimum of two segments and a maximum
of nine segments connected in such a way mentioned just before, and finally a load
with two similar levels.
Fig.10 shows two configurations of the loaded antenna which include three conducting
surfaces, one of them bigger than the others. Drawing 45 shows a triangular conducting
surface (45a) which is connected to two smaller circular conducting surfaces (45b)
and (45c) through one conducting strip (45d) and (45e). Drawing 46 is a similar configuration
to drawing 45 but the bigger conducting surface is a multilevel structure.
Fig.11 shows other particular cases of the loaded antenna. They consist of a monopole
antenna comprising a conducting or superconducting ground plane (48) with an opening
to allocate a coaxial cable (47) with its outer conductor connected to said ground
plane and the inner conductor connected to the loaded antenna. The loaded radiator
can be optionally placed over a supporting dielectric (49).
Fig.12 shows a top-loaded polygonal radiating element (50) mounted with the same configuration
as the antenna in Fig. 12. The radiating element radiator can be optionally placed
over a supporting dielectric (49). The lower drawing shows a configuration wherein
the radiating element is printed on one of the sides of a dielectric substrate (49)
and also the load has a conducting surface on the other side of the substrate (51).
Fig.13 shows a particular configuration of the loaded antenna. It consists of a dipole
wherein each of the two arms includes two straight strip loads. The lines at the vertex
of the small triangles (50) indicate the input terminal points. The two drawings display
different configurations of the same basic dipole; in the lower drawing the radiating
element is supported by a dielectric substrate (49).
Fig.14 shows, in the upper drawing, an example of the same dipole antenna side-loaded
with two strips but fed as an aperture antenna. The lower drawing is the same loaded
structure wherein the conductor defines the perimeter of the loaded geometry.
Fig.15 shows a patch antenna wherein the radiating element is a multilevel structure
top-loaded with two strip arms, upper drawing. Also, the figure shows an aperture
antenna wherein the aperture (59) is practiced on a conducting or superconducting
structure (63), said aperture being shaped as a loaded multilevel structure.
Fig.16 shows a frequency selective surface wherein the elements that form the surface
are shaped as a multilevel loaded structure.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SOME PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0022] A preferred embodiment of the loaded antenna is a monopole configuration as shown
in Fig.11. The antenna includes a conducting or superconducting counterpoise or ground
plane (48). A handheld telephone case, or even a part of the metallic structure of
a car or train can act as such a ground conterpoise. The ground and the monopole arm
(here the arm is represented with the loaded structure (26), but any of the mentioned
loaded antenna structure could be taken instead) are excited as usual in prior art
monopole by means of, for instance, a transmission line (47). Said transmission line
is formed by two conductors, one of the conductors is connected to the ground counterpoise
while the other is connected to a point of the conducting or superconducting loaded
structure. In Fig.11, a coaxial cable (47) has been taken as a particular case of
transmission line, but it is clear to any skilled in the art that other transmission
lines (such as for instance a microstrip arm) could be used to excite the monopole.
Optionally, and following the scheme just described, the loaded monopole can be printed
over a dielectric substrate (49).
[0023] Another preferred embodiment of the loaded antenna is a monopole configuration as
shown in Fig.12. The assembly of the antenna (feeding scheme, ground plane, etc) is
the same as the considered in the embodiment described in Fig.11. In the present figure,
there is another example of the loaded antenna. More precisely, it consists of a trapezoid
element top-loaded with one of the mentioned curves. In this case, one of the main
differences is that, being the antenna edged on dielectric substrate, it also includes
a conducting surface on the other side of the dielectric (51) with the shape of the
load. This preferred configuration allows to miniaturize the antenna and also to adjust
the multiband parameters of the antenna, such as the spacing the between bands.
Fig.13 describes a preferred embodiment of the invention. A two-arm antenna dipole
is constructed comprising two conducting or superconducting parts, each part being
a side-loaded multilevel structure. For the sake of clarity but without loss of generality,
a particular case of the loaded antenna (26) has been chosen here; obviously, other
structures, as for instance, those described in Fig. 2,3,4,7 and 8, could be used
instead. Both, the conducting surfaces and the loading structures are lying on the
same surface. The two closest apexes of the two arms form the input terminals (50)
of the dipole. The terminals (50) have been drawn as conducting or superconducting
wires, but as it is clear to those skilled in the art, such terminals could be shaped
following any other pattern as long as they are kept small in terms of the operating
wavelength. The skilled in the art will notice that, the arms of the dipoles can be
rotated and folded in different ways to finely modify the input impedance or the radiation
properties of the antenna such as, for instance, polarization.
[0024] Another preferred embodiment of a loaded dipole is also shown in Fig.13 where the
conducting or superconducting loaded arms are printed over a dielectric substrate
(49); this method is particularly convenient in terms of cost and mechanical robustness
when the shape of the applied load packs a long length in a small area and when the
conducting surface contains a high number of polygons, as happens with multilevel
structures. Any of the well-known printed circuit fabrication techniques can be applied
to pattern the loaded structure over the dielectric substrate. Said dielectric substrate
can be, for instance, a glass-fibre board, a teflon based substrate (such as Cuclad
®) or other standard radiofrequency and microwave substrates (as for instance Rogers
4003
® or Kapton
®). The dielectric substrate can be a portion of a window glass if the antenna is to
be mounted in a motor vehicle such as a car, a train or an airplane, to transmit or
receive radio, TV, cellular telephone (GSM900, GSM1800, UMTS) or other communication
services electromagnetic waves. Of course, a balun network can be connected or integrated
at the input terminals of the dipole to balance the current distribution among the
two dipole arms.
[0025] The embodiment (26) in Fig.14 consist on an aperture configuration of a loaded antenna
using a multilevel geometry as the conducting surface. The feeding techniques can
be one of the techniques usually used in conventional aperture antennas. In the described
figure, the inner conductor of the coaxial cable (53) is directly connected to the
lower triangular element and the outer conductor to the rest of the conductive surface.
Other feeding configurations are possible, such as for instance a capacitive coupling.
[0026] Another preferred embodiment of the loaded antenna is a slot loaded monopole antenna
as shown in the lower drawing in Fig.14. In this figure the loaded structure forms
a slot or gap (54) impressed over a conducting or superconducting sheet (52). Such
sheet can be, for instance, a sheet over a dielectric substrate in a printed circuit
board configuration, a transparent conductive film such as those deposited over a
glass window to protect the interior of a car from heating infrared radiation, or
can even be a part of the metallic structure of a handheld telephone, a car, train,
boat or airplane. The feeding scheme can be any of the well known in conventional
slot antennas and it does not become an essential part of the preserit invention.
In-all said two illustrations in Fig.14, a coaxial cable has been used to feed the
antenna, with one of the conductors connected to one side of the conducting sheet
and the other connected at the other side of the sheet across the slot. A microstrip
transmission line could be used, for instance, instead of a coaxial cable.
[0027] Another preferred embodiment is described in Fig.15. It consists of a patch antenna,
with the conducting or superconducting patch (58) featuring the loaded structure (the
particular case of the loaded structure (59) has been used here but it is clear that
any of the other mentioned structures could be used instead). The patch antenna comprises
a conducting or superconducting ground plane (61) or ground counterpoise, and the
conducting or superconducting patch which is parallel to said ground plane or ground
counterpoise. The spacing between the patch and the ground is typically below (but
not restricted to) a quarter wavelength. Optionally, a low-loss dielectric substrate
(60) (such as glass-fibre, a teflon substrate such as Cuclad
® or other commercial materials such as Rogers4003
®) can be placed between said patch and ground counterpoise. The antenna feeding scheme
can be taken to be any of the well-known schemes used in prior art patch antennas,
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
(of course the typical modifications including a capacitive gap on the patch around
the coaxial connecting point or a capacitive plate connected to the inner conductor
of the coaxial placed at a distance parallel to the patch, and so on, can be used
as well); 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 a slot, and even a microstrip line with the strip co-planar to
the patch. All these mechanisms are well known from prior art and do not constitute
an essential part of the present invention. The essential part of the invention is
the loading shape of the antenna which contributes to enhance the behavior of the
radiator to operate simultaneously at several bands with a small size performance.
[0028] The same Fig.15 describes another preferred embodiment of the loaded antenna. It
consist of an aperture antenna, said aperture being characterized by its loading added
to a multilevel structure, said aperture being impressed over a conducting ground
plane or ground counterpoise, said ground plane consisting, for example, of a wall
of a waveguide or cavity resonator or a part of the structure of a motor vehicle (such
as a car, a lorry, an airplane or a tank). The aperture can be fed by any of the conventional
techniques such as a coaxial cable (61), or a planar microstrip or strip-line transmission
line, to name a few.
[0029] Another preferred embodiment is described in Fig.16. It consists of a frequency selective
surface (63). Frequency selective surfaces are essentially electromagnetic filters,
which at some frequencies they completely reflect energy while at other frequencies
they are completely transparent. In this preferred embodiment the selective elements
(64), which form the surface (63), use the loaded structure (26), but any other of
the mentioned loaded antenna structures can be used instead. At least one of the selective
elements (64) has the same shape of the mentioned loaded radiating elements. Besides
this embodiment, another embodiment is preferred; this is, a loaded antenna where
the conducting surface or the loading structure, or both, are shaped by means of one
or a combination of the following mathematical algorithms: Iterated Function Systems,
Multi Reduction Copy Machine, Networked Multi Reduction Copy Machine.
1. A loaded antenna characterized in that the radiating element includes at least two parts, first part consisting on at least
one conducting surface, second part being a loading structure, said loading structure
consisting on at least a conducting strip, wherein at least one of said strips are
connected at least at one point on the edge of said first conducting surface, and
wherein the maximum width of said strip or strips is smaller than a quarter of the
longest edge of first conducting surface.
2. A loaded antenna according to claim 1 characterized in that the radiating element includes at least two parts, first part consisting on a conducting
surface, second part being a loading structure, said loading structure consisting
on at least a conducting strip, wherein the two tips of at least one of the conducting
strips are connected at two points on the perimeter of said first conducting surface.
3. A loaded antenna according to claim 1 or 2 wherein said first conducting surface and
second loading structure are lying on the same flat or curved surface.
4. A loaded antenna according to claim 1,2 or 3 comprising a conducting surface and at
least a first and a second strip, wherein said first strip is connected at least at
one point on the perimeter of said conducting surface, and wherein said second strip
is connected at least by means of one of its tips to said first conducting strip.
5. A loaded antenna according to claim 1,2,3 or 4 wherein the antenna includes at least
a second conducting surface, said second surface featuring a smaller area than first
conducting surface, and wherein at least one conducting strip is connected to first
conducting surface at one end, and to second conducting surface at the other end
6. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4 or 5 wherein the perimeter of said conducting surface is shaped chosen
from the following set: triangular, square, rectangular, trapezoidal, pentagonal,
hexagonal, heptagonal, octogonal, circular or elliptical.
7. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4 or 5 wherein at least a portion of said conducting surface is a multilevel
structure.
8. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6 or 7 wherein the shape of at least one loading strip is a curve
composed by a minimum of two segments and a maximum of nine segments which are connected
in such a way that each segment forms an angle with their neighbours, i.e., no pair
of adjacent segments define a larger straight segment.
9. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6 or 7 wherein the loading structure includes at least one straight
strip, said strip having one end connected to a point on the edge of said conducting
surface.
10. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6 or 7 wherein the shape of at least one loading strip is a space-filling
curve.
11. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6 or 7 wherein at least one loading strip is a straight strip with
a polygonal shape.
12. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6 or 7 wherein the loading structure includes at least two strips,
with the first strip with one tip free of connection, or connected to the second strip,
or both tips connected to the second strip or one tip connected to the second strip
and the other tip connected to the conducting surface.
13. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6 or 7 wherein the loading structure consists on two or more strips
connected at several points on the perimeter of said conducting surface.
14. A loaded antenna according to claim 5,6 or 7 wherein at least the second conducting
surface includes a loading structure according to claim 8,9,10,11,12 or 13.
15. A loaded antenna including a conducting surface and a loading structure according
to claim 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13 or 14 wherein a central portion of the conducting
surface is removed.
16. A loaded antenna according to claims 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14 or 15 wherein
the antenna is a monopole, said monopole including a ground-plane or ground-counterpoise
and a radiating element, said element including at least a conducting surface and
a loading structure.
17. A loaded antenna according to claims 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14 or 15 wherein
the antenna is a dipole including two arms, said arms including at least a conducting
surface and a loading structure.
18. A loaded antenna according to claims 16 or 17 where the radiating element is printed
on one of the sides of a dielectric substrate and the load has a conducting surface
on the other side of the substrate.
19. A loaded antenna according to claims 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14 or 15 wherein
the antenna is a microstrip patch antenna and wherein the radiating patch of said
antenna includes a conducting surface and a loading structure.
20. A loaded antenna according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the antenna features a multiband behavior, a broadband behavior or a combination
of both.
21. A loaded antenna according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the antenna is shorter than a quarter of the central operating wavelength.
22. A loaded antenna wherein the antenna is an aperture or slot antenna characterized in that the shape of the slot or aperture is the same as any of the shapes of the radiating
elements of the loaded antennas described in the preceding claims.
23. A loaded antenna radiating element described in any of the preceding claims which
shape is used in at least one of the selective elements on a frequency selective surface.
24. A loaded antenna according to any of the preceding claims, characterized in that the geometry of the surface, the loading structure or both are shaped by means of
one or a combination of the following mathematical algorithms: Iterated Function Systems,
Multi Reduction Copy Machine, Networked Multi Reduction Copy Machine.