[0001] The invention concerns a dual-polar antenna for base station of mobile radio systems
with adjustable azimuth beamwidth.
[0002] Base stations are typically equipped with several transmit-receive antennas which
cover sectors of terrain surrounding the base station. An important consideration
in determining the necessary capacity of a base station is the number and angular
width of these sectors. It is common for each base station to be equipped with multiple
antennas connected to radio transmitters and receivers, each antenna having an azimuth
half-power (3dB) beamwidth of between 65 degrees and 90 degrees.
[0003] Many mobile radio system operators provide services which use multiple interface
standards and frequency bands, for example using the GSM protocol in the frequency
bands 1710 - 1880MHz and the W-CDMA protocol in the band 1900 - 2170MHz. To reduce
the cost and physical size of the antenna systems required at each base station it
is common for these different radio systems to be served by common antennas. These
antennas are required to provide essentially constant operational parameters over
the whole frequency band 1710 - 2170MHz, a fractional bandwidth of 26%.
[0004] The capacity of a base station can be less than the theoretical maximum if regularly
arranged sectors of coverage are used in locations in which the distribution of users
is non-uniform, or in non-uniform land.
[0005] In a system using a code-division multiple access (CDMA) protocol, such as CDMA-2000
or W-CDMA, users whose location lies in the overlap area between adjacent sectors
communicate through the radio equipment of all the sectors within whose coverage they
lie. While this arrangement provides highly reliable service it also results in a
single user consuming radio resources in more than one sector, which can relate to
the same or different base stations.
[0006] In these circumstances it is advantageous to be able to remotely adjust the angular
width of the sectors of coverage, a parameter primarily determined by the azimuth
beamwidth of the antennas serving the appropriate sectors.
[0008] The transmission or reception of signals with the described polarization requires
the use of antenna radiating elements capable of transmitting and receiving signals
with these polarizations.
[0009] An antenna array such as described in the cited article would typically be expected
to comprise an alignment of identical radiating elements.
[0010] Figures 1 and 2 of the present application are representative of antennas.
[0011] Figure 1 shows configuration of a base station antenna, in which a single vertical
column comprising between 4 and 16 radiating elements 1 in the vertical plane is mounted
in front of a conductive surface 2 which acts as a reflector, creating a unidirectional
beam in the direction of the arrow 3 typically in or close to the horizontal plane.
[0012] Figure 2 shows a configuration of a base station antenna comprising multiple vertical
columns of radiating elements.
[0013] Each of the radiating elements 1 comprises a crossed dipole, patch or other configuration
chosen to provide the required characteristics of azimuth beamwidth, impedance match
and polarization.
[0014] It is well known that the azimuth beamwidth of simple radiating elements including
patches and crossed-dipoles can be modified by the use of a suitably shaped reflecting
screen behind the elements, the shaping of the edges of the screen, the provision
of slots in the edges of the screen, or by the use of slots in additional suitably
placed passive parasitic elements. Such parasitic elements radiate by virtue of currents
induced in them by the fields created by the nearby actively excited elements of the
antenna.
[0015] The extent of control of the radiation pattern by the use of parasitic elements is
limited by the frequency bandwidth over which the antenna is required to operate.
As the frequency changes the amplitude and phases of the currents in the parasitic
elements, the radiation pattern of the driven element combined with its associated
parasitic elements changes in consequence.
[0016] The provision of a stable azimuth half-power (3dB) beamwidth wider than about 70
degrees (for example 90 degrees) has been found to be not easily achieved without
the use of more complex and expensive configurations of radiating elements.
[0017] A wide, stable and adjustable azimuth beamwidth can be obtained by the use of a plurality
of radiating elements in which the relative amplitudes of the signals fed to each
element are fixed at a suitable value and the relative phases of the signals are varied.
The phase of each radiating element can be adjusted independently.
[0018] In the form previously described, an antenna suitable for use at a mobile radio base
station would comprise an array of n radiating elements wide in the horizontal plane
(where n has a typical value of 3) and m radiating elements in the vertical plane
where m has a value chosen according to the total gain required from the antenna,
typically between 4 and 16 radiating elements, as shown in figure 2.
[0019] Each group of n radiating elements 1 disposed in the horizontal plane is typically
identical in configuration. In the case of antennas designed to radiate and receive
dual-polarized signals each radiating element 1 is typically designed to support radiating
currents having each of the radiated polarizations. In such an array a full feed network
with n x m branches is necessary for each of the two radiated polarizations.
[0020] This configuration provides a complex antenna array of identical dual-polar radiating
elements together with separate power division networks and phase shifters associated
with each polarization.
[0021] It is the objective of the present invention to permit the achievement of a dual-polar
antenna having a chosen value of azimuth beamwidth using a simpler and less costly
arrangement of radiating elements and feed networks.
[0022] To this end, the invention concerns a dual-polar antenna for base station of mobile
radio systems with adjustable azimuth beamwidth comprising:
- at least a set of radiating elements comprising :
o an inner group of radiating elements having at least two input ports,
o two outer groups of radiating elements, and
- at least one power division network connected to each group of radiating elements.
According to the invention:
- the inner group of radiating elements is comprised of radiating elements capable of
radiating and/or receiving two nominally orthogonally polarized signals,
- the outer groups of radiating elements are comprised of radiating elements capable
of radiating and/or receiving signals with a single polarization.
[0023] According to various embodiments, the present invention also concerns the characteristics
below, considered individually or in all their technical possible combinations:
- the inner group of radiating elements comprises a single dual polar radiating element,
- the dual polar radiating elements are crossed-dipole radiating elements,
- the dual polar radiating elements are patch radiating elements,
- the outer groups of radiating elements comprise each a single radiating element,
- it comprises a single power division network feeding the inner and outer groups of
radiating elements, said single power division network comprising :
o two inputs, one for each of the input polarized signals,
o two outputs connected to the two input ports of the inner group of radiating elements
respectively,
o two outputs, each connected to one of the outer groups of radiating elements,
- it further comprises two variable phase shifters, each variable phase shifter being
connected to one of the two input ports of the inner group of radiating elements and
to one of the two outputs of the power division network,
- the power division network is a coupling network comprising :
o two transmission lines, each of the transmission lines being connected between one
of the input ports of the inner group of radiating elements and one of the input ports
of the coupling network, respectively,
o a coupling line having a portion inductively coupled to a portion of each of the
transmission lines of the coupling network, said coupling line comprising on one side,
a first unconnected end and on the other side, a second end connected to two output
lines thereby forming a Tee-junction, each output line being connected to one of the
outer radiating elements, respectively,
- the coupling network comprises a single variable phase shifter within the coupling
line and connected to an input end of the inductively coupled portion of the coupling
line and the Tee junction,
- it comprises m sets of radiating elements aligned in the vertical plane, forming an
antenna array,
- each variable phase shifter comprises a control device, the control device of each
of the variable phase shifters being connected to a bus linked to a central unit,
whereby signals corresponding to a selected azimuth beamwidth are transmitted to each
variable phase shifter from the central unit,
- the central unit is linked to a data communication means so that the beamwidth can
be remotely controled.
[0024] The description of the invention is illustrated by the following drawings in which:
- Figure 1 represents a configuration of a typical base station antenna, according to
prior art, comprising a single vertical column of radiating elements ;
- Figure 2 represents a configuration of a typical base station antenna, according to
prior art, comprising n radiating elements in the horizontal plane and m radiating
elements in the vertical plane ;
- Figure 3 represents an antenna arrangement of three dual-polar radiating elements
aligned horizontally (n=3) according to prior art ;
- Figure 4 represents an antenna arrangement comprising a single inner dual-polar radiating
element and two outer radiating elements (n=3), according to the invention ;
- Figure 5 represents details of a coupling network, according to the invention ;
- Figure 6a and 6b represent achievable azimuth radiation patterns, of an horizontal
arrangement of radiating elements, according to the invention and prior art ;
[0025] Figure 3 represents an antenna arrangement according to prior art. This antenna arrangement
comprises an inner group of radiating elements 100 and two outer groups of radiating
elements 101, 102. Each group of radiating elements 100, 101, 102 comprises a dual-polar
radiating element. The group of radiating elements 100, 101, 102 are fed through two
power division networks 17, associated with the +45° and -45° polarizations respectively.
The radiating elements 100, 101, 102 are aligned horizontally. Each polarization access
of the radiating elements 100, 101, 102 is fed through a single power division network
17.
[0026] Two variable phase shifters 15 are connected to the inner group of radiating elements
100 and the power division networks 17. Each phase shifter 15 is associated with a
single polarization (-45° or +45°). The beamwidth of the antenna is controlled by
the choice of the power division ratio provided by the power division networks 17
and the phase shift provided by the phase shifters 15. It is usual that the two polarizations
have the same beamwidth and the two phase shifters 15 are varied identically.
[0027] It is necessary to excite the two outer groups of radiating elements 101, 102 by
only a small proportion of the total input power, typically less than - 20dB relative
to the inner group of radiating elements 100.
[0028] The two power division networks 17 comprise three branches for each of the two radiated
polarizations.
[0029] This configuration provides a complex and costly antenna with separate power division
networks and phase shifters associated with each polarization.
[0030] Because the power transmitted by the two outer groups of radiating elements 101,
102 is very much lower than that transmitted by the inner group of radiating elements
100, the polarization characteristics of the outer groups of radiating elements 101,
102 are not critical.
[0031] According to a possible embodiment of the present invention, as shown in figure 4,
the antenna comprises a set of radiating elements 30 aligned horizontally. The antenna
can comprise several sets of radiating elements 30.
[0032] Each set of radiating elements 30 includes an inner group of radiating elements 100
and two outer groups of radiating elements 101, 102. In this example, the inner group
of radiating elements 100 is a central group of radiating elements 100.
[0033] The inner group of radiating elements 100 comprises radiating elements capable of
radiating and/or receiving two nominally orthogonally polarized signals.
[0034] Nominally means that the signals have planes of polarization inclined nominally ±
45 degrees relative to the vertical plane. The two nominally orthogonally polarized
signals can be linear, circular or elliptical.
[0035] The signals can be nominally vertically polarized signals, nominally horizontally
polarized signals or nominally circularly polarized signals.
[0036] The outer groups of radiating elements 101, 102 comprise radiating elements capable
of radiating and/or receiving signals with a single polarization.
[0037] In this example, each of the two outer groups of radiating elements 101, 102 comprises
a single radiating element which is a vertically-polarized radiating element laterally
disposed relative to the inner group of radiating elements 100.
[0038] The inner group of radiating elements 100 comprises a single dual-polar radiating
element. This dual-polar radiating element can be a crossed-dipole radiating element
or a patch radiating element.
[0039] Each outer group of radiating elements 101, 102 is excited by means of a single power
division network 200 with currents of a chosen amplitudes and phases relative to the
currents in the dual-polar radiating element of the inner group of radiating elements
100 such that the radiation pattern in the plane containing the groups of radiating
elements 100, 101, 102 is modified to provide a chosen 3-dB beamwidth in that plane.
The inner group of radiating elements 100 comprises at least two input ports 110,
111, each input 110, 111 of the inner group of radiating elements 100 is connected
to one output 211, 212 of the power division network 200.
[0040] The dual-polar element of the inner group of radiating elements 100 provides transmission
on two orthogonal linear polarizations with polarization planes of +45° and -45° respectively.
In order to achieve control of the beamwidth for both polarizations, the signals fed
to the outer vertically polarized group of radiating elements 101, 102 are required
to contain power from both the transmissions made by the inner dual-polar group of
radiating elements 100.
[0041] This is achieved by the power division network 200 comprising two inputs 240, 241,
each connected to one of the input polarized signals (+45° or -45°). The power division
network 200 comprises two outputs 221, 222 each connected to one of the vertically
polarized outer group of radiating elements 101, 102. The signals provided at outputs
221, 222 comprise low level signals derived from both of the inputs 240, 241.
[0042] The antenna can comprise several variable phase shifters 15.
[0043] In the figure 4, the antenna comprises two variable phase shifters 15. Each variable
phase shifter 15 is connected to one of the two input ports 110, 111 of the inner
group of radiating elements 100 and to one of the outputs 221, 222 of the power division
network 200, allowing adjusting the azimuth beamwidth.
[0044] There exists many known means by which the functionality of the power division network
200 could be achieved.
[0045] Figure 5 provides details of a possible embodiment of the invention in which the
power division network 200 is a coupling network 230.
[0046] The coupling network 230 comprises two transmission lines 231, 232, each of the transmission
lines being connected between one of the input ports 110, 111 of the inner group of
radiating elements 100 and one of the input ports 240, 241 of the coupling network
230, respectively.
[0047] The coupling network 230 comprises a coupling line 233 having a portion 233a inductively
coupled to a portion 231a, 232a of each of the transmission lines 231, 232 of the
coupling network 230. The coupling line 233 comprises on one side, a first unconnected
end 234 and on the other side, a second end connected to two output lines 112, 113
thereby forming a Tee-junction 235. Each output line 112, 113 is connected to one
of the outer radiating elements 101, 102 respectively.
[0048] The coupling network 230 can optionally be constructed using any form of radio-frequency
transmission line including microstrip lines, striplines or coaxial transmission lines.
[0049] In this example, the inner group of radiating elements 100 is a cross polar radiator
100, comprising a crossed dipole, or a dual-polar patch radiating element in which
the signals to be radiated with polarizations +45-deg and -45-degrees are connected
to one of the two input ports 110, 111 of the inner group of radiating elements 100,
respectively.
[0050] Each one of the two RF (Radio Frequency) input ports 240, 241 of the coupling network
230 fed one of the +45-deg and -45-deg input ports 110, 111 of the cross polar radiator
100, respectively.
[0051] The unconnected end 234 of the coupling line 233 can be left open-circuit as shown
or can be connected to ground via a resistive terminating load. The disposition of
the portions 231a, 232a, 233a of the transmission lines 231, 232 and coupling line
233 ensures that a small amount of power from each of portion 231 a, 232a of the transmission
lines 231, 232 is coupled to the portion 233a of the coupling line 233 but a negligible
amount of power is directly coupled between the transmission lines 231 and 232.
[0052] The coupling between portions of the transmission lines 231, 232 and the coupling
line 233 is chosen such that after passing through the Tee junction 235, the power
supplying the outer groups of radiating elements 101, 102 is sufficient to provide
the chosen radiation pattern from the antenna. The total relative lengths of the respective
portions of the transmission lines 231, 232 and coupling line 233 are chosen such
that the radiating signals in each of the radiating elements have an appropriate phase
relationship to create the required radiation pattern from the antenna.
[0053] The phase of the inner groups of radiating elements 100 can be fixed relative to
that in the outer groups of radiating elements 101, 102, creating a chosen fixed azimuth
beamwidth.
[0054] In one embodiment, the azimuth beamwidth can be made variable by the mean of two
variable phase shifters 15 connected between the coupling network 230 and the inner
group of radiating elements 100. But from the design of this type of coupler 230,
it is advantageous to use a unique variable phase shifter 15 within the coupling line
233 and connected to an input end 236 of the portion 233a of coupling line 233 and
the Tee junction 235. The azimuth beamwidth can be adjusted to a chosen value within
the range provided by the configuration.
[0055] The low relative power level required in the outer groups of radiating elements 101,
102 in order to provide a substantial change in the beamwidth compared with that from
the single dual-polar radiating element of the inner group of radiating element 100
ensures that the presence of the vertically-polarized outer groups of radiating elements
101, 102 has little effect on the polarization of the signal radiated by the dual-polar
radiating element of the inner group of radiating element 100.
[0056] The negligible coupling between the transmission lines 231 and 232 ensures that the
isolation between the input ports 241, 242 is very little reduced by the presence
of the coupling network 230.
[0057] In these respects the performance of the antenna of three radiating elements 100,
101, 102 is very similar to that of an antenna comprising only an isolated dual-polar
radiating element, but the composite beamwidth is modified. The performance of the
configuration shown in Figure 5, according to the invention, is very close to that
provided by the more complex arrangement shown in Figure 3, according to cited prior
art, but its cost is reduced and its reliability is increased.
[0058] The beamwidths achievable by the means described, according to the invention, range
from 65° to 100° according to the choice of complex coupling coefficients between
the transmission lines 231, 232 and the coupling line 233.
[0059] The antenna arrangement has essentially constant performance over a wide operating
frequency band, for example, between 1710 and 2170MHz as shown in Figures 6a and 6b.
[0060] Figures 6a and 6b illustrate the adjustable azimuth half-power (3db) beamwidth, in
the horizontal plane, of an arrangement as described according to the invention and
cited prior art, over the frequency band 1710 - 2170MHz and for the minimum 3 (Figures
6a) and maximum 4 (Figures 6b) beamwidths available from a realisation.
[0061] The azimuth half-power (3db) beamwidth 3, 4 can be adjusted when varying the phase
with the phase shifter 15.
[0062] In an other embodiment, the antenna can comprise no phase shifter. In this case,
the azimuth half-power (3db) beamwidth can not be adjusted.
[0063] The above description of the invention relates to the simplest realisation in which
a single dual-polar radiating element is associated with two outer radiating elements
laterally disposed relative to the direction of maximum radiation.
[0064] It will be understood by those skilled in the art that this is a particular embodiment
and that the method is of general application although the extent of variation in
azimuth beamwidth available from arrays with larger number of radiating elements is
less then that for the case described.
[0065] The inner group of radiating elements 100 and the outer group of radiating elements
101, 102 can comprise several radiating elements.
[0066] In a further embodiment, the dual-polar antenna comprises a plurality of set of radiating
elements 30 aligned in the vertical plane, forming an antenna array.
[0067] This antenna array comprises n radiating elements wide in the horizontal plane (where
n has a typical value of 3) and m sets of radiating elements 30 in the vertical plane
where m has a value chosen according to the total gain required from the antenna,
typically between 4 and 16 sets of radiating elements 30.
[0068] This antenna array comprises m coupling networks 230 connected to each of the m sets
of radiating elements 30.
[0069] Each set of radiating elements 30 could be set to the same azimuth beamwidth value.
To vary the azimuth beamwidth of this antenna, it is possible, in a particular embodiment,
to couple all the phase shifters 15 together and simultaneously. It is possible to
actuate them manually or remotely from the antenna.
[0070] Each variable phase shifter 15 can comprise a control device. Each control device
is connected to a bus. The bus is linked to a central unit from where signals corresponding
to a selected azimuth beamwidth are transmitted to each variable phase shifter 15.
The azimuth beamwidth can be controlled with the central unit wherein selected azimuth
beamwidth are stored. It can be controlled remotely from the antenna.
[0071] Whatever the way the variable phase shifters 15 are actuated, the control device
could receive commands from a data communication means provided by wire transmission
or wireless transmission in order to remotely change the azimuth beamwidth of the
antenna from a location far from the antenna.
[0073] Specifically the radiation patterns, beamwidths, gains and efficiency of the antenna
are identical whether it is transmitting or/and receiving a radio signal. In the above
description, to avoid the necessity of describing each component of the antenna system
when operating both as a transmitting and as a receiving antenna, the example of a
transmitting antenna is used and it is to be understood that in accordance with the
said Principle of Reciprocity all aspects of the operation and performance of the
arrangement can correspondingly be described in terms of a receiving antenna.
[0074] By using a simpler and less costly arrangement of radiating elements and feed networks,
one obtain a dual-polar antenna with performance which is in all operational respects
equivalent to that which would be provided by the more complex antenna array of identical
dual-polar elements together with separate power division networks and phase shifters
associated with each polarization.
1. A dual-polar antenna for a base station of mobile radio systems with adjustable azimuth
beamwidth comprising :
- at least a set of radiating elements (30) comprising :
o an inner group of radiating elements (100) having at least two input ports (110,
111), and
o two outer groups of radiating elements (101, 102), and
- at least one power division network (17, 200) connected to each group of radiating
elements (100, 101, 102),
characterised in that :
- the inner group of radiating elements (100) is comprised of radiating elements capable
of radiating and/or receiving two nominally orthogonally polarized signals,
- the outer groups of radiating elements (101, 102) are comprised of radiating elements
capable of radiating and/or receiving signals with a single polarization.
2. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 1, characterised in that the inner group of radiating elements (100) comprises a single dual polar radiating
element.
3. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 1 or 2 characterised in that the dual polar radiating elements are crossed-dipole radiating elements.
4. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the dual polar radiating elements are patch radiating elements.
5. A dual-polar antenna according to anyone of claims 1 to 4, characterised in that the outer groups of radiating elements (101, 102) comprise each a single radiating
element.
6. A dual-polar antenna according to anyone of claims 1 to 5,
characterised in that it comprises a single power division network (200) feeding the inner (100) and outer
(101, 102) groups of radiating elements, said single power division network (200)
comprising :
- two inputs (240, 241), one for each of the input polarized signals,
- two outputs (211, 212) connected to the two input ports (110, 111) of the inner
group of radiating elements (100) respectively,
- two outputs (221, 222), each connected to one of the outer groups of radiating elements
(101, 102).
7. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 6, characterised in that it further comprises two variable phase shifters (15), each variable phase shifter
(15) being connected to one of the two input ports (110, 111) of the inner group of
radiating elements (100) and to one of the two outputs (211, 212) of the power division
network (200).
8. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 6,
characterised in that the power division network (200) is a coupling network (230) comprising :
- two transmission lines (231, 232), each of the transmission lines being connected
between one of the input ports (110, 111) of the inner group of radiating elements
(100) and one of the input ports (240, 241) of the coupling network (230), respectively,
- a coupling line (233) having a portion (233a) inductively coupled to a portion (231
a, 232a) of each of the transmission lines (231, 232) of the coupling network (230),
said coupling line (233) comprising on one side, a first unconnected end (234) and
on the other side, a second end connected to two output lines (112, 113) thereby forming
a Tee-junction (235), each output line (112, 113) being connected to one of the outer
radiating elements (101, 102), respectively.
9. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 8, characterised in that the coupling network (230) comprises a single variable phase shifter (15) within
the coupling line (233) and connected to an input end (236) of the inductively coupled
portion (233a) of the coupling line (233) and the Tee junction (235).
10. A dual-polar antenna according to anyone of claims 1 to 9, characterised in that it comprises m sets of radiating elements (30) aligned in the vertical plane, forming
an antenna array.
11. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 10 as depending upon anyone of claims 7 to
9, characterised in that each variable phase shifter (15) comprises a control device, the control device of
each of the variable phase shifters (15) being connected to a bus linked to a central
unit, whereby signals corresponding to a selected azimuth beamwidth are transmitted
to each variable phase shifter (15) from the central unit.
12. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 11, characterised in that the central unit is linked to a data communication means so that the beamwidth can
be remotely controled.
Amended claims in accordance with Rule 86(2) EPC.
1. A dual-polar antenna for a base station of mobile radio systems with adjustable azimuth
beamwidth comprising :
- at least a set of radiating elements (30) comprising :
O an inner group of radiating elements (100) having at least two input ports (110,
111), and
O two outer groups of radiating elements (101, 102),
- the inner group of radiating elements (100) is comprised of radiating elements capable
of radiating and/or receiving two nominally orthogonally polarized signals,
- the outer groups of radiating elements (101, 102) are comprised of radiating elements
capable of radiating and/or receiving signals with a single polarization,
characterised in that :
- said set of radiating elements (30) comprises a single power division network (200)
feeding the inner (100) and outer (101, 102) groups of radiating elements, said single
power division network (200) comprising two inputs (240, 241), one for each of the
input polarized signals.
2. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 1, characterised in that the inner group of radiating elements (100) comprises a single dual polar radiating
element.
3. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 1 or 2 characterised in that the dual polar radiating elements are crossed-dipole radiating elements.
4. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that the dual polar radiating elements are patch radiating elements.
5. A dual-polar antenna according to anyone of claims 1 to 4, characterised in that the outer groups of radiating elements (101, 102) comprise each a single radiating
element.
6. A dual-polar antenna according to anyone of claims 1 to 5,
characterised in that said single power division network (200) of the set of radiating elements (30) comprises
:
- two outputs (211, 212) connected to the two input ports (110, 111) of the inner
group of radiating elements (100) respectively,
- two outputs (221, 222), each connected to one of the outer groups of radiating elements
(101, 102).
7. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 6, characterised in that it further comprises two variable phase shifters (15), each variable phase shifter
(15) being connected to one of the two input ports (110, 111) of the inner group of
radiating elements (100) and to one of the two outputs (211, 212) of the power division
network (200).
8. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 6,
characterised in that the power division network (200) is a coupling network (230) comprising :
- two transmission lines (231, 232), each of the transmission lines being connected
between one of the input ports (110, 111) of the inner group of radiating elements
(100) and one of the input ports (240, 241) of the coupling network (230), respectively,
- a coupling line (233) having a portion (233a) inductively coupled to a portion (231
a, 232a) of each of the transmission lines (231, 232) of the coupling network (230),
said coupling line (233) comprising on one side, a first unconnected end (234) and
on the other side, a second end connected to two output lines (112, 113) thereby forming
a Tee-junction (235), each output line (112, 113) being connected to one of the outer
radiating elements (101, 102), respectively.
9. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 8, characterised in that the coupling network (230) comprises a single variable phase shifter (15) within
the coupling line (233) and connected to an input end (236) of the inductively coupled
portion (233a) of the coupling line (233) and the Tee junction (235).
10. A dual-polar antenna according to anyone of claims 1 to 9, characterised in that it comprises m sets of radiating elements (30) aligned in the vertical plane, forming
an antenna array.
11. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 10 as depending upon anyone of claims 7 to
9, characterised in that each variable phase shifter (15) comprises a control device, the control device of
each of the variable phase shifters (15) being connected to a bus linked to a central
unit, whereby signals corresponding to a selected azimuth beamwidth are transmitted
to each variable phase shifter (15) from the central unit.
12. A dual-polar antenna according to claim 11, characterised in that the central unit is linked to a data communication means so that the beamwidth can
be remotely controled.