FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to the field of antennas and antenna elements and in
particular, to multi-band antennas and antenna elements operable to radiate within
multiple frequency bands.
BACKGROUND
[0002] As the bandwidth requirements on antennas for mobile wireless communications increase,
it becomes difficult for traditional antenna constructs to meet these increasing requirements.
One potential way of addressing this is to move from radiating elements supporting
all required frequency bands to hybrid radiating elements consisting of two or more
constituting component radiators, whereby each component radiator supports only a
subset of the required operating frequency bands, yet the hybrid radiating element
in totality provides all required frequency bands. This allows the constituting component
radiators making up the hybrid radiating element to be simpler and cheaper to build,
as each of them is asked to function in only a subset of the required frequency bands.
[0003] With such hybrid devices, there is a requirement to control electromagnetic interference
among the constituting component radiators. This interference arises from proximity-induced
coupling of electromagnetic energy among the component radiators. Although this can
be addressed by spatial separation between the component radiators, often in combination
with the introduction of an electromagnetic-shielding structure, this presents a waste
of valuable real estate, which could otherwise be used for a more- productive purpose,
such as enhancement of the radiating element's radio-frequency performance.
[0004] It would be desirable to provide an antenna of a limited size able to operate in
multiple frequency bands.
[0005] Planar or low-profile antennas having a radiating surface mounted above a ground
plate provide a space efficient antenna. One example of an antenna that operates at
two frequencies, is disclosed in "
Dual-Frequency Printed Dipole Loaded With Split Ring Resonators" by Herraiz-Martinez
et al. IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation Letters, vol.8, 2009). This document discloses a dipole antenna which lacks the low profile of a planar
or low profile antenna. This dipole antenna is configured to operate at two frequencies
and has four sets of nested split-ring resonators giving a total of eight resonators
on each dipole arm. Each resonator is configured to resonate at the same frequency.
The resonators are mounted symmetrically on the two arms such that there is a resonant
frequency due to the whole dipole and a further resonant frequency due to the dipole
electrically shortened by the resonance of the split-ring resonators.
SUMMARY
[0006] A first aspect of the present invention provides an antenna element comprising:
a conductive radiating surface mounted at a distance from a surface plane of a ground
plate; at least one feed probe for feeding an input signal to said conductive radiating
surface; at least one frequency-selective component mounted on or close to said conductive
radiating surface, said at least one frequency-selective component being configured
to impede the flow of electric current within a first frequency band and to allow
the flow of electric current within a second frequency band, such that a portion of
said conductive radiating surface carries electric current of all of said frequencies
of said input signal and a further portion carries electric current of a subset of
said frequencies.
[0007] As noted previously, hybrid antennas are often formed by using multiple elements.
These multiple elements comprise lower- and higher-frequency component radiators which
in some cases are arranged side by side. This arrangement offers ease of construction
and the advantage of using essentially the same radiator design for all frequency
bands, just scaled differently for the different frequencies. However, when such hybrid
radiating elements are utilized to form an antenna array, array synthesis tends to
yield suboptimal antenna performance due to the fact that the constituting component
radiators do not have a common phase centre.
[0008] In terms of planar (2D) or low-profile (2.5D) antennas, the requirement of a common
phase centre translates into the requirement of the lower-frequency component radiator,
which generally has larger dimensions than radiating antenna structures operating
at higher frequencies, being located around the higher-frequency component radiator
in an onion-like fashion. Moreover, this nested arrangement reduces the required antenna
footprint and therefore has advantages over the side-by-side arrangement. Since the
higher-frequency component radiator is surrounded by the lower-frequency component
radiator, the requirement to reduce the electromagnetic interference between the component
radiators is even more pronounced than in the side-by-side arrangement, i.e., the
higher-frequency component radiator should not be allowed to appreciably degrade the
performance of the encompassing lower-frequency component radiator, and vice versa.
The concern of electromagnetic interference is typically addressed by means of a fence-like
metallic enclosure placed to encircle the higher-frequency component radiator, in-between
the higher-frequency component radiator and its lower-frequency counterpart. A way
to increase the utility of the enclosure is to make the enclosure an integral part
of either, or both, component radiators for enhancement of the radiators'radiation
properties, e.g., the higher-frequency component radiator can be designed for ultra-wideband
performance, and the enclosure - in addition to reducing the electromagnetic interference
between the higher- and lower-frequency component radiators - suppresses unwanted
higher-order modes that would otherwise prevent ultra-wideband performance. In this
way the enclosure can perform double duty. Co-pending European application
EP14205603.4 to Alcatel Lucent discloses such a low profile wideband radiating antenna with such
circumferential topology.
[0009] Nonetheless, in applications which require enhanced performance of the lower-frequency
component radiator, the enclosure between the component radiators decreases the portion
of the hybrid radiating element's allocated footprint that can be used for improving
the performance of the lower-frequency component radiator.
[0010] The present invention recognises that the spatial separation of antenna elements
operating at different frequencies and the provision of shielding between them can
lead to antenna elements that have a relatively large size, much of which is not used
for active radiating components. It also recognised that frequency-selective components
could be used to control the flow of electric currents on a radiating surface of an
antenna element and this could allow certain portions of the element to carry a subset
of frequencies while other portions could carry all frequencies. In this way certain
frequencies could make use of the whole radiating surface while others could use just
a portion. This would allow different frequency bands to be supported, with in some
cases one of the bands making use of the entire radiating surface. In this regard,
generally the lowest frequency band supported requires the largest radiating element.
Allowing portions of a radiating element whose size is selected for the lowest frequency
band to support other higher frequency bands makes efficient use of the radiating
surface and provides a compact and efficient antenna element supporting more than
one frequency band of operation.
[0011] In this way frequency-selective components serve to manipulate the way the electric
currents of different frequencies flow on the radiating surface.. One or more frequency-selective
components tuned to one or more different frequency bands and placed in the proximity
of, or on the contiguous radiating surface, control the distribution of electric currents
of different frequency bands to different sections of the radiating surface. Such
a system increases the utilization of the footprint available for the antenna and,
at the same time, offers ample versatility to allow performance optimization for various
requirements in various application scenarios.
[0012] In effect a radiator that uses frequency-selective components, either in the proximity
of the radiator or directly integrated into the radiator, to manipulate the way the
electric currents of different frequencies flow on the radiator surface is used to
provide an antenna element that supports more than one frequency band of operation.
[0013] The frequency-selective component(s) may be mounted on the antenna element or close
to the radiating surface. In this regard it may be mounted between the radiating surface
and the ground plate, or it may be mounted on the other side of the radiating surface
to the ground plate. The frequency-selective component(s) is mounted close enough
to the radiating surface such that there is electromagnetic coupling between the radiating
surface and the frequency-selective component.
[0014] The ground plate may be a metallic plate or a plate with a conductive layer. It may
have a number of forms, it may have a continuous planar form or it may form a plane
with some portions being absent, such that a circumferential hollow shape is provided.
Furthermore, where the ground plate consists of a conductive layer on a surface of
another material such as a substrate, the conductive layer may cover the whole of
the surface of the other material or it may just cover a portion of the surface.
[0015] Although the radiating surface may in preferred embodiments be substantially parallel
to the ground plate it may also lie at an angle to it. In this regard the radiating
surface is preferably at an angle of less than 10° to the surface of the ground plate,
although an angle of up to 40° would provide an antenna element with suitable properties,
however, its profile would be larger than were the surface parallel to the ground
plate, thus in preferred embodiments the radiating surface is substantially parallel
to the ground plate.
[0016] In some embodiments, said at least one frequency-selective component is configured
to impede a flow of electric current within said first frequency band to an area of
said conductive radiating surface.
[0017] The frequency-selective component maybe arranged to impede the flow of electric current
within a first frequency band to an area of the conductive radiating surface such
that this area is free or virtually of electric current within the first frequency
band. This area of the antenna element does therefore not radiate at this frequency
band.
[0018] In some embodiments, said conductive radiating surface comprises a substantially
planar surface and said at least one frequency-selective component is configured to
impede a flow of electric current flowing on said planar surface by deflecting said
electric current such that it does not flow through a portion of said radiating surface.
[0019] The frequency-selective component may act to deflect the electric current and in
this way may cause an area of the planar surface to be substantially free from electric
current in this frequency band.
[0020] Although, the frequency-selective component can have a number of forms, in some embodiments
it comprises at least one of a band-stop, high-pass, band-pass or low-pass frequency-selective
component.
[0021] Such components may impede either a particular frequency band or all low frequencies,
or high frequencies or it may allow a frequency band to pass while impeding other
frequencies. Suitable selection of such components allows the electric current flowing
on the radiating surface to be manipulated such that electric current in particular
frequency band(s) are restricted from flowing in certain areas, producing an antenna
element with different portions that radiate at different frequency bands.
[0022] In some embodiments, said at least one frequency-selective component comprises a
band stop or band pass frequency-selective component configured such that said component
has a relative impedance frequency band of at least 5% at an impedance match level
of 10dB.
[0023] Where the frequency-selective component is a band-stop or band-pass frequency-selective
component then it is configured to respectively impede or allow electric current across
a relatively wide bandwidth, i.e. at least 5% of a relative impedance bandwidth at
an impedance match level of 10 dB. This differentiates the component from a notch
filter, for example, which only acts to impede a very narrow frequency range, providing
a low-performance antenna element.
[0024] In some embodiments, the antenna element comprises at least two feed probes, at least
one first feed probe for feeding a first input signal within a first lower frequency
band and at least one second feed probe for feeding a second input signal within a
second higher frequency band, said first feed probe feeding said first input signal
to a location closer to a circumferential edge of said radiating surface than said
second feed probe; and said at least one frequency-selective component being located
between said first and second feed probe and being configured to impede an electric
current from said second input signal and to allow an electric current from said first
input signal, such that an inner portion of said radiating surface is configured to
carry both said first and second input signals and said outer portion is configured
not to carry said second input signal.
[0025] An antenna element that is configured to radiate a low-frequency signal generally
needs to have a larger size than one that is configured to radiate a higher-frequency
signal, owing to the longer wavelengths of the lower-frequency signal. Embodiments
of the present invention can radiate at higher and lower frequency bands by feeding
the higher-frequency signal to an inner portion of the radiating surface and using
frequency-selective components to confine this signal to the inner area of the radiating
surface while allowing the lower-frequency signal to use the whole radiating surface.
In this way, the radiating surface is used efficiently and radiates effectively at
both the higher and lower frequencies.
[0026] Although the frequency-selective component can have a number of forms provided that
it can act to impede electric current in certain frequency bands while allowing electric
current in other frequency bands to flow, in some embodiments it comprises an inductor-capacitor
(LC) circuit operable to resonate at a predetermined frequency.
[0027] In this regard, the inductor-capacitor circuit will be mounted close enough to the
radiating surface to be electromagnetically coupled to it, so that electric current
of the frequency close to the resonant frequency of the inductor-capacitor circuit
is impeded as it causes resonance within this circuit causing a high-resistance path
for current on the radiating surface at this frequency.
[0028] In some embodiments, said at least one frequency-selective component comprises two
of said inductor-capacitor circuits mounted close to each other, such that they are
electromagnetically coupled to each other and to said radiating surface, mutual electromagnetic
couplings among said two inductor-capacitor circuits and said radiating surface providing
a plurality of resonant frequencies within said two inductor-capacitor circuits and
generating a stop band comprising said frequencies.
[0029] Although, the frequency-selective component maybe a single inductor-capacitor circuit
mounted on its own and acting to impede electric current on the radiating surface
at a frequency band close to the resonant frequency of the inductor-capacitor circuit
when it is electromagnetically coupled to the radiating surface, in other embodiments
there may be two frequency-selective components mounted close to each other such that
they are electromagnetically coupled to each other and to the radiating surface.
[0030] Advantageously the two frequency-selective components are configured to resonate
at different frequencies, such that mutual couplings among the two inductor-capacitor
circuits and the radiating surface provide for a plurality of resonant frequencies
and generate a stop band comprising these frequencies. In this way, the stop bandwidth
is increased, allowing the frequency-selective components to impede electric current
in a relatively wide frequency band, making it an efficient multiple-band antenna
element.
[0031] In some embodiments, said frequency-selective component comprises at least one split-ring
resonator.
[0032] Although the frequency-selective component may have a number of forms, in some embodiments
it comprises one or more split-ring resonators. In this regard, in some embodiments
two split-ring resonators are mounted on either side of the radiating surface and
act to generate a stop band that is dependent on the resonant frequency of each of
the resonators and the resonant frequency that is generated by them being electromagnetically
coupled with each other and with the radiating surface. Where they have different
resonant frequencies then a relatively wide frequency stop band comprising the different
resonant frequencies can be generated.
[0033] In some embodiments, the antenna element comprises, an antenna element comprising
a plurality of frequency selective components mounted on or in proximity to said radiating
surface, at least some of said frequency selective components being configured to
impede electric current of different frequency bands, such that different portions
of said radiating surface carry currents of different frequency bands.
[0034] The antenna element may act as a multi-band antenna element having multiple frequency-selective
components, at least some of them being configured to impede electric currents in
different frequency bands. In this way, different portions of the radiating surface
carry currents of different frequency bands, producing an antenna element operable
to radiate these different frequency bands.
[0035] In some embodiments, said antenna element comprises, a multi-band antenna element
comprising a plurality of feed probes for feeding input signals within a plurality
of different frequency bands to said radiating surface, at least some of said plurality
of frequency-selective components being configured to impede electric currents within
at least some of said plurality of different frequency bands.
[0036] In some cases the multi-band antenna element will have several feed probes feeding
input signals of different frequency bands, the frequency-selective components being
configured to impede electric currents within at least some of these different frequency
bands such that different portions of the radiating surface carry electric currents
in different frequency bands. Thus, some portions may just carry the low-frequency
band signals while other portions may carry higher-frequency signals, and perhaps
intermediate frequency signals. Generally there will be a portion that carries all
of the bands, and a larger portion which carries all but the high-frequency band and
an even larger portion that carries all but the two high-frequency bands and so on,
until you have a portion that carries just the low-frequency band, the other portions
also carrying the low-frequency band such that the low-frequency band will make use
of the largest portion of the radiating surface of all of the frequency band signals.
[0037] It should be noted that in some embodiments the frequency-selective components are
positioned asymmetrically at different points on the radiating surface. In this regard
there is no requirement for them to be mounted symmetrically, each being able to act
either independently or in concert to provide an area of radiation suitable for a
particular frequency band.
[0038] In some embodiments, said radiating surface comprises a single contiguous radiating
surface.
[0039] A single contiguous radiating surface maybe used with frequency-selective components
defining portions which carry electric currents within particular frequency bands.
[0040] In some embodiments, said radiating surface comprises at least two portions, said
at least one frequency-selective component being mounted at or close to a junction
between said at least two portions, at least one of said portions comprising a substantially
planar radiating surface area.
[0041] The different portions of the radiating surface which carry different frequency bands
of electric current are separated by frequency-selective components which impede currents
of one frequency band from flowing into the other portion. In some embodiments, at
least one of the portions comprises a planar radiating surface area, this implementation
being particularly applicable to planar antenna elements.
[0042] In some embodiments, the antenna element comprises an inner portion comprising a
continuous planar surface and an outer portion, said outer portion comprising at least
two arms extending away from said continuous planar surface.
[0043] In some cases, the inner portion may be a continuous planar surface and the outer
portions may have different forms such as arms extending away. The two portions will
be separated by the frequency-selective components such that the lower-frequency band
will have signals running along the arms and across the inner continuous planar surface
while the higher-frequency signals will only operate in the continuous planar surface,
the frequency-selective components confining them to this portion.
[0044] A second aspect of the present invention provides a planar or low-profile antenna
comprising at least one antenna element according to the first aspect of the present
invention.
[0045] In some embodiments, the antenna comprises a plurality of antenna elements arranged
in an array of antenna elements.
[0046] An antenna may be formed in an array of these antenna elements, each configured to
support multi-band operation and in this way an antenna that can support multiple
frequency bands can be provided in a cost-effective and space-efficient manner. Further
particular and preferred aspects are set out in the accompanying independent and dependent
claims. Features of the dependent claims may be combined with features of the independent
claims as appropriate, and in combinations other than those explicitly set out in
the claims.
[0047] Where an apparatus feature is described as being operable to provide a function,
it will be appreciated that this includes an apparatus feature which provides that
function or which is adapted or configured to provide that function.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0048] Embodiments of the present invention will now be described further, with reference
to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 illustrates an isometric view of an exemplary radiating antenna element according
to an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 2 shows an exploded isometric view of an exemplary radiating antenna element
according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 3 shows an exploded isometric view of an exemplary radiating antenna element
according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 4 shows an isometric view of an exemplary contiguous radiator, with feed probes
according to an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 5 shows a lumped-element equivalent circuit model of a portion of the radiator
loaded with one split-ring resonator;
Figure 6 shows a frequency-dependence plot of the magnitude of the input reflection
coefficient, where vertical dotted lines delimit the design operating lower-frequency
band;
Figure 7 shows a frequency-dependence plot of the magnitude of the input reflection
coefficient, vertical dotted lines delimit the design operating higher-frequency band;
Figure 8 shows a plot of co-polarized far-field gain radiation pattern of an exemplary
radiating antenna element in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 9 shows a plot of cross-polarized far-field gain radiation pattern of an exemplary
radiating antenna element in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 10 shows a plot of co-polarized far-field gain radiation pattern of an exemplary
radiating antenna element in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 11 shows a plot of cross-polarized far-field gain radiation pattern of an exemplary
radiating antenna element in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention;
and
Figure 12 shows an antenna element configured to operate in three frequency bands
in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0049] Before discussing the embodiments in any more detail, first an overview will be provided.
[0050] Antenna elements according to embodiments of the present invention provide a single
contiguous radiating surface of a radiator positioned above a ground plate or plane.
The radiator may be ungrounded - i.e., electrically floating above the ground plane
- or it may be electrically connected to the ground plane at one or more locations.
One or more feed probes feeding a radio-frequency signal to the radiator are coupled
to the radiator either by direct connection or proximity coupling. In addition, there
are one or more frequency-selective components either in the proximity of the radiating
surface or directly integrated into the radiator. The frequency-selective components
are designed to control the flow of electric currents on the radiator surface; specifically,
the frequency-selective components manipulate the way the electric currents of different
frequencies flow on the radiator surface.
[0051] Consequently, in such an arrangement, not all sections of the radiator carry electric
currents of all frequency bands fed to the radiator by the feeding probes - e.g.,
some sections of the contiguous radiator may carry only a subset of the frequency
bands, other sections may carry a different subset of the frequency bands (partially
overlapping with the first subset or not), and yet other sections may carry all frequency
bands supplied to the radiator. In this regard the frequency-selective components
may confine signals of certain frequency bands to certain portions of the radiating
surface, while allowing signals of other frequency bands to flow over further portions
of the surface or over the whole surface.
[0052] Embodiments of the present invention seek to provide an alternative to the electromagnetic-shielding
structure between the lower- and higher-frequency component radiators in a hybrid
radiating element by building lower- and higher-frequency component radiators as a
single contiguous radiator and limiting the electromagnetic interference between the
radiators by means of a small number of frequency-selective components judiciously
located on or proximate to the contiguous radiator. In such an arrangement, higher-frequency
electric currents (signals) are restricted to only a portion of the contiguous radiator
while lower-frequency electric currents (signals) use the entire contiguous radiator,
i.e., a segment of the contiguous radiator carries both higher- and lower-frequency
electric currents (signals). Since in some embodiments the full contiguous radiator
carries lower-frequency electric currents, the entire structure of the radiating element
can be applied to serve the lower-frequency functionality of the radiating element,
thereby providing increased means for performance enhancement.
[0053] A single contiguous electrically-conducting radiator can be utilized to conduct electric
currents of multiple frequency bands. Frequency-selective components tuned to a number
of different frequency bands and placed in the proximity of the contiguous radiating
surface control the distribution of electric currents of different frequency bands
to different sections of the radiating surface. Such a system increases the utilization
of the footprint available for the antenna and, at the same time, offers ample versatility
to allow performance optimization for various requirements in various application
scenarios.
[0054] In effect embodiments provide a multi-band radiating antenna element as a single
contiguous radiator and use frequency-selective components, either in the proximity
to the radiator or directly integrated in the radiator, to manipulate the way the
electric currents of different frequencies flow on the radiator surface.
[0055] Figures 1-4 show an exemplary radiating antenna element according to an embodiment
of the present invention. The antenna element comprises a single contiguous metallic
radiator 1 elevated over a metallic ground plane 2. The ground plane 2 forms the top
surface of a rectangular-shaped standard radio-frequency/ microwave substrate sheet
material 9. The radiator 1 is formed by joining a central radiator 1a with four circumferentially-mounted,
sequentially-rotated identical radiators 1b, 1c, 1d, 1e placed in the corners of the
substrate sheet material 9. The central radiator 1a comprises an inverted-cup patch
elevated over a grounded pedestal 12.
[0056] The central radiator 1a is fed by means of two feed probes 4a, 4b, which provide
for operation with dual linear (±45°-slant) polarization. The radio-frequency signal
is brought to the feed probes 4a, 4b by conventional metallic microstrip lines 11a,
11b on the lower surface of the substrate sheet material 9 (see Figure 3). The radiating
element comprising the central radiator 1a, the feed probes 4a, 4b and the grounded
pedestal 12 is designed to operate over the frequency band of 1.50-1.85 GHz.
[0057] The radiators 1b, 1c, 1d, 1e form two pairs of mutually-orthogonal arms: one pair
is formed by radiators 1b and 1d, and the other pair is formed by radiators 1c and
1e. Feed probes 3a, 3b, 3c, 3d feed the respective radiators 1b, 1c, 1d, 1e. The radio-frequency
signal is brought to the feed probes 3a, 3b, 3c, 3d by a conventional metallic microstripline
signal-distribution network 10a, 10b on the lower surface of the substrate sheet material
9 (Figure 3).
[0058] The signal-distribution network 10a provides differential feeding to radiators 1b
and 1d, while the signal-distribution network 10b provides differential feeding to
radiators 1c and 1e. In this way each pair of radiators (1c/ 1e and 1b/ 1d) radiates
electromagnetic waves of one linear (+45°- or -45°-slant) polarization. Differential
feeding provides radio-frequency signals of equal amplitude and a 180° phase shift,
compensating for the mutual 180° rotation of the radiators serving one polarization.
[0059] Furthermore, there are four frequency-selective components 5a/5b, 6a/ 6b, 7a/7b,
8a/ 8b mounted in proximity to the central radiator 1a, whereby each frequency-selective
component consists of a pair of metallic split-ring resonators etched on a standard
radio-frequency/microwave substrate sheet material. As long as the electrical size
of the frequency-selective components is small, the function of the basic frequency-selective
cell 5a, 5b, 6a, 6b, 7a, 7b, 8 a, 8b can be described by means of a lumped-element
model. Specifically, the equivalent model of a transmission line loaded by one split-ring
resonator is depicted in Figure 5.
[0060] In the model, L and C are the per-section inductance and capacitance of the transmission
line, while the split-ring resonator is modelled as a resonant circuit - with inductance
LSRR and capacitance
CSRR - electromagnetically coupled to the transmission line through the mutual inductance
M. Consequently each frequency-selective cell acts as a notch filter. By coupling
two cells - tuned to somewhat different resonant frequencies - to the same transmission
line, thus forming a single frequency-selective component, a band-stop filter is formed
that encompasses the frequencies of the individual notch filters. In the arrangement
depicted in Figures 1-4, the design goal is to enlarge the filter's stopband to the
extent that the stopband would ideally just about encompass the operating frequency
band of the radiating element composed of the central radiator 1a, the feed probes
4a, 4b and the grounded pedestal 12. Hence the electric currents of the 1.50-1.85
GHz frequency band on the surface of the contiguous radiator 1 are confined to the
central radiator 1a, while the electric currents of lower frequency bands are allowed
to flow over the entire surface of the contiguous radiator 1.
[0061] In all of the above, the term "metallic" refers to parts with electrically conducting
surfaces; as such, the parts can be manufactured in several ways, e.g., as solid or
sheet metals, electrically conducting plastics or metalized plastics.
[0062] A full-wave software analysis has been utilized to calculate the scattering parameters
and far-field gain radiation patterns of the radiating element depicted in Figures
1-4. Ohmic losses are included in the simulations; copper (Cu) has been considered
for all metallic parts. Figure 6 is the frequency-dependence plot 21 of the magnitude
of the input reflection coefficient 22 of the complete radiating element when radio-frequency
signal is fed to the input port of either of the signal-distribution networks 10a,
10b. The radiating element has been designed for the operating frequency band of 650-870
MHz, which is delimited by the markers
f1 and
f2 in the plot 21.
[0063] Figure 7 shows the frequency-dependence plot 31 of the magnitude of the input reflection
coefficient 32 of the complete radiating element when radio-frequency signal is fed
to the input port of either of the microstrip lines 11a, 11b. The radiating element
shows a usable operating frequency band of 1.58-1.74 GHz, delimited by the markers
f3 and
f4 in the plot 31. Four resonances are observed in that frequency band; they arise from
a combination of three phenomena: (A) the fundamental resonance of the inverted-cup
patch itself, (B) the electromagnetic coupling of energy from the transmission line
to the two frequency-selective cells forming each frequency-selective component and
(C) the electromagnetic coupling of energy between the two frequency-selective cells
forming each frequency-selective component.
[0064] Figures 8 and 9 show the typical plots 41 and 51 of the respective co- and cross-polarized
far-field gain radiation patterns in the frequency band of 650-870 MHz of the radiating
element in the E-, mid- and H-planes, while Figures 10 and 11 show the typical plots
61 and 71 of the respective co- and cross-polarized far-field gain radiation patterns
in the frequency band of 1.58-1.74 GHz of the radiating element in the E-, mid- and
H-planes. Good peak gain, co-polarized beam integrity and good polarization purity
are observed throughout the two operating frequency bands.
[0065] Figure 12 shows an alternative embodiment of the present invention comprising an
antenna element configured to operate in 3 different frequency bands. The radiating
surface 100 is formed of a contiguous surface having four outer fin type elements
101a, 101b, 101c and 101d, two if which are fed by feed probes 30, 32 which input
a low frequency signal. These outer fins are joined to intermediate fins 102a, 102b,
102c and 102d via four regions of radiating surface on which are mounted respectively
low pass filters 20a, b, c, d. These low pass filters allow the low frequency band
input signal of the feed probes 30 and 32 to pass into the intermediate fins 102 a,
b, c, d. Since the two fins 101d, 101c that the corresponding two feed probes 30,
32 connect to, fill adjacent 90°-wide quadrants of the radiating surface 100 and the
electric currents on the surfaces of fins 101d, 101c can only leave the fins through
the low pass filters 20d, 20c positioned on the diagonals of the radiating surface
100, the signals fed to feed probes 30, 32 are radiated mutually orthogonal (±45°-slant
linear polarizations) signals.
[0066] The four intermediate fins are similar in shape to the outer fins and similarly have
two input feed probes 40 and 42 which feed signals to two neighbouring intermediate
fins. These signals are in an intermediate frequency band that is a higher frequency
band than the signals input by feed probes 30 and 32 and they cannot pass through
the low pass filters 20a, b, c, d and are thus, restricted from flowing to the outer
fins.
[0067] Radiating surface 100 has a central region 103 with two input feed probes 50 and
52 for inputting a higher frequency signal. The central region 130 is joined to the
intermediate fins via four regions of radiating surface on which are mounted respectively
band stop filters 22a, 22b,22c, 22d which stop the higher frequency signals input
at the input feed probes 50 and 52 but allow the low frequency signals and intermediate
frequency signals to pass.
[0068] In this way the radiating surface 100 has a central portion which carries signals
of all input frequencies, an intermediate portion which carries low frequency and
intermediate frequency signals and an outer portion which only carries the low frequency
signals. Thus, the whole radiating surface acts as a radiating element for the low
frequency signals input at probes 30 and 32, while the intermediate fins and central
region act as a radiating element for the intermediate frequency signals input at
probes 40 and 42, and the central region acts as a radiating element for the high
frequency signals input at probes 50 and 52.
[0069] Although Figure 12 shows an example of an antenna element according to an embodiment
of the present invention that is configured to operate at three different frequency
bands, further frequency bands could be supported using additional feed probes and
frequency selective components configured to limit electric current of particular
frequency bands to particular portions of the radiating surface.
[0070] It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that any block diagrams herein
represent conceptual views of illustrative circuitry embodying the principles of the
invention. Similarly, it will be appreciated that any flow charts, flow diagrams,
state transition diagrams, pseudo code, and the like represent various processes which
may be substantially represented in computer readable medium and so executed by a
computer or processor, whether or not such computer or processor is explicitly shown.
[0071] The description and drawings merely illustrate the principles of the invention. It
will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various
arrangements that, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles
of the invention and are included within its spirit and scope. Furthermore, all examples
recited herein are principally intended expressly to be only for pedagogical purposes
to aid the reader in understanding the principles of the invention and the concepts
contributed by the inventor(s) to furthering the art, and are to be construed as being
without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions. Moreover,
all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the invention,
as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass equivalents thereof.
1. An antenna element comprising:
a conductive radiating surface mounted at a distance from a surface plane of a ground
plate;
at least one feed probe for feeding an input signal to said conductive radiating surface;
at least one frequency selective component mounted on or close to said conductive
radiating surface, said at least one frequency selective component being configured
to impede the flow of electric current within a first frequency band and to allow
the flow of electric current within a second frequency band, such that a portion of
said conductive radiating surface carries electric current of all of said frequency
bands of said input signal and a further portion carries electric current of a subset
of said frequency bands.
2. An antenna element according to claim 1, wherein said at least one frequency selective
component is configured to impede a flow of electric current within said first frequency
band to an area of said conductive radiating surface.
3. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said conductive radiating
surface comprises a substantially planar surface and said at least one frequency selective
component is configured to impede a flow of electric current flowing on said planar
surface by deflecting said electric current such that it does not flow through a portion
of said radiating surface.
4. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said at least one frequency
selective component comprises at least one of a band stop, high pass, band pass or
low pass frequency selective component.
5. An antenna element according to claim 4, wherein said at least one frequency selective
component comprises a band stop or band pass frequency selective component configured
such that said component has a relative impedance frequency band of at least 5% at
an impedance match level of 10dB.
6. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, comprising at least two feed
probes, at least one first feed probe for feeding a first input signal within a first
lower frequency band and at least one second feed probe for feeding a second input
signal within a second higher frequency band, said first feed probe feeding said first
input signal to a location closer to a circumferential edge of said radiating surface
than said second feed probe; and
said at least one frequency selective component being located between said first and
second feed probe and being configured to impede an electric current from said second
input signal and to allow an electric current from said first input signal, such that
an inner portion of said radiating surface is configured to carry both said first
and second input signals and said outer portion is configured not to carry said second
input signal.
7. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said at least one frequency
selective component comprises an inductor-capacitor (LC) circuit operable to resonate
at a predetermined frequency.
8. An antenna element according to claim 7, wherein said at least one frequency selective
component comprises two of said inductor-capacitor circuits mounted close to each
other, such that they are electromagnetically coupled to each other and to said radiating
surface, mutual electromagnetic couplings among said two inductor-capacitor circuits
and said radiating surface providing a plurality of resonant frequencies within said
two inductor-capacitor circuits and generating a stop band comprising said frequencies.
9. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said frequency selective
component comprises at least one split-ring resonator.
10. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, comprising a plurality of frequency
selective components mounted on or in proximity to said radiating surface, at least
some of said frequency selective components being configured to impede electric current
of different frequency bands, such that different portions of said radiating surface
carry currents of different frequency bands.
11. An antenna element according to claim 10, said antenna element comprising a multi-band
antenna element comprising a plurality of feed probes for feeding input signals within
a plurality of different frequency bands to said radiating surface, at least some
of said plurality of frequency selective components being configured to impede electric
currents within at least some of said plurality of different frequency bands.
12. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said radiating surface
comprises a single contiguous radiating surface.
13. An antenna element according to claim 12, wherein said radiating surface comprises
at least two portions, said at least one frequency selective component being mounted
at or close to a junction between said at least two portions, at least one of said
portions comprising a substantially planar radiating surface area.
14. A planar or low profile antenna comprising at least one antenna element according
to any preceding claim.
15. A planar or low profile antenna according to claim 14, comprising a plurality of antenna
elements according to any preceding claim arranged as an array of antenna elements.
Amended claims in accordance with Rule 137(2) EPC.
1. An antenna element comprising:
a contiguous substantially planar conductive radiating surface (1) mounted at a distance
from a surface plane of a ground plate 2;
at least one feed probe (3a, 3b, 3c, 3d, 4a, 4b) for feeding an input signal to said
conductive radiating surface (1);
at least one frequency selective component (5a, 6a, 7a, 8a) mounted on or close to
said conductive contiguous radiating surface (1), said at least one frequency selective
component being configured to impede the flow of electric current within a first frequency
band and to allow the flow of electric current within a second frequency band, such
that a portion of said conductive radiating surface (1a) carries electric current
of all of said frequency bands of said input signal and a further portion carries
electric current of a subset of said frequency bands (1b, 1c, 1d, 1e).
2. An antenna element according to claim 1, wherein said at least one frequency selective
component (5a, 6a, 7a, 8a) is configured to impede a flow of electric current within
said first frequency band to an area of said conductive radiating surface.
3. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said at least one frequency
selective component (5a, 6a, 7a, 8a) is configured to impede a flow of electric current
flowing on said planar surface by deflecting said electric current such that it does
not flow through a portion of said radiating surface.
4. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said at least one frequency
selective component (5a, 6a, 7a, 8a) comprises at least one of a band stop, high pass,
band pass or low pass frequency selective component.
5. An antenna element according to claim 4, wherein said at least one frequency selective
component comprises a band stop or band pass frequency selective component configured
such that said component has a relative impedance frequency band of at least 5% at
an impedance match level of 10dB.
6. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, comprising at least two feed
probes, at least one first feed probe (3a, 3b, 3c, 3d) for feeding a first input signal
within a first lower frequency band and at least one second feed probe (4a, 4b) for
feeding a second input signal within a second higher frequency band, said first feed
probe feeding said first input signal to a location closer to a circumferential edge
of said radiating surface than said second feed probe; and
said at least one frequency selective component being located between said first and
second feed probe and being configured to impede an electric current from said second
input signal and to allow an electric current from said first input signal, such that
an inner portion of said radiating surface is configured to carry both said first
and second input signals and said outer portion is configured not to carry said second
input signal.
7. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said at least one frequency
selective component comprises an inductor-capacitor (LC) circuit operable to resonate
at a predetermined frequency.
8. An antenna element according to claim 7, wherein said at least one frequency selective
component comprises two of said inductor-capacitor circuits mounted close to each
other, such that they are electromagnetically coupled to each other and to said radiating
surface, mutual electromagnetic couplings among said two inductor-capacitor circuits
and said radiating surface providing a plurality of resonant frequencies within said
two inductor-capacitor circuits and generating a stop band comprising said frequencies.
9. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said frequency selective
component comprises at least one split-ring resonator.
10. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, comprising a plurality of frequency
selective components mounted on or in proximity to said radiating surface, at least
some of said frequency selective components being configured to impede electric current
of different frequency bands, such that different portions of said radiating surface
carry currents of different frequency bands.
11. An antenna element according to claim 10, said antenna element comprising a multi-band
antenna element comprising a plurality of feed probes for feeding input signals within
a plurality of different frequency bands to said radiating surface, at least some
of said plurality of frequency selective components being configured to impede electric
currents within at least some of said plurality of different frequency bands.
12. An antenna element according to any preceding claim, wherein said radiating surface
comprises at least two portions, said at least one frequency selective component being
mounted at or close to a junction between said at least two portions, at least one
of said portions comprising a substantially planar radiating surface area.
13. A planar or low profile antenna comprising at least one antenna element according
to any preceding claim.
14. A planar or low profile antenna according to claim 13, comprising a plurality of antenna
elements according to any preceding claim arranged as an array of antenna elements.