CLOAKED LOW BAND ELEMENTS FOR MULTIBAND RADIATING ARRAYS
20200119447 ยท 2020-04-16
Inventors
- Ozgur Isik (Gladesville, AU)
- Philip Raymond Gripo (Toongabbie, AU)
- Dushmantha Nuwan Prasanna Thalakotuna (Rosehill, AU)
- Peter J. Liversidge (Glenbrook, AU)
Cpc classification
H01Q21/30
ELECTRICITY
H01Q25/00
ELECTRICITY
H01Q9/16
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/06
ELECTRICITY
H01Q19/24
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/52
ELECTRICITY
H01Q19/108
ELECTRICITY
H01Q5/49
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q5/49
ELECTRICITY
H01Q1/52
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/06
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/26
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A multiband antenna, having a reflector, and a first array of first radiating elements having a first operational frequency band, the first radiating elements being a plurality of dipole arms, each dipole arm including a plurality of conductive segments coupled in series by a plurality of inductive elements; and a second array of second radiating elements having a second operational frequency band, wherein the plurality of conductive segments each have a length less than one-half wavelength at the second operational frequency band.
Claims
1. An antenna comprising: a reflector; a plurality of radiating elements that extend forwardly from the reflector and that are configured to operate in a first frequency band; and a plurality of parasitic elements that extend forwardly from the reflector, each of the parasitic elements comprising a conductive pattern that has a distributed inductive loading, wherein the distributed inductive loadings along the parasitic elements are configured to tune phases of first frequency band currents that are induced on the respective parasitic elements.
2. The antenna of claim 1, wherein each of the parasitic elements comprises a plurality of conductive segments coupled in series by a plurality of inductors that provide the distributed inductive loading.
3. The antenna of claim 2, wherein each of the conductive segments has a length that is less than 5 centimeters.
4. The antenna of claim 2, wherein the inductors are selected to appear as low impedance elements at the first frequency band.
5. The antenna of claim 2, wherein the conductive segments comprise metallization on a non-conductive substrate and the inductors each comprise metallization tracks on the non-conductive substrate.
6. The antenna of claim 5, wherein each parasitic element includes four conductive segments coupled by three of the metallization tracks.
7. The antenna of claim 5, wherein each parasitic element includes six conductive segments coupled by five of the metallization tracks.
8. The antenna of claim 2, wherein the first frequency band comprises the 694-960 MHz frequency band.
9. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the parasitic elements are aligned to be approximately parallel to a longitudinal dimension of the reflector.
10. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the parasitic elements are aligned perpendicular to a longitudinal dimension of the reflector.
11. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the distributed inductive loadings along the parasitic elements are configured to control an azimuth beamwidth of an antenna beam in the first frequency band.
12. The antenna of claim 1, wherein at least one of the radiating elements comprises a crossed dipole element.
13. The antenna of claim 1, wherein a first of the parasitic elements is configured so that current induced therein will be substantially in phase with current in a first of the radiating elements.
14. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the parasitic elements are adjacent a first edge of the reflector.
15. The antenna of claim 14, wherein the parasitic elements extend in a column that is parallel to a longitudinal axis of the reflector.
16. The antenna of claim 1, wherein the antenna is a cellular base station antenna.
17. An antenna comprising: a reflector; a radiating element that extends forwardly from the reflector, and that is configured to operate in a first frequency band; a first parasitic element that extends forwardly from the reflector, the first parasitic element located along a first side edge of the reflector; and a second parasitic element that extends forwardly from the reflector the second parasitic element located along a second side edge of the reflector that is opposite the first side edge, wherein the radiating element is positioned between the first parasitic element and the second parasitic element, and wherein the first and second parasitic elements are configured so that currents in the first and second parasitic elements will be substantially in phase with current in the radiating element.
18. The antenna of claim 17, wherein the first and second parasitic elements each comprise a plurality of conductive segments coupled in series by a plurality of inductors.
19. The antenna of claim 18, wherein the conductive segments comprise metallization on a non-conductive substrate and the inductors each comprise metallization tracks on the non-conductive substrate.
20. The antenna of claim 18, wherein a distributed inductive loading along each of the first and second parasitic elements is configured to tune phases of first frequency band currents that are induced on the respective first and second parasitic elements.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0014]
[0015]
[0016] The low band radiating element 16 may be advantageously used in multi-band dual-polarization cellular base-station antenna. At least two bands comprise low and high bands suitable for cellular communications. As used herein, low band refers to a lower frequency band, such as 694-960 MHz, and high band refers to a higher frequency band, such as 1695 MHz-2690 MHz. The present invention is not limited to these particular bands, and may be used in other multi-band configurations. A low band radiator refers to a radiator for such a lower frequency band, and a high band radiator refers to a radiator for such a higher frequency band. A dual band antenna is a multi-band antenna that comprises the low and high bands referred to throughout this disclosure.
[0017] Referring to
[0018] In the examples of
[0019] At low band frequencies, the impedance of the inductors 24 connecting the conductive segments 22 is sufficiently low to enable the low band currents continue to flow between conductive segments 22. At high band frequencies, however, the impedance is much higher due to the series inductors 24, which reduces high band frequency current flow between the conductive segments 22. Also, keeping each of the conductive segments 22 to less than one half wavelength at high band frequencies reduces undesired interaction between the conductive segments 22 and the high band radio frequency (RF) signals. Therefore, the low band radiating elements 16 of the present invention reduce and/or attenuate any induced current from high band RF radiation from high band radiating elements 14, and any undesirable scattering of the high band signals by the low band dipole arms 20 is minimized. The low band dipole is effectively electrically invisible, or cloaked, at high band frequencies.
[0020] As illustrated in
[0021] A first example of a cloaked low band parasitic element 30a is illustrated in
[0022] At high band frequencies, the inductors 24a, 24b appear to be high impedance elements which reduce current flow between the conductive segments 22a, 22b, respectively. Therefore the effect of the low band parasitic elements 30 scattering of the high band signals is minimized. However, at low band, the distributed inductive loading along the parasitic element 30 tunes the phase of the low band current, thereby giving some control over the low band azimuth beam width.
[0023] In a multiband antenna according to one aspect of the present invention described above, the dipole radiating element 16 and parasitic elements 30 are configured for low band operation. However, the invention is not limited to low band operation, the invention is contemplated to be employed in additional embodiments where driven and/or passive elements are intended to operate at one frequency band, and be unaffected by RF radiation from active radiating elements in other frequency bands. The exemplary low band radiating element 16 also comprises a cross-dipole radiating element. Other aspects of the invention may utilize a single dipole radiating element if only one polarization is required.