Ultra-wideband dual-band cellular basestation antenna
09859611 ยท 2018-01-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01Q19/30
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/30
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q5/00
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/26
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/30
ELECTRICITY
H01Q19/30
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Ultra-wideband dual-band cellular dual-polarization base-station antennas and low-band radiators for such antennas are disclosed. The low-band radiator comprises a dipole and an extended dipole configured in a crossed arrangement, a capacitively coupled feed connecting the extended dipole to an antenna feed, and a pair of auxiliary radiating elements. The dipole comprises two dipole arms, each of approximately /4, for connection to the antenna feed. The extended dipole has anti-resonant dipole arms of approximately /2. The auxiliary radiating elements are configured in parallel at opposite ends of the extended dipole. The radiator is adapted for the frequency range of 698-960 MHz and provides a horizontal beamwidth of approximately 65 degrees. The dual-band base-station antenna comprises high-band radiators configured in at least one array and low-band radiators interspersed amongst the high-band radiators at regular intervals.
Claims
1. An ultra-wideband cellular, dual-polarization dual-band basestation antenna having a low band and a high band suitable for cellular communications, the dual-band antenna comprising: at least one low band radiator having a crossed dipole configuration including a vertical dipole with two dipole arms and a horizontal dipole with two dipole arms located above a vertically-extending groundplane, forming clear regions on the groundplane, to provide vertical and horizontal polarization; a plurality of high band radiators each comprising a crossed dipole and inclined at 45 so as to radiate slant polarization, the high band radiators located within the clear regions on the groundplane of the dual-band antenna, wherein the at least one low band radiator having the crossed dipole configuration defines four quadrants including a lower-left quadrant, a lower-right quadrant, an upper-left quadrant and an upper-right quadrant when the low band radiator is viewed in plan view, and a respective one of the high-band radiators is located in each of the four quadrants, wherein the at least one low band radiator further includes a pair of auxiliary radiating elements that are perpendicular to and at opposite ends of the horizontal dipole, wherein said auxiliary radiating elements comprise tuned parasitic elements, and wherein said tuned parasitic elements are each a dipole having a pair of arms formed on a printed circuit board with metalisation, each parasitic element including an inductive element formed between the arms of said dipole.
2. A dual-polarization, dual-band base station antenna having a low band and a high band suitable for cellular communications, the dual-band antenna comprising: a low band radiator extending above a vertically-extending groundplane, the low band radiator including a vertical dipole with two dipole arms and a horizontal dipole with two dipole arms that are arranged in a crossed dipole configuration, the low band radiator configured to radiate at vertical and horizontal polarizations; a plurality of high band radiators, each high band radiator comprising a crossed dipole and inclined at 45 so as to radiate at 45/+45 slant polarizations, the high band radiators located within respective clear regions on the groundplane of the dual-band antenna, wherein a length of the horizontal dipole is approximately twice a length of the vertical dipole.
3. The dual-band antenna of claim 2, the low band radiator further comprising a pair of auxiliary radiating elements that are perpendicular to and at opposite ends of the horizontal dipole.
4. The dual-band antenna of claim 3, wherein first and second of the high band radiators are located between the vertical dipole and a first of the parasitic elements, and third and fourth of the high band radiators are located between the vertical dipole and a second of the parasitic elements.
5. The dual-band antenna of claim 2, wherein a respective one of the high-band radiators is located in each of four quadrants that are defined by the crossed dipole configuration of the low band radiator.
6. The dual-band antenna of claim 2, wherein the high band radiators are positioned in a 22 array above the groundplane and a center feed for the low band radiator is located at a center of the 22 array.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) Arrangements of ultra-wideband dual-band cellular base-station antennas are described hereinafter, by way of an example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) Ultra-wideband dual-band cellular base-station antennas and low-band radiators for such antennas are disclosed hereinafter. In the following description, numerous specific details, including particular horizontal beamwidths, air-interface standards, dipole arm shapes and materials, and the like are set forth. However, from this disclosure, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that modifications and/or substitutions may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. In other circumstances, specific details may be omitted so as not to obscure the invention.
(10) As used hereinafter, low band refers to a lower frequency band, such as 698-960 MHz, and high band refers to a higher frequency band, such as 1710 MHz-2690 MHz. 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. The dual band comprises the low and high bands referred to throughout this disclosure.
(11) The embodiments of the invention relate to ultra-wideband dual-band antennas and a low band radiator for such an antenna adapted to support emerging network technologies. The embodiments of the invention enable operators of cellular systems (wireless operators) to use a single type of antenna covering a large number of bands, where multiple antennas were previously required. The embodiments of the invention are capable of supporting several major air-interface standards in almost all the assigned cellular frequency bands. The embodiments of the invention allow wireless operators to reduce the number of antennas in their networks, lowering tower leasing costs while increasing speed to market capability.
(12) The embodiments of the invention help solve the hereinbefore-mentioned problems in the art of multiple antennas cluttering towers and associated difficulties with the complicated installation and maintenance of multiple antennas by, in one antenna, supporting multiple frequency bands and technology standards.
(13) Deploying an ultra-wideband dual-band cellular base-station antenna in accordance with an embodiment of the invention can save operators time and expense during their next technology rollouts. Such an antenna provides a future-ready solution for launching a high performance wireless network with multiple air-interface technologies using multiple frequency bands. Deploying such a flexible, scalable and independently optimized antenna technology simplifies the network, while providing the operator with significant future ready capacity. Such an antenna is optimized for high performance in capacity-sensitive data-driven systems. The embodiments of the invention utilize dual orthogonal polarizations and support multiple-input and multiple-output (MIMO) implementations for advanced capacity solutions. The embodiments of the invention support multiple bands presently and in the future as new standards and bands emerge, protecting wireless operators from some of the uncertainty inherent in wireless technology evolution.
(14) In the following description, ultra-wideband with reference to an antenna connotes that the antenna is capable of operating and maintaining its desired characteristics over a bandwidth of at least 30% of a nominal frequency. Characteristics of particular interest are the beam width and shape and the return loss, which needs to be maintained at a level of at least 15 dB across this band. In the present instance, the ultra-wideband dual-band antenna covers the bands 698-960 MHz and 1710 MHz-2690 MHz. This covers almost the entire bandwidth assigned for all major cellular systems.
(15) The following embodiments of the invention support multiple frequency bands and technology standards. For example, wireless operators can deploy using a single antenna Long Term Evolution (LTE) network for wireless communications in 2.6 GHz and 700 MHz, while supporting Wideband Code Division Multiple Access (W-CDMA) network in 2.1 GHz. For ease of description, the antenna array is considered to be aligned vertically.
(16) An antenna in accordance with an embodiment of the invention provides a dual-band solution, which can for example add five lower frequency bands making the antenna capable of supporting nine frequency bands across the wireless spectrum for all four air-interface standards: Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM), Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA), W-CDMA and LTE. Other relevant interfaces include WiMax and GPRS. In one implementation, the antenna may be a 10-port, 2.5 meter device, for example.
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(18) The extended dipole 120 is an elongated dipole with anti-resonant dipole arms 120A and 120B each having a length of approximately half a wavelength (/2). As shown in
(19) As shown in
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(21) The dipole 140 is a vertical dipole with dipole arms 140A, 140B that are approximately a quarter wavelength (/4), and the extended dipole 120 is a horizontal dipole with dipole arms 120A, 120B that are approximately a half wavelength (/2) each. The auxiliary radiating elements 150A and 150B, together with the dipole 140, modify or narrow the horizontal beamwidth in vertical polarisation.
(22) The antenna architecture depicted in
(23) The dipole 120 has anti-resonant dipole arms 120A, 120B of length of approximately /2 with a capacitively coupled feed with an 18 dB impedance bandwidth >32% and providing a beamwidth of approximately 65 degrees. This is one component of a dual polarised element in a dual polar wideband antenna, The single halfwave dipole 140 with the two parallel auxiliary radiating elements 150A, 150B to provide the orthogonal polarization to signal radiated by extended dipole 120. The low-band radiator 100 of the ultra-wideband dual-band cellular base-station antenna is well suited for use in the 698-960 MHz cellular band. In the description that follows, an ultra-wideband dual-band cellular base-station antenna 100 of the type shown in
(24) The low-band radiators of the antenna as described radiate vertical and horizontal polarizations. For cellular basestation antennas, dual slant polarizations (linear polarizations inclined at +45 and 45 to vertical) are conventionally used. This can be accomplished by feeding the vertical and horizontal dipoles of the low-band radiator from a wideband 180 hybrid (i.e., an equal-split coupler) well known to those skilled in the art.
(25) A particular advantage of this configuration of the low band radiators is that unobstructed regions of the groundplane are left that allow placement of high band radiators with minimum interaction between the low band and high band radiators.
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(28) While the low-band radiator (crossed dipoles with auxiliary radiating elements) 100 can be used for the 698-960 MHz band, the high-band radiators 410, 420, 430, 440 can be used for the 1.7 GHz to 2.7 GHz (1710-2690 MHz) band. The low-band radiator 100 provides a 65 degree beamwidth with dual polarisation (horizontal and vertical polarisations). Such dual polarisation is required for base-station antennas. The conventional dipole 140 is connected to an antenna feed, while the extended dipole 120 is coupled to the antenna feed by a series inductor and capacitor. The low-band auxiliary radiating elements (e.g., parasitic dipoles) 150 and the vertical dipole 140 make the horizontal beamwidth of the vertical dipole 140 together with the auxiliary radiating elements 150 the same as that of the horizontal dipole 120. The antenna 400 implements a multi-band antenna in a single antenna.
(29) Beamwidths of approximately 65 degrees are preferred, but may be in the range of 60 degrees to 70 degrees on a single degree basis (e.g., 60, 61, or 62 degrees)..
(30) This ultra-wideband, dual-band cellular base-station antenna can be implemented in a limited physical space.
(31) Thus, ultra-wideband multi-band cellular base-station antennas and a low-band radiator for such an antenna described herein and/or shown in the drawings are presented by way of example only and are not limiting as to the scope of the invention. Unless otherwise specifically stated, individual aspects and components of the antennas may be modified, or may have been substituted therefore known equivalents, or as yet unknown substitutes such as may be developed in the future or such as may be found to be acceptable substitutes in the future.