Dual-beam sector antenna and array
11469497 · 2022-10-11
Assignee
Inventors
- Igor E. Timofeev (Dallas, TX, US)
- Martin L. ZIMMERMAN (Chicago, IL, US)
- Huy Cao (Garland, TX, US)
- Yanping Hua (Suzhou, CN)
Cpc classification
H01Q25/00
ELECTRICITY
H01Q3/30
ELECTRICITY
H01Q3/26
ELECTRICITY
H01Q21/24
ELECTRICITY
H01Q25/002
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01Q3/00
ELECTRICITY
H01Q3/30
ELECTRICITY
H01Q3/26
ELECTRICITY
H01Q25/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A low sidelobe beam forming method and dual-beam antenna schematic are disclosed, which may preferably be used for 3-sector and 6-sector cellular communication system. Complete antenna combines 2-, 3- or -4 columns dual-beam sub-arrays (modules) with improved beam-forming network (BFN). The modules may be used as part of an array, or as an independent 2-beam antenna. By integrating different types of modules to form a complete array, the present invention provides an improved dual-beam antenna with improved azimuth sidelobe suppression in a wide frequency band of operation, with improved coverage of a desired cellular sector and with less interference being created with other cells. Advantageously, a better cell efficiency is realized with up to 95% of the radiated power being directed in a desired cellular sector.
Claims
1. A dual beam antenna, comprising: a plurality of radiating elements; and a 2×3 beamforming network, comprising: a first input port; a second input port; a first output port; a second output port; a third output port; a 90° hybrid coupler having first and second inputs and first and second outputs, where the first and second inputs of the 90° hybrid coupler are coupled to the first and second input ports, respectively, and the first output of the 90° hybrid coupler is coupled to the first output port; and a 180° coupler having an input coupled to the second output of the 90° hybrid coupler and first and second outputs that are coupled to the second and third output ports, respectively, wherein the first output port is coupled to at least a first of the radiating elements, the second output port is coupled to at least a second of the radiating elements, and the third output port is coupled to at least a third of the radiating elements.
2. The dual beam antenna of claim 1, wherein an amplitude of a signal output at the first output port in response to a signal input at the first input port is the same as an amplitude of a signal output at the third output port in response to the signal input at the first input port and is less than an amplitude of a signal output at the second output port in response to the signal input at the first input port.
3. The dual beam antenna of claim 1, wherein the first of the radiating elements, the second of the radiating elements, and the third of the radiating elements are aligned in a row.
4. A dual beam antenna, comprising: a plurality of radiating elements; and a 2×4 beamforming network, comprising: a first input port; a second input port; first, second, third and fourth output ports; a first 180° splitter coupled to the first input port; a second 180° splitter coupled to the second input port; and a Butler Matrix coupled between the first and second 180° splitters and the first through fourth output ports, wherein the first output port is coupled to at least a first of the radiating elements, the second output port is coupled to at least a second of the radiating elements, the third output port is coupled to at least a third of the radiating elements and the fourth output port is coupled to at least a fourth of the radiating elements.
5. The dual beam antenna of claim 4, wherein the first 180° splitter has first and second outputs that are coupled to first and second inputs of the Butler Matrix, and the second 180° splitter has first and second outputs that are coupled to third and fourth inputs of the Butler Matrix.
6. The dual beam antenna of claim 5, further comprising first and second phase shifters interposed, respectively, between the first 180° splitter and the Butler Matrix and between the second 180° splitter and the Butler Matrix.
7. The dual beam antenna of claim 6, wherein the first phase shifter is coupled between the second output port of the first 180° splitter and the second input of the Butler Matrix, and the second phase shifter is coupled between the first output of the second 180° splitter and the third input of the Butler Matrix.
8. The dual beam antenna of claim 5, wherein phases of signals output at the first, second, third and fourth output ports in response to a signal input at the first input port are 0°, −90°, −180° and −270°, respectively.
9. The dual beam antenna of claim 8, wherein phases of signals output at the first, second, third and fourth output ports in response to a signal input at the second input port are 0°, 90°, 180° and 270°, respectively.
10. The dual beam antenna of claim 9, wherein amplitudes of signals output at the respective first and fourth output ports in response to the signal input at the first input port are less than amplitudes of the signals output at the second and third output ports in response to the signal input at the first input port.
11. The dual beam antenna of claim 4, wherein an amplitude of a signal output at the first output port in response to a signal input at the first input port is the same as the amplitude of a signal output at the fourth output port in response to the signal input at the first input port and is less than an amplitude of a signal output at the second output port in response to the signal input at the first input port.
12. The dual beam antenna of claim 4, wherein the first of the radiating elements, the second of the radiating elements, the third of the radiating elements and the fourth of the radiating elements are aligned in a row.
13. The dual beam antenna of claim 4, wherein the plurality of radiating elements are arranged in rows, and the 2×4 beamforming network is coupled to either two or three of the rows of radiating elements, where each of the two or three rows of radiating elements includes four radiating elements.
14. A dual-beam cellular communication antenna, comprising: a plurality of radiators, each radiator including a dipole having a first polarization; a plurality of modules that are spaced apart from each other along a vertical direction, each of the modules including a respective subset of the radiators, the radiators in each module being arranged in at least one horizontal row; a first signal port; a second signal port; a first divider that connects the first signal port to each of the modules; and a second divider that connects the second signal port to each of the modules, wherein a first radiator in a first of the modules and a third radiator in a second of the modules define a first vertical column, a second radiator in the first of the modules that is directly adjacent the first radiator and a fourth radiator in the second of the modules that is directly adjacent the third radiator define a second vertical column, and a fifth radiator in a third of the modules is offset from the first vertical column and from the second vertical column, and wherein the radiators are configured to generate a first antenna beam that points in a first direction and a second antenna beam that points in a second direction that is different from the first direction, the first and second antenna beams having the first polarization.
15. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 14, where the first antenna beam is configured to cover a first sector of a cell of a cellular communications system and the second antenna beam is configured to cover a second, different sector of the cell of the cellular communications system.
16. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 14, wherein each radiator further includes a dipole having a second polarization, the dual-beam cellular communication antenna further comprising: a third signal port; a fourth signal port; a third divider that connects the third signal port to each of the modules; and a fourth divider that connects the fourth signal port to each of the modules, wherein the radiators are configured to generate third and fourth antenna beams having the second polarization, where the third antenna beam is configured to cover a first sector of a cell of a cellular communications system and the fourth antenna beam is configured to cover a second, different sector of the cell of the cellular communications system.
17. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 16, wherein each module includes a bidirectional beamforming network coupled between the first and second dividers and the dipoles having the first polarization.
18. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 17, wherein the bidirectional beamforming networks include a 2×3 beamforming network that is coupled to the third of the modules.
19. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 18, wherein the 2×3 beamforming network comprises a 90° hybrid coupler and a 180° splitter.
20. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 18, wherein the bidirectional beamforming networks include a 2×4 beamforming network that is coupled to the second of the modules.
21. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 14, wherein a first distance between two adjacent radiators in the first of the modules is less than a second distance between two adjacent radiators in the third of the modules.
22. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 14, wherein the third of the modules is an uppermost of the modules.
23. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 14, wherein the third of the modules is a lowermost of the modules.
24. The dual-beam cellular communication antenna of claim 14, wherein the third of the modules is between a lowermost of the modules and an uppermost of the modules.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(12) Referring now to
(13)
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(15) The improved BFNs 20, 30, 50 can be used separately (BFN 20 for a 3 column 2-beam antenna and BFN 30, 50 for 4 column 2-beam antennas). But the most beneficial way to employ them is the modular approach, i.e. combinations of the BFN modules with different number of columns/different BFNs in the same antenna array, as will be described below.
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(19) Below, in
(20) Referring now to
(21) Referring to
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(25) Referring to
(26) As can be appreciated in
(27) For instance, the physical dimensions of 2-beam antenna 122 in
(28) In other designs based on the modular approach of the present invention, other dual-beam antennas having a different AzBW may be achieved, such as a 25, 35, 45 or 55 degree AzBW, which can be required for different applications. For example, 55 and 45 degree antennas can be used for 4 and 5 sector cellular systems. In each of these configurations, by the combination of the 2×2, 2×3 and 2×4 modules, and the associated spacing X2, X3 and X4 between the radiator columns (as shown in
(29) Though the invention has been described with respect to a specific preferred embodiment, many variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading the present application. For example, the invention can be applicable for radar multi-beam antennas. The intention is therefore that the appended claims be interpreted as broadly as possible in view of the prior art to include all such variations and modifications.