ADAPTIVE RADIO ANTENNAS
The present invention relates to modes of operation and control of a number of small directional antennas, including but not limited to dielectric resonator antennas, used at a radio terminal (for example a mobile telephone).
The direction of arrival of radio signals varies depending upon the environment surrounding the terminal. This effect has been examined by a large number of workers in the field of microwave propagation, in particular for mobile telephony and similar applications. This work has shown that the angular spread of direction of arrival is greatest in urban areas and least in rural areas. As a radio terminal moves from one radio environment to another the optimum form ofthe antenna will change.
A high gain antenna is desirable for spatially filtering radio signals (e.g. looking towards the optimum direction and away from interferers). However passive gain is achieved by making antennas directional, and such directionality necessitates pointing the antenna correctly in order to obtain improved performance. Moreover, in some radio environments, it is desirable to receive from a wide distribution of directions of arrival, and to transmit in a broad beam; whereas in other radio environments best communication will be achieved by receiving from only a narrow angle and transmitting a narrow beam.
It is known that:
• A number of directional antennas arranged in an array pointing in different directions can be combined to form an antenna with a near omni-directional pattern
• Two or more of such antennas can be combined to form a broad beam
• By selectively combining antenna elements (bar one or two) a null can be produced in the antenna gain pattern
• An antenna may consist of 2 polarisations - these polarisations may be combined to increase the gain ofthe antenna
• Using suitable control electronics the null in the combined antenna gain pattern can be made deeper and more effective by shifting the relative phase between the antenna elements
The present applicant has built on these known findings to provide an adaptive radio antenna with several novel features and advantages.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a compound radio antenna comprising a plurality of directional antenna elements and provided with control circuitry adapted selectively to enable one or more of the elements in direct response to detected characteristics of received radio signals.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of controlling a compound radio antenna comprising a plurality of directional antenna elements, wherein a control algorithm is used selectively to enable one or more ofthe elements in direct response to detected characteristics of received radio signals.
Although preferred embodiments of the present invention utilise dielectric resonator antennas DRAs) as the antenna elements, it will be appreciated that any other appropriate small directional antenna elements may be used.
The control circuitry preferably includes electronic control means adapted selectively to activate one or more antenna elements individually and/or in various combinations. There may be provided steering control means, a protocol stack and RF switching/combining circuitry as described in more detail hereinbelow.
Control to adapt form of antenna gain pattern
A number of antenna elements may be selectively combined so that the antenna gain pattern can change its form to optimise signal reception and transmission for the environment. A number of small directional antennas (for example a cluster of DRA segments as described in the present applicant's International patent application WO 01/69721, the full disclosure of which is hereby incorporated into the present application by reference) can each be connected independently to a receiver and/or a transmitter.
Alternatively each element can be switched to a combining circuit through independent selection switches. This circuit can combine the signals from the selected antennas and route them to the receiver. It can also equally distribute the signal to each ofthe selected antennas from the transmitter amplifier.
When the direction of arrival of signals is undetermined, the antenna elements may be combined to form a substantially omnirdirectional pattern, see Fig 1(a). This enables the system to receive signals from all directions.
As the direction of arrival of signals is determined further by the control system (by momtoring ofthe signals from each ofthe antenna elements) the form ofthe antenna gain pattern can be automatically and progressively changed from an omnidirectional pattern to one where the pattern has a null in the direction of unwanted signals.
The antenna gain pattern can then be progressively adapted further by the control system to produce a more directed antenna gain pattern that gives the maximum signal gain and rejection of unwanted signals. Such adaptation may be effected by switching in of appropriate antenna elements; alternatively or in addition, this maybe effected by changing the effective phase path length to each of the elements (for
example by switching in or our predetermined lengths of transmission cable or the like).
In many protocols, and for example in WCDMA, the antenna may be required to point in two directions simultaneously, see Fig; 1(c). This can be achieved by selecting two :segments which point in the correct directions. In this case each segment may be controlled independently to optimise gain for one of the two radio paths.
This manner of control can be extended to multiple radio channels being independently optimised by selecting antenna elements pointing in the optimum direction.
Null steering
Mobile user equipment can be enabled with a number of small directional antennas, a control algorithm and RF switching and/or combining networks to steer a null in the combined antenna gain pattern towards a. source of interference, and thereby to reduce the level of the received interference. This may be achieved by a number of means. The phase length ofthe path to each ofthe antenna elements can be varied to steer a null in the antenna pattern. Alternatively or in addition, individual elements may be de-energised to create a null in the antenna pattern. The null can be directed towards a source of interference. The null can also be directed such that signals transmitted by the antenna do not interfere with equipment nearby and, or alternatively, the gain pattern ofthe antenna can be appropriately directed for good or substantially optimal propagation of the signal from the terminal to the receiving station. In both cases, the control system operates by receiving information from either the equipment being interfered with or by receiving information from the receiving station.
Control algorithm
Two or more small directional antennas in a radio terminal can be controlled so as intelligently to steer toward a desired signal as described hereinbefore, but alternatively may be controlled to switch from one antenna element to another. Such switching may be carried out at set intervals rather than being determined by the strength or other characteristics of the received signals. This method will increase the average amplitude ofthe received signal, and provides a method of avoiding fast fades in high multipath environments. For particular protocols, where data is interleaved over several radio blocks for example, this method will increase the diversity of the antenna and may thereby improve the radio link. Alternatively, the control system may switch from one antenna element to another when the radio link integrity falls below a preset or predetermined level and thereby switch the direction ofthe gain ofthe antenna system from one direction to another.
Selection and phasing of signals from elements
The control system may select the antenna element giving the best signal in such an array, or may combine antenna elements to produce an optimum or a best-available signal, or may introduce a relative phase shift between the signals from the elements to optimise or at least improve the signal and reduce interference caused by multipath effects.
Arrangement of antenna elements
The antennas may be arranged so as to provide
• angular diversity
• polarisation diversity
or a combination of these two forms of antenna diversity.
Alternatively or in addition to the above, the antennas may be sited at sufficient distances from each other so as to avoid all being obstructed by a user, for example by being covered by a user's hand.
Combinations of these diverse elements can be explored by the control system in order to optimise or at least improce the radio link for the given environment.
Table 1 below shows a comparison ofthe benefits provided by different modes of an antenna of embodiments ofthe present invention.
multi- 3G 3G 3G 3G 3G segment GSM GSM GSM adaptation
Table 1 Benefits of different modes ofthe antenna
For a better understanding ofthe present invention and to show how it may be carried into effect, reference shall now be made by way of example to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIGURE 1 shows various modes of operation of a compound antenna embodying the present invention;
FIGURE 2 shows a control system for an antenna embodying the present invention; and
FIGURE 3 shows a control circuit configuration for an antenna embodying the present invention.
Figure 1(a) shows a compound antenna 1 formed of six sectored DRA elements a, b, c, d, e and f, which is this case are all excited so as to provide an omni-directional mode of operation.
In Figure 1(b), two elements, a and b, are switched off to produce a null in a radiation pattern generated by excited elements c, d, e and f.
In Figure 1(c), two elements, c and e, are excited and the remaining elements are switched off. This generates a radiation pattern having beams in two separate directions.
In Figure 1(d), two adjacent elements, d and e, are both excited and combined to give a relatively broad directional beam.
In Figure 1(e), a single element, e, is excited to give a highly directional relatively narrow beam.
Figure 2 shows a sectored DRA 1 ofthe type shown in Figure 1. Each element a, b, c, d, e and f is connected by way of RF switching/combining circuitry 2 and a steering control unit 3 to a protocol stack 4, which may form part of an integrated circuit or computer device (not shown). The control system depicted in Figure 2 is able to provide selective activation of the various antenna elements a to e, either individually or in combination, in response to detected signal strengths and or other signal characteristics so as to enable intelligent steering and other control of the compound antenna.
The control system may include a control algorithm which may consist of a process where the direction of arrival of the incoming signal is determined by measuring the signal strength on each of the antenna elements a to f. Using this information, the control algorithm will set up an RF switch network that will determine the direction of transmission of the radio signal. In protocols where the radio link is reciprocal (i.e. where the uplink and downlink propagation paths are identical or can be approximated to be identical) it may be assumed that within a short period of time the optimum uplink direction will be the direction of arrival ofthe downlink direction.
Alternatively, or in addition to the above process, the network basestation may provide feedback information to the handset on the received signal strength. Under these conditions, the terminal will select the optimum direction of transmission by sampling a number of directions of transmission. The basestation will provide a metric to the terminal of the relative efficiency of each direction of transmission and this information can be used to select the antenna elements to be used for the transmission from the terminal. These elements may be different from the elements used for the reception of the signal. The optimisation routine may be a continuous
process -with an update period commensurate with the duration of a typical multipath channel lifetime.
The RF switching control circuitry 2,3 is designed such that the elements selected for the transmission and reception of the signal may be selected individually as necessary. In TDMA systems this can be effected by rapid switching between the optimum uplink and downlink configurations. In CDMA systems the configuration difference between the uplink and the downlink configurations is effected by the use of biased diode elements to make the signal forward and reverse paths different.
The short duration of multipath experienced in cellular networks, for example, requires that the control algorithm processing is performed in the lower layers of the protocol stack, and most Hkely as part of a digital signal processing operation. In other situations where the lifetime of multipath is longer, the control algorithms may be executed at higher layers ofthe protocol stack 4 and will be less time critical.
The diagram shown in Figure 3 illustrates a possible configuration of the control circuit. The antenna elements are each connected to a diplexer and this is used to separate the transmit and receive parts. Each transmit and receive of each element may be individually or severally selected to allow the appropriate antenna segments to be selected. This is achieved by connection of a configuration of elements 11 each with a different gain pattern (either directionalϊy different, of different polarisation or spatially dispersed) to diplexers 12 and then to separate receive and transmit selection switches, 13 and 14, respectively. The receive channel signal 15 may then be single or a combination of elements and therefore correspond to a signal arriving within a certain angle and/or polarisation and with an optimum or at least improved fade profile relative to the handset. The receive and transmit selection switches are controlled by a control system 17.
The preferred features of the invention are applicable to all aspects of the invention and may be used in any possible combination.
Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the words "comprise" and "contain" and variations of the words, for example "comprising" and "comprises", mean "including but not limited to", and are not intended to (and do not) exclude other components, integers, moieties, additives or steps.