Title of Invention

AN IMPROVED REPEATER ANTENNA

Abstract The invention discloses a repeater antenna (250) for use in telecommunications systems on the microwave range, intended to connect a first radio unit (120) at a first site to a second radio unit at a second site (A). The repeater antenna has at least a first (410) and a second (420) antenna element and a feed network for said antenna elements, the antenna elements giving rise to a first (260) and a second (270) antenna beam. The first beam can be used to connect the repeater antenna to said first radio unit, and the second beam can be used for connecting the repeater antenna to said second radio unit. Also, said first and second antenna elements are arranged on a surface (430, 620) where the distance between the two antenna elements along the surface is longer than the shortest distance between the antenna elements.
Full Text TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention discloses a repeater antenna for use in
telecommunications systems in the microwave range. The repeater antenna
is intended for connecting transmissions from a first radio unit at a first site to
a second radio unit at a second site.
BACKGROUND ART
In telecommunications systems such as, for example, cellular telephony
systems in the microwave range, there can be a number of problems for a
base station when trying to communicate with the users located in the area
covered by the base station, said area being referred to as "a cell", said
problems being particularly noticeable in systems that use a high bit rate In
urban areas, examples of such problems can be high-rise buildings which
obstruct the line of sight to certain sub-areas, or that in certain sub-areas the
number of users can exceed that which can be handled by the base station.
One way of handling these problems, especially in the case of areas where
the line-of-sight is obscured, is to use so called repeater antennas, i.e.
antennas which are installed at a location where they may be reached from
the base station, and from which location they may also relay transmissions
to and from the obscured area.
Another way of handling the described problems, especially in the case of
sub-areas within the cell with an amount of users which is too large to be
handled by the base station, is to install other base stations which can cover
the sub-areas in question, usually base stations with smaller capacity, so
called "pico-stations".
These "pico-stations" then need to be connected to the network in some way,
suitably with the pico-station as one of the points in a point-to-point
connection. Said point-to-point connection could be made by means of a
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repeater station, which would be directed at the "pico-station" from the base
station, or from another higher level node in the network.
Conventional repeater antennas are usually designed by means of two
reflector antennas, often parabolic dishes, connected by means of a wave-
guide and pointed in different directions. Installing such repeaters, especially
in urban areas, is becoming increasingly difficult, due to a number of factors
such as aesthetic considerations and difficulties in finding sufficient space for
a repeater site.
Another kind of previously known repeater is merely a large sheet of
reflective material, such as metal. Such a repeater would suffer from a
number of drawbacks, for example high losses due to low directivity, and
would generally not be suitable for use in urban areas.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
As described above, there is thus a need for a repeater antenna in a
telecommunications system on the microwave range which would overcome
the previously described drawbacks of known repeater antennas.
This need is addressed by the invention in that it discloses a repeater
antenna for use in telecommunications systems on the microwave range, the
repeater antenna being intended to connect a first radio unit at a first site to a
second radio unit at a second site.
The disclosed repeater antenna has at least a first and a second antenna
element and a feed network for these antenna elements, and the antenna
elements give rise to first and second antenna beams, so that the first beam
can be used for connecting the repeater antenna to said first radio unit, and
the second beam can be used for connecting the repeater antenna to said
second radio unit.
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In the repeater antenna, said first and second antenna elements are
arranged on a surface where the distance between the two antenna elements
along the surface is longer than the shortest distance between the antenna
elements, in other words a non-flat surface, either a curved or bent such
surface.
In one embodiment of the repeater antenna, at least one of said first and
second antenna elements are part of an array comprising a plurality of
antenna elements. In one version of this embodiment, the repeater antenna
can suitably have a longitudinal and a lateral direction of extension, and the
array of antenna elements is a one-dimensional array which is arranged to
coincide with one of said directions of extension of the antenna. In another
version of this embodiment, the array of antenna elements is a two-
dimensional array, with the two dimensions being arranged to essentially
coincide with one of said directions of extension of the antenna.
Suitably but not necessarily, the antenna elements can be essentially plane
and created on a sheet of electrically conducting material, and the repeater
antenna additionally comprises a ground plane spaced apart from the
antenna elements by means of a dielectric material.
Thus, by means of the invention, a repeater antenna is disclosed which can
direct beams in more or less any azimuth (horizontal) or elevational angle so
that it can have one beam which covers the base station antenna, and a
second beam which covers an area within the cell where there is a need for
additional coverage in addition to that afforded by the base station antenna.
Said first and second beams can be separated by a more or less arbitrary
angle, so that the repeater antenna can be used in a highly versatile manner.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be described in more detail in the following description,
with reference to the appended drawings, in which
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Fig 1 shows a basic view of a system in which the repeater antenna of the
invention can be applied, and
Fig 2 shows a basic view of the system of fig 1 in which the repeater antenna
of the invention is used, and
Fig 3 shows a top view of the system of fig 2, and
Fig 4 shows a schematic top view of repeater antenna of the invention, and
Figs 5-7 show more detailed embodiments of the repeater antenna.
EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
Fig 1 shows an example of a telecommunications system 100 in which the
invention may be used. The system 100 shown in this example is a cellular
telephony system in the microwave range, i.e. from 1GHz and upwards.
In the system 100, there is a base station 110 which is connected to higher
levels in the system. The radio base station uses one or several antennas
120 in order to cover a certain area, a so called cell, within which the base
station handles communication to and from users of the cellular systems, as
well as all control of the telephones of said users.
The cell of the system 100 is located in an urban area with one or several
high-rise buildings 125, 126, which block the communications from the base
station antenna 120 to one or more areas. Thus, there will be areas such as
the shaded area A within the cell which can only be serviced at degraded bit
rates or which cannot be serviced at all by the base station 110 by means of
the coverage given by the base station antenna 120.
There can also be a number of other factors which would make it difficult or
impossible for the base station 110 to service users in an area within the cell,
one such reasons being that the number of users in that particular area is so
high that the total number of users in the entire cell exceeds the base
station's capacity.
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Fig 2 shows the system of fig 1 with some additional equipment, which will be
described in the following. In order to service users of the system in the area
A, a repeater antenna 250 of the invention has been deployed, in this case
on top of the building 126. The repeater antenna 250 is intended to connect
the base station to one or more users of the system at sites within the area A.
As shown in fig 2, the repeater antenna has at least a first 260 and a second
270 antenna beam. As will be shown in more detail later on, the first beam
can be used for reception of the signals from the base station, and the
second beam can be used for transmitting the received signals to area A, to
one or more users within that area.
In fig 3, the system 200 of fig 2 is shown in a schematic "top view". As seen
here, the repeater antenna 250 is deployed on top of one of the buildings
126, from where there is line of sight to the obscured area A. The repeater
antenna has the two beams 260, 270 mentioned previously, the first 260 of
which is directed so that it covers the base station, and the second 270 of
which is so directed that it covers the obscured area A. Thus, the repeater
antenna 250 can connect the base station 110 to users in area A, users
which would otherwise have been unable to connect to the base station,
particularly if they wish to connect at high bit rates, such as typically 0.5
Mbps or higher.
In another application of the repeater antenna, if the users in area A aren't
obscured from line of sight from the base station, or if they in addition to
being obscured are also of such a quantity that the base station can't handle
them, the system may be expanded to comprise an additional base station
dedicated to servicing area A. This additional base station can be one which
is similar to the base station 110, or it can be a so called "pico" base-station,
i.e. a base station which has a smaller capacity than the base station 110,
the pico station being a type of base station which is specifically intended to
aid larger base stations. The repeater antenna would then be installed so that
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it connects the pico station to the base station, the pico station handling the
users in area A, instead of those users being handled directly by the base
station.
The first and the second antenna beams of the repeater antenna are, in order
to meet the demands of the system, separated by a more or less arbitrarily
chosen angle a. In order to achieve this, as shown in figs 4a and 4b, where
two embodiments of the repeater antenna 250 are shown in a top view, the
repeater antenna comprises a first 410 and a second 420 antenna element,
which are arranged on a surface 430 where the distance between the two
antenna elements along the surface is longer than the shortest distance
between the antenna elements. In other words, the surface on which the
antenna elements are arranged is curved or bent. The antenna elements as
such can either follow the shape of the surface, i.e. curved or bent, or they
can be essentially straight, as shown in figs 4a and 4b respectively.
Before the design of the repeater antenna is described in more detail, one
more aspect of the repeater antenna should be mentioned: the repeater
antenna can be either an active or a passive antenna. In other words, the
repeater antenna can either passively relay signals which have been
received in one beam to be transmitted by another of the antenna beams, or
the received signals can be amplified before they are re-transmitted. One and
the same repeater antenna could in fact be used for both applications: if the
repeater is to be used in a passive mode, the input/output ports to the
respective beams would simply be connected to each other, and if the
repeater is to be used in an active mode, the same ports could be connected
to each other via an external amplifying equipment.
Naturally, the repeater antenna could also be designed as an active or
passive repeater from the beginning.
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Turning now to some examples of the more exact design of the repeater
antenna, the antenna is suitably but not necessarily designed as a so called
"patch antenna". Such an antenna comprises as radiation elements patches
of an electrically conducting material, which have usually been created on a
non-conducting layer or substrate, in a manner which as such is well known
within the art. The "patch" type of antenna will also comprise a ground plane,
i.e. another plane of electrically conducting material, which is spaced apart
from the radiation elements by means of a dielectric material, usually in the
form of a separate physical layer of, but said layer of dielectric material may
also be no more than a layer of air.
The patch antenna also comprises a feeder network, by means of which the
radiation elements are connected to input/output ports of the antenna, and
also possibly to each other, and, where applicable, to other components of
the antenna, such as, for example, phase shifters.
The feed network can be created in the same conducting layer as the
radiation elements, or as a separate network which would then, for example,
be connected to the radiation elements by means of through-holes in the
ground plane.
The design of the feed network for the radiation elements can be chosen
from a large number of principles, such as, for example, connecting radiation
elements so that they form so called travelling wave antennas, or the feed
network can be a Butler matrix antennas or there can even be individual
antenna patches with individual feeder networks.
An example of a travelling wave antenna 500 is shown in fig 5: the antenna
500 comprises at least a first 511 and a second 512 radiation element, which
are arranged in series at a centre distance D from each other.
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Since the radiation elements are connected serially to each other there will
be a first and a second "end element" to which are attached input/output
ports 522, 523, of the antenna 500.
As shown in fig 5, the antenna 500 has a first and a second antenna beam
532, 533, each of which is associated with one of the antenna ports 522, 523.
This means that the first beam 532 may be used by accessing the first port
522, and in a similar way the second beam 533 is associated with the second
port 523. The angle between the beams is determined by the centre distance
D between the antenna elements of the antenna.
As can also be seen in fig 5, the two antenna beams of the travelling wave
antenna are each other's "mirror image" with respect to an imagined line 540
which extends in a direction perpendicular to the antenna. Thus, the two
beams are sometimes referred to as the "plus" or the "minus"-directions.
The Butler matrix antenna will only be commented upon briefly here, since it
is also quite well known within the art. A Butler matrix antenna comprises N
input/output ports, and produces N antenna beams. By means of a network
internal to the Butler matrix, a signal input at any one of the input/output ports
produces equal amplitudes at all of the antenna ports, and a linear phase
progression from (antenna) port to port. If the antenna ports are connected in
sequence to an equally spaced linear antenna array, one antenna beam is
formed for each input/output port.
The internal network may comprise phase shifters and hybrids, and by
externally combining two or more of the input/output ports, the antenna
diagram can be moved, broadened or be given altered side lobe levels.
Fig 6 shows a preferred embodiment 600 of the repeater antenna. As can be
seen here, the antenna comprises a bent surface 620, in this case an
octagonal surface or body. Said body is elongated, i.e. it has a longitudinal
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(y) and a lateral (x) direction of extension, with the longitudinal extension in
this case exceeding the lateral one, and there is arranged a number of arrays
621-623 of antenna elements 621- 621N on each of the flat surfaces of the
octagonal body, so as to afford a 360-degree coverage. Naturally, the body
of the antenna can be hexagonal or any other shape with a plurality of
surfaces in different directions, or it can be cylindrical, as shown in fig 4.
As shown in fig 6, the antenna arrays 621-623 are one-dimensional arrays,
i.e. column arrays, which are arranged to coincide with one of said directions
of extension of the repeater antenna, in this case the lateral extension (y).
Thus, the previously mentioned first and second antenna elements are in this
embodiment part of respective arrays comprising a plurality of antenna
elements.
This array can be one-dimensional, as shown in fig 6, or it can be a two-
dimensional array, said two dimensions being arranged to essentially
coincide with the two main directions of extension of the repeater antenna.
Fig 7 shows another embodiment 700 of a repeater antenna according to the
invention:
The antenna 700, in similarity to the antennas shown previously, has a first
710 and a second 720 plurality of radiation elements, here shown as column
arrays on the sides of an octagon. Both of said pluralities are connected to a
two-dimensional beam forming network, by means of which a plurality of
beams or radiation diagrams can be generated in both the azimuth
(horizontal, "H") and elevation (Vertical, "V") directions. By means of the
antenna 700, separate beams may thus be formed for a number of relevant
areas within a cell, in order to, for example, cover the base station and the
obscured areas "A" described above.
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As indicated in fig 7, in the antenna 700 is a cylindrical array antenna, in this
case an octagon, which, as mentioned, is equipped with beam-forming
networks in two dimensions, both elevation and azimuth, so that a plurality of
beams may be formed in elevation.
As an example, the antenna 700 may feed each individual column with a
separate feeder network, and the signals from the output ports of the vertical
feed networks 720 can be combined using two or more beam-forming
networks 730 in azimuth.
Beam forming could here be carried out in both the vertical and horizontal
(azimuth) direction. Calibration could also be implemented on column-basis
only, i.e. between columns, with fixed beam forming networks within the
columns.
Beam-forming networks (for example Butler matrices) can be applied to one
or both of two orthogonal polarizations (in the case of dual-polarized antenna
elements) and can connect to different numbers of antenna elements in
elevation.
The invention is not limited to the examples of embodiments shown above,
but may be freely varied within the scope of the appended claims. For
example, different polarizations maybe used in the different antenna beams,
or one or more of the antenna elements may be dual polarized.
The radiation elements or antenna elements are typically so called patch
antennas, but can also be dipoles or any other type of radiation elements, as
is well known to those skilled in the field.
It can also be pointed out that the repeater antenna can utilise any number of
the beams it generates in order to achieve the desired coverage. For
example, a repeater antenna with four beams could use one beam to receive
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in and two beams pointed in different directions to retransmit the data it has
received.
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WE CLAIM:
1. A repeater antenna (250) for use in telecommunications systems on the
microwave range, the repeater antenna being intended to connect a first
radio unit (120) at a first site to a second radio unit at a second site (A), said
repeater antenna being characterized in that it has at least a first (410) and a
second (420) antenna element and a feed network for said antenna
elements, the antenna elements giving rise to a first (260) and a second
(270) antenna beam, so that the first beam can be used to connect the
repeater antenna to said first radio unit, and the second beam can be used
for connecting the repeater antenna to said second radio unit, the repeater
antenna also being characterized in that said first and second antenna
elements are arranged on a surface (430, 620) where the distance between
the two antenna elements along the surface is longer than the shortest
distance between the antenna elements.
2. The repeater antenna of claim 1, in which at least one of said first and
second antenna elements are part of an array (621, 622, 623) comprising a
plurality of antenna elements.
3. The repeater antenna of claim 2, which has a longitudinal (x) and a lateral
(y) direction of extension, and in which said array of antenna elements is a
one-dimensional array which is arranged to coincide with one of said
directions of extension of the repeater antenna.
4. The repeater antenna of claim 2, which has a longitudinal (x) and a lateral
(y) direction of extension, and in which said array of antenna elements is a
two-dimensional array, said two dimensions being arranged to essentially
coincide with one of said directions of extension of the repeater antenna.
5. The repeater antenna of any of the previous claims, characterized in that
the antenna elements are essentially plane and created on a sheet of
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electrically conducting material, and also in that the antenna additionally
comprises a ground plane spaced apart from the antenna elements by
means of a dielectric material.
6. The repeater antenna of any of the previous claims, in which the design of
the feed network for the antenna elements is chosen from at least one of the
following: travelling wave antennas, butler matrix antennas or individually fed
antenna patches.
7. The repeater antenna of claim 5 or 6, in which the antenna elements in
addition to being plane also are flat.


Dated this 1st day of February 2008

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The invention discloses a repeater antenna (250) for use in telecommunications systems on the microwave range, intended to connect a
first radio unit (120) at a first site to a second radio unit at a second site (A).
The repeater antenna has at least a first (410) and a second (420) antenna element and a feed network for said antenna elements, the antenna
elements giving rise to a first (260) and a second (270) antenna beam. The first beam can be used to connect the repeater antenna to said first radio unit, and the second beam can be used for connecting the repeater antenna
to said second radio unit. Also, said first and second antenna elements are arranged on a surface (430, 620) where the distance between the two antenna elements along the surface is longer than the shortest distance between the antenna elements.

Documents:

http://ipindiaonline.gov.in/patentsearch/GrantedSearch/viewdoc.aspx?id=kNwZhgNUbUe8M/s/ljkSjw==&loc=wDBSZCsAt7zoiVrqcFJsRw==


Patent Number 268694
Indian Patent Application Number 455/KOLNP/2008
PG Journal Number 38/2015
Publication Date 18-Sep-2015
Grant Date 11-Sep-2015
Date of Filing 01-Feb-2008
Name of Patentee TELEFONAKTIEBOLAGET LM ERICSSON (PUBL)
Applicant Address SE-164 83 STOCKHOLM
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 JOHANSSON, MARTIN KROKSLÄTTS PARKGATA 69C, S-431 68 MÖLNDAL
2 ANDERSSON, MATS IBSENSGATAN 16, S-417 19 GÖTEBORG
3 RAFFAELLI, SILVIA 23 JOHN STREET, CB 1, CB1 1DT, CAMBRIDGE
PCT International Classification Number H04B 7/155
PCT International Application Number PCT/SE2005/001078
PCT International Filing date 2005-07-04
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 NA