Device for transmitting and/or receiving signals

Communications: radio wave antennas – Antennas – Microstrip

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C343S815000, C343S834000, C343S895000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06618012

ABSTRACT:

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a device for transmitting and/or receiving electromagnetic waves, more especially to an antenna known as a “printed antenna”.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
In everything that follows, the term “printed antenna” (or “microstrip antenna”) will refer to an antenna made using so-called “microstrip” technology comprising a radiating element, typically a “patch”, a slot, etc., or an array of such elements, the number of elements depending on the sought-after gain. This type of antenna is used in particular as primary source at the focus of a lens or of a parabola.
By virtue of their lightness, their flatness, the flexibility of design which they offer, their ease of incorporation into numerous items of electronic equipment, the compatibility of their manufacture with proven techniques for the mass production of printed circuits and finally their low cost price, printed antennas are becoming increasingly used in numerous wireless communications systems (local wireless networks, access networks whether they be terrestrial or satellite, etc.).
Now, in numerous applications, it may be advantageous and/or necessary to use circular polarization for the transmission/reception antennas.
However, printed antennas are better adapted to transmit/receive a linearly polarized wave.
Thus, to transmit/receive circular polarization with printed antennas, several techniques have been implemented. These techniques are described, for example, in “Handbook of Microstrip Antennas” edited by J R James & P S Hall; published by: Peter Peregrinus Ltd, London, United Kingdom-ISBN 0 86341 150 9. In particular, chapter 4: Circular polarisation and bandwith, pp. 219-274.
These techniques consist essentially in simultaneously exciting two linearly polarized waves 90° out of phase. Therefore, the quality of the circular polarization which can be quantified by the ellipticity ratio (or “axial ratio”) of the wave radiated or received by the antenna can only be obtained over a narrow frequency band.
Solutions for widening the frequency band such as the use of a hybrid coupler associated with a radiating element or the use of the technique of sequential rotation in the case of an array (see “application of sequential feeding to wide bandwith, circularly polarised microstrip patch arrays” P. S. Hall, IEE Proceedings, Vol. 136, Pt. H, No 5, October 1989) make it possible to widen this frequency band.
However, it is not always possible to implement these solutions.
Moreover:
for certain applications, the bandwidths obtained with these techniques remain inadequate,
in the case of the use of sequential rotation, the quality of the circular polarization deteriorates fairly rapidly as soon as one deviates from the principal direction of the beam. This poses a problem, for example, for a source antenna used for the illumination of a parabola or a lens.
SUMMARY
The object of the invention is to propose a device for receiving and/or transmitting signals comprising a printed antenna of high quality of circular or linear polarization over a widened frequency band and over a wide angle sector.
Thus, the subject of the present invention is a device for transmitting and/or receiving electromagnetic waves comprising at least one radiating element for radiating a circular or linear polarization of given sense, characterized in that it comprises at least one means dimensioned and positioned with respect to the radiating element in such a way as to radiate, at the frequency of the radiating element, a circular or linear polarization of opposite sense to that of the radiating element and whose phase is adjusted so as to compensate for the cross component of the radiating element.


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patent: 6229488 (2001-05-01), Lin et al.
patent: 2226186 (1990-06-01), None
F.S. Lomaglio et al “Original Parasitic Elements for Cross-Polarization Control in Reflector Antennas” International Symposium on Antennas and Propagation, IEEE, May 7, 1990 pp. 164-167.

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