Abstract:
A remote control electrical device which can communicate with a remote control device. The electrical control device is adapted to fit into a housing which fits into a wall mounting. The remote control electrical device can comprise a control circuit disposed in the housing, a transmitter disposed in the housing, a receiver disposed in the housing wherein said transmitter and said receiver are in communication with the control circuit. There is also a support plate having an inside face facing into the housing and an outside face facing away from the housing body. The support plate is coupled to the housing, wherein there is also an antenna disposed on the outside face of the support plate. This antenna does not receive any power-line AC frequencies or DC, instead it is capacitively coupled to the rest of the electrical components and disposed on the outside face of the support plate.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The invention relates to a device for integrating a compact RF antenna held for transmitting and receiving radio frequency signals, into a wireless lighting control system installed in a standard electrical wall box. Other antennas may generally relate to this field. For example, the following U.S. patents generally relate to the field: U.S. Pat. No. 4,138,684 to Kerr; U.S. Pat. No. 4,939,702 to Urbish et al; U.S. Pat. No. 5,079,559 to Umetsu et al; U.S. Pat. No. 5,400,041 to Strickland; U.S. Pat. No. 5,982,103 to Mosebrook et al, wherein the disclosures of all of these patents are hereby incorporated herein by reference. 
     A good or effective antenna can create an electromagnetic (EM) field in space. This antenna will have a radiation resistance that is much larger than the loss resistance. In that way, radio frequency (RF) power is dissipated into space as opposed to dissipated in the antenna materials. 
     In addition, an effective antenna presents suitable impedance to the RF interface circuitry which can usually be at 50 ohms resistance with nearly 0 ohms reactive. This antenna impedance is measured using a network analyzer. 
     Furthermore, an effective antenna prevents standing waves on the host device by minimizing common mode currents. With the case of a wall switch, the need for low common mode currents is increased so that connections to the device do not cause excessive performance variation. 
     In most cases, the connection between RF circuits consists of an unbalanced transmission line, such as for example a coaxial cable, or a microstrip transmission line. Unbalanced transmission lines ideally carry differential mode currents only. However because an antenna inherently interacts with the environment, it can excite currents on the ground if not interfaced properly. This can lead to common mode currents. 
     Proper interfacing will match the antenna to the transmission line. A balanced antenna like a dipole will often include a Balanced to Unbalanced transformer (a BALUN). Other antennas like an “F” antenna naturally interfaces with unbalanced lines. 
     Common mode currents result in that an unintended voltage is established somewhere besides the antenna. One effect is that the performance can be sacrificed because power can be lost as the voltage induced radio waves are radiated inside of the appliance. Alternatively, destructive interference is established resulting in a highly irregular radiation pattern. 
     The design of the present invention is in contrast to previous designs which might relate to a traditional F antenna. A traditional “F” antenna naturally interfaces to the unbalanced transmission line by establishing a ground at the surface of the device. There is radiation resistance in the interval between the feed point and the open ended transmission line and the interval between the feed point to the ground connection that establishes the input impedance. 
     In contrast, the present invention overcomes some of the limitations of the prior art by providing for example, a modified “F” antenna that results in an antenna positioned on a different plane from an antenna feed point. 
     SUMMARY 
     The present invention relates to a wireless lighting control system which uses a compact but concealed antenna connected to the lighting control system such as, for example a light dimming system for turning on and off a light or dimming a light to a certain level in response to an external RF signal. In the construction of the antenna of the system, the antenna selected, which resides behind the switch plate, has a length that is less than a quarter of the transmitted or received wavelength. The antenna comprises a single wire antenna that is suitably loaded by the use of stripline-like components to produce a tuned, sensitive antenna for receiving and transmitting RF signals within the local area of the wall switch. 
     For example the invention can relate to a remote control electrical device such as a wireless lighting system which can communicate with a remote control device. In this case, the wireless lighting system is adapted to fit into a housing which fits into a wall mounting. The lighting system comprises a control circuit and a transmitter disposed in the housing. There is also a receiver disposed in the housing wherein the transmitter and the receiver are in communication with the control circuit. There is also a support plate in the form of a strap having an inside face and an outside face. The strap is coupled to the housing. There is also an antenna, wherein the antenna is adapted to receive signals from the remote control device and transmit signals to the remote control device. This antenna is in communication with the transmitter, and the receiver. In addition, the antenna can be coupled to the outside face of the support plate. 
     Many of these electrical components are housed on at least one printed circuit board, wherein the control circuit as well as the transmitter and the receiver are disposed on the printed circuit board. 
     For example, the transmitter and the receiver can be in the form of a transceiver mounted on the printed circuit board. However, this antenna is not mounted on the circuit board but capacitively coupled to the printed circuit board. 
     Thus, there can be at least two isolating capacitors disposed on the printed circuit board and coupled in series between the antenna and the transceiver. 
     There can also be an antenna feed point, in the form of a strip line that is capacitively coupled to antenna and disposed on the printed circuit board. 
     One advantage of the invention is that the strap can extend outside of the housing. The strap is in the form of a plate which can be made from aluminum. Coupled to the strap is at least one antenna coupler. This antenna coupler is comprised of a dielectric material which effectively isolates the antenna from the strap. This antenna coupler includes a channel for receiving the antenna and at least one prong for selectively securing the antenna to the support plate. 
     In one example embodiment, the antenna can comprise a flexible wire that can be any shape such as in an L shape and disposed inside a thin insulation, and mounted on the strap plate so as to be concealed by the cover plate of the wall switch. The antenna is “tuned” with respect to the ground plane of the printed circuit board of the lighting control, and the metal surrounding the antenna. The antenna is capacitively coupled to the circuit board of the lighting control so as to prevent any electrical hazard with respect to the line voltage supplied to the control circuit. The compact antenna design provides flexibility with regard to changing the color of the frame or wall plate. In addition, because of the presence of the antenna feed point, the antenna is also not disturbed by any hand or body effect located in close proximity to the switch so that there is no detuning of the circuit due to any hand or body effect. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       Other features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description considered in connection with the accompanying drawings. 
       In the drawings, wherein similar reference characters denote similar elements throughout the several views: 
         FIG. 1  is an electrical block diagram showing an antenna connected to a switching control circuit; 
         FIG. 2  is a detailed schematic diagram of the antenna and its coupling to the switching circuit; 
         FIG. 3A  shows a portion of the printed circuit board of the switching circuit together with the antenna circuitry incorporated within; 
         FIG. 4A  shows a perspective view of the antenna holder that fits on the outer surface of the strap plate; 
         FIG. 4B  is a top plan view in detail of the antenna holder; 
         FIG. 4C  is a side view of the antenna and its holder of  FIG. 4B ; 
         FIG. 4D  is a bottom view of the antenna holder of  FIG. 4A ; 
         FIG. 4E  is a top end view of the antenna holder shown in  FIG. 4B ; 
         FIG. 4F  is a cross sectional view of the antenna holder taken through the line I-I in  FIG. 4B ; 
         FIG. 4G  is a cross sectional view of the antenna holder taken through the line II-II in  FIG. 4B ; 
         FIG. 4H  is a cross sectional view of the antenna holder taken through the line III-III in  FIG. 4B ; 
         FIG. 5A  is a front plan view of the strap plate which fits over the wall box and supports the antenna according to the invention; 
         FIG. 5B  is a side view of the strap plate containing the antenna; 
         FIG. 6  is an exploded view of the switching control circuit and its housing adapted for mounting in an electrical wall box; 
         FIG. 7A  is an exploded perspective view of another embodiment of the strap and antenna holder for a multi-button switch plate; 
         FIG. 7B  is a perspective view of the antenna holder and switch plate put together; 
         FIG. 7C  is a bottom view of the switch plate and antenna holder combination shown in  FIG. 7B ; 
         FIG. 8A  is an exploded perspective view of a second embodiment of the switch plate; and 
         FIG. 8B  is a perspective view of this second embodiment with the parts coupled together. 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     Referring to  FIG. 1 , there is shown a block diagram of a preferred embodiment of the present invention showing a main power controller  10 , and a power supply  11 , which in turn is coupled through an air gap switch  12  to a main power source such as 110 volts AC. Main controller  10  may be any switching control circuit capable of handling the lighting load which is connected to it. The output of main controller  10  connects to a switching and dimming circuit  13 , and to a secondary controller or transceiver  14 . The antenna circuit comprises a tuning capacitor  16  coupled to an antenna feed point  17 , which in a preferred embodiment is coupled to isolating capacitors  18  and  19 , however, an antenna circuit in accordance with this invention may be include less than, or more than 2 isolating capacitors. These isolating capacitors are in turn connected to the actual antenna line  20 . 
     Air gap switch  12 , which is connected to the 110 volt AC line, is a mechanical switch or relay that will disconnect the power to the control circuitry when the two contacts of gap switch  12  are physically separated, such as when the switch is exposed or opened up for inspection. 
     Main controller  10  controls the functions of the load. In particular, it can be used to control the amount of power using the switching and dimming circuit  13  directed to the load  9  (for example a dimmer switch, and on/off switch etc). Main controller  10  can include a processor and works in communication with the communication controller and the memory chip. 
     Secondary controller or RF Transceiver  14  is used to control the wireless communication between antenna  20  and the other logic components such as main controller  10  and memory chip  15 . 
     Memory chip  15  is an EEPROM memory chip that can be in communication with secondary controller  14 . This EEPROM is encoded with, and can be used to store the following characteristics: last load status, light level, minimum and maximum settings or other known settings. In this case, the EEPROM also offers power down storage and retrieval of events status during power up. A power supply  11  is shown coupled between switch  12  and the controller and switching circuits. The above circuits would typically be contained on a printed circuit board mounted within the housing of the unit. 
     Referring to  FIG. 2 , there is shown an example embodiment of an antenna circuitry in the form of a detailed schematic diagram. This diagram shows antenna  20 , coupled in series with the two isolation capacitors  18  and  19 , which connect to an antenna feed point  17  on a copper plated strip-line buss section  24 . One end of strip-line buss section  24  is grounded to the circuit board ground plane  29  ( FIG. 3 ) and forms a ground connection point  25 , whereas the opposite end is capacitively coupled through tuning capacitor  16  to a SAW filter  26 , the output of which is coupled to transmitter-receiver, or secondary controller  14 . 
     Saw filter  26  is similar to a band pass filter and is tuned to a particular signal to pass on signals of a selected band width. 
     Referring to  FIG. 3 , there is shown an enlarged portion of the electrical printed circuit board  60  which can include the main and secondary controllers  10  and  14  (See  FIGS. 1 ,  2 ) Circuit board  60 , shows the strip-line buss section  24 , with one end  25  grounded to the ground plane  29  of printed circuit  26 . Surrounding strip-line buss section  24  is a dielectric area  27  of the circuit board which does not include ground plane  29 . Near the upper mid-section of strip-line section  24 , is shown the antenna feed point  17  which is coupled through isolating capacitors  18  and  19  to an antenna connector  28 , which is formed on printed circuit board  60 . Antenna connector  28  is designed to be connected to an antenna wire  20  which is extended to fit into an antenna holder mounted on the strap or support plate of the device. 
     Printed circuit board (PCB)  60  includes a copper plated or conductive ground plane  29  which is an electrically conductive surface that serves as a near-field reflection point for an antenna, or as a reference ground in a circuit. This ground plane helps reduce noise and helps to ensure that all integrated circuits within the system compare different signal voltages to the same potential. This ground plane  29  is shown by the cross hatched area. Another printed circuit board or PCB  50  (See  FIG. 6 ) can also be used to house electronic components of the circuit design. 
     Antenna  20  is designed for the reception and transmission of control signals at for example, 908 MHz frequency. The antenna is fed single ended and can have an impedance of any other number other than 50 ohms at resonance frequency. Matching to a 50 Ohm circuit includes correctly positioning the antenna feed point which serves as a tap point on a transmission line transformer. It was found that an antenna of 1.67 inches long, which is smaller than the ¼ wavelength of 3.24 inches for that frequency of 908 MHz worked very well. The impedance of the RF transceiver and the SAW filter is approximately 50 ohm at the transmitting frequency. 
       FIG. 3  shows the structure of the design used which can achieve impedance matching of the circuit. With this design, antenna  20  is shown extending above strap  35  (See  FIGS. 5A-8B ). This antenna extends down to an antenna connector  28  which is below strap  35 . Copper strip line bus section  24  is coupled to antenna connection point  17  and extends across circuit board  60  in a region of open or dielectric area  27 . At one end, this strip line  24  is coupled to a ground connection point  25  at a transmission line end. This strip line bus section creates an unbalanced transmission line between the antenna and the remaining electronics. 
     Ultimately, the benefit of this design is that the radiating part of the transmission line or antenna is above the outer surface of the device. The antenna tap and the feed point  17  are inside of the housing or device. This method reduces the required outer surface area and allows the “loop” between the ground and the feed point to be manufactured on a standard printed circuit board which also simplifies the assembly and reduces cost. 
     There are various ways to match the antenna impedance. The first method is to use a matching network between the SAW filter and antenna. The matching network can either be a “T” or a “π” structure, or part of that structure. A second method for matching the impedance is the use of antenna feed point  17  wherein the shape of the feed point, the trace width of the feed point, the spacing between the feed point and ground plane and antenna length adjusted during the tuning process will achieve the desirable antenna impedance (50 ohm in our case) and return loss (better than −25 dB at 908 MHz). 
     The hand/body effect can cause a detuning of an antenna impedance characteristic when there is a human touch to the area close to the antenna. 
     The design of the antenna system of this invention however avoids the hand and body effect on reception/transmission by its unique design of the antenna feed point. The antenna feed point provides a fixed impedance that is insensitive to the environment, i.e. relatively insensitive to the material of wall box in which the product is installed and insensitive to the presence of other environmental factors such as persons or other metal or plastic objects in close proximity to the antenna. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 4A-4H , there is shown an embodiment of the present invention which is an antenna holder  30  designed in a L-shaped configuration. Antenna holder  30  can be made from any suitable insulating or dielectric material. One example of such material is polycarbonate. Antenna holder  30  has an open slot or channel  31 , and a cylindrical coupling  32  at one end for coupling to wire  20  from printed circuit board  60  at terminal  28 . Cylindrical coupling  32  has channel  31  extending therethrough to allow antenna  20  to extend down (See  FIG. 4G ). Antenna wire  20  is pressed or snap fit into slot  31  which can be in the form of a v-shaped slot formed along the length of insulated holder  30  so as to prevent contact with the metal of a strap plate to which it is to be mounted. Wire or antenna holder  30  has locking flanges  33  which extend over slot  31  allowing antenna  20  to be fixed inside of slot  31 . Locking flanges  33  are shown in a cross sectional view as extending over channel  31  in  FIG. 4H . Holder  30  includes at least 2 insulated mounting pins  34   a  and  34   b  designed to press fit through corresponding holes formed on the outer surface of strap plate  35 . Moreover, cylindrical coupling  32  is adapted to fit through a corresponding round hole in strap plate  35 . Coupling  32  allows wire  20  of the antenna to pass through strap plate  35  from PC board  60 , mounted under the strap plate. 
     Referring to  FIGS. 5A and 5B , there is shown an embodiment of the present invention which includes the L-shaped antenna and its holder, which are mounted approximately in the center of strap plate  35 . Strap plate  35  can also be referred to as support yoke. This strap plate can be made from any conductive metal such as aluminum, and it can be used as a heat sink to direct heat away from the electronic components in the PCB. Due to the positioning of the antenna, and the use of the wire holder, the strap is preferably designed to extend outside of the housing to dissipate heat, and is located near the outside of the wall box, concealed by the switch cover plate and its associated bezel.  FIG. 5B  is a side view of strap plate  35  showing the mounting of the antenna holder  30  containing antenna  20 , wherein antenna holder  30  has cylindrical coupling  32 . This strap plate includes wings or fins  39   a  and  39   b  which are coupled to longitudinal edges of the strap and extend outside of the housing allowing these wings to dissipate heat outside of the housing. 
       FIG. 6  shows an exploded perspective view of the L-shaped antenna mounted on strap plate  35  and in relation to a particular control circuit and switch for coupling into a standard wall box. The strap plate  35  is shown containing the antenna, and its holder immediately mounted below control switch  75  and its bezel  70 . 
     For example, in this embodiment there is shown a housing  40  which is designed to fit into a wall box, and receive a circuit board  50 , a first circuit board  60  having an air gap switch  12 , a second board  66  is spaced apart from first circuit board  60  by spacing columns  64 . Both circuit boards can be housed inside of housing  40 . There is strap  35  which can be coupled to housing  40  via screws  80  and positioned to extend outside of housing  40 . As shown in this view, coupled to strap  35  is antenna holder  30  which holds antenna  20  in a position essentially outside of housing  40 . Because strap  35  functions as a heat sink for circuit boards  60  and  50 , the position of strap  35  outside of housing  40  allows for greater heat dissipation outside of housing  40  creating a greater tolerance for electrical power to pass through circuit boards  60  and  50 . 
     A bezel  70  is coupled to the face of strap  35  which can be used to allow a switch plate  75  to be coupled thereto and house a switch  72  beneath switch plate  75 . 
       FIG. 7A  shows an exploded perspective view of an alternative embodiment for strap  35 , which is shown by reference numeral  135 . In this view, there is also a second embodiment for the antenna holder  41  which is shown as a substantially straight antenna holder. Antenna holder  41  includes a cylindrical coupling  42  and connection pins  44   a  and  44   b  which allow antenna holder  41  to connect to strap  135 . Strap  135  includes corresponding holes  37  and  38   a  and  38   b  for receiving cylindrical coupling  42  and connection pins  44   a  and  44   b . As disclosed above, connection pins  44   a  and  44   b  snap fit into these corresponding holes to provide a secure connection. Antenna holder  41  includes a channel or slot  45  and a plurality of locking flanges  46  to allow the antenna to snap fit into channel or slot  45 . 
       FIG. 7B  shows a perspective view of this device in a connected condition while  FIG. 7C  shows a bottom view showing cylindrical connection  42  and pins  44   a  and  44   b  extending through strap  135 . 
       FIG. 8A  discloses an exploded perspective view of this alternative embodiment in relationship to another control device. In this view, there is a second housing  140 , to circuit boards  61  and  62  which are spaced apart from each other by spacer columns  69 . Both of these circuit boards are placed and disposed inside of housing  140  when this embodiment is in an assembled condition as shown in  FIG. 8B . A plurality of buttons or actuators  77  can be coupled to circuit board  62  while strap  135  is coupled on top of these components such that in the assembled condition, strap  135  resides outside of housing  140  as shown in  FIG. 8B . Disposed on top of strap  135  is antenna holder  41  which is covered by bezel  73  in the assembled condition. A control switch  90  can also be coupled to this device which can serve as a master control for the other components. As shown in this view, strap  135  is coupled to housing  140  and to the other components including circuit board  62  via screws  81 . 
     Thus, with this design, a strap can extend outside of a housing providing a greater heat dissipation from the electronic components inside of the housing while allowing the antenna to be coupled in front of the strap creating greater access to the antenna and improved reception. In addition, because the antenna is capacitively coupled to the electronic components, a user touching this antenna on the strap would not be subject to AC current running through this antenna. Thus this creates a safer, improved wireless system. 
     Accordingly, while a few embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it is to be understood that many changes and modifications may be made thereunto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.