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| United States Patent | 4884252 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4884252.html |
| Inventor(s) | Teodoridis; Viron (Hauterive, CH);
Joss; Bernard (Chezard, CH) |
| Abstract | A timepiece (4), adapted to be worn on a part of the body, for example on
the wrist, is provided with an antenna capable of capturing an
electromagnetic field bearing radio-diffused messages. Measurements have
shown that when close to the wrist the radial electric component (E.sub.r)
and the azimuthal or tangential magnetic component (H.sub..phi.) were
predominant. Consequently, in order to capture the first, a capacitive
antenna the electrodes of which are parallel to the back cover (2) of the
timepiece will be provided and, to capture the second, an inductive
antenna including a winding the axis of which is parallel to the
longitudinal direction of the bracelet (3) will be provided. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4884252 |
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Timepiece including an antenna |
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| Publication Date |
November 28, 1989 |
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| Filing Date |
April 14, 1989 |
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| Priority Data |
Apr 26, 1988[CH]1563/88 |
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Title Information  |
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Claims  |
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What we claim is:
1. A timepiece adapted to be worn on a portion of the body having a
cylindrical form such as the arm or the trunk, said timepiece including an
antenna capable of capturing an electromagnetic field which includes a
magnetic field H and an electrical field E, said electromagnetic field
bearing radio-diffused messages and a case having at least a glass and a
back cover, said case comprising, in addition to the elements necessary to
display the time of day, a micro receiver which receives the messages
captured by the antenna in order to transform such messages into data
perceptible to the wearer of the timepiece, the antenna being situated
within the space bounded by the case and being constituted by a coil
including at least one winding said winding being arranged and oriented to
capture the component (H.sub..phi.) of the magnetic field tangential to
said cylinder, the axis of said winding being arranged parallel to the
back cover of the case.
2. A timepiece as set forth in claim 1 in the form of a wristwatch having a
bracelet, the axis of said winding being furthermore oriented parallel to
the longitudinal direction of the bracelet.
3. A timepiece as set forth in claim 1 in the form of a pendant watch, the
axis of said winding being furthermore oriented perpendicularly to the
vertical of a plumb line.
4. A timepiece as set forth in claim 1 wherein the winding includes a
plurality of sections coupled end to end by connections.
5. A timepiece as set forth in claim 4 wherein the winding includes a first
section sunk into the back cover of the case and a second section
metallized under the glass, the first and second sections being coupled
end to end by means of flexible connectors located between the back cover
and the glass.
6. A timepiece adapted to be worn on a portion of the body having a
cylindrical form such as the arm or the trunk, said timepiece including an
antenna capable of capturing an electromagnetic field which includes a
magnetic field H and an electrical field E, said electromagnetic field
bearing radio-diffused messages and a case having at least a glass and a
back cover, said case comprising, in addition to the elements necessary to
display the time of day, a micro receiver which receives the messages
captured by the antenna in order to transform such messages into data
perceptible to the wearer of the timepiece, the antenna being situated
within the space bounded by the case and being formed by first and second
substantially planar electrodes placed parallel to one another and
separated by a dielectric, said electrodes being arranged and oriented so
as to capture the component E.sub.r of the electrical field E radial to
said cylinder, the planes of said electrodes being parallel to the back
cover of said case.
7. A timepiece as set forth in claim 6 in the form of a wrist watch or
pendant watch and including metallization applied under the glass to
constitute said first electrode, the back cover and the glass being
supported on a caseband formed of insulating material.
8. A timepiece adapted to be worn on a portion of the body having a
cylindrical form such as the arm or the trunk, said timepiece including an
antenna capable of capturing an electromagnetic field which includes a
magnetic field H and an electrical field E, said electromagnetic field
bearing radio-diffused messages and a case having at least a glass and a
back cover, said case comprising, in addition to the elements necessary to
display the time of day, a micro receiver which receives the messages
captured by the antenna in order to transform such messages into data
perceptible to the wearer of the timepiece, the antenna being situated
within the space bounded by the case and formed by the combination of a
coil including at least one winding, said coil being arranged and oriented
so as to capture the component H.sub..phi. of the magnetic field H
tangential to said cylinder, the axis of said coil being arranged parallel
to the back cover of said case and of first and second electrodes
substantially planar placed parallel to one another and separated by a
dielectric, said electrodes being arranged and oriented so as to capture
the component E.sub.r of the electrical field radial to said cylinder, the
planes of said electrodes being arranged parallel to the back cover of
said case.
9. A timepiece as set forth in claim 8 wherein the coil and the first and
second electrodes are connected in parallel. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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This invention concerns a timepiece adapted to be worn on a part of the
body having a cylindrical form such as the arm or the trunk, said
timepiece including an antenna capable of capturing an electromagnetic
field bearing radio diffused messages and a case having at least a glass
and a back cover, said case comprising in addition to the elements
necessary to displaying the time of day, a micro receiver receiving
messages captured by the antenna in order to transform such messages into
data perceptible to the timepiece wearer.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
On many occasions, timepieces have been presented equipped with an antenna
and a micro receiver in order to capture radio diffused signals. If such
timepiece is in the form of a wristwatch, the antenna is generally located
within the bracelet as is the case in arrangements described for instance
in the patent documents Nos. FR-A-1 207 640, EP-A-0 100 639, EP-A-0 125
930, EP-A-0 184 606 and WO-A-86/03645. But locating the antenna within the
bracelet of a watch gives rise to problems of providing connections
between the input to the receiver located in the watchcase and the antenna
which forms a part of the bracelet, this latter a movable element,
generally hinged on the case by means of lugs. The leadthrough of the
antenna conductor thus gives rise to constructional problems which require
solutions not always simple. At the leadthrough for instance the
conductors are mechanically stressed and they break off more or less
rapidly if means are not provided to avoid such breakage. The means are
demanding and complicate changing the bracelet, a bracelet moreover which
must be specially built since it carries an antenna and which may not
always be exchanged with a bracelet readily found on the market.
To incorporate a micro receiver with its antenna within a case worn by a
person, is known from relatively recent developments. There is for
instance a receiver developed by the Motorola company and confined to a
case in the form of a pen provided with a clip which serves to attach the
pen to a portion of the clothing. Such a product has been made known under
the registered trademark "Sensar". There is likewise known a receiver from
the Philips company which takes the form of an elongated parallelepipedon
likewise provided with a clip enabling it to be attached to an article of
clothing. This receiver is known as the "Pager 32 B" and its approximate
dimensions are 10 cm in length and 2 cm in width and thickness.
The receivers just mentioned have dimensions sufficiently great so that
incorporation of an antenna does not pose very grave problems. However, it
seems admissible that to incorporate an antenna into the case of a
timepiece capable of being worn on a portion of the body, for example a
wristwatch or a pendant watch, poses problems far more difficult to solve
in view of the very limited space which is available for mounting such
antenna.
Efforts have however been made in order to resolve this problem. Thus, the
French patent document No. FR-A-2 505 105 (U.S. Pat. No. 4,419,770)
describes a wrist AM radio receiver including a PLL synthesizer as local
oscillator. This receiver, provided with an electronic watch, is equipped
with an antenna in the form of bar mounted in the watchcase, such case
being rounded in order to hug the curve of the wrist. The figures
accompanying the document show clearly that the bar is directed in the
sense of the width of the bracelet, this making the antenna sensitive to
the component of the magnetic field situated longitudinally to the
cylinder which forms the wrist. This arrangement is unfavourable as will
appear in the description of the invention to follow.
The English abstract of the patent document No. JP-A-52-48 364 appearing in
"Patent Abstracts of Japan", vol. 1, Nr. 116, Oct. 4, 1977, page 4486 E77,
describes a timepiece under the glass of which is placed a single line
antenna. It has been however determined that such an antenna is
inefficient in the range of frequencies considered hereinafter, if it is
not associated with another conducting element in order to form a
capacitive antenna sensitive to the component of the electrical field
located radially to the cylinder which forms the wrist.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In order to obtain a reasonable signal at the input of the micro receiver,
it is thus necessary to take certain precautions to attain the objective
of this invention, such invention being characterized in that the antenna
is arranged and directed to capture either the component H.sub..phi. of
the magnetic field H located tangentially to the cylinder formed by the
portion of the body on which the watch is worn, or the component E.sub.r
of the electrical field E located radially to said cylinder, or eventually
said components H.sub..phi. and E.sub.r in combination.
The invention will be better understood following reading of the
description to follow and in referring to the drawings which illustrate it
by way of example.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic view simulating the human body or a part thereof and
shows two components of the electromagnetic field in proximity to such
body;
FIG. 2 shows a wrist bearing a wristwatch as well as two components of the
electromagnetic field acting on such watch;
FIG. 3 shows how an inductive antenna is arranged in the wrist of the
invention;
FIG. 4 shows how a capacitive antenna is arranged in the wristwatch of the
invention;
FIG. 5 shows a man wearing a pendant watch as well as two components of the
electromagnetic field acting on such watch;
FIG. 6 is a top view of a wristwatch according to a first embodiment of the
invention;
FIG. 7 is a cross-section along line VII--VII of FIG. 6;
FIG. 8 is a top view of a wristwatch according to a second embodiment of
the invention;
FIG. 9 is a cross-section along line IX--IX of FIG. 8;
FIG. 10 is a simplified electrical schematic diagram showing an example of
matching of the antenna to a micro receiver.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Laws are known which determine the propagation of the electromagnetic field
in a vacuum. They are expressed by the Maxwell equations which couple the
magnetic and electrical components of the electromagnetic field, these
components being orthogonal to one another. These equations teach that an
electrical field variable over a period of time generates a rotating
magnetic field and inversely. There results from this that the electrical
component of the field may be captured by a capacitive antenna while the
magnetic component may be captured by an inductive antenna. A capacitive
antenna takes the form of two electrodes separated by a dielectric and an
inductive antenna takes the form of a coil. By dielectric there must here
be understood an insulating medium separating the two electrodes, which
medium may also be air. The polarization of the incident electrical field
is assumed to be perpendicular to the electrodes of the capacitive antenna
while the incident polarization of the magnetic field is assumed to be
parallel to the axis of the coil of the inductive antenna.
This invention relating to a timepiece adapted to be worn on a part of the
human body, it is very important to know the influence of the body on the
configuration of the electromagnetic field. It has been determined that
for frequencies situated in the VHF band (30 to 300 MHz) and at least at
the beginning of the UHF band (300 to 3000 MHz), the level and direction
of the electromagnetic field are strongly modified in the neighbourhood of
the body, this being mainly due to the fact that the dielectric properties
of the human body are very different from those of air.
A study of the electromagnetic field in the neighbourhood of the human body
has been undertaken in forming a model of this body as shown on FIG. 1.
The model is a cylinder 1 having a height of 180 cm and a diameter of 25
cm. The material of this body is simulated by a solution of glycol
ethandiol, distilled water and sodium chloride proportioned such that the
dielectric properties of this solution correspond to those of the body.
Numerous measurements effected within the framework of this invention have
enabled the establishment of the three following conclusions if one
radiates the model by a vertical polarization field:
at a distance r<15 cm from the surface of the body, the electrical field is
essentially radial, i.e. perpendicular to the skin. This electrical field
will be referred to by E.sub.r.
At a distance r<15 cm from the surface of the body, the magnetic field is
essentially azimuthal or tangential, i.e. turning around the body. This
magnetic field will be referred as H.sub.100 .
The components E.sub.r and H.sub..phi. of the electromagnetic field are
almost independent of the angle .phi., this implying a radiation almost
omnidirectional in the plane perpendicular to the body.
The term "essentially" employed hereabove leaves it to be understood that
there exist other directions of the electromagnetic field than those
considered for which one measures values of lesser amplitude than those of
the privileged directions E.sub.r and H.sub..phi.. These are in particular
the radial and longitudinal directions for the magnetic field and the
tangential and longitudinal directions for the electrical field, the
longitudinal direction being that which is parallel to the Z axis of the
body. Thus, to take a concrete example, there has been measured a level of
tangential magnetic field H.sub..phi. of 6 to 8 dB greater than the level
exhibited by the radial magnetic field.
Similar measurements to those which have been mentioned hereabove have been
repeated not only on the human body or trunk but on the forearm or wrist
for several positions of the arm relative to the body. All positions with
one exception have given results which are identical to the results
obtained precedingly and have thus confirmed the dominance of the fields
E.sub.r and H.sub..phi. for the wrist as well. The position which gives
rise to the exception is that where the arm is folded against the chest.
In this special case it is the longitudinal component of the magnetic
field which dominates since there is a coupling with the tangential
component H.sub..phi. brought about by the trunk of the body. In this
particular case however the component E.sub.r remains.
From the important considerations which precede, there follows immediately
the attainment of the main objective of this invention in respect of the
manner of incorporating an antenna into a timepiece intended to be worn on
a part of the body, whether this be the trunk or the forearm of the body,
namely the antenna must be arranged and directed in order to capture
either the magnetic component H.sub..phi. of the electromagnetic field
located tangentially to the cylinder representing the body or a portion
thereof, or the electrical component E.sub.r of the same electromagnetic
field located radially to said cylinder.
FIG. 2 shows a forearm bearing a wristwatch 4 including a case 2 and a
bracelet 3. The two predominant fields E.sub.r (radial electrical
component) and H.sub..phi. (azimuthal or tangential magnetic component)
act on this case.
FIG. 5 shows a human figurine wearing a pendant watch 5 including a case 2
attached to a chain 6. The two predominant fields E.sub.r and H.sub..phi.
likewise act on this case.
It will be understood that in the two examples of FIGS. 2 and 5, the
tangential magnetic field H.sub..phi. penetrates into the case by the
cross-section of the latter and that the antenna to be provided must be
formed of a coil having one or several windings, the axis of this coil
being arranged parallel to the back cover of the case.
In the example of the wristwatch, FIG. 3 shows in a schematic manner how
the inductive antenna is arranged in the case 2 of the watch. The antenna
7 here comprises only a single winding which is connected to a micro
receiver 8. It is important to note that in this instance the axis of the
coil in addition to being arranged parallel to the back cover of the case,
must be arranged parallel to the longitudinal direction of the bracelet 3.
In the example of the pendant watch, FIG. 5 makes it apparent that the axis
of the inductive antenna, not shown, in addition to being necessarily
arranged parallel to the back cover of the case, must be arranged
perpendicular to the vertical of a plumb line.
This first embodiment of the invention which consists in capturing the
tangential magnetic component of the electromagnetic field and which has
been explained hereinabove in principle, is illustrated by a practical
embodiment shown on FIGS. 6 and 7.
FIG. 6 is a plan view of a wristwatch comprising a case 2 and a bracelet 3
and FIG. 7 is a cross-section along line VII--VII of FIG. 6. This watch is
subjected to the tangential magnetic component H.sub..phi.. In order to
capture this component, the watch includes an inductive antenna 7 here
formed of five windings 11, each having two sections 9 and 12 coupled end
to end by means of connections 13. As shown on FIG. 7, the first section
12 is a metallic wire sunk into the back cover 14 of case 2 and the second
section 9 is in the form of metallization deposited under the glass 10.
These first and second sections are here connected end to end by means of
a flexible connector 13 which may consist of a "zebra" (registered
trademark) bearing several conductive zones. Zones 15 and 16 of the
connector 13 are coupled to the input of a micro receiver (not shown)
which is arranged within case 2 in addition to all the elements necessary
for displaying the time of day such as the movement 17, the dial 18 and
hands 19. The battery for energization of the system may be housed in a
drawer provided laterally within the case or in an opening provided in the
back cover. In this latter case the sections 12 will traverse the cover of
the opening and will be coupled to the sections sunk into the back cover
likewise by means of flexible connectors.
The invention is not limited to the specific embodiment described
hereinabove. Thus, the connections coupling the sections to one another
could be in the form of soldering or welds rather than the connectors as
suggested. The metallized section 9 could also be over the glass or sunk
into the latter. In the same manner, section 12 could be only partially
sunk into the back cover 14 or even arranged on the surface thereof.
FIGS. 2 and 5 also show that the radial electrical field E.sub.r penetrates
the case perpendicularly to its glass or to its back cover and that in
this case the antenna to be provided for the capture thereof will
necessarily be constituted by two substantially planar electrodes
separated by a dielectric and arranged parallel to the back cover of the
case.
In the example of the wristwatch, FIG. 4 shows in a schematic manner how
the capacitive antenna 50 is arranged in the case 2. Here the antenna
includes two electrodes 20 and 21 connected to a micro receiver 8.
In the example of the pendant watch, it is apparent from FIG. 5 that the
electrodes (not shown) will also necessarily be arranged parallel to the
glass or to the back cover of the case.
The second embodiment of the invention which consists of capturing the
radial electrical component of the electromagnetic field is illustrated by
a practical arrangement shown by FIGS. 8 and 9.
FIG. 8 is a plan view of a wristwatch including a case 2 and a bracelet 3,
and FIG. 9 is a cross-section along line IX--IX of FIG. 8. This watch is
subjected to the radial electrical component E.sub.r. In order to capture
this component the watch includes a capacitive antenna formed from
electrodes 20 and 21. The first electrode is a peripheral metallization 20
of glass 10 and the second electrode is a metallic back cover 21 which may
be entirely metallic, or as shown on FIG. 9, a metal leaf applied to a
cover 32 formed of plastic material. Thus, electrodes 20 and 21 are
arranged parallel to one another so as to capture the radial electrical
component E.sub.r of the electromagnetic field. The electrodes are
supported on a caseband 33 formed of insulating material. Electrodes 20
and 21 are coupled to the input of a micro receiver (not shown) which is
arranged in the case 2 in addition to all other elements required for
displaying the time of day such as movement 17, dial 18 and hands 19. The
connections between electrodes 20 and 21 and the input of the micro
receiver could be obtained by spring loaded supports such as already
described for instance in the patent No. EP-B-0 041 145 (U.S. Pat. No.
4,523,856).
The invention is not limited to the special embodiment as described
hereinabove, the essential being that electrode 20 must be located at a
certain distance from electrode 21 and exhibit a certain surface relative
to the latter. Thus, electrode 20 could have a surface substantially
identical to that of electrode 21 if it were located under dial 18. In
certain cases, this electrode 20 could be the dial itself surmounted by
hands and eventually pierced with an opening so as to permit appearance
for example of the message to be transmitted (a telephone number to call
back, date of a meeting, etc.). In the same manner, the annular electrode
20 shown on FIG. 8 could be split or assume a serpentine form.
FIG. 10 shows a schematic diagram of the possible matching of an inductive
antenna 7 to the input of a micro receiver 8. This receiver may be that
marketed by the Philips Company under the reference UAA 2033. If the
inductive antenna comprises five windings and is balanced, the matching at
the input of the receiver will take the form of capacitors C.sub.1 and
C.sub.2, the capacity of each being on the order of 4 pF. Other
arrangements are likewise possible in accordance with whether the antenna
and the receiver input are matched or not.
It has been seen how one captures the magnetic component H.sub..phi. or the
electrical component E.sub.r of the electromagnetic field respectively by
means of an inductive or a capacitive antenna. It is evident that the
present invention is not limited to the capture of one of these components
whilst excluding the other and that one could readily capture both
components at the same time, one thereof not propagating without the
other. In this case one would provide the timepiece with a capacitive
antenna and an inductive antenna obtained in accordance with the
description given hereinabove. It will be understood that such an
arrangement could be advantageous in respect of the amplitude of the
signal gathered in. It will also be understood that if two antennas are
placed in parallel one of them may serve as matching circuit for the other
this leading to a simplification of the input circuit of the micro
receiver.
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Description  |
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