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An automotive remote keyless entry (RKE) receiver antenna is a radio-frequency (RF) antenna used in remote keyless entry (RKE) systems in vehicles. RKE systems allow drivers to lock, unlock, and in some cases start the engine wirelessly using a key fob with buttons. These systems typically operate at 315 MHz (primarily in North America) or 433 MHz (Europe and most of the rest of the world). [1] [2] [3]
RKE antennas are present both in the key fob (transmitter) and inside the vehicle (receiver). Their primary function is to provide reliable short- to medium-range wireless communication between the key fob and the vehicle under various environmental conditions, including vehicle body shielding, multipath propagation and electromagnetic interference.
Automotive RKE receiver antennas can be broadly classified into printed PCB antennas, [4] [5] [6] [7] discrete conductive antennas, [8] window glass antennas, [9] and RKE antennas integrated into combined multi-antenna systems (shark-fin design). [10]
These antenna types differ in radiation efficiency, bandwidth, sensitivity to the ground plane, and suitability for compact automotive electronics.
Printed PCB antennas are fabricated directly on a printed circuit board and represent the most common solution for both key-fob transmitters and vehicle-mounted RKE receivers due to their low cost, compact size, and ease of integration.
Discrete conductive antennas are implemented as separate metallic elements rather than PCB traces. [8] [14]
In modern vehicles, RKE antennas are increasingly implemented as part of combined multi-antenna systems, in which several antennas supporting different wireless services are integrated into a single module or coordinated antenna architecture. [15] [16]
The RKE antenna operates alongside antennas for GNSS, cellular (LTE/5G), Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and V2X systems. A common implementation is the roof-mounted “shark-fin” module, where multiple antennas are packaged together to reduce cabling complexity and improve vehicle aesthetics.
The RKE function within a combined system may be realized using printed PCB antennas, PIFA structures, or compact discrete conductive elements. Careful electromagnetic design is required to manage mutual coupling, detuning effects, and noise coupling between co-located antennas.
In some architectures, RKE antennas in combined systems are implemented as active antennas with integrated low-noise amplifiers (LNAs) to compensate for reduced antenna efficiency and additional losses.
Most RKE antennas are designed for linear polarization. While some implementations use vertical polarization, others employ horizontal or slanted polarization based on packaging requirements. [17] [18] [19]
A significant challenge is the random orientation of the key fob in the user's hand, leading to polarization mismatch loss, and the "hand effect" where human tissue detunes and absorbs RF energy. Magnetic-field radiators like loop antennas are more robust against this effect than electric-field radiators like monopoles.
Modern vehicles employ multiple RKE receiving antennas distributed throughout the vehicle body to achieve near-omnidirectional coverage. [8] [20] [21] [19] [14]
Typical locations include headliner (roof area), front and rear bumpers, door handles, B-pillars, interior trim panels, mirrors, and window glass.
The metallic vehicle body causes significant multipath fading. To mitigate this, manufacturers use antenna diversity systems — typically spatial or polarization diversity. The RKE receiver monitors signal strength (RSSI) from each antenna and selects the strongest signal. [17]
RKE systems typically provide an operating range of 10–50 metres, with some reaching up to 100 metres under optimal conditions. [3] [17] [18]
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