All mobiles use dipole antenna as they are capable of capturing signals from 360degrees. Phone uses signal booster for enhancing the low signal, which we dont get in general purpose modem used in some projects.
i dont think so that dipole is being used in modern handsets nowadays. they were used in earlier handsets where u can see the antenna protruding from the top.
nowadays all handsets use internal antennas like pifa
balaguru thavamani thanks for posting the link. i have checked it and as i mentioned in my first post , PIFA is the most widely used antenna in handsets
but can you post any other information about the antennas used in latest nokia handsets or samsung
Microstrip patch antennas are commonly used in mobile communications terminals due to their many attractive
features, such as simple structure, low production cost, light weight, and robustness. Dual-frequency antenna elements
are required, as today’s standard mobile terminals operate in two frequency bands, e.g. GSM900/GSM1800 in Europe.
It is desirable to have more universal phones that operate in multiple systems around the world, but the inherently
narrow impedance bandwidth of patch antennas combined with the restricted volume for the antenna element limit their
applicability in multiband phones.
Samsung and Nokia do use PIFA for all wide band antennas (850, 900, 1800,1900 MHz). Here is picture from a Samsung U600:
h**p://www.ethertronics.com/photo_gallery/10/
Nokia N95:
h**ps://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/oetcf/eas/reports/ViewExhibitReport.cfm?mode=Exhibits&RequestTimeout=500&calledFromFrame=N&application_id=640965&fcc_id='PDNRM-321'
Main difference compared to older PIFA antennas is improved design to cover more bands with smaller and slimmer size. None of them have ever been using dipoles as antenna in a mobile phone due to poor function in available space. Older phones with external antennas have been more or less shortened monopoles.
Both Nokia and Samsung makes singel band phones (2100 MHz) with an embedded monpole antenna.
This type of antenna can get enough height above ground to work reasonable well even as embedded due to the short wave lengt and relative narrow band.
Have never seen a patch as phone antenna but ceramic patches are sometimes used as gps or bluetoth antennas inside a phone.
fractus antennas are not used much any more mostly PIFA (shorted Patch) are used my company has done several tests on the fractus idea we have found that even though they are well matched they don't radiated as efficiently as other antenna designs (but they are small)
I believe many handset antennas are using various kinds of PIFA antennas and modified monopoles. The 1st handset without monopole was from Nokia some years ago. I helped them to model it correctly on IE3D.
Some designers are also modified monopoles. A well-known antenna designer from SonyEricsson designed a multi-band antenna using modified monopole. He said the antenna he designed was used by more than 100 million handsets. Interestingly, he told me he was using IE3D on it.
Another interesting fact is that some handset may look like they have a monopole there. However, it s a fake one. Designers want to make a fake one there so that users may feel more comfortable on the handset because they got used to the handsets with some type of monopole antenna. Regards.
at present, some mobile phones use PIFA and some use monopole, because now many phones are small and thin, the PIFA antenna can not satisfy this requirement, so many thin moble phones use monopole antenna.