The invention relates to a filter composed of cavity resonators, the adaptation of which filter can be adjusted during use. A typical application of the invention is an antenna filter of a base station of some mobile network.
Cavity resonators are generally used in communications networks for making filters, especially when the effect of the signal to be transferred is relatively large. This is due to the fact that losses caused by such resonator filters are small, which means only a slight damping of the effective signal. Additionally their response characteristics are easy to control and adjust even according to strict specifications.
In most filters, both the center frequency and bandwidth of the pass band of the filter is meant to be fixed. In some filters the bandwidth of the pass band of the filter is meant to be fixed, but the center frequency of the pass band can be made adjustable within range of center frequencies. Thus an adjustment possibility for altering the center frequency of the pass band is needed in the filter in addition to the basic cavity filter construction.
Changing the position of the adjustment mechanism of the filter naturally some what affects the adaptation of the filter, i.e. it affects what kind of impedance it is “seen” as from the input wire and correspondingly from the output wire. The change in the adaptation is also manifested from a change in reflection coefficient of the filter: a rise in the reflection coefficient on the pass band of the filter shows a worsening of the adaptation more clearly than a change in the impedance. When the bandwidth of the pass band is relatively small, for example less than a percent of the frequency of the carrier wave of the signal, variation in the level of the reflection coefficient may be insignificantly small. Whenever the pass band is moved over wider range of frequencies, the larger the variation in the level of the reflection coefficient also is. The need for moving the pass band is especially large in a system according to the LTE standard (Long Term Evolution) designed for the 2.6 GHz area. In the filter according to
An arrangement for adjusting the input connection of the resonator filter and thus the adaptation of the input side is known from publication U.S. Pat. No. 6,025,764. There is a flexible metal strip in the cavity of the input resonator, which metal strip is attached at its one end to the middle conductor of an input connector. Its free end can be pushed by turning a screw in the side wall of the filter casing and the input connection can thus be changed. The adjustment is thus manual.
The object of the invention is to reduce the above-mentioned disadvantages related to prior art. The resonator filter according to advantageous embodiments of the invention is presented in the following description.
One aspect of the invention is the following: The resonator filter is adapted by adjusting the connection from its input connector to the input resonator and from the output resonator to the output connector. For adjusting the connection there is a coaxial transfer line, the outer conductor of which is connected by its one end to the wall of the filter casing and by its other end to the outer conductor of the connector and the inner conductor of which extends from the middle conductor of the connector to the cavity of the resonator and there into the internal connecting member of the resonator. A middle rod belonging to the inner conductor is surrounded over a certain range by a cylindrical conductive tuning element, which can be moved by sliding it along the middle rod. The tuning element forms a node with small impedance in the area with relatively large impedance in the transfer path. This node moves with the tuning element, whereby the strength and simultaneously adaptation of the connection between the input wire and the input resonator is changed.
It is an advantage of the invention that the adaptation of the resonator filter can be corrected during its use. As was mentioned, such a correction need typically arises when the pass band of the filter is moved over wide range. Additionally the correction of the adaptation can be arranged to be automatic using electric actuators, so that it occurs with the same control command as the moving of the pass band.
In the following, the invention will be described in detail. In the description, reference is made to the appended drawings, in which
The conductor of the tuning element 215 is insulated from the middle rod 214 with a dielectric layer INS, which is so thin that the tuning element is at the use frequencies of the filter functionally in short circuit to the middle rod. The dielectric layer is in the figure a coating on the middle rod, but it may also be coating of the surface of the hole in the tuning element. The tuning element is thus supported on the middle rod in an insulated manner. The friction between the tuning element and the middle rod is so small that the tuning element can be slid along the middle rod with relatively small force. The moving of the first tuning element takes place by means of a dielectric control pin 216 attached thereto. The control pin extends through a slit SL1 in the direction of the middle rod in the outer conductor OC1 to outside the cavity into a recess REC in the outer conductor.
When moving from the input connector CN1 the impedance of the transfer line is in the beginning the nominal impedance ZO of the transfer path, which is for example 50 Ohm. In the part of the transfer line between the starting end of the middle rod 214 and the tuning element 215 its impedance is significantly higher than ZO, because the diameter of the middle rod is significantly smaller than the diameter of the middle conductor of the connector. By the tuning element 215 the impedance of the transfer line is significantly smaller than ZO, because the diameter of the tuning element is significantly larger than the diameter of the middle conductor of the connector. From the tuning element onwards toward the input resonator the impedance of the transfer line is again the same as before the tuning element. The transfer line thus has a part with relatively small impedance between two parts with relatively large impedance. When the tuning element 215 is moved toward the input resonator, the part of the transfer line with small impedance moves along with it, whereby the connection between the resonator and the input connector is strengthened, and vice versa. The strengthening of the connection changes the input impedance of the filter in the opposite direction than moving the pass band of the filter downwards, to lower frequency. Thus the adaptation of the resonator filter may be corrected by moving the tuning element 215 toward the input resonator while the pass band of the filter is moved downwards, to lower frequency and toward the input connector CN1 while the pass band of the filter is moved upwards, to higher frequency.
The transfer line TL1 is naturally dimensioned so that a required scope is obtained in the adaptation adjustment area. In other words the diameter of the tuning element 215, the diameter of the middle rod 214, the adjustment displacement range [L1] of the tuning element and the distance of this displacement range [L1] from the wall of the filter are selected appropriately.
The filter 300 further comprises a first transfer line TL1 for adapting its input impedance and a second transfer line TL2 for adapting its output impedance. The first transfer line TL1 is connected to the input resonator 310. It has an outer conductor OC1, a middle rod 314, a tuning element 315 and a control pin 316 arranged in the same way as in
In the filter in the example the adjustment arrangement of the connection between the input connector and the input resonator is dimensioned so that the abovementioned correction of the adaptation requires moving the tuning element 215 a distance of 7 mm toward the input resonator. When such a move is realized with a shared control command simultaneously with the move of the pass band, the adaptation is corrected automatically at the same time as the pass band moves.
The definitions “horizontal”, “vertical”, “lower” and “upper” in this description and claims refer to the position of the filter, where the lid and the bottom of the filter casing are in a horizontal position, the lid being higher, and these definitions have nothing to do with the use position of the filter.
An adaptable resonator filter is described above. Its adjustment mechanism may naturally differ from what is shown in its details, such as the shape of its different structural parts. The internal connecting member of the resonator, to which the middle rod of the transfer line according to the invention is connected, may also be an expansion of the middle rod, which only has an electromagnetic connection to the resonator. The middle rod may also be connected in a conductive manner directly to the inner conductor of the resonator, which thus simultaneously functions as a connecting member. The invention does not take a stand regarding what kind of mechanism is used to move the pass band of the filter. The invention also does not limit the manufacturing manner and type of the filter; it may also be comprised of for example dielectric cavity resonators. The inventive idea may be applied in different ways as will be appreciated by those skilled in the art. An equivalent solution may also be conceived of, where the middle rod of the transfer line and the tuning element form a uniform inner conductor, which is moved in the longitudinal direction. Thus both ends of the inner conductor would have sliding surfaces, and the control pin could also be in the resonator cavity, extending through the lid.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20106189 | Nov 2010 | FI | national |
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Entry |
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Finland Search Report for Application No. 20106189 dated Oct. 12, 2011, 2 pages. |
European Search Report for Application No. 11187668.6 dated Feb. 6, 2012, 6 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120119851 A1 | May 2012 | US |