A pair of conductive lines are coupled when they are spaced apart, but spaced closely enough together for energy flowing in one to be induced in the other. The amount of energy flowing between the lines is related to the dielectric medium the conductors are in and the spacing between the lines.
Couplers are electromagnetic devices formed to take advantage of coupled lines, and may have four ports, one for each end of two coupled lines. A main line has an input end connected directly or indirectly to an input port. The other end is connected to the direct port. The other or auxiliary line extends between a coupled port and an isolated port. A coupler may be reversed, in which case the isolated port may become the input port and the input port may become the isolated port. Similarly, the coupled port and direct port may have reversed designations. Couplers may be used as power combiners or splitters (dividers).
Directional couplers are four-port networks that may be simultaneously impedance matched at all ports. Power may flow from one or the other input port to the pair of output ports, and if the output ports are properly terminated, the ports of the input pair are isolated.
The Lange coupler is a four-port, interdigitated structure developed by Dr. Julius Lange around 1969. The length of the interdigitated fingers may be about one-quarter of the wavelength of a design frequency.
A coupler may include four ports, and first and second sets of conductive strips. Each set of conductive strips may include a plurality of interconnected conductive strips extending between two ports. Each conductive strip of the first set may be electromagnetically coupled to a conductive strip of the second set. Conductive tabs capacitively coupled directly or indirectly to a ground conductor may extend from conductive strips of the first and second sets or from the ports. An interconnection may be positioned between adjacent tabs, the interconnection connecting conductive strips of one of the sets of conductive strips. The adjacent tabs may be spaced different distances from the interconnection.
It is seen that set 17 interconnects ports 12 and 15, and set 18 interconnects ports 13 and 14. In particular, fingers 20 and 21 extend integrally from port 12, with finger 21 also integrally connected to port 15. An interconnection 26, in the form of a bridge or wire bond 28 interconnects a distal end 20a of finger 20 with port 15. Fingers 23 and 24 extend integrally from port 14. A further interconnection 26 interconnects fingers 23 and 24 with port 13. In particular, a bridge 30 interconnects distal ends 23a and 24a of fingers 23 and 24. A further bridge 32 interconnects distal end 24a with port 13, as shown. Other forms of interconnections may also be used, such as wire ribbons, chip-mounted conductors, or conductors extending through an insulating or dielectric substrate 34 on which the ports and fingers are mounted. The ports and fingers are shown in coplanar configuration mounted on a primary face 34a of the substrate. Although other configurations may be used, a signal-return or ground plane 36 may be mounted on the backside or opposite primary face of the substrate.
Set 17 of fingers in combination with spaced ground plane 36 form what may be considered a first microstrip transmission line 38, and set 18 and the ground plane form a second microstrip transmission line 40. Signals may propagate through the coupler in even and odd modes of propagation. The even-mode of propagation corresponds to propagation when the transmission lines of the coupler are driven in-phase at one end of the coupler, and the two transmission lines behave like a single microstrip transmission line 42. The odd-mode of propagation corresponds to propagation when the transmission lines of the coupler are driven 180 degrees out of phase, and the transmission lines behave like a parallel-wire transmission line 44. The interdigitated fingers provide strong coupling.
In an uncompensated Lange coupler including only the interdigitated fingers, the even-mode propagation velocity of a signal through the coupler may be faster than the odd-mode propagation velocity. The directivity of the coupler may be high when the even-mode propagation velocity equals the odd-mode propagation velocity. The even-mode velocity may be decreased relative to the odd-mode velocity by increasing the capacitance per unit length and inductance per unit length of the microstrip line 42 relative to the parallel-wire transmission line 44. The impedance of microstrip line 42 may be maintained by maintaining the balance between capacitance and inductance. Conductive tabs 46 may be placed at one or more positions along a finger of the coupler, and may provide an increase in capacitance per unit length. When a tab 46 of one of transmission lines 38 and 40 extends along ground plane 36 and couples directly or indirectly to the ground plane more than to the other transmission line, the even-mode propagation velocity may be decreased relative to the odd-mode propagation velocity.
In the example shown in
Additionally or alternatively, tabs 46 may be positioned at other locations on coupler 10. For example, there may be a plurality of tabs distributed along fingers 21 and 23, as shown in dashed lines. Further, there may be one or more tabs 46 positioned at the ends of the fingers, such as a tab on each of ports 12, 13, 14 and 15, as is also shown in dashed lines. Tabs on different conductors may be spaced far enough apart so that they do not significantly couple to each other, but rather primarily couple to ground plane 36.
An interconnection 80 in the form of a conductive bridge 82 interconnects the distal ends of fingers 72 and 74, and an intermediate portion 73a of finger 73. Bridge 82 extends over intermediate finger portions 77a and 78a, and is also referred to as an intermediate bridge. There are also interconnections 80 between the ends of fingers of set 68 adjacent to ports 63 and 64. Specifically, a first end bridge 84 interconnects finger ends 77b and 78b, and spans an end 73b of finger 73. A second end bridge 86 interconnects finger ends 77c and 78c, and spans an end 73c of finger 73.
As particularly shown in
In this second coupler example, fingers 72, 74, 77 and 78 have extensions 72c, 74b, 77d and 78d extending from respective outer sides 72d, 74c, 77e and 78e facing away from the other fingers. As mentioned, finger 73 is between fingers 77 and 78 and does not have any extensions. The extensions are capacitively coupled to ground and form respective capacitive tabs 100,101, 102 and 103. Tabs 100 and 102 are on the same side of the coupler and separated by a distance D7. Tabs 101 and 103, on the other side of the coupler, are also separated by distance D7. Further, tabs 102 and 103 are each separated from bridge 82 by a distance D8. Tabs 100 and 101 are separated from bridge 82 by a distance D9. Distance D7 is equal to the sum of distances D8 and D9. The sizes of the tabs and the fingers were determined using an electromagnetic simulator and optimizing the operating characteristics of the coupler.
The tabs 102 and 103 on end-bridged fingers 77 and 78 may be placed so that the edges of the tabs are at least as far away from the adjacent ends of the outermost center-bridged fingers 72 and 74, as the minimum spacing between fingers in the coupler. The spacing between fingers is depicted by distance D2 in
Coupler 60 also has additional tabs that couple capacitively directly or indirectly to ground, located near or on the ends of the fingers connected to the ports. In particular, a tab extends from each port in a configuration that provides coupling to ground. These tabs include tabs 106, 107, 108 and 109 extending from ports 62, 63, 64 and 65, respectively. Adjacent tabs 106 and 107, and adjacent tabs 108 and 109, are a distance D10 apart. As with distance D7, the distance between adjacent tabs along the fingers of the coupler, distance D10 may be greater than the thickness of the substrate, distance D1, in order to assure that the dominant coupling is between each tab and ground plane 90, rather than between the adjacent tabs.
In summary, then, coupler 60 includes tabs capacitively coupled to ground at the ends of the interdigitated fingers and at intermediate locations along the outer edges of outer fingers 72, 74, 77 and 78. The design depicted in
Simulated operating characteristics of coupler 60 over a frequency range of 25 GHz to 50 GHz are illustrated in
As stated with regard to coupler 10, many variations may be made in the configuration of coupler 60. For example, the quantities, positions and dimensions of the ports, fingers and tabs may be varied. For example, a plurality of tabs on one or more outer fingers may be used, different numbers of tabs may be provided on different fingers, or some outer fingers may not have a tab. The tabs on the ports may be replaced with or may be in addition to tabs extending from the ends of the fingers near the ports. Further, a three-dimensional configuration of fingers may be used instead of the two-dimensional, planar configuration shown. In a three-dimensional configuration, some or all of the fingers may have a side not adjacent another finger, making them outer fingers that may be suitable to have tabs capacitively coupled to a ground conductor.
Accordingly, while embodiments of couplers have been particularly shown and described with reference to the foregoing disclosure, many variations may be made therein. Other combinations and sub-combinations of features, functions, elements and/or properties may be used. Such variations, whether they are directed to different combinations or directed to the same combinations, whether different, broader, narrower or equal in scope, are also regarded as included within the subject matter of the present disclosure. The foregoing embodiments are illustrative, and no single feature or element is essential to all possible combinations that may be claimed in this or later applications. The claims, accordingly, define inventions disclosed in the foregoing disclosure. Where the claims recite “a” or “a first” element or the equivalent thereof, such claims include one or more such elements, neither requiring nor excluding two or more such elements. Further, ordinal indicators, such as first, second or third, for identified elements are used to distinguish between the elements, and do not indicate a required or limited number of such elements, and do not indicate a particular position or order of such elements unless otherwise specifically stated.
The methods and apparatus described in the present disclosure are applicable to the telecommunications, computers and other communication-frequency signal processing industries involving the combining or dividing of transmission of signals.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3319190 | Shively | May 1967 | A |
3371284 | Engelbrecht | Feb 1968 | A |
3516024 | Lange | Jun 1970 | A |
3534299 | Eberhardt | Oct 1970 | A |
3678433 | Hallford | Jul 1972 | A |
4127831 | Riblet | Nov 1978 | A |
4394630 | Kenyon et al. | Jul 1983 | A |
4777458 | Pardini | Oct 1988 | A |
4800345 | Podell et al. | Jan 1989 | A |
4937541 | Podell et al. | Jun 1990 | A |
5075646 | Morse | Dec 1991 | A |
5111165 | Oldfield | May 1992 | A |
5132645 | Mayer | Jul 1992 | A |
5243305 | O'Oro et al. | Sep 1993 | A |
5745017 | Ralph | Apr 1998 | A |
6147570 | Gill | Nov 2000 | A |
6794954 | Gurvich et al. | Sep 2004 | B1 |
6822532 | Kane et al. | Nov 2004 | B1 |
6825738 | Shumovich | Nov 2004 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060044073 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |