The invention relates to a directional coupler, a radio frequency network comprising the directional coupler and a method of manufacturing the directional coupler.
Directional couplers are common components in waveguide networks for coupling electromagnetic signals between various ports of the waveguide networks with low insertion losses.
Directional couplers used in space applications are mainly manufactured with conventional milling manufacturing techniques because these techniques can provide high precision for manufacturing components at high frequencies such as millimeter and sub-millimeter frequencies. In order to facilitate assembly of the directional couplers, said directional couplers are typically manufactured by separately milling two solid half bodies. After milling, common joining walls are formed in the half bodies. The common joining walls define a plane of propagation of the electric field called E-plane. The two separated milled half bodies are then assembled together by putting in contact the two common joining walls for forming a so-called E-plane waveguide directional coupler having two coupled rectangular waveguide portions. In an assembled E-plane waveguide directional coupler, coupling between the two rectangular waveguide portions occurs through a broad wall common to both waveguide portions. The E-plane is parallel to narrow walls of each rectangular waveguide portion and ideally cuts in two identical parts the waveguide directional coupler at the middle point between said narrow walls. The E-plane does not intersect the electromagnetic surface current lines resulting from a waveguide fundamental mode excitation. As a consequence, imprecisions of manufacturing and assembly along the joining walls, i.e. along the E-plane, disturb less the circulation of said surface currents and minimize undesired effects such as leakage and passive intermodulation products. Thus, typically, E-plane waveguide directional couplers are preferred type of couplers in space applications as well as other applications requiring for example high power handling and multi-carrier operation.
There are two main families of known E-plane waveguide directional couplers: the so-called branch line waveguide couplers and the so-called slot waveguide couplers.
A branch line waveguide coupler may comprise two waveguide portions assembled together along the E-plane as described above. The waveguide portions are electromagnetically coupled together by means of multiple small waveguide sections, called branches, extending in a direction along the E-plane. Performance of the branch line couplers can be tuned by adjusting the number and dimensions of the said branches.
The slot waveguide couplers may comprise also waveguide portions assembled together along the E-plane. In slot couplers the waveguide portions are electromagnetically coupled between each other by means of slots, i.e. apertures provided on a thin broad wall common to both waveguide portions.
A known example of such directional slot coupler is described in H. Xin, S. Li, Y. Wang, “A terahertz-band E-plane Waveguide Directional Coupler with Broad Bandwidth”, 16th International Conference on Electronic Packaging Technology, 2015, pages 1419-1421, to which we will refer briefly as to H. Xin. H. Xin describes an E-plane waveguide directional coupler having two rectangular waveguides placed parallel to each other sharing a common broad wall. The common broad wall has three rectangular apertures electromagnetically coupling the two rectangular waveguides. However, the coupler described in H. Xin has been designed and tested for frequencies higher than 300 GHz and the use of it at lower frequencies, for example at the C or Ka bands, would require a rather long and bulky structure. Further, since apertures of the coupler described in H. Xin have relatively small size, power handling capabilities of said known coupler may be poor. A consequence of the poor power handling capability is that the known coupler may comprise secondary electron emissions in resonance with an alternating electric field leading to an exponential electron multiplication, known in the art as the so-called multipactor effect, possibly damaging the known coupler. The same effect may be found in known branch line couplers where the branches have also typically small dimensions.
Last but not least, since coupling apertures in known slot couplers as described in H. Xin are distributed widely along a cross section perpendicular to the E-plane inside the two milled half bodies with constrained or even no access from the common joining wall, manufacturing of such known couplers with conventional milling techniques and assembly method described above may be cumbersome. For this reason, branch line waveguide couplers are usually preferred for space applications, but due to the length of the branches, they occupy more volume than an equivalent slot coupler resulting in bulkier RF networks.
It would be advantageous to have an improved E-plane waveguide directional coupler.
The invention is defined by the independent claims; the dependent claims define advantageous embodiments.
A directional coupler for coupling an electromagnetic signal from an open end of the directional coupler to a plurality of open ends of the directional coupler is provided. The directional coupler comprises:
In hollow bodies forming waveguide portions, the electromagnetic signal is carried by a so-called fundamental mode, e.g. the TE10 mode in waveguide portions with rectangular first cross section. By providing the aperture with a part of the shape slanted with respect to the longitudinal direction, said fundamental mode of propagation can excite an orthogonal mode of propagation, e.g. the TE01 mode in waveguide portions with square first cross section, coupling part of the power of the fundamental mode to the orthogonal mode. Over the operating frequency band, this orthogonal mode cannot propagate at the open ends of the hollow waveguide portions and is said to be below cut-off frequency. This orthogonal mode excited by the aperture couples back along the longitudinal direction to the fundamental modes propagating in the opposite side of the hollow bodies and leads to a desired coupling between the plurality of open ends.
For example, in an embodiment the slanted part of the aperture has a staircase, saw tooth, spline or polynomial shape. It has been found that smooth shapes such as that of high order polynomials, for example Legendre polynomial functions, may increase an operating frequency bandwidth of the directional coupler, i.e. the directional coupler is more broadband.
In an embodiment, the shape of the aperture is reflection asymmetric with respect to the first plane. Any shape of the aperture which is reflection asymmetric with respect to the E-plane is a shape suitable for exciting the orthogonal mode of propagation, e.g. the TE01 mode in waveguide portions with square or almost square first cross section. For example, irregular shapes such as irregular polygons, or even regular polygons with a side slanted with respect to the longitudinal direction not having an axis of symmetry at an intersection of the E-plane with a plane of the septum, may be applied.
In an embodiment, the aperture has a shape which is neither rectangular nor square.
In an embodiment, the septum is provided with a single aperture. Compared to known slot couplers operating at a specific frequency, a single aperture may be larger than multiple apertures of smaller dimensions. This has been found advantageous to increase coupling at the specific operating frequency. Further, since power handling capabilities of the directional coupler are also limited by the dimension of the aperture, providing a single larger aperture increases power handling capabilities compared to known slot couplers having multiple smaller apertures.
In an embodiment, the waveguide portions are configured to each have a rectangular or semi-circular or semi-elliptical first cross section and a rectangular second cross section. For example, the directional coupler may have the form of a rectangular prism or cuboid or cylinder or elliptic cylinder.
Another aspect of the invention provides a method of manufacturing a directional coupler. The method comprises
At least one of more walls has a side edge having a slanted part with respect to the longitudinal direction.
For example, removing the material may be done with milling technologies. Since the two half bodies are assembled along the first plane of propagation of the electric field, i.e. the E-plane, impact of manufacturing and assembly imperfections on the performance of the directional coupler is reduced.
Further details, aspects and embodiments of the invention will be described, by way of example only, with reference to the drawings. Elements in the figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale. In the Figures, elements which correspond to elements already described may have the same reference numerals. In the drawings,
LIST OF REFERENCE NUMERALS FOR
While this invention is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms, there are shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail one or more specific embodiments, with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as exemplary of the principles of the invention and not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments shown and described.
In the following, for the sake of understanding, elements of embodiments are described in operation. However, it will be apparent that the respective elements are arranged to perform the functions being described as performed by them.
Directional coupler 100 couples an electromagnetic signal from an open end of the directional coupler 100 to a plurality of open ends of directional coupler 100, e.g. from open end 1 to open ends 2 and 3 while maintaining open end 4 isolated.
Directional coupler 100 comprises two hollow bodies forming two waveguide portions 200 and 201. The electromagnetic signal propagates through the hollow bodies which are, as described below, surrounded by conductive material, e.g. aluminum, except at the open ends 1, 2, 3 and 4.
Each waveguide portion 200 and 201 has an open end arranged at a first side 10 of the waveguide portion and another open end arranged at a second side 20 of the waveguide portion opposite to the first side along a longitudinal direction 30 of the waveguide portion.
Waveguide portions 200 and 201 have a first cross section perpendicular to longitudinal direction 30. With reference to
Waveguide portions 200 and 201 have a common wall along the longitudinal direction forming a septum 400 on a second plane orthogonal to the E-plane between the two waveguide portions 200 and 201. The septum has an aperture 410 for coupling waveguide portions 200 and 201. Aperture 410 provides physical coupling between waveguide portions 200 and 201. In operation, for example in a RF network or beam forming network, aperture 410 provides an electromagnetic coupling between waveguide portions 200 and 201. Aperture 410 has a shape comprising at least a part which is slanted with respect to longitudinal direction 30. In other words, the aperture is defined by its edge which is also the edge of the septum along the aperture. The edge of the aperture defines the shape of the aperture. Herein in this document the word slanted means that the shape of the aperture may comprise one or more parts which have a slope relative to the longitudinal direction. However, as it will be apparent from several embodiments described below, said one or more parts may comprise sub-parts which may or may not be slanted with respect to the longitudinal direction.
Directional coupler 100 may be used in any suitable space or ground applications.
In an embodiment, directional coupler 100 may be one component of a radio frequency (RF) waveguide network. The RF waveguide network may include one or more directional couplers of the type described above. The RF waveguide network may, for example, feed an antenna for transmitting an electromagnetic signal from a source to the antenna. The RF waveguide network may, for example, feed a receiver for transmitting an electromagnetic signal from an antenna to the receiver. Directional coupler 100 may provide transmission of the electromagnetic signal in a desired direction with desired coupling factor in any section of the RF waveguide network.
Directional coupler 100 is a four-port coupler. With reference to
In an embodiment, open end 1 may be used as input port configured to receive an input electromagnetic signal, open end 2 may be used as through port configured to output a first electromagnetic signal coupled to the input electromagnetic signal, open end 3 may be used as coupling port configured to output a second electromagnetic signal coupled to the input electromagnetic signal, and open end 4 may be used as isolated port. Directional coupler 100 thus couples the electromagnetic signal from input port 1 to through port 2 and coupling port 3. The term directional means that directional coupler 100 works in only one direction: if the input electromagnetic signal is inputted to input port 1, then there is no coupling between input port 1 and isolated port 4.
In an embodiment further described later, the shape of the aperture is arranged to induce an absolute phase difference between the first electromagnetic signal and second electromagnetic signal of substantially 90 degrees.
In an embodiment shown later, the first electromagnetic signal has a first electromagnetic signal power and the second electromagnetic signal has a second electromagnetic signal power. The shape of the aperture may be arranged for obtaining a predetermined power ratio of the second electromagnetic signal power to the first electromagnetic signal power.
In an embodiment, the shape of the aperture is arranged for obtaining a predetermined power ratio substantially equal to one. The latter embodiment is that of a so-called hybrid or 3 dB coupler where both outputs provide electromagnetic signals with balanced amplitude, corresponding to substantially half the input electromagnetic signal power.
Waveguide portions 200 and 201 may be made of any material suitable for the specific implementation. For example, waveguide portions 200 and 201 may have walls made of an electrical conductor material, for example metal. Waveguide portions 200 and 201 may be filled with a homogeneous, isotropic material supporting the propagation of electromagnetic signals, for example air.
In the embodiment shown in
In an embodiment not shown in the Figures, the waveguide portions may have a square cross section perpendicular to longitudinal direction 30 and a rectangular cross section along longitudinal direction 30, i.e. along the E-plane.
In an embodiment not shown in the Figures, the waveguide portions may have a semi-circular cross section perpendicular to longitudinal direction 30 and a rectangular cross section along longitudinal direction 30, i.e. along the E-plane. In the latter embodiment, the waveguide portions may be semi-cylindrical. The coupler may be in this case a circular waveguide with a septum arranged along a diameter of the circular waveguide, i.e. having the shape of a cylinder.
In the embodiment shown in
In an embodiment, each waveguide portion may have a cross section perpendicular to the longitudinal direction varying along the longitudinal direction. Said varying cross section may provide waveguide impedance matching and thus enhance RF performance.
In an embodiment, the cross section may have a first cross section shape for a first portion of the direction coupler along the longitudinal direction and having a second cross section shape in a second portion of the directional coupler along the longitudinal direction. The second cross section shape may be identical to the first cross section shape. The first cross section may have a first area and the second cross section may have a second area different from the first area.
In an embodiment, the second cross section shape may be different from the first cross section shape.
The first cross section shape and the second cross section shape may be any of rectangular, square, semi-circular or semi-elliptical shape.
In an embodiment each waveguide portion 200 and 201 is a rectangular waveguide having rectangular first walls and rectangular second walls. The rectangular second walls are parallel to the E-plane and narrower than the first walls. The slanted part of the septum may partially extend between the second walls, i.e. between the narrower walls. In the latter embodiment, the aperture of the septum may have a shape having parts extending in a diagonal direction with respect to the longitudinal direction not completely extending between the narrower walls. Alternatively, the slanted part of the septum may completely extend between the second walls, i.e. between the narrower walls.
The aperture of the septum may have any suitable shape comprising a part slanted with respect to the longitudinal direction.
In an embodiment, the aperture has a shape which is neither rectangular nor square.
In an embodiment, the septum has a single aperture. By providing a single aperture in a septum of a selected area, the aperture may be larger than by providing multiple apertures in the same area. Power handling capabilities of the directional coupler may thus be improved and a broader range of coupling coefficient may be covered, for example from 1 to 5 dB or outside this range. The directional coupler of the invention may be suitable to meet a broader range of specifications in the design of RF waveguide networks as compared to for example known slot couplers which are usually limited to lower coupling values.
To explain further,
Other aperture profiles are possible.
In an embodiment, polynomial or spline functions may be used to shape a profile of the first part and the second part of the aperture. For example, Legendre polynomial functions or any other type of suitable polynomial or spline functions may be used. It has been found that when the septum has a profile of the aperture defined by a polynomial function, the directional coupler shows better RF performance over a broader frequency band.
In an embodiment, the aperture is reflection symmetric with respect to a plane orthogonal to the longitudinal direction cutting the directional coupler in two identical waveguide sub-portions.
In all embodiments described with reference to
In all embodiments described with reference to
Waveguide portions consisting of hollow bodies as described with reference to
The staircase shape shown in
In other words, referring to
The mode of propagation orthogonal to that applied to the input port of the coupler is called in the art transverse electric 01 mode, i.e. TE01 mode.
As it will be explained later, the shape of the septum and dimension of the aperture may be used to tune a phase difference and an amplitude ratio of the electric field propagating with TE01 mode and with TE10 mode.
In an embodiment described below, the directional coupler may be described as two waveguide polarizers comprising a septum on a plane orthogonal to the E-plane. The two waveguide polarizers are arranged back to back at an open end of each waveguide polarizer where the septum partially extends between walls of the waveguide polarizer. The septum may be used to obtain, at half length of the directional coupler, different type of polarizations associated to different combinations of the two orthogonal electric field modes TE01 and TE10.
For example, polarization may be circular or elliptical depending on the differential phase induced by the septum between the two orthogonal electric field modes.
For example, with reference to septum polarizer 300, four ports 1, 2′, 3′ and 4 are indicated. Ports 1 and 4 may correspond to the input and isolated port of an embodiment of the directional coupler described above. Ports 2′ and 3′ may correspond to intermediate ports at half length of the directional coupler. These four ports 1, 2′, 3′ and 4 are sized to propagate the fundamental modes in hollow waveguides, being the TE10 mode of a rectangular waveguide portion associated to ports 1 and 4, and the TE10 and TE01 modes of a square waveguide portion associated to ports 2′ and 3′, respectively. When excited at one of the two ports 1 or 4, the septum polarizer will split equally the signal towards ports 2′ and 3′ with a phase difference that will depend on the shape of the septum and on the port excited. Ports 1 and 4 will excite port 2′ with the same insertion phase, but port 3′ with opposite insertion phases.
This can be better understood by using a known technique called in the art as decomposition into even and odd modes, i.e. modes having either the same phase or opposite phase of propagation, respectively.
Assuming septum polarizer 300 is matched at all ports, ports 1 and 4 are isolated and ports 2′ and 3′ are also isolated, the scattering matrix of the septum polarizer may be written as:
Depending on the phase difference between signals at ports 2′ and 3′, the septum polarizer may produce circularly polarized (φ=±90 degrees) or linearly polarized (φ=0 or φ=180 degrees) electromagnetic signal. Both circular and linear polarization are particular cases of elliptical polarization which is generated for any other value of the phase difference.
In a back-to-back septum polarizer configuration, as illustrated in
The transmission coefficients of the resulting total scattering matrix when inputting an electromagnetic signal to port 1 or 4 are obtained as follows:
Equations (3) simplify into
Considering that the matrix is symmetric and maintains the matching and isolation properties of the elementary matrices, the resulting total scattering matrix is:
When φ=±45 or φ=±135 degrees, the resulting scattering matrix is the matrix of a hybrid coupler, the outputs having the same amplitude and being in phase quadrature. Other values of φ will lead to unbalanced amplitudes while maintaining phase quadrature.
In an embodiment, the shape of the aperture is arranged for obtaining, in use, a phase difference between electromagnetic signals of 45 degrees plus a multiple integer of 180 degrees at half of the length of the directional coupler.
In an embodiment the phase difference is −45 degrees. For a phase difference of φ=−45 degrees, scattering matrix (5) results in the following scattering matrix:
Matrix (6) is the scattering parameter matrix of a hybrid or 3 dB coupler with a through port in phase delay with respect to the coupling port.
Cross section at half of the length of the coupler as shown in
It can be seen that electric fields gradually increase intensity in areas of the coupler corresponding to parts of the septum slanted with respect to the longitudinal direction.
In an embodiment, power handling capabilities of the inventive directional coupler can be at least four times higher than a branch directional coupler having similar RF performance, for example having similar insertion losses, isolation and input matching performance within the same operating frequency band. It is known that when a secondary electron emission occurs in resonance with an alternating electric field, a so-called multipactor effect can be generated damaging the directional coupler. A condition for the occurrence of the multipactor effect is that a voltage threshold is reached. This voltage threshold is an indication of the power handling capability of the coupler. For non-resonant structures with low voltage magnification factors such as directional couplers, said threshold voltage is proportional to the product of the specific operating frequency and a distance between two parallel walls of the coupler. For the same operating frequency, the worst case for the threshold voltage is thus determined by the minimum distance between the two parallel walls. Since the inventive directional coupler has an aperture provided at the common wall between the two waveguide portions, the minimum distance between two parallel walls is set by a thickness of each waveguide portion. In a known branch directional coupler having similar RF performance of the inventive directional coupler, this minimum distance would be set by a distance of the walls of a branch which is typically much smaller than a thickness of a waveguide portion of the inventive coupler.
In an embodiment, a minimum distance between two parallel sections of the directional coupler is equal or larger than a thickness of a waveguide portion measured along the plane of propagation of the electric field, i.e. the E-plane. This ensures the minimum threshold voltage is set by the thickness of a waveguide portion. For example, the septum of
The further septum 404 has a further aperture 414 for coupling the further waveguide portion 202 to said waveguide portion 201. The further aperture 414 has a further shape comprising a further part slanted with respect to longitudinal direction 30.
In an embodiment, as shown in
In an embodiment, as shown in
In an embodiment, not shown in the Figures, the further septum may be arranged in parallel with the septum such that identical aperture and further aperture overlap each other.
In an embodiment, not shown in the Figures, shapes of apertures 410 and 414 may be different.
Directional coupler 101 may for example be used as a six-port directional coupler. In beam forming network applications use of six-port directional couplers instead of four-port directional couplers may be considered in order to reduce overall volume of the network and the number of components.
As explained above also for a six-port directional coupler, shape of the apertures may be configured for adapting the coupling factor, e.g. providing balanced or unbalanced output between the three output ports.
For example,
Graph 510 shows relatively flat and wide band response within the C-band down-link frequency.
In an embodiment, the shape of apertures 410 and 414 may be adapted to obtain a fractional bandwidth, i.e. the frequency bandwidth of the coupler divided by the center frequency, of more than 10%. In some embodiments the fractional bandwidth may be for example 15%, 20% or more than 20%, for example 25%. In the example shown in
The inventive directional coupler may have more than six open ends, i.e. ports, and a number of ports may be extended to any natural number suitable for the specific application.
For example,
Directional coupler 102 has thus 16 open ends, 8 on each opposite side along the longitudinal direction. Directional coupler 102 may be used in complex waveguide RF networks where many electromagnetic signals may be routed at the same time.
The method 700 comprises
The common wall results from joining one or more walls of one half body with the one or more walls of the other half body.
Removing 720 the material may be done with any suitable technology. For example, removing 720 may comprise milling technologies.
Conventional printed waveguide technologies like Substrate Integrated Waveguide (SIW) technologies may also be used.
In an alternative method, recent manufacturing technics including for example additive manufacturing may also be considered. In such alternative method the coupler may be directly manufactured by consecutively adding layers of a suitable material over each other, like for example it is done in three-dimensional printing technologies.
Since the cross section along which half bodies 800 and 801 are assembled is along the E-plane (See
Further, since in the embodiment shown, the aperture on the septum is not completely contained in a wall of only one of half body 800 or 801, standard technologies of removing the material such as milling may be used to form the walls. An aperture in one of the wall of half body 800 or half body 801 would considerably add complexity to the manufacturing method, likely leading to less precisions or higher manufacturing costs. Directional couplers 100, 101, 102 described above may be manufactured with method 700.
The selected material may be any metal suitable for the specific application, for example aluminum, silver plated aluminum, copper, nickel, silver plated invar or the like. For example for high frequency applications, silver plated aluminum may show a good compromise between mass density, electrical and thermal conductivity of the directional coupler and structural stiffness.
The selected material may comprise also plastic. For example, metal plated plastic may be used. Metal plated plastic is particularly advantageous for reducing payload mass in space missions.
It should be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments.
In the claims references in parentheses refer to reference signs in drawings of embodiments or to formulas of embodiments, thus increasing the intelligibility of the claim. These references shall not be construed as limiting the claim. Use of the verb “comprise” and its conjugations does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those stated in a claim. The article “a” or “an” preceding an element does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements. The invention may be implemented by means of hardware comprising several distinct elements, and by means of a suitably programmed computer. In the device claim enumerating several means, several of these means may be embodied by one and the same item of hardware. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16203470.6 | Dec 2016 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/081060 | 11/30/2017 | WO | 00 |