This application is a National Stage of International patent application PCT/EP2011/073813, filed on Dec. 22, 2011, which claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1005182, filed on Dec. 30, 2010, the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
The subject matter of the present invention relates to a variable filter using capacitors switched by means of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) components.
In the description, the expression “tunable filter” will be understood to mean a filter belonging to the family of passband filters produced from coupled oscillating (inductor/capacitor) circuits, said filters being configurable and adjustable.
Likewise, the term “jamming” is used to denote signals that disrupt the useful signal. The term “resonator” is used in the present invention to refer to resonant circuits, also called oscillator circuits. The term “interdigitated” is known in the art.
MEMS technology has allowed advances in microelectronics to be used to produce deformable microsystems the mechanical behavior of which modulates electrical behavior.
Various actuators and switches are described in the prior art. Thus, the prior art discloses MEMS structures that use a movable conductive element and a number of fixed current carrying contact terminals advantageously allowing a larger current to be carried relative to prior devices in which the current was made to flow through movable conductive elements. The fields of radio communication and radio navigation make use of low power transceiver filter systems for highly linear co-site filtering. Co-site or proximity operation is in particular obtained when a receiver capturing a weak signal is located nearby a high-power emitter.
Co-site filters have a very substantial impact on power consumption and bulk. Most of the systems currently used have the following problems:
To solve these various problems it is known to use a varactor diode based filter, however varactor diodes are nonlinear components that have a low immunity to jamming. It is also known to use capacitors switched by relay or p-i-n (positive-intrinsic-negative) diode. However, switching times are too long for this type of switching. In the case where p-i-n diodes are used power consumption is high.
The various solutions known in the art do not adequately solve the following problems:
The technical teachings of patent application US 2005/0017824 relate to a filter comprising two elements 8, 9 placed in parallel with each other and connected via a coupling element 18 that is a capacitor. The first conductor 8 and the second conductor 9 are rectangular features placed in parallel and spaced apart by a given distance. An element 10, which is a third conductor, is located between the first and the second elements 8, 9. The coupling capacitor 18 is connected to the two elements 8 and 9.
Document KR 2001 0094509, a summary of which is available in the Espacenet patent database, describes a microstrip capacitor.
The document entitled “adjustable bandwidth filter design based on interdigital capacitors” IEEE microwave and wireless components letters, pages 16-18, XP011199157 relates to microstrip filters.
The document entitled “a microstrip bandpass filter with ultra-wide stopband” IEEE transactions on microwave theory and techniques, pages 1468-1472, XP011215082 also describes a microstrip technology.
The document entitled “corrugated microstrip coupled lines for constant absolute bandwidth tunable filters” IEEE transactions on microwave theory and techniques, Vol. 58, No. 4, (2010 Apr. 1), pages 956-963, XP011305950 for example shows a three-pole filter in
Patent EP 1 953 914 relates to a multiplexer and a diplexer.
Patent application US 2002/0149448 relates to a device allowing losses in ferromagnetic components to be characterized.
The subject matter of the present invention notably relates to a novel approach using MEMS components to switch between various capacitance values in a tunable filter. This advantageously enables adjustable or reconfigurable filtering or filtering with a filter the constant pass band of which can be tuned to a frequency using variable MEMS RF capacitors.
The invention relates to a tunable filter comprising at least two resonator circuits placed between a first matching network connected to a first input/output and a second matching network connected to a second input/output, said matching networks consisting of an inductor (L4, L5) and a capacitor (C4, C5) connected in parallel, and:
The tunable filter according to the invention is, for example, produced in microstrip technology.
The filter having a feature at least described above is used in a receiver chain, said tunable filter being placed closest a receiving antenna and just before a low noise amplifier.
According to another embodiment, the tunable filter according to the invention is used in a receiver chain, said tunable filter being placed downstream of a low noise amplifier and of a high-field protection device and of an antenna.
The tunable filter may also be placed between a power driver or controller and an amplifier.
Other features and advantages of the device according to the invention will become more clearly apparent on reading the following description of an embodiment given by way of non-limiting example and illustrated by the appended figures, in which:
The filter studied, an example of which is given by way of illustration to clarify the subject matter of the present invention, is a working 2 pole filter covering an octave with a constant passband over the entire tunable range.
The core of the device consists of two oscillating circuits 1, 2 having a self-inductance L0 and a variable capacitance C0. These two oscillating circuits 1, 2 or resonator circuits or resonators are coupled by a coupling circuit 3 produced by placing a coupling inductor Lcoup and a capacitor Ccoup in parallel in this embodiment.
The assembly consisting of the first coupling circuit 1 and the coupling circuit is connected to the input IN of the filter by a matching network 4, which converts an impedance of 50 ohms to the impedance required to achieve filtering with a constant bandpass, this being one of the advantages of the present device.
Symmetrically, an identical matching network 5 allows the output of the filter to be coupled to the second resonant circuit.
A matching network 4, 5 may consist of a fixed inductor with a capacitor in parallel coupled to the inductance L0 of the resonant circuit via an intermediate connection, according to a model known to those skilled in the art, these elements not being shown in the figure for the sake of simplicity.
Correct matching to 50 ohms and the constancy of the passband at −3 dB depend on mathematical relationships between the elements of the matching circuit L0, C0, Lcoup and Ccoup.
The radio-frequency or RF MEMS network 12 may consist of an array of capacitive MEMS the capacitances of which can be set to a number of values (as shown in
The power passing through the filter obeys the following relationship at the terminals of the oscillating circuit: P=2·Vrms2/R1 were Veff is the RMS voltage. Peak voltage=√(2·Vrms) Vpeak=√(R1·P). The impedance seen by the MEMS is (R1)/2 when the filter is tuned.
For a power P the peak voltage across the terminals of the MEMS is a maximum at the maximum frequency with an amplitude equal to √(R1·P/2).
To maximize the power withstand of the filter, it is necessary to decrease the value of R1 and therefore alter the design of the filter, the value of the capacitance of the MEMS increases as R1 decreases. The MEMS filter thus defined may accept high powers. To further increase the admissible power of the filter it is possible to place a number of MEMS in parallel.
In
In
In
Numerical Example of a Device According to the Invention
For a filter with a passband of 50 MHz, the frequency range to cover is from 950 to 2300 MHz.
Since the frequency range is 1.35 GHz, with such a step it is possible to increment frequency in steps of about 5.3 MHz. This step is compatible with the desired passband.
The minimum crossover must be such that the central frequency of the first step corresponds to 2300 MHz-25 MHz for optimal crossover in the band at 0.5 dB for the filter. Thus, a “box of weights” comprising 8 elements is used for an overestimate of 20% and to provide some latitude in the band covered by the device i.e. for the following steps:
the passband of the filter is almost constant. The desired passband of about 50 MHz is obtained at the minimum and maximum frequencies, the filter width being larger (64 MHz) midband:
The filter covers a frequency band ranging from 861 MHz when all the capacitors are activated (activation of all the MEMS) to 2300 MHz when all the MEMS are deactivated.
Regarding use in an emitter (
A notable advantage of the invention is that it provides a device having a capacitance that can be made to vary over a very wide range by switching capacitors, thereby allowing a wide band to be covered.
It also provides devices having the following improvements:
The voltage applied to the MEMS component may be quite high and, as intermodulation performance is excellent, a rather substantial improvement in jamming immunity may be obtained and the filter according to the invention may be used for medium-power emissions (about 5 to 10 watts).
In this power field, adjustable filters using fixed capacitors actuated by p-i-n diodes in the tuning system have admissible powers similar to the present device, but at the cost of the high electrical power consumption required to keep the p-i-n diodes on.
In the device presented, very little power is required to turn a MEMS on, which is one of the advantages of this device.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 05182 | Dec 2010 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/073813 | 12/22/2011 | WO | 00 | 11/5/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/089619 | 7/5/2012 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5485131 | Fajen et al. | Jan 1996 | A |
7385465 | Chen | Jun 2008 | B2 |
8363380 | Lan et al. | Jan 2013 | B2 |
20020149448 | Toncich | Oct 2002 | A1 |
20050017824 | Hirabayashi | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20100184384 | Jones et al. | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20110002080 | Ranta | Jan 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1329977 | Jul 2003 | EP |
1953914 | Jan 2008 | EP |
2001-0094509 | Nov 2001 | KR |
Entry |
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Zhu et al., “Adjustable Bandwidth Filter Design Based on Interdigital Capacitors”, IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, IEEE Service Center, vol. 18, No. 1, Jan. 2008, pp. 16-18. |
Tang et al., “A Microstrip Bandpass Filter with Ultra-Wide Stopband”, IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Service Center, vol. 56, No. 6, Jun. 2008, pp. 1468-1472. |
El-Tanani et al., “Corrugated Microstrip Coupled Lines for Constant Absolute Bandwidth Tunable Filters”, IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Service Center, vol. 58, No. 4, Apr. 2010, pp. 956-963. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140176263 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |