This application relates to interconnecting a waveguide to a coaxial transmission line.
Waveguide to coaxial transitions are commonly used to efficiently convert a TE10 waveguide mode to a coaxial waveguide TEM mode. So called “in line” transitions are a class of coaxial-to-waveguide transition wherein the coaxial transmission line carrying a TEM mode is physically oriented in the same propagating direction as the rectangular waveguide transmission line carrying a TE10 mode and have been in existence since at least the 1950s. See for example Wheeler, G., “Broadband waveguide-to-coax transitions”, IRE International Convention Record, vol. 5, pp. 182-185 (1957) doi: 10.1109/IRECON.1957.1150581. As shown in the cross-section of
Other prior art exists for magnetically coupled transitions, including Gaudio et al. U.S. Pat. No. 3,737,812. This approach employed stepped ridges 107 in the center of the waveguide 102 to form the magnetic loop 104 as shown in cross section in
One limitation of these prior art transitions is that these transitions usually require multiple complex 3-dimensional parts because the enclosed rectangular guide and coaxial transmission line cannot be machined or extruded as one part. Another limitation of the prior art is the small physical size of the coax required to maintain an effective waveguide back short.
As described herein, preferred embodiments include a coaxial transmission line coupled to a waveguide, wherein the center conductor of the coaxial line passes through the back short of the waveguide through an iris and that terminates at one of the inside walls of the waveguide. In some embodiments, the transmission line and waveguide may be formed in a planar substrate.
In some embodiments, the iris may be fabricated separately from the waveguide as part of a shim.
An advantage over the prior art is that the iris can be easily fabricated into flat sheets of conductive material using processes such as machining, chemical milling or laser cutting, and attached to a waveguide section. This eliminates overhanging material allowing the waveguide section, and indeed the entire transition, to be fabricated using simple manufacturing processes such as CNC machining or casting.
Our approach is not dependent on the shim itself. The shim is but one possible convenient implementation of the iris.
Additional novel features and advantages of the approaches discussed herein are evident from the text that follows and the accompanying drawings, where like features are denoted by the same reference numbers throughout the detail descriptions of the drawings, and in which:
Referring to
The iris dimensions may be adjusted to vary the reactance of the iris. This in turn is used to match the impedance of the coaxial section to the waveguide section. A selection of thin conducting walls with varying iris dimensions can therefore be prepared prior to the manufacture and/or test of a coaxial transmission line to waveguide transition. Examples of iris dimensions to vary include their thickness, and if circular, their radius. Using this prepared selection, irises of various dimensions can be swapped in and out during testing in order to tune the match of the transition.
In one embodiment, the coaxial transmission line, which may be any TEM mode transmission line, is provided by another structure, such as a coaxial connector 120.
The iris 100 aperture closes tightly around the center conductor 103 of the coaxial transmission line such that the coaxial impedance formed by the center conductor 103 and iris 100 is less than the impedance of the coaxial transmission line. This allows back short currents to flow largely unobstructed in the end wall 105 of the waveguide 102 resulting in a more effective magnetic loop return path and waveguide back short.
Results of a computer model, with and without the iris, shows the effect of the iris on return loss. Referring to
An advantage over prior art is that the iris 100 can be easily fabricated into flat sheets of conductive material, or shims 109, using processes such as machining, chemical milling or laser cutting, and attached to the waveguide section to form the back short as shown in
The preferred embodiments are not dependent on the thin conducting wall, or shim 109 itself. The shim is therefore but one convenient implementation of the iris. In a more general conceptualization, an arbitrary TEM transmission line may be utilized, coupled to a waveguide wherein the center conductor of the coaxial line passes through the back short of the waveguide through an iris and where the center conductor terminates at one of the inside walls of the waveguide. The center conductor need not be rotationally symmetric around the TEM transmission line's axis of propagation as shown in
Other types of transmission lines, such as a microstrip or coplanar waveguide may have TEM and TM modes. Therefore, an iris, as described above, may also be used to launch these other types of transmission lines into rectangular or circular waveguides.
Furthermore, the TEM mode need not be the sole significant propagating waveguide mode in the transmission line. The inside walls of the waveguide need not have a feature for the center conductor to make contact with. The center conductor may instead contact with a broadwall 106 of the waveguide as shown in
The above description has particularly shown and described example embodiments. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the legal scope of this patent as encompassed by the appended claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 63/058,219 filed Jul. 29, 2020 entitled “Coaxial Iris Coupled Waveguide Adapter”, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2981904 | Ajioka et al. | Apr 1961 | A |
3023382 | Borghetti | Feb 1962 | A |
3737812 | Gaudio et al. | Jun 1973 | A |
3942138 | Schaedla | Mar 1976 | A |
20080003872 | Chen et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20130271235 | Kai | Oct 2013 | A1 |
Entry |
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Pozar, D.,“Microwave Engineering”, 4th Ed. (2012 John Wiley & Sons), pp. 203-206. |
Herres, D., “The Difference Between Metal Conductors and Waveguides” Jan. 28, 2019 at http://www.testandmeasurementtips.com/. |
Fiolia et al., “An Iris Polarizer In Coaxial Waveguide,” Digest on Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium, 1989, pp. 961-964 vol. 2. |
“Microwave Engineering”—“Waveguide Discontinuities”—“Waveguide Irises” https://electronics-club.com/waveguide-discontinuities/ Dec. 13, 2020. |
Wheeler, G., “Broadband Waveguide-to-Coax Transitions”, IRE International Convention Record, vol. 5, pp. 182-185 (1957). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20220037756 A1 | Feb 2022 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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63058219 | Jul 2020 | US |