The present invention concerns a method for the manufacture of a transmission line according to the preamble of claim 1. Further, it concerns such a transmission line, according to the preamble of claim 2.
The use of microstrip lines with air as the dielectric has been used in base station antennas since at least the mid-90s. The advantage is low loss and ease of manufacture in the sense that a flat ground plane can be used for the lines. The disadvantage of such lines is the necessary width, which for e.g. a 3 mm separation is 13 mm for a 50 ohms line. The absence of a dielectric, other than air, also means that the mutual coupling is rather high.
As another prior art in respect of the present invention U.S. Pat. No. 5,652,557 could be mentioned. This patent discloses a transmission line consisting of a longitudinal groove having longitudinal metal walls and a longitudinal opening. In the groove, a microstrip conductor line is formed.
However, the microstrip conductor of U.S. Pat. No. 5,652,557 is manufactured by disposing a conductor film on a dielectric. Such a production method can be complex and expensive.
It is an object of the present invention to propose a solution for or a reduction of the problems of prior art. A main object is consequently to devise a method for manufacturing a transverse electric magnetic (TEM) mode transmission line, that provides a transmission line having beneficial electric properties and at the same time is a method that is both rational and easy to employ.
According to the invention this is accomplished by a method having the features of claim 1. According to this method, a transmission line can be produced by forming a metal strip through punching a metal sheet and then fastening the metal strip in a longitudinal groove by means of a holding device or spacer. This is a rational method: it is easy to punch a metal sheet to form the metal strip, and the provision of a holding device enables an easy mounting of the metal strip in production.
According to another aspect of the invention, one or more of the above objectives is reached with a transmission line having the features of claim 2. This is a straightforward solution for a transmission line that lends itself to a rational production of the same.
We present an alternative transmission line geometry well suited to a base station antenna structure. As shown in
The characteristic impedance of the line is controlled by changing the height of the line.
We compare the proposed transmission line with a standard air-microstrip line of similar dimensions. Our simulations, using a software, HFSS, for 3D electromagnetic-field simulation, confirm that the proposed line has lower loss and mutual coupling than air microstrip.
Embodiments exemplifying the invention will now be described, by means of the appended drawings, on which
a illustrates two parallel transmission lines, according to the invention placed in two longitudinal grooves or “canyons”,
b illustrates the two parallel transmission lines in an embodiment such that the complete assembly could be punched out of a single piece of sheet metal,
c illustrates a possible solution to attach the line to the reflector,
a illustrates the geometry of a transmission line according to the invention,
b illustrates the field distribution in a transmission line according to
a illustrates a cross-section of a line with the simulated field distribution,
b illustrates the simulated loss of the line in
c illustrates a cross-section of a line with the simulated field distribution,
d illustrates the simulated loss of the line in
a illustrates a cross-section of two lines with simulated field distribution, in order to consider mutual coupling,
b illustrates the simulated loss of the lines in
c illustrates a cross-section of two lines with simulated field distribution, in order to consider mutual coupling,
d illustrates the simulated loss of the lines in
a illustrates a simulation of two parallel transmission lines with a cross-over in between,
b illustrates a Smith chart in connection to the simulation of 6a, and
c illustrates the simulated loss of the lines in
a illustrates two parallel lines of the proposed “canyon line” design. The two lines (dark) are connected by a cross-over part at the centre and the complete assembly could be punched out of a single piece of sheet metal as shown in
The first step in the design is to determine the dimensions of our proposed line for 50Ω operation.
The resulting E-fields, in Volts/meter [V/m] of the simulations can be summarised for
The E-fields for
Note: The loss in the air microstrip, 0.22 dB/lambda at 1 GHz, seems much too high. It is possible that HFSS overestimates the loss due to radiation, but simulations using a larger air volume and smaller port areas could not confirm this. We are still confident however, that the proposed line has lower losses.
In order to compare the proposed transmission line to air microstrip, we should also consider the mutual coupling. For this purpose, we have made simulations of the two comparable geometries shown in
The resulting E-fields, in Volts/meter [V/m] of the simulations can be summarised for
The E-fields for
Finally, we have simulated a design where a cross-over section is placed between two parallel lines of the proposed “canyon stripline”.
The resulting E-fields, in Volts/meter [V/m] of the simulation can be summarised for
We have presented numerical HFSS simulations of a “canyon stripline” and compared it to a traditional air microstrip. The design is well-suited for integration in base station antennas using extruded reflectors. The simulation results show that the proposed line has lower losses and lower mutual coupling.
There are many variations of the invention. For instance, the wall portions forming the groove(s) in the element can be made of a thin sheet of conducting material or paint placed on a non-conducting material. The holding device could be snap-fitted to the metal strip by the use of e.g. arms fitted into one or more holes of the metal strip. The holding device could be attached to the element by the use of e.g. rivets that could be an integral part of the holding device. This would enable the metal strip with the spacer(s) to be mounted in a single step.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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SE0601971-5 | Sep 2006 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE07/00834 | 9/24/2007 | WO | 00 | 7/6/2009 |