This application is a U.S. national phase application, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 517 371, of PCT/KR2009/006303, filed Oct. 29, 2009, designating the United States, which claims priority to Korean Application No. 10-2008-0108131, filed Oct. 31, 2008, and Korean Application No. 10-2009-0084972, filed Sep. 9, 2009. The entire contents of the aforementioned patent applications are incorporated herein by this reference.
The present invention relates to a DC blocking device, more particularly to a DC blocking device used in a mobile communication system such as a TMA (Tower Mounted Amplifier).
When transmitting signals, a mobile communication base station system transmits signals to an antenna placed in a tower through a feeding cable after amplifying the signals that need to be transmitted at a high-output amplifier located in the base station, and the antenna placed in the tower radiates the transmission signals. Also, when receiving signals, a mobile communication base station system amplifies weak reception signals by transmitting them to a low noise amplifier inside the base station through a feeding cable after an antenna placed in the tower receives the signals.
In such a mobile communication base station system, a base station system and an antenna are generally placed apart at a substantial distance, thus having the problem of signals attenuating as transmission signals and reception signals are transmitted through feeding cables. If a base station system and an antenna are scores of meters apart, input signals may attenuate by 3 dB or more, and this may cause reception sensitivity to decrease due to a relative increase of noise during reception.
To resolve such problems, a transmission filter and an amplifier are included when an antenna and a base station are placed far apart, and the use of a TMA placed close to an antenna is becoming a basic requirement.
In such a TMA, RF signals and DC power signals are provided together, and there is a need to transmit RF signals and DC power signals separately. Of course, even in mobile communication equipment other than a TMA, such as a repeater, a device for separately transmitting RF signals and DC power signals in this manner is necessary.
Such a device is not necessary if cables for RF signals and DC power supply are equipped separately, but since doing so is difficult and costs much, a DC blocking device has been developed for separately transmitting RF signals and DC power signals through one cable.
A DC blocking device is a device for simultaneously receiving RF signals and DC power signals and either separating them or blocking the DC power signals, and such a DC blocking device and its circuit diagram are illustrated in
Referring to
Of the RF signals and the DC power signals, the RF signals cannot pass through the inductor, whereas the DC power signals are output to terminal (c) through the inductor L1.
In this manner, the DC blocking device may separate DC power signals and RF signals into different paths by a combination of an inductor and capacitor. Of course, a DC blocking device that blocks DC signals only without providing a separate path for DC signals may sometimes be used, and in such a case an inductor is not implemented.
Referring to
RF signals are inputted to the internal conductor 100, and the external conductor 102 is electrically connected to a ground.
The internal conductor 100 has a junction groove 108 and an insertion groove 110. An inductor (not pictured) is electrically connected to the junction groove 108, and DC power signals are output through the inductor electrically connected at the junction groove 108.
Also, an insertion conductor 112 is inserted into the insertion groove 110. The insertion conductor 112 is not electrically connected to the internal conductor 100, and is inserted with a designated distance of space left between them. There forms capacitance between the internal conductor 100 and the insertion conductor 112, and coupling of RF signals is made to the insertion conductor, whereby the signals are output to the outside.
For proper coupling to be achieved between the internal conductor and the insertion conductor 112 in such a DC blocking device of the related art, the length of the section for achieving coupling (that is, the length of the insertion conductor) should be set at one quarter of the wavelength.
Consequently, the lower the frequency is, the longer the length of the section for achieving coupling gets, and in a low frequency band (850-900 MHz), as the length of the coupling section gets long, the size of a DC blocking device gets large, causing the problem of spatial constraint when mounted in a mobile communication device of a densified structure.
To resolve the problems of the related art addressed above, an embodiment of the invention provides a DC blocking device that may be manufactured in a smaller size.
Another purpose of the present invention is to provide a DC blocking device that can minimize the spatial constraint when mounted to a mobile communication equipment.
Yet another purpose of the present invention is to provide a structure wherein proper coupling is achieved even if the length of the part of a DC blocking device where coupling is achieved is reduced.
Other purposes of the present invention can be derived through the embodiments below by those skilled in the related art.
To achieve the objective above, an aspect of the invention provides a DC blocking device of a small size that includes: an internal conductor where RF signals are applied; and an external conductor electrically connected to a ground. The internal conductor has an insertion groove, and into this insertion groove is inserted an insertion conductor without touching the internal conductor and with a designated distance of space between them. The diameter of the external conductor in a portion where the insertion conductor is inserted is set differently from the diameter in another portion.
The diameter of the external conductor in the portion where the insertion conductor is inserted is set to be larger than in another portion.
A change in reactance in the portion where the diameter of the external conductor is set larger causes a decrease in an optimal coupling frequency.
Another aspect of the present invention provides a DC blocking device of a small size that includes: an internal conductor where RF signals are applied; and an external conductor electrically connected to a ground. The internal conductor has an insertion groove; an insertion conductor is inserted into the insertion groove without touching the internal conductor and with a designated distance of space between them; and the external conductor includes a high-impedance part having a relatively large diameter and a low-impedance part having a relatively small diameter.
According to certain embodiments of the present invention, when a DC blocking device is mounted on a mobile communication device, spatial constraints can be minimized, and proper coupling can be achieved even if the length of the portion for achieving coupling in the DC blocking device is reduced.
A DC blocking device of a small size according to certain preferred embodiments of the invention will be described below in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring to
An RF cable is coupled to the connector unit 450, and RF signals and DC power signals are provided through the RF cable. As an example, the RF cable may be a coaxial cable. DC power signals are provided together with RF signals, for supplying power to a modem mounted on a TMA or a repeater or to other devices.
While
The internal conductor 400 and external conductor 402 of the connector 450 serve as a signal transmission path; RF signals and DC power signals are applied to the internal conductor 400, while the external conductor 402 provides ground potential. The internal conductor 400 and external conductor 402 may be cylindrical in shape.
An inductor (not shown) may be coupled to the junction groove 408 of the internal conductor. Of the DC power signals and RF signals inputted to the connector 450 through the RF cable, the DC power signals are output to the outside through the inductor coupled to the junction groove 408, providing DC power to devices such as modems.
Of course, DC blocking device according to the present invention may not include a junction groove 408. As described above, if there is no need for providing a separate path for DC power signals, a junction groove 408 is not formed in the DC blocking device and the DC blocking device of the present invention is not coupled to an inductor.
An insertion conductor 412 is inserted into the insertion groove 410 formed in the internal conductor. The insertion conductor 412 is electrically connected to an RF signal output end (not shown).
As illustrated in
An electromagnetic coupling occurs between the internal conductor 400 and the insertion conductor 412, and the RF signals applied at the internal conductor 400 are coupled from the internal conductor 400 to the insertion conductor 412 and outputted.
Referring to
As illustrated in
The reason for setting the diameter of the external conductor differently in this manner is for making the size of the DC blocking device smaller.
As described above, the length of the portion where coupling between the internal conductor and the insertion conductor occurs should be set as λ/2, that is, half of the central frequency wavelength λ. For example, if RF signals of 850 MHz-900 MHz band are used, the length of the portion where coupling occurs should be set at approximately 42 mm.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, the diameter of the low-impedance part may be set at 16 mm, and the diameter of the high-impedance part may be set at 26 mm.
As illustrated in
In the related art, the reason for setting the length of the area where coupling occurs at λ/2 is that the level of coupling is the highest when the length is λ/2. This is due to the fact that return loss in the conventional DC blocking device is the smallest at half the wavelength.
If the external conductor has a low-impedance part and a high-impedance part as in the present invention, the reactance changes at the high-impedance part, and it operates as a matching stub in an ordinary RF circuit.
In
As illustrated in
Thus, since the frequency having the smallest return loss is one third of that of the conventional DC blocking device, the length of the portion (b) where coupling occurs may also be shortened to about one third of its length. In other words, a DC blocking device having the structure according to the present invention may have the length of the portion where coupling occurs shortened to approximately one third of that of the conventional device, and this means that the length of the insertion groove 410 and the insertion conductor 412 may be set at approximately λ/12. In other words, if RF signals of 850 MHz-900 MHz band are used, a DC blocking device according to the present invention may have the length of the portion where coupling occurs set at approximately 14 mm.
Consequently, the structure of a DC blocking device according to an embodiment of the present invention may minimize spatial constraints that occur when being mounted in a mobile communication device.
The first disclosed embodiment is of a structure that attempts to make the size smaller by changing impedance, and the second disclosed embodiment is of a structure that attempts to make the size smaller by applying a slow-wave structure to an insertion conductor.
Referring to
While
An RF cable is coupled to the connector unit 750, and RF signals and DC signals are provided through the RF cable. As an example, an RF cable may be a coaxial cable. DC signals may be signals for supplying power to a modem mounted on a TMA or a repeater, or to other devices, and may be signals for other kinds of bias.
The internal conductor 700 and the external conductor 702 serve as a signal transmission path; RF signals and DC signals are applied to the internal conductor 700, and the external conductor 702 provides ground potential. The internal conductor 700 and external conductor 702 may be cylindrical in shape.
Although not shown in
An insertion conductor 712 is inserted into the insertion groove 710 of the internal conductor. The insertion conductor 712 is electrically connected to an RF signal output end (not shown).
As illustrated in
An electromagnetic coupling occurs between the internal conductor 700 and the insertion conductor 712, and the RF signals applied at the internal conductor 700 are coupled from the internal conductor 700 to the insertion conductor 712 and outputted. In other words, RF signals applied at the internal conductor 700 is coupled to the insertion conductor 712, but DC signals are not coupled but are blocked.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the insertion conductor 712 where coupling occurs is of a slow-wave structure. A slow-wave structure is one in which a periodical pattern is repeated, and is for controlling the speed of signals in a transmission cable; such a slow-wave structure is applied to the insertion conductor 712 of the present invention.
As illustrated in
In this manner, having an insertion conductor 712 of a slow-wave structure is for implementing the length of the insertion conductor in a smaller size. As described above, the length of the portion where coupling between the internal conductor 700 and the insertion conductor 712 occurs should be set as λ/2, that is, half of the central frequency wavelength λ. For example, if RF signals of 850 MHz-900 MHz band are used, the length of the portion where coupling occurs should be set at approximately 42 mm, but if a slow-wave structure according to an embodiment of the present invention is used, the insertion conductor can be implemented at an even shorter length.
In a slow-wave structure such as in
In other words, when a slow-wave structure according to an embodiment of the present invention is applied to the insertion conductor 712, even if the length of the insertion conductor is shortened within the same band, appropriate DC blocking and RF signal coupling may be achieved.
In
While the spirit of the invention has been described in detail with reference to particular preferred embodiments, it is to be appreciated that those skilled in the art can change or modify the embodiments without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth in the claims below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10-2008-0108131 | Oct 2008 | KR | national |
10-2009-0084972 | Sep 2009 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/KR2009/006303 | 10/29/2009 | WO | 00 | 4/28/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2010/050760 | 5/6/2010 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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10-2002-0000093 | Jan 2002 | KR |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110205001 A1 | Aug 2011 | US |