The present invention relates to a nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus whose propagation constant in a forward direction and propagation constant in a backward direction are different from each other, and further relates to an antenna apparatus including the same nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus.
A composite right/left-handed transmission line (hereinafter, referred to as a CRLH (Composite Right/left-Handed) transmission line) has been known as one of metamaterials. The CRLH transmission line is configured by substantially periodically inserting capacitive elements in series branch of the transmission line and substantially periodically inserting inductive elements in shunt branch, at intervals sufficiently smaller than the wavelength so as to have a negative effective permeability and a negative effective dielectric constant in a predetermined frequency band. In recent years, a nonreciprocal phase shift CRLH transmission line obtained by adding a nonreciprocal transmission function to the CRLH transmission line has been proposed (See, for example, Patent Documents 1 to 3). The nonreciprocal phase shift CRLH transmission line is able to exhibit a positive refractive index when electromagnetic waves having an identical frequency propagate in the forward direction and to exhibit a negative refractive index when the electromagnetic waves propagate in the backward direction.
When the transmission line resonator is configured by using the nonreciprocal phase shift CRLH transmission line, the resonator size can be freely changed without changing the resonance frequency. Further, the electromagnetic field distribution on the resonator is similar to the electromagnetic field distribution of a traveling wave resonator. Therefore, by using a transmission line resonator having the nonreciprocal phase shift CRLH transmission line, a pseudo traveling wave resonator can be configured such that an amplitude of the electromagnetic field of the pseudo traveling wave resonator is uniform and a phase of the electromagnetic field of the pseudo traveling wave resonator linearly changes with a constant gradient along the transmission line. In this case, the phase gradient of the electromagnetic field distribution on the resonator is determined by the nonreciprocal phase shift characteristic of the transmission line configuring the resonator. Hereinafter, the transmission line apparatus using the nonreciprocal phase shift CRLH transmission line is referred to as a nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus.
The metamaterials have been a very interesting important theme in the field of applications to antennas for more than a decade. The nonreciprocal CRLH metamaterial has been proposed for the purpose of applications to directional leaky wave antenna using the CRLH transmission line until now. Moreover, recently, an antenna based on the pseudo traveling wave resonator highly developed from the zeroth-order resonator (See, for example, Non-Patent Document 1) has been proposed, so that the gain and the directivity are increased in spite of compactness as compared with the conventional leaky wave antenna.
Many ones of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses that have been proposed until now adopt such a structure that a ferrite rod perpendicularly magnetized is embedded under the strip line at the center of the composite right/left-handed transmission line apparatus configured of the conventional microstrip line. In this case, the direction of the radiation beam from the antenna apparatus having the pseudo traveling wave resonator configured of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus is determined by the phase gradient of the electromagnetic field distribution on the resonator. Moreover, if the ferrite is a soft magnetic material, the nonreciprocal phase shift characteristic of the transmission line is changed by changing the magnitude or the direction of an externally applied magnetic field, and beam scanning can consequently be performed.
For example, Non-Patent Document 1 proposes application of the pseudo traveling wave resonator having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus to a beam-scanning antenna. The beam scanning antenna having the pseudo traveling wave resonator has such a drawback that the operation band is narrow, however, the beam scanning antenna has higher radiation efficiency than that of the conventional leaky wave antenna. Further, the problem of the occurrence of beam squint, which is such a phenomenon that the radiation beam direction changes in accordance with the frequency change of the propagation signal, is largely reduced.
The beam squint is a phenomenon well known in the conventional phased array antenna, or such a phenomenon that the beam radiation angle fluctuates depending on the frequency. The operation bandwidth is disadvantageously suppressed by this (See, for example, Non-Patent Document 6). In the ordinary array antenna, the main cause of the beam squint is in the dispersibility of the delay element. As one method for solving this, there can be enumerated a tunable time delay element used as an active CRLH delay element disclosed in Non-Patent Document 8. In the case of the CRLH metamaterial, this kind of compensation circuit is meaningless, and it has been possible to reduce the beam squint only in the upper bands of the series resonance frequency of the series branch and the parallel resonance frequency of the shunt branch (See, for example, Non-Patent Document 7).
In a reciprocal zeroth-order resonant leaky wave antenna, any problem of the beam squint does not occur. Because the dispersion characteristic of the traveling wave propagating in one direction is completely cancelled by the dispersion characteristic of the reflected wave propagating in the opposite direction. However, the resonance type leaky wave antenna consisting of the nonreciprocal CRLH transmission line has become able to control the radiation angle, and this leads to that the phase constant differs between the traveling wave and the reflected wave propagating in the resonator. Consequently, the frequency dispersion characteristic of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount obtained from the average value of the phase constant in the case of forward travel and the phase constant in the case of backward travel causes beam squint. There has been proposed no method for substantially preventing the occurrence of the beam squint until now, and no effective means is found.
An object of the present invention is to solve the aforementioned problems, and provide a nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus that substantially prevents the beam squint from occurring in the vicinity of the center frequency of the operation band and an antenna apparatus having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus.
According to the first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus configured by connecting in cascade at least one unit cell. Each of the unit cell(s) includes: (a) a microwave transmission line section; (b) a series branch circuit equivalently including a capacitance element; and (c) first and second parallel branch circuits provided branched from the transmission line section, each of the first and second parallel branch circuit equivalently including an inductive element between first and second ports. A propagation constant in a forward direction and a propagation constant in a backward direction of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus are different from each other. The transmission line section of each unit cell has spontaneous magnetization so as to have gyro anisotropy by being magnetized in a direction different from a propagation direction of microwaves or by being externally magnetized by an external magnetic field. The first parallel branch circuit is a first stub conductor having a first electrical length, and the second parallel branch circuit is a second stub conductor having a second electrical length shorter than the first electrical length. When a phase constant in a first mode of propagation in the forward direction is βp, and a phase constant in a second mode of propagation in the backward direction is βm, the first and second electrical lengths are set so that a function of nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR=(βp−βm)/2 with respect to the operating angular frequency comes close to a function of nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNRZ with respect to an operating angular frequency, when beam squint of such a phenomenon that a radiation direction of electromagnetic waves radiated from the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus changes in accordance with frequency does not occur in the vicinity of an intersection of a dispersion curve representing a relation between the phase constant βp and the operating angular frequency and a dispersion curve representing a relation between the phase constant βm, and the operating angular frequency.
In the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus of the first aspect of the present invention, the function is a function proportional to the operating angular frequency.
In addition, in the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus of the first aspect of the present invention, the first stub conductor has a first admittance, the second stub conductor has a second admittance, and the first and second electrical lengths are set such that: (a) the first admittance substantially coincides with the second admittance at a predetermined operating angular frequency lower than the operating angular frequency at the intersection, and (b) respective imaginary parts of the first and second admittances are negative at the predetermined operating angular frequency.
Further, in the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus of the first aspect of the present invention, the first stub conductor is a short-circuit stub, and the first electrical length is set to be longer than one-half of a guide wavelength. The second stub conductor is a short-circuit stub, and the second electrical length is set to be shorter than one-fourth of the guide wavelength.
Furthermore, in the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus of the first aspect of the present invention, the first stub conductor is an open stub, and the first electrical length is set to be longer than one-fourth of a guide wavelength. The second stub conductor is a short-circuit stub, and the second electrical length is set to be shorter than one-fourth of the guide wavelength.
Furthermore, the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus of the first aspect of the present invention further includes a grounding conductor provided between the first stub conductors, and the grounding conductor provides a shield between the first stub conductors.
According to the second aspect of the present invention, there is provided an antenna apparatus including the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus of the first aspect of the present invention.
According to the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus and the antenna apparatus of the present invention, the function of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR=(βp−βm)/2 with respect to the operating angular frequency is configured so as to come close to the function of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR with respect to the operating angular frequency when the beam squint of such a phenomenon that the radiation direction of electromagnetic waves radiated from the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus changes in accordance with the frequency does not occur. Therefore, any beam squint does not substantially occur in the vicinity of the center frequency of the operation band.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described below with reference to the drawings. In the following embodiments, like components are denoted by the same reference signs.
First of all, a fundamental configuration and an operation principle of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70A to 70F according to the present invention are described below with reference to
A nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus according to an embodiment of the present invention is configured by connecting in cascade a plurality of unit cells of a transmission line.
The transmission line having the nonreciprocal phase shift characteristics is configured by including such a transmission line among the aforementioned transmission lines that is configured to particularly include gyrotropic materials in part or as a whole, and to be magnetized in a magnetization direction different from a propagation direction of the electromagnetic wave (more preferably, in a direction orthogonal to the propagation direction) to be asymmetric with respect to a plane composed of the propagation direction and the magnetization direction. In addition to such a transmission line, a lumped-parameter element, having an equivalent nonreciprocal phase shift feature and being sufficiently small as compared to a wavelength, is also available as a transmission line having the nonreciprocal phase shift characteristics. The gyrotropic materials include all such materials that a dielectric constant tensor, a permeability tensor, or both of them exhibits gyrotropy, due to spontaneous magnetization, magnetization produced by an externally supplied DC or low-frequency magnetic field, or an orbiting free charge. Exemplary and specific gyrotropic materials include: ferrimagnetic materials such as ferrite, ferromagnetic materials, solid-state plasma (semiconductor materials etc.), liquid and gaseous plasma media, and magnetic artificial media made by micromachining or the like, for use in microwave, millimeter wave, and so on.
The capacitive element inserted in the series branch circuit may include a capacitor commonly used in electric circuits, a distributed-parameter capacitance element for microwave, millimeter wave, etc., and may include equivalent circuits or circuit elements having a negative effective permeability for the electromagnetic wave mode of propagation through the transmission line. In order to obtain the negative effective permeability, the series branch circuit should be equivalent to a transmission line dominantly operating as a capacitive element. Concrete examples of elements having the negative effective permeability include: a split ring resonator made of metal; a spatial arrangement including at least one magnetic resonator of a spiral structure; a spatial arrangement of a magnetically resonating dielectric resonator; or a microwave circuit operable in the waveguide mode or the evanescent mode having the negative effective permeability, such as an edge mode propagation along a ferrite substrate microstrip line. In addition, the capacitive element inserted in the series branch circuit may be a series or parallel connection of capacitive elements and inductive elements, or a combination of their series and parallel connections. The element or circuit to which to be inserted may be capacitive as a whole.
The inductive element inserted in the shunt branch circuit may include a lumped-parameter element such as a coil used in electrical circuits, and a distributed-parameter inductive element such as a short-circuit stub conductor for microwave, millimeter wave, etc., and may include a circuit or an element having a negative effective dielectric constant for the electromagnetic wave mode of propagation through the transmission line. In order to obtain the negative effective dielectric constant, the shunt branch circuit should be equivalent to a transmission line dominantly operating as an inductive element. Concrete examples of elements having the negative effective dielectric constant include: a spatial arrangement including at least one electric resonator of a metal thin wire, a metal sphere, etc.; a spatial arrangement of an electrically resonating dielectric resonator other than metal; or a microwave circuit operable in a waveguide mode or an evanescent mode having the negative effective dielectric constant, such as waveguides and parallel planar lines, in which the TE mode is in a blocking region. In addition, the inductive element inserted in the shunt branch circuit may be a series or parallel connection of capacitive elements and inductive elements, or a combination of their series and parallel connections. The element or circuit to which to be inserted may be inductive as a whole.
The evanescent mode may occur in the transmission line apparatus having the nonreciprocal phase shift characteristics, when the transmission line apparatus has the negative effective permeability for the electromagnetic wave mode of propagation through the transmission line apparatus. Since the negative effective permeability corresponds to a case where a capacitive element is inserted in the series branch circuit, the equivalent circuit of the transmission line apparatus includes both the nonreciprocal phase shift part and the series capacitive element part.
The evanescent mode may occur in the transmission line apparatus having the nonreciprocal phase shift characteristics, when the transmission line apparatus has the negative effective dielectric constant for the electromagnetic wave mode of propagation through the transmission line apparatus. Since the negative effective dielectric constant corresponds to a case where an inductive element is inserted in the shunt branch circuit, the equivalent circuit of the transmission line apparatus includes both the nonreciprocal phase shift part and the shunt inductive element part.
Δβ and
where ω denotes an operating angular frequency, and β denotes a phase constant of an electromagnetic wave propagating along a periodic structure. The Equation (1) denotes a relation between the operating angular frequency ω and the phase constant β, and therefore, it is an equation of dispersion (ω-β diagram).
Assuming the reciprocal characteristic (βNp=βNm, and Zp=Zm) in the Equation (1), the transmission line becomes the same as the conventional reciprocal transmission line apparatus, and the Equation (1) is simplified as follows:
It is assumed that in the Equation (2), the admittance Y=1/jωL, and the impedance Z=1/jωC.
where εp and μp denote an effective dielectric constant and an effective permeability of the transmission line parts 61 and 62 in the unit cells 60A to 60D. Therefore, in order for the cutoff frequencies to satisfy ω1=ω2 with no forbidden band, it is only necessary for the Equation (2) to have a multiple root under the condition of the phase constant β=0, and as a result, the following equation is obtained:
According to the results of the Equation (5), no gap appears if an impedance √{square root over (L/C)} of the capacitor C and the inductor L is identical to the characteristic impedances Zp of the transmission line parts 61 and 62, where the capacitor C is a capacitive element inserted in the series branch circuit, and the inductor L is an inductive element inserted in the shunt branch circuit. The Equation (5) is a kind of condition for impedance matching.
The dispersion curves of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus given by the Equation (1) is described below. In the case of the reciprocal transmission line, it is shown according to the Equation (2) that the dispersion curves are symmetric with respect to the axis of the phase constant β=0 (i.e., ω axis). On the other hand, in the case of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus, it is readily shown according to the left side of the Equation (1) that the axis of symmetry of the dispersion curves is shifted with respect to β in the positive direction from the axis of β=0 by the following equation:
βNR is referred to as a nonreciprocal shift amount hereinafter. As a result,
As described above, the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus is significantly different from the reciprocal transmission line apparatus such that the axis of symmetry of the dispersion curves is shifted from the ω axis in the right or left direction, because the phase constant β=βp in the forward direction and the phase constant β=βm satisfy βm≠βp (therefore, the forward and backward propagation constants are different from each other), i.e., because of the effect of a nonreciprocal phase shift. It is to be noted that the nonreciprocal shift amount βNR can be represented by the following equation, using the phase constant βp in the forward direction and the phase constant βm in the backward direction instead of the Equation (6):
As a result, the transmission bands are classified into the following five transmission bands (A) to (E).
(A) Both the forward and backward propagations are done as a left-handed transmission. The magnitudes of the propagation constants are different from each other.
(B) The forward propagation is done as a left-handed transmission, and the backward propagation has zero propagation constant and infinite guide wavelength.
(C) The forward propagation is done as a left-handed transmission, and the backward propagation is done as the right-handed transmission.
(D) The forward propagation is done as a right-handed transmission, and the backward propagation has zero propagation constant and infinite guide wavelength.
(E) Both the forward and backward propagations are done as a right-handed transmission. The magnitudes of the propagation constants are different from each other.
In general, a stop band (forbidden band) appears at the center of the transmission band (C) as shown from
Considering the conventional reciprocal transmission line for the purpose of comparison, the two identical modes with positive and negative directions of the power transmission intersect each other without coupling between these two modes, when the matching condition of the Equation (5) is satisfied, i.e., when the phase constant β=0 as shown in
where εp and μp denote a forward effective dielectric constant and a forward effective permeability of the nonreciprocal transmission line parts 61 and 62 in the unit cells 60A to 60D, and εm and μm denote their backward effective dielectric constants and backward effective permeabilities. According to the Equation (7), the condition for avoiding a gap near the intersection of the two modes is a condition for impedance matching, in a manner similar to that of the case of the Equation (5) of the reciprocal transmission line apparatus. In addition, it is only necessary to insert an inductor L and a capacitor C so that matching is made in either the forward direction or the backward direction, and there is an advantageous feature that a weaker condition of impedance matching is imposed than in the case of the reciprocal transmission line apparatus.
A more general case of two asymmetric transmission line parts 61 and 62 as shown in
Moreover, when the two nonreciprocal transmission line parts 61 and 62 have an identical propagation characteristic, a matching condition for avoiding a band-gap is the same as that of the Equation (7). It is noted that the condition of
and the condition of
Referring to
Hereinafter, the dispersion curves of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70A to 70F according to the present embodiment and the following embodiments are dispersion curves in the balanced state as shown in
When the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70A to 70F are formed on a dielectric substrate, the derivative of an angle θ (hereinafter, referred to as a radiation angle θ) between the beam direction of the pseudo traveling wave resonator antenna apparatus having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70A to 70F and the direction perpendicular to the dielectric substrate with respect to of the operating angular frequency ω is expressed by the following equation in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC (See Non-Patent Document 1):
where β0 denotes a phase constant of electromagnetic waves in vacuum. Therefore, in order to prevent the beam squint of such a phenomenon that the radiation angle θ of the electromagnetic waves radiated from the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70A to 70B changes in accordance with the operating frequency from occurring in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC in the pseudo traveling wave resonator antenna apparatus having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70A to 70F, the following equation is only required to hold:
That is, the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR is required to be proportional to the operating angular frequency ω in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC. The nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70A to 70F of the present embodiment and the following embodiments are configured so as to satisfy the Equation (9), and this leads to that the occurrence of the beam squint can be prevented.
The ferrite square bar 15A is magnetized in a magnetization direction different from the propagation direction of electromagnetic waves, and has spontaneous magnetization so as to have gyro anisotropy. In
Referring to
The stub conductor 13A has an electrical length La, and extends on the −X side of the strip conductor 12. On the other hand, the stub conductor 13B has an electrical length Lb shorter than the electrical length La, and extends on the +X side of the strip conductor 12. The stub conductors 13A and 13B each diverge from the strip conductor 12, and are provided as two parallel branch circuits corresponding to the inductor L (parallel branch circuit) of
As described above, the stub conductors 13A and 13B are formed on mutually different sides with respect to a plane (YZ plane) formed of the propagation direction (e.g., +Y direction or −Y direction which is indicated by an arrow on the microstrip line 12E of
The nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E of
In concrete, when the impedances (i.e., electrical lengths) of the stub conductors 13A and 13B are made to be different from each other, the structure of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E becomes asymmetrical with respect to the plane (YZ plane) formed of the propagation direction and the magnetization direction of the microstrip line 12E. Consequently, the propagation constant in the forward direction (direction from port P1 to P2) and the propagation constant in the backward direction (direction from port P2 to P1) are different from each other, so that a state of propagation in the right-handed mode in the forward direction and propagation in the left-handed mode in the backward direction can be achieved. According to this configuration, the magnitude of nonreciprocity can be changed by adjusting the electrical lengths La and Lb of the stub conductors 13A and 13B, respectively. As described in detail later, the electrical lengths La and Lb of the stub conductors 13A and 13B are set so that any beam squint does not substantially occur in the antenna apparatus using the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E.
The propagation characteristic in the TE mode of propagation along the microstrip line 12E, in which the ferrite square bar 15A is embedded, changes depending on the boundary conditions on the side surfaces on both sides of the microstrip line 12E. The inventor and others of the present application analyzed the general nonreciprocal dispersion characteristic of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E. In the nonreciprocal CRLH leaky wave antenna of resonance type, the radiation angle θ can be evaluated from the expression of sinθ=βNR/β0 (See, for example, Non-Patent Document 1). In this case, β0 denotes a phase constant in vacuum. Moreover, the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR is the average value of the phase constants βp and βm with respect to the two propagation directions, through which the electromagnetic power may flow in a manner similar to that of the Equation (6), and represents the magnitude of nonreciprocity of the phase constant β. In this case, the variation Δθ of the radiation angle θ due to a change in the operating angular frequency ω by Δω from the center angular frequency ωC is approximately given by the following equation in Non-Patent Document 1:
Therefore, in order to prevent the beam squint from occurring in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC in the nonreciprocal CRLH leaky wave antenna of resonance type having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E, it is required that the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR is strictly proportional to the operating angular frequency co in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC.
Next, an approximate expression of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR in the configuration of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E of
In the present embodiment, the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E is analyzed by combining the electromagnetic analysis with transmission line models. Referring to
If the magnetic wall type boundary conditions are applied to the reciprocal line section RS, this leads to the edge guide mode simple dispersion relation described in Non-Patent Document 2.
On the other hand, by the eigenmode analysis proposed in Non-Patent Document 3, the dispersion relation to the nonreciprocal line section NRS is given in a manner similar to that of the following equation:
It is noted that ω denotes an operating angular frequency, w is a width of the ferrite square bar 15A, c denotes a velocity of light in vacuum, and εr denotes a relative dielectric constant of the ferrite square bar 15A. The physical amount μ and μa denote a diagonal component and a non-diagonal component of the Polder relative permeability tensor:
of the ferrite square bar 15A magnetized in the Z-axis positive direction.
Moreover,
{tilde over (Y)}1=Y1√{square root over (μ0/ε0)}, {tilde over (Y)}2=Y2√{square root over (μ0/ε0)},
where μ0 is a permeability in vacuum, and ε0 is a dielectric constant in vacuum. Further, in the Equation (11), kx that means a wave number in the transverse direction is given by the following equation:
kx2=γ2+(μ2−μa2)εrω2/(μc2).
Moreover, a complex propagation constant γ can be written as γ=α+jβ by using a decay constant α and a phase constant β.
Regarding the macroscopic characteristics of the reciprocal line section RS and the nonreciprocal line section NRS, the characteristic impedance is estimated from the electromagnetic field distribution as a ratio of integral value of a pointing vector in a cross section to a surface current along the microstrip line 12E. A relation between an electric field component EZ of electromagnetic waves and magnetic field components HX and HY can be obtained from the Maxwell equation. If there is no transmission loss, the characteristic impedance is reciprocal.
Next, an analysis of the eigenmode of propagation along the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E is performed. The features of the structure of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E can be obtained by an ABCD matrix FUC with respect to the unit cell 60E. It is noted that the ABCD matrix FUC with respect to the unit cell 60E is expressed as FUC=F2CFRSFNRSFRSF2C as a product of a matrix FRS to the reciprocal line section RS, a matrix FNRS to the nonreciprocal line section NRS, and a matrix F2C to the capacitor of the capacitance 2Cse. In this case, if periodic boundary conditions are applied to the traveling direction for the matrix FUC, the dispersion relation is obtained by the following equation:
det[FUC−Îexp(γMMp)]=0,
where γMM represents a complex propagation constant of the mode of propagation along the periodic structure.
This equation can be formulated by using a magnitude of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR in the nonreciprocal line section NRS. In concrete, the nonreciprocal phase shift amount in the nonreciprocal line section NRS can be approximately expressed by a perturbation method on the assumption that μa has a small value. By applying the perturbation method to the dispersion relation of the nonreciprocal CRLH metamaterial, the magnitude of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR is given by the following equation:
It is noted that ωM is (|g|μ0MS), and g denotes a gyromagnetic ratio. As apparent from the Equation (12), the nonreciprocity of the structure of the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E is caused by (a) the asymmetry of the structure expressed by the following:
({tilde over (Y)}2−{tilde over (Y)}1)
and (b) ωM=|g|μ0MS that means the magnitude of the magnetization of the ferrite square bar 15A. On the other hand, in the Equation (12), the term of:
({tilde over (Y)}2+{tilde over (Y)}1)
represents the sum total of the admittances Y1 and Y2 of the two stub conductors 13A and 13B (See Non-Patent Document 4). The imaginary part of the total admittance of the inductive stub having a negative dielectric constant assumes a negative value. In the lossless case, the nonreciprocity appears only in the phase constant, the nonreciprocity appears only in the phase constant as pointed by, for example, Non-Patent Document 3.
Moreover, as shown in
On the other hand, as shown in
In the leaky wave antenna of resonance type using the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E, the present embodiment utilizes the fact that the admittances Y1 and Y2 change in accordance with the frequency in order to prevent the occurrence of the beam squint that the beam angle θ changes in accordance with the operating frequency. In general, the admittances Y1(ω) and Y2(ω) can be expressed by using the relational expression of the input impedance in the finite length microstrip line, in which the load impedance is connected to a transmission line terminal. In general, the input admittance contains a cotangent function or a tangent function when the transmission line terminal end is short-circuited or opened, and therefore, the input admittance has a singular point or a significant point at a predetermined frequency, and exhibits discontinuity.
Referring to the Equation (12), the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR becomes zero when
{tilde over (Y)}2−{tilde over (Y)}1=0
i.e., when Y1=Y2, and a comparatively large nonreciprocal phase shift characteristic can also be obtained at a further operating angular frequency ω. From the characteristics of the trigonometric function owned by the admittances Y1 and Y2 of the inserted stub conductors 13A and 13B, such conditions of the admittances Y1 and Y2 can be found that the aforementioned beam squint becomes zero between two singular points (frequencies) at which
{tilde over (Y)}1(ω) or {tilde over (Y)}2
becomes discontinuous, i.e., the conditions of the electrical lengths La and Lb.
The phase constants βp and −βm and the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR at the time of manufacturing the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E of
As described above, it has been described that the occurrence of the beam squint can be substantially prevented in the antenna apparatus using the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E by analyzing the magnitudes of the phase constants βp and −βm in the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E. Moreover, when the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E was manufactured for trial purposes and the transmission characteristics were measured, it was confirmed that the experimental values coincided well with the simulation calculated values. Therefore, if the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E is applied to the leaky wave antenna of resonance type, a beam scanning antenna apparatus can be achieved, in which the beam squint does not substantially occur.
As described in the embodiments, the admittances Y1 and Y2 of the stub conductors 13A and 13B give frequency dependence to the boundary conditions on the side surface on the −X side and the side surface on the +X side of the microstrip line 12E. In this case, it is possible to make βNR=0 at a predetermined operating angular frequency ωZ lower than the center angular frequency ωC by using the stub conductors 13A and 13B having admittances Y1 and Y2, respectively, which are different from each other, and are inserted on both sides of the microstrip line 12E. On the other hand, it is possible to secure large nonreciprocity at a frequency higher than the center angular frequency ωC and to further make the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR(ω) an increasing function (See
In
Y1=−zst−1 cot(La√{square root over (εst)}ω/c).
By combining the grounded stub conductor 13A with the grounded stub conductor 13B, the condition of βNR=0 can be approximately satisfied at the operating angular frequency ωZ lower than the center angular frequency ωC. In this case, the fact that the aforementioned condition is satisfied at the angular frequency that is not so much separated from the angular frequency ω=πc/La√{square root over (εst)} can be analogized by the function form of the admittance Y1 of the stub conductor 13A.
In this case, the fact that the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR(ω) is the increasing function of the operating angular frequency ω does not mean that the beam squint can be easily made to disappear but sometimes deteriorates the maximum radiation beam angle as described in the embodiment. In the present modified embodiment, the admittance Y1 of the longer stub conductor 13A is adjusted by providing an additional capacitor Csh. With this arrangement, the controllability of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR(ω) can be improved as compared with the embodiment. With this arrangement, the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70F can be designed so that βNR(ω)∝ω substantially results in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC when the value of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR(ω) is larger. Therefore, the occurrence of the beam squint can easily be suppressed as compared with the embodiment.
It is acceptable to use a ferrite square bar having no spontaneous magnetization in place of the ferrite square bar 15A having spontaneous magnetization and apply a magnetic field by the external magnetic field generator 80 of
As described above, the electrical lengths La and Lb of the stub conductors 13A and 13B are set to 25.5 mm and 1.3 mm, respectively, and the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70F has a structure of a strong asymmetry with respect to the microstrip line 12E. As shown in
As described in detail above, the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70E and 70F are configured by connecting in cascade the unit cells 60E or 60F between the ports P1 and P2, where the propagation constant in the forward direction and the propagation constant in the backward direction are different from each other. In this case, each of the unit cells 60E and 60F has a microwave transmission line section, a capacitor Cse that is the series branch circuit equivalently containing a capacitance element, and first and second parallel branch circuits that are each provided branched from the microwave transmission line section and equivalently containing an inductive element. Moreover, the transmission line section has spontaneous magnetization so as to have gyro anisotropy by being magnetized in a direction different from the propagation direction of microwaves or is magnetized by external magnetization. Further, the first parallel branch circuit is the stub conductor 13A having an electrical length La, and the second parallel branch circuit is the stub conductor 13B having an electrical length Lb shorter than the electrical length La.
Further, when the phase constant in the first mode of propagation in the forward direction is assumed to be βp, and the phase constant in the second mode of propagation in the backward direction is assumed to be βm, the electrical lengths La and Lb are characterized by being set so that the function of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR=(βp−βm)/2 with respect to the operating angular frequency comes close to the function βNRZ of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR with respect to the operating angular frequency, when the beam squint of such a phenomenon that the radiation direction of electromagnetic waves radiated from the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus changes in accordance with the frequency does not occur in the vicinity of the intersection of the first dispersion curve that exhibits the relation between the phase constant βp and the operating angular frequency and the second dispersion curve that exhibits the relation between the phase constant βm and the operating angular frequency.
More concretely, in the antenna apparatus having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E or 70F, the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR is required to be proportional to the operating angular frequency ω in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC in order to substantially prevent occurrence of the beam squint in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC that is the operating angular frequency at the intersection of the aforementioned two dispersion curves. That is, the following equation is required to substantially hold in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC:
Moreover, in order to make this equation hold, the electrical length La of the stub conductor 13A and the electrical length Lb of the stub conductor 13B are set so that the admittance Y1 of the stub conductor 13A and the admittance Y2 of the stub conductor 13B satisfy the following first and second conditions.
The first condition: The nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR assumes the value of zero at the predetermined operating angular frequency ωZ, that is in the vicinity of the center angular frequency ωC of the antenna apparatus having the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70F and is lower than the center angular frequency ωC. That is, the admittances Y1 and Y2 of the stub conductors 13A and 13B inserted on both sides of the microstrip line 12E satisfy Y1=Y2 at the operating angular frequency ωZ (See Equation (12)).
The second condition: Both of the admittances Y1 and Y2 must be inductive (inductance) at the aforementioned operating angular frequency ωZ. That is, since the stub conductors 13A and 13B must be inductive stubs having a negative dielectric constant at the operating angular frequency ωZ, Im(Y1)=Im(Y2)<0.
In the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70E and 70F, although one end of the stub conductor 13A is grounded, it may be opened. The inventor and others of the present application discovered that the electrical lengths La and Lb (La>Lb) should be set to satisfy the following additional third and fourth conditions depending on whether one end of the stub conductor 13A is grounded (short-circuit stub) or opened (open stub). It is noted that λ is a guide wavelength in each of the following conditions.
The first case (in the case where the stub conductor 13A is a short-circuit stub):
The third condition: The stub conductor 13A is a short-circuit stub satisfying La>λ/2.
The fourth condition: The stub conductor 13B is a short-circuit stub that satisfying Lb<λ/4.
The second case (in the case where the stub conductor 13A is an open stub):
The third condition: The stub conductor 13A is an open stub satisfying La>λ/4.
The fourth condition: The stub conductor 13B is a short-circuit stub satisfying Lb<λ/4.
As described above, the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR can be increased by additionally connecting a lumped element capacitance such as a chip capacitor to the predetermined connection point of the stub conductor 13A in the first and second cases. Therefore, the occurrence of the beam squint can be substantially suppressed even if the radiation beam angle θ becomes relatively large.
Next, the admittances Y1 and Y2 in the aforementioned second case are considered.
Referring to
As indicated by the aforementioned Equation (12), the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR has a factor proportional to (Y2−Y1), and this means that the frequency dependence of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR is influenced by the frequency dependence of (Y2−Y1). Referring to
Referring to
In order to confirm the operation of the pseudo traveling wave resonator antenna using the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70E in the aforementioned second case, a simulation was performed by using the ANSYS HFSS ver 13 of high-frequency three-dimensional electromagnetic analysis software.
Further, referring to
It is noted that, in the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus 70A of the embodiment, the electrical lengths La and Lb of each of the stub conductors 13A and 13B may be set as described in the embodiments and the modified embodiments.
According to the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus and the antenna apparatus of the present invention, the function of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR=(βp−βm)/2 with respect to the operating angular frequency is configured so as to come close to the function of the nonreciprocal phase shift amount βNR with respect to the operating angular frequency when the beam squint of such a phenomenon that the radiation direction of electromagnetic waves radiated from the nonreciprocal transmission line apparatus changes in accordance with the frequency does not occur. Therefore, the beam squint does not substantially occur in the vicinity of the center frequency of the operation band.
The nonreciprocal transmission line apparatuses 70A to 70F of the present invention are useful as devices and antenna apparatuses for signal transmission.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2013-042156 | Mar 2013 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2014/054552 | 2/25/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/136621 | 9/12/2014 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20100060388 | Ueda | Mar 2010 | A1 |
20130321093 | Ueda et al. | Dec 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2008111460 | Sep 2008 | WO |
2011024575 | Mar 2011 | WO |
2012115245 | Aug 2012 | WO |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20160006092 A1 | Jan 2016 | US |