A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright protection. This patent document may show and/or describe matter which is or may become trade dress of the owner. The copyright and trade dress owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent disclosure as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent files or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright and trade dress rights whatsoever.
1. Field
This disclosure relates to waveguide devices used to combine or separate two orthogonal modes, also known as ortho-mode transducers (OMTs).
2. Description of the Related Art
Satellite broadcasting and communications systems may use a first signal having a first polarization state for an uplink to a satellite and a second signal having a second polarization state, orthogonal to the first polarization state, for a downlink from the satellite. Note that two circularly polarized signals are orthogonal if the e-field vectors rotate in the opposite directions. The polarization directions for the uplink and downlink signals may be determined by the antenna and feed network on the satellite.
A common form of antenna for transmitting and receiving signals from satellites consists of a parabolic dish reflector and a feed network where orthogonally polarized modes travel in a common waveguide. The common waveguide may typically be cylindrical or square, but may be elliptical or rectangular.
An ortho-mode transducer (OMT) is a three-port waveguide device having a common waveguide coupled to two branching waveguides. An ortho-mode transducer may be used to launch or extract the orthogonal linearly polarized modes into or from the common waveguide of an antenna feed network.
In this patent, the term “cylindrical waveguide” means a waveguide segment shaped as a right circular cylinder, which is to say the cross-sectional shape of the waveguide segment is circular. Similarly, the terms “elliptical waveguide”, “rectangular waveguide”, and “square waveguide” mean a waveguide segment having an elliptical, rectangular, or square cross-sectional shape, respectively. In this patent, the term “generally rectangular waveguide” means a waveguide having an asymmetrical cross-section with two long sides and two short sides where at least a portion of each side is flat (not curved). A generally rectangular waveguide may have, for example, rounded internal corners, a septum extending between the two long sides or the two short sides, and/or ridges extending into the waveguide from one or more sides. In this patent, the term “ridged waveguide” means a generally rectangular waveguide with ridges, or conductive protrusions extending from two opposed sides of the waveguide. Within this patent, the term “port” refers generally to an interface between devices or between a device and free space. A port of a waveguide device may be formed by an aperture in an interfacial surface to allow microwave radiation to enter or exit a waveguide within the device.
The common waveguide of an OMT typically supports two orthogonal linearly polarized modes. Within this patent, the terms “support” and “supporting” mean that a waveguide will allow propagation of a mode with little or no loss. In a feed system for a satellite antenna, the common waveguide may be a cylindrical waveguide. The two orthogonal linearly polarized modes may be TE11 modes which have an electric field component orthogonal to the axis of the common waveguide. When the cylindrical waveguide is partially filled with a dielectric material, the two orthogonal linearly polarized modes may be hybrid HE11 modes which have at least some electric field component along the propagation axis. Two precisely orthogonal TE11 or HE11 modes do not interact or cross-couple, and can therefore be used to communicate different information.
The common waveguide terminates at a common port, which is to say that a common port aperture is defined by the intersection of the common waveguide and an exterior surface of the OMT.
Each of the two branching waveguides of an OMT typically supports only a single linearly polarized mode, which may be a TE10 mode. The mode supported by the first branching waveguide is orthogonal to the mode supported by the second branching waveguide. Within this patent, the term “orthogonal” will be used to describe the polarization direction of modes, and “normal” will be used to describe geometrically perpendicular structures.
A traditional OMT, for example as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 6,087,908, has one branch waveguide axially aligned with the common waveguide, and one branch waveguide normal to the common waveguide. The branch waveguide that is axially aligned with the common waveguide terminates at what is commonly called the vertical port. The linearly polarized mode supported by the vertical port is commonly called the vertical mode. The branch waveguide which is normal to the common waveguide is terminated at what is commonly called the horizontal port. The branch waveguide that terminates at the horizontal port also supports only a single polarized mode commonly called the horizontal mode.
The terms “horizontal” and “vertical” will be used in this patent to denote the two orthogonal modes and the waveguides and ports supporting those modes. Note, however, that these terms do not connote any particular orientation of the modes or waveguides with respect to the physical horizontal and vertical directions.
Elements in the drawings are assigned reference numbers which remain constant among the figures. An element not described in conjunction with a figure may be presumed to be the same as a previously-described element having the same reference number.
The OMT 100 may include a common waveguide 210 that terminates at a common port 200 on the front surface of the OMT 100. In this example, the common waveguide 210 is a cylindrical waveguide. The common waveguide of an OMT may be cylindrical, elliptical, square, rectangular, or some other shape.
The OMT 100 may include a generally rectangular vertical branch waveguide 310 that terminates at a vertical port 300 on a back surface of the OMT 100. The vertical branch waveguide 310 and the vertical port 300 are partially visible through the common port 200. The vertical branch waveguide 310 may be configured to support a first TE10 mode and to couple the first TE10 mode into or from a first TE11 mode in the common waveguide 210.
A septum 320 (partially visible through the common port 200) may extend between two short sides of the vertical branch waveguide 310 near the intersection of the vertical branch waveguide 310 and the common waveguide 210. The septum 320 may have a central stepped portion 325 having a smaller cross-section than the adjacent side portions of the septum 320.
The OMT 100 may include a generally rectangular horizontal branch waveguide 410 (partially visible through the common port 200) that terminates at a horizontal port 400 (not visible) on a bottom surface of the OMT 100. At least a portion of the horizontal branch waveguide 410 may be a ridged waveguide. The horizontal branch waveguide 410 may be configured to support a second TE10 mode and to couple the second TE10 mode into or from a second TE11 mode within the common waveguide 210. A polarization direction of the second TE10 mode may be orthogonal to a polarization direction of the first TE10 mode. The terms “vertical” and “horizontal” do not imply any absolute orientation of the OMT 100.
The OMT 100 may include a generally rectangular symmetry waveguide 510 that terminates at a symmetry port 500 on the top surface of the OMT 100. At least a portion of the symmetry waveguide 510 may be a ridged waveguide. The symmetry waveguide 510 may be configured to support the first TE10 mode and to couple the first TE10 mode into or from the waveguide 210. The symmetry port 500 may be opposed to the horizontal port 400. The symmetry waveguide 510 may be in line with and coaxial with the horizontal branch waveguide 410. The symmetry port 500 may be closed by a shorting plate, not shown in
The characteristics of an OMT such as the OMT 100 are determined by the geometry of the common waveguide, the vertical branch waveguide, the horizontal branch waveguide, and other structures internal to the OMT. It may be difficult to visualize the internal structure based on drawings of the exterior of an OMT. To aid in understanding the structure of the OMT 100,
In
In
The common waveguide 210 may have a circular cross-section over its entire length. The vertical branch waveguide 310 may include three segments. A first vertical branch waveguide segment 312, nearest the vertical port 300, may have a generally rectangular cross-section with rounded corners. A second vertical branch waveguide segment 314 may be split into two generally rectangular portions separated by the septum 320. The septum 320 may be centered on the shorter sides of the generally rectangular cross-section of the second vertical branch waveguide section 314.
A third vertical branch waveguide segment 316 may overlap a portion of the common waveguide 210. As will be discussed subsequently with respect to
Continuing the discussion of
Referring again to
An OMT, such as the OMT 100, may be designed such that the respective segments of the vertical branch waveguide 310, the horizontal branch waveguide 410, and the symmetry waveguide 510 having the largest cross-sectional areas are adjacent to the corresponding vertical, horizontal, or symmetry port. Additionally, an OMT may be designed such that the cross-sectional area of each succeeding waveguide segment is smaller than, and contained within, the cross-sectional area of the preceding waveguide segment. “Contained within” means that the entire perimeter of each succeeding waveguide section is visible through the aperture formed by the preceding waveguide section. With such a design, each waveguide section may be formed by machining through the aperture of the preceding waveguide section. Thus each waveguide section may be formed by a numerically controlled machining operation with an end mill or other machine tool, and the number of machining operation steps may be equal to the total number of waveguide segments.
The OMT 100 and other OMT devices designed according to the same principles may be formed in a series of machining operations without assembly or joining operations such as soldering, brazing, bonding, or welding. An OMT designed according to these principles may be formed from a single piece of material. The single piece may be initially a solid block of material. The OMT may be formed from a solid block of a conductive metal material such as aluminum or copper. The OMT may be also formed from a solid block of dielectric material, such as a plastic, which would then be coated with a conductive material, such as a film of a metal such as aluminum or copper, after the machining operations were completed. If justified by the production quantity, a blank approximating the shape of the OMT could be formed prior to the machining operations. The blank could be either metal or dielectric material and could be formed by a process such as casting or injection molding.
An OMT, such as the OMT 100, may be designed using a commercial software package such as CST Microwave Studio. An initial model of the OMT may be generated with estimated dimensions for the common waveguide, horizontal branch waveguide, and vertical branch waveguide. The structure may then be analyzed, and the reflection coefficients and cross coupling may be determined for two orthogonal linearly polarized modes introduced respectively at the two branch ports. The dimensions of the model may then be iterated manually or automatically to minimize the reflection coefficients across an operating frequency band. As previously described,
The dashed line 1010 is a graph of the return S2(1),2(1) at the horizontal port of the OMT, and the solid line 1020 is a graph of the return S3(1),3(1) at the vertical port of the OMT. The return S2(1),2(1) is less than −20 dB, equivalent to a voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) of 1.22, over the frequency range from 10.7 GHz to 12.75 GHz. The return S3(1),3(1) is less than −20 dB over the frequency range from 10.7 GHz to greater than 14.5 GHz. Thus the bandwidth of the vertical port is greater than 3.8 GHz or 30% of the center frequency of 12.6 GHz.
Closing Comments
Throughout this description, the embodiments and examples shown should be considered as exemplars, rather than limitations on the apparatus and procedures disclosed or claimed. Although many of the examples presented herein involve specific combinations of apparatus elements, it should be understood that those acts and those elements may be combined in other ways to accomplish the same objectives. Elements and features discussed only in connection with one embodiment are not intended to be excluded from a similar role in other embodiments.
For means-plus-function limitations recited in the claims, the means are not intended to be limited to the means disclosed herein for performing the recited function, but are intended to cover in scope any means, known now or later developed, for performing the recited function.
As used herein, “plurality” means two or more.
As used herein, a “set” of items may include one or more of such items.
As used herein, whether in the written description or the claims, the terms “comprising”, “including”, “carrying”, “having”, “containing”, “involving”, and the like are to be understood to be open-ended, i.e., to mean including but not limited to. Only the transitional phrases “consisting of” and “consisting essentially of”, respectively, are closed or semi-closed transitional phrases with respect to claims.
Use of ordinal terms such as “first”, “second”, “third”, etc., in the claims to modify a claim element does not by itself connote any priority, precedence, or order of one claim element over another or the temporal order in which acts of a method are performed, but are used merely as labels to distinguish one claim element having a certain name from another element having a same name (but for use of the ordinal term) to distinguish the claim elements.
As used herein, “and/or” means that the listed items are alternatives, but the alternatives also include any combination of the listed items.