The present invention relates generally to transducers, and more particularly to orthomode transducers and their method of manufacture.
As known in the art of front-end electronics, the orthomode transducer (OMT) is a three-port device which can be used to separate and/or combine orthogonally polarized signals. In a conventional use, the OMT is used to receive signals of a first polarization, and transmit signals of an orthogonal polarization using the same antenna.
The receive section 130 is configured to receive a horizontally-polarized signal 135 (typically in the range from 10.95-12.75 GHz for Ku band operation) and includes a receive port 132 containing a substantially rectangular aperture 134. The antenna section 150 includes an antenna port 152 containing a circular aperture 154 which is sized to support the transmission of the outgoing vertically-polarized signal 125, or the reception of the incoming horizontally-polarized signal 135, thereby operating over the combined transmit/receive band of 10.95-14.5 GHz. The wideband OMT permits the use of a single antenna for transmission and reception, which greatly reduces the system's cost.
Unfortunately, wideband OMTs, such as the exemplary 10.95-14.5 GHz OMT, face a common obstacle in that the dimensions of the antenna section 150 usually permit the propagation of higher, deleterious waveguide modes. In particular, if the cutoff frequency for the antenna section 150 is designed at 10 GHz, a higher order TM01 waveguide mode will exist at approximately 13.05 GHz, occurring in the upper band of the OMT's operation. The existence of this mode means that signals within the antenna section 150 above 13.05 GHz may propagate in either the dominant mode TE11, in the higher mode TM01, or possibly both. Signal propagation in the dominant TE11 mode is desired as it produces the intended vertically-polarized signal. Signal propagation in the TM01 mode is undesirable, as it will propagate as a cross-polarized signal, e.g., a horizontally-polarized signal in the present example. As a result of this, the intended vertically-polarized signal will have reduced signal strength. Moreover, the signal may experience mode conversion in which it switches between the TE11 and TM01 signal modes, resulting in significant signal distortion.
The presence of the undesired cross-polarization signal 230 indicates the corresponding presence of TM01 mode signals propagating in the antenna section 150 which, as explained above, depletes power from the desired transmitted signal and contributes to significant signal distortion. What is therefore needed is an OMT having improved cross-polarization suppression.
The present invention provides an orthomode transducer having improved cross-polarization suppression. In a particular embodiment the OMT includes a first waveguide section, a second waveguide section coupled to the first waveguide section, and a third waveguide section coupled to the first and second waveguide sections. The first waveguide section is configured to support the propagation of a signal having a first polarization, and includes a first waveguide aperture sized to communicate the signal having the first polarization therethrough. The second waveguide is configured to support the propagation of a signal having a second polarization which is orthogonal to the first polarization, the second waveguide section having a single internal septum and a second waveguide aperture sized to communicate the signal having the second polarization therethrough. The third waveguide is configured to support the propagation of either a signal having the first polarization or the second polarization, and includes a third waveguide aperture sized to communicate the signals having either the first or second polarization therethrough.
Other embodiments of the invention, as well as particular features of the embodiments will be more readily understood in view of the following drawings and detailed description.
The OMT 300 further includes a second (receive) waveguide section 330 configured to support a signal having a second polarization which is orthogonal to the first polarization, that signal being a received horizontally-polarized Ku-band signal 335 in the exemplary embodiment. The receive waveguide section 330 includes a receive port 332 containing an aperture 334 which is sized appropriately to receive a 10.95-12.75 GHz horizontally-polarized signal 335 therethrough. In the exemplary embodiment, the aperture 334 may be a WR75 aperture. The receive waveguide section 330 further includes a single internal septum 336 (illustrated in
The OMT 300 further includes a third (antenna) waveguide section 350 which is configured to support the vertically-polarized transmitted signal 325 or the horizontally-polarized signal 335. The antenna waveguide section 350 includes an antenna port 352 containing a circular (or alternatively, square) aperture sized appropriately to support the propagation of the vertically-polarized transmit signal 325 or the horizontally-polarized receive signal 335.
Further observable is that the internal septum 316 may having a varying thickness dimension to facilitate cast fabrication of the OMT 300 as will be further discussed below.
The OMT 300 of the present invention may be manufactured from a variety of materials used in the construction of waveguide components. Such materials include aluminum, copper, brass, and Kovar, and other materials (possibly plated) which are commonly used in the microwave frequency component manufacture. Techniques for manufacturing the OMT of the present invention would include the conventional processes of precision machining the OMT (usually by a numerically controlled machine) to the desired dimensions. High frequency components often require precision machining due to the very tight tolerances needed for high frequency operation. However, precision machining is expensive and an alternative technique is to cast the structure. Casting represents a substantially lower cost method of manufacturing since once a final mold is made, each part may be fabricated quickly and inexpensively in contrast to the time, skilled labor and machinery need to machine each part.
Casting, however, requires tapering portions of the structure to allow placement and removal of molds with the structure. However, high frequency structures such as the OMT of the present invention are generally designed assuming substantially straight edges and corners. Consequently, the introduction of tapered edges and corners will alter the performance of the structure, usually resulting in degraded performance.
Once machined, the measured performance of the prototype is compared with the simulated performance (process 530). In one embodiment, the process is performed by comparing the measured and simulated cross-polarization responses of the OMT. If the measured performance is within an acceptance window relative to the desired performance, a casting mold of the OMT is made (process 540). The casting mold is substantially similar to the engineering drawings of the machined structure, the exception being that the internal walls and septum thickness are tapered to allow placement and removal of the casting mold.
Subsequently, the cast OMT is formed and its performance measured (process 550). If the measured performance is within a predefined window of the desired performance, the casting mold becomes the production mold from which additional OMTs are manufactured (process 560). In a particular embodiment of 500, process 560 comprises manufacturing the cast OMTs in aluminum.
If the measured response of the OMT is not within a predefined range of the desired response, processes 540 and 550 are repeated in which casting molds are modified and the OMT re-cast. In a particular embodiment of this process, if the measured cross-polarization response of the cast OMT is not within a predefined range of the desired cross-polarization response, processes 540 and 550 are repeated. Process 500 continues in this manner until the measured performance of the cast OMT is within the acceptable range of the desired performance. The resulting molds are then used as the production molds to fabricate the number of OMTs required.
While the above is a detailed description of the present invention, it is only exemplary and various modifications, alterations and equivalents may be employed in various apparati and processes described herein. For example, the waveguide and aperture dimensions may be changed to permit operation at different frequencies as known in the art. Accordingly, the scope of the present invention is hereby defined by the metes and bounds of the following claims:
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040160292 A1 | Aug 2004 | US |