This application is based upon and claims the benefit of prior German Patent Application No. 10 2014 117 077.6, filed on Nov. 21, 2014, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference
The present disclosure relates to a power divider, such as a power divider for high-frequency applications. The power divider may include one input and two outputs, and frequency-dependent division ratios.
Antennas in satellite-communication may include a maximum regulatory compliant equivalent isotropic radiated power spectral density (EIRP-SD) in a transmitting frequency band of the antenna. This may be achieved by an amplitude distribution in an aperture plane of the antenna. In array antennas, aperture illumination may be implemented by a power divider network, which may excite the single radiating elements of the antenna array. Inputs and outputs of a power divider may be designed such that an asymmetrical power distribution creates conditions for desired aperture illumination.
A homogeneous aperture illumination may be desirable for receiving characteristics of the array antenna, because homogeneous aperture illumination may maximize antenna gain. If a shared power divider network is used for the transmitting band and the receiving band, however, this may result in a reduced performance capability of the array antenna in the reception case due to an inhomogeneous power divider network used in the transmitting frequency band.
WO 99/34477 describes a power divider where impedance matching, and consequently, power division, may be optimized by way of the location and size of constrictions. U.S. Pat. No. 4,365,215 and Hee-Ran Ahn; Wolff, I., “General design equations, small-sized impedance transformers, and their application to small-sized three-port 3-dB power dividers”, Microwave Theory and Techniques, Transactions on, Vol. 49, No. 7, pages 1277 to 1288, July 2001, describe design suggestions for power dividers.
Embodiments of the present disclosure provide a power divider and an antenna which enables desired aperture illuminations by way of a frequency-dependent power division.
For high-frequency signals, the power divider may include a signal conductor having one input and two outputs. An imaginary center line of the input may separate signal conductor sections of the first and second outputs, wherein the signal conductor sections of the first and second outputs may have differing impedances. A septum may additionally be introduced. The septum may be a recess or a wall, for example. The septum may extend from the side of the signal conductor located opposite the input partially into the signal conductor and may be arranged offset in relation to the center line.
The effects of an asymmetrical design of the outputs and of the septum may thereby be combined. Depending on conduction technology used to implement the power divider, stronger effects in the low frequency range and stronger effects in the higher frequency range may be produced. By combining effects, it is possible to design a divider that, for example, may have a considerably higher illumination in the transmitting frequency band than in the receiving band.
The power divider may be connected by the input to a transceiver device and by the outputs to antenna elements, so that the antenna elements can be operated with differing illuminations in the transmitting and receiving frequency bands.
The outputs may have a shared second axis of symmetry, where the shared second axis may have differing impedances. In large antenna arrays, for example, it is therefore possible to better interconnect the individual power dividers in a network at equally long paths between power dividers.
Power dividers according to embodiments of the present disclosure are suitable for different conducting technologies. If the signal conductor is a waveguide, the losses can be minimized even if a larger installation space is required. In the case of a ridge waveguide, for example, the available bandwidth may be increased. If a neutral conductor, such as a microstrip, coaxial line or a rectax, is used as the signal conductor, then broadband, compact power dividers can be implemented. A microstrip may be cost-effective to produce. A rectax may be a very low-loss rectangular coaxial line, which may contain a dielectric.
To compensate for the effects of differing impedances of outputs, the septum may be shifted to, or located nearer to, the output having the greater impedance.
The impedance ratio of the two outputs may be in a range of 1 to 1.1 (1:1.1) to 1:1.7. For a rectax or a ridge waveguide, for example, the impedance ratio of the two outputs may be in a range of 1:1.3 to 1:1.5. This ratio may allow asymmetry to be compensated for by the septum in the reception case, but may also make variable divider ratios possible in the transmission case. In larger array antennas, for example, very large differences in the illumination of individual antenna elements may be possible via the arrangements of multiple power dividers connected downstream in a tree structure.
The septum may have a length extending into the signal conductor of no more than half a wavelength, wherein the wavelength may correspond to a maximum wavelength of a signal frequency range of the antenna.
Moreover, the septum may have a width of no more than one third the wavelength, for example of the waveguide, or 0.8 of a width of the input, for example a microstrip. The septum may operate reliably in this range.
The offset may influence setting the divider ratio. The septum may be offset by no more than one quarter wavelength from the center line.
The described embodiments may be effective when the receiving frequency band and transmitting frequency band are in bands that are separated as much as possible from each other. For a homogeneous receiving aperture and an inhomogeneous transmitting aperture in satellite communication, for example, the divider ratio may be set such that the divider ratio of the power of the outputs in the receiving frequency band may be smaller than the divider ratio of the power of the outputs in the transmitting frequency band. Divider ratios may be 1:1 in the receiving frequency band, and between 1:1.1 and 1:10 in the transmitting frequency band. For example, divider ratios may be between 1:1 to 1:4 in the transmitting frequency band.
The power divider may be suitable for receiving and transmitting frequency bands in the Ka band or Ku band, where there may be a large difference between the bands for receiving and transmitting.
The antenna according to embodiments of the present disclosure may use the aforementioned power dividers to connect a plurality of antenna elements to a transceiver device, wherein the difference in the power between the respective outputs in the transmitting frequency band may differ for two neighboring power dividers, and may provide high variability in setting a desired aperture illumination.
The properties, features and advantages of the present disclosure, and the manner in which these are achieved, will become more apparent and clearly understandable in connection with the following description of exemplary embodiments, which will be described in more detail in connection with the drawings. For the sake of clarity, identical or like acting elements may be denoted by the same reference numerals.
A power divider according to the present disclosure is shown in
An imaginary center line Sym divides the signal conductor H into two signal conductor sections A and B, wherein the signal conductor sections A and B outcouple power components into the outputs A1 or A2. This power divider furthermore includes a septum S, which projects into the signal conductor H on the side located opposite the input E. The septum S may be offset slightly with respect to the center line Sym in the direction of an output A2.
The outputs A1 and A2 may be located on a second shared center line M; however they may differ from each other as they may have differing effective widths, resulting in differing impedances of these outputs A1 and A2. Said impedances are labeled in
The following figures each separately show neutral conductor technology MS such as microstrip, coaxial line, or rectax, for example, and waveguide technology HL.
The situation is reversed in the signal conductor according to
As shown, the impedances of the signal conductor sections A and B are different in the two variants, creating an asymmetrical power divider mechanism M1. This power division is frequency-dependent, as described below and shown in
The two mechanisms M1 and M2 shown in
The mechanisms M1 and M2 are shown in
The power dividers according to
The left signal conductor section A may have a higher outcoupled power than the right signal conductor section B. This may result in a diagram according to
If effects of the two mechanisms M1 and M2 are combined in a common geometry, the two effects may superimpose each other. This is shown in
For both power dividers according to
Thus, frequency-dependent power dividers can be implemented. The power dividers may have a distinctive power division between the transmission case and the reception case in receiving frequency bands rx and transmitting frequency bands tx located in different frequency bands. The power divider may be symmetrical in the receiving frequency band rx, and may be asymmetrical in the transmitting frequency band tx.
Array antennas can be dimensioned consistent with the frequency-dependent power dividers of the present disclosure. In
A high variance may be set for the asymmetry of the power divider in the transmitting frequency band. The power ratio may vary in the range of 1:1 to a maximum of 10:1. Thus, certain dimensions of the inputs and outputs A1 and A2, and of the septum S must be accounted for. In certain embodiments, outputs A1 and A2 have differing effective widths, and are symmetrical to each other. When symmetrical, outputs A1 and A2 may be located on the shared second center line M of
In embodiments of the present disclosure, the maximum length of the septum S projecting into the signal conductor H does not exceed λ/2. The wavelength λ may refer to the maximum wavelength in the receiving frequency band rx and the transmitting frequency ban tx. In embodiments of the present disclosure, the maximum width of the septum S may be indicated with a maximum of λ/3 in waveguide technology, for example. In embodiments of the present disclosure, in microstrip technology MS, for example, the maximum width of the septum S should not exceed 0.8 of the input conduction width. In embodiments of the present disclosure, the displacement of the septum S from the center line M should not exceed λ/4.
According to the present disclosure, array antennas for satellite communications applications can be optimized, wherein the receiving and transmitting frequency bands rx and tx may be in the Ka band or Ku-band. In the transmitting frequency band tx, the transmission characteristics can be set very precisely, while the antenna gain may remain at a maximum level in the receiving frequency band rx due to a symmetrical power combination.
The power divider network can be used jointly for the receiving and transmitting frequency ranges in an array antenna. Embodiments of the present disclosure may reduce the required number of power dividers in the antenna by half. Thus, the antenna can be implemented more compactly and with a lower weight. Additionally, costs for the antenna can be reduced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2014 117 077 | Nov 2014 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4365215 | Landry | Dec 1982 | A |
4758843 | Agrawal | Jul 1988 | A |
4849720 | Call | Jul 1989 | A |
9343795 | Halligan | May 2016 | B1 |
20120077504 | Schadler | Mar 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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WO 9934477 | Jul 1999 | WO |
Entry |
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Hee-Ran Ahn and Ingo Wolff, “General Design Equations, Small-Sized Impedance Transformers, and their Application to Small-Sized Three-Port 3-dB Power Dividers,” IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. 49, No. 7, pp. 1277-1288, Jul. 2001. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160149282 A1 | May 2016 | US |