The present invention relates generally to high power RF waveguide networks. More specifically, it relates to improved phase-directed power combiners and related methods.
In certain high power RF applications, pulsed RF power is needed at multiple different loads at different times. For delivery to n loads, this may be implemented using n separate sources and transmission lines, with appropriately coordinated timing. Rather than having each source connected to a single load, another approach is to use phase directed combining to send power from multiple sources to a selected one of the desired loads, allowing power to be sequentially routed to different individual loads by changing the input phases. This approach allows the peak power requirement to be reduced by roughly a factor of n. It may be implemented using a high power RF switching circuit. For example, four-port hybrids may be used for combining power in waveguide by controlling the relative phase of the inputs to selectively direct power out of either output.
As shown in
If the port widths are constrained to be half the center width and the mitres 45°, the particular symmetry of the 2×2 hybrid design of
Note that the 4×4 design superhybrid, like the 2×2 hybrid design, has its waveguides all in a common plane (the H-plane). A straightforward extension in the plane of this 4×4 8-port device to 8×8 16-port device or 16×16 32-port device, however, leads to increasingly complicated and extensive layouts, requiring many bends and waveguide runs to connect component ports.
The present invention provides compact and elegant multi-port phase-directed power combiners. A multi-port passive waveguide network according to the invention allows RF power from multiple RF sources to be combined and directed to any of an equal number of output ports through control of the relative phases of the input RF power. These compact waveguide circuits provide an efficient means of instantly switching RF power between the output ports by drive phase manipulation. In another aspect, the devices can also be used in reverse as matched splitters.
Embodiments include 16-port (8×8) design and two 32-port (16×16) design configurations. Both the geometric arrangements and various unique component features of these networks provide advantageous improvements. The networks are symmetric. At the design frequency, each of the input ports is isolated from all of the others and equally coupled, with varying phase, to each of the output ports. These waveguide networks, composed solely of volume enclosed by metal walls, need no active components, dielectrics, ferrites, or any other materials.
In one aspect, the invention provides a high power RF phase-directed power combiner including a first 4×4 superhybrid RF waveguide in a first plane, a second 4×4 superhybrid RF waveguide in a second plane parallel to the first plane, a first RF waveguide circuit in a third plane, a second RF waveguide circuit in a fourth plane parallel to the third plane, where the third and fourth planes are orthogonal to the first and second planes, and E-plane bends connecting the first 4×4 superhybrid RF waveguide to the first RF waveguide circuit and the second RF waveguide circuit and connecting the second 4×4 superhybrid RF waveguide to the first RF waveguide circuit and the second RF waveguide circuit.
The first RF waveguide circuit may be a third 4×4 superhybrid RF waveguide, and the second RF waveguide circuit a fourth 4×4 superhybrid RF waveguide. Four such superhybrids in this arrangement may be duplicated, nested, and joined with interleaving E-plane bends to form a 16×16 combiner. Alternatively, the first RF waveguide circuit may be a first 2×2 magic H hybrid RF waveguide and the second RF waveguide circuit a second 2×2 magic H hybrid RF waveguide, forming an 8×8 combiner.
In another aspect, the invention provides a high power RF directive combining circuit comprising a first set of hybrid waveguides in a first set of multiple parallel planes, a second set of hybrid waveguides in a second set of multiple parallel planes orthogonal to the first set of parallel planes, and a set of waveguide twists connecting ports of the first set of hybrid waveguides to ports of the second set of hybrid waveguides.
Embodiments of the present invention provide passive waveguide circuits that have phase-directed switching capability of RF power from multiple inputs to any of multiple outputs using relatively compact geometries. These multi-port waveguide circuits allow agile combining and switching of power from multiple combined sources to any of multiple outputs using phase patterns. Several examples of such circuits are here realized, with different geometrical arrangements and port orientations. Conceptually, these designs are not necessarily bound to the particular sub-components used here for illustrative purposes. For example, the design principles of the combiners of the present invention encompass variations in particulars of hybrid design such as slots or posts, smooth twists, swept bend/tapers, and so on.
A 16-port combiner/splitter according to embodiments of the invention provide compact design by designing the circuit with waveguide components having their H-planes in multiple distinct planes, some of which are orthogonal to others, resulting in a 3D design.
By comparison with the compact design of
There are other approaches than merging and encircling to achieving appropriate connections between hybrids in combining circuits. Two such designs are made possible by incorporating either of the additional waveguide components pictured in
Now, the pass through of
As shown in
An alternate design of a 32-port 16×16 directive combining circuit composed of 32 hybrids, 8 pass throughs and 16 waveguide twists is shown in
While
The RF devices described above may be designed to operate at arbitrary RF frequency, in appropriate waveguide, the pictured examples being for 9.3 GHz in WR112, for several waveguide combining circuits with equal numbers of input and output ports. Properly optimized, each input port is matched, uncoupled from the others, and equally coupled to each of the output ports (and vice versa). With equal power in each input and independent phase control, any combination of output power division, in particular full combining to any one, is possible.
Employing these unique 3D designs as well as unique component designs, embodiments of 8×8 and 16×16 combiners have been described above. Based on the principles of the invention described herein, variations of these designs are also possible. In addition, it may be possible to conceive a next-level 32×32 combiner geometry using the principles of the present invention (though a 4th dimension is unavailable). Such a device design would incorporate 80 hybrids, or their equivalent.
It should be understood by those skilled in the art that various sub-components of alternate design could be substituted for the components shown in the specific embodiments described herein without departing from the scope of the invention. For example, such alternative components may include a standard waveguide twist, swept bend/taper (curved walls), mitred E-plane bend, slotted hybrid, biplanar coupler, and so on.
Embodiments of the invention advantageously allow the use of smaller RF amplifiers than otherwise required and, more significantly, allow the input power to be combined and selectively directed to any of several different output ports in quick succession by means of applied drive signal phase patterns.
Expressing the port fields in complex notation, where 1, i, −1 and −i represent respectively 0°, 90°, 180° and −90° phases, the scattering matrix of a (lossless) 2×2 hybrid and its directive combining function with appropriate inputs can be represented as follows:
For the 4×4 superhybrid, the scattering matrix grows to the following:
Phase patterns that lead to combining to selective ports for this are shown below.
Note that the output power is proportional to the square of the field, so that it is here four times the normalized input powers.
Though unwieldy to display in this text, the extension up to our 16×16 combiners is straight forward. With the factor in front going to ¼, the 32×32 S-matrix, with proper port numbering and phase references, is a symmetric matrix composed of an orthogonal set of column/row vectors, each of which has 16 zeroes and 16 elements of unit amplitude and various phases aligned to the complex axes.
Since the S-matrix inverse is the conjugate transpose, the phase combination needed for combining to a port n can be determined by taking the complex conjugate the nth row, i.e. from:
The technology is well established to allow a low-level RF (LLRF) system to control and manipulate the relative phases of the drives to multiple RF amplifiers, with fast switching, from the same phase reference.
One important application of the devices of the present invention is in medical applications where it allows multi-angle irradiation of tumors on a time scale fast compared to bodily movements—thus increasing accuracy and effectiveness while limiting collateral tissue damage—without the unrealistic expense of a 16 times higher power individual RF source for each linac. Specifically, devices of the present invention allow for sequentially powering a set of medical linacs arranged around a patient to provide fast multi-angle radiation therapy without a turning gantry. For example, embodiments of the invention may be used in systems such as that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 8,618,521, which is incorporated herein by reference. Other uses are envisioned in areas such as industry and materials detection. With loads on all but one output port, they can be used simply as matched multi-source combiners, or in reverse as 16-way splitters.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application 62/003,002 filed May 26, 2014, which is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with Government support under Contract DE-AC02-76SF00515 awarded by the Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20150340752 A1 | Nov 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62003002 | May 2014 | US |