The present invention relates to a transition arrangement. The invention particularly relates to arrangements for use in the high, or very high, frequency region, e.g. above 30 GHz, or even in the THz region, but also for frequencies below 30 GHz.
The invention also relates to a waveguide structure comprising a number of waveguide twists, and still further it relates to a rotary joint.
In many microwave and millimetre wave systems, the polarization of the waves or signals needs to be rotated with an angle. For example, horizontally polarized waves or signals may need to be rotated to a vertically polarized waves or signals, or vice versa. For that purpose so called polarization twists are needed. The rectangular step twist is a polarization twist which is comparatively easy to realize. Microwave rectangular waveguide step twists were described by H. A. Wheeler and Henry Schwiebert in 1955 in “Step Twist Waveguide Components”, IRE Trans. on Microwave Theory and Techniques, MTT, vol. 3, no. 5, pp. 44-52, 1955, and numerous reports which relate to rectangular waveguide step twists have followed. All these rectangular waveguide step twists are made by several pieces of waveguide sections, which then are connected with each other with a certain twisted angle for each section by means of screws or through welding. However, not least for millimetre waves, it becomes very difficult to obtain a good conductive contact between these sections by using screws since actually no screws which are as small as would be required are available, or to achieve a satisfactory precision as far as waveguide dimensions are concerned when using welding, since at the welding spots or locations there will always be comparatively large amounts of welding material representing large volumes, particularly for millimetre wave applications. A very good electric contact is needed in order to avoid leakage and accompanying losses in performance, and reduced bandwidth. Unless the conductive contact is very good, currents will flow between the sections, resulting in a leakage, mismatch and losses which will deteriorate the performance.
Gap waveguide technology is a promising solution for enabling the provisioning of step twists through the use of gap waveguides wherein a good electric contact is achieved in a contact-less manner through the use of a pin structure which is of importance e.g. for millimetre wave applications. If no conductive contact is required between sections, the use of screws or welding might even be disposed of.
In e.g. E. Pucci, P.-S. Kildal, “Contactless Non-Leaking waveguide flange Realized by Bed of Nails for millimetre wave Applications”, 6th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EUCAP), pp. 3533-3536, Prague, March 2012, a waveguide flange which is realized by a bed of pins, and working between 190 and 320 GHz is proposed. This flange, with a pin structure or a textured surface does not require a conductive contact when connected to a standard waveguide, which facilitates fabrication and mounting.
In S. Rahiminejad, E. Pucci, V. Vassilev, P.-S. Kildal, S. Haasl, P. Enoksson, “Polymer Gap adapter for contactless, Robust, and fast Measurements at 220-325 GHz”, Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems, Vol. 25, No. 1, February 2016, a double-sided pin-flange gap adapter which is to be placed between two flanges to avoid leakage is disclosed.
In “Real time rotatable waveguide twist using contactless stacked air-gapped waveguides”, by Dongquan Sun and Jinping Xu, IEEE microwave and wireless component letters, Feb. 14, 2017, the gap technology has been implemented and a real-time rotatable rectangular waveguide 90° twist is proposed which is based on a modified contactless waveguide flange. The proposed waveguide twist consists of seven layer stacked waveguide plates with a traditional smooth flange on one side and a bed of nails on the opposite side, wherein the waveguide plates are held together by a circular hollow housing and any adjacent plates having a maximum twist-angle of +/−15°.
Even if the use of the gap waveguide technology allows for a good electrical contact by using a pin structure so that no real contact is required, which solves several of the problems referred to above, it is a disadvantage that a large number of steps are required in order not to have a high reflection coefficient and high insertion losses, which makes fabrication costs high and entails a laborious mounting process. The structure is also complex and complicated. In addition, the performance is not as good as would be desired. Still further, it is a drawback that the rotation angle is limited.
Also, in RF systems so called waveguide rotary joints are interesting devices, e.g. for making it feasible with rotating antennas at scanning. For microwave frequencies it is known to make rotary joints comprising a transformer for transforming from a rectangular waveguide to a coax, and from a coax to a rectangular waveguide respectively, where the coax part can be rotated without changing the field distribution in the coax. However, particularly for mm-waves, extremely small coaxes would be needed if applying this type of the rotary joints, which are extremely difficult to fabricate and considerably increases the manufacturing costs. The seven-step twist discussed above in “Real time rotatable waveguide twist using contactless stacked air-gapped waveguides”, by Dongquan Sun and Jinping Xu, has been proposed to be used also for providing a rotary joint. However, using seven steps, the rotary joint would never be as stable as required for rotary joints, extremely inflexible, and complicated and expensive to fabricate and would not find any practical use.
Thus, although, through the solution discussed above, the need for a conductive or electric contact is removed, there is still an urgent need for improvement as far as transitions comprising waveguide twists, and also rotary joints, are concerned. There is also a need for providing arrangements and structures appropriate for different and other frequency bands.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a transition arrangement for interconnection of waveguide structures through which one or more of the above-mentioned problems can be overcome.
It is particularly an object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist which is easy to fabricate and assemble.
It is also an object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist for interconnection of waveguide structures which enables interconnection in a fast and reliable manner with a minimum of interconnecting, e.g. screwing and unscrewing, operations for joining/disconnecting waveguide flanges, and facilitating interconnection.
It is a particular object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist which can be used for high frequencies, e.g. above 10 GHz, or particularly above 30 GHz, or for THz frequencies, particularly for millimetre waves, but also for lower frequencies.
It is a particular object to provide a transition arrangement, and a structure respectively, appropriate for different, and additional, frequency bands, most particularly also for the frequency band 50-75 GHz, e.g. for 60 GHz, and even more particularly for interconnection of V-band flanges.
Particularly it is an object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist which is easy to fabricate and easy to use, and also which is non-expensive.
It is a general object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist through which interconnection as well as disconnection of waveguide structures is facilitated.
It is also an object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist which is robust and suitable for manufacture for different frequency bands, or independently of which is the desired frequency band, and which is very flexible.
Another object is to provide a flexible solution that can be implemented for interconnection of waveguide structures by means of a waveguide twist for operation in different desired frequency bands.
A most particular object is to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist which is suitable for being used for interconnections e.g. in measurement systems for high as well as for low frequencies, in connection with different standard waveguides dimensions (such as WR15, WR3,WR12, . . . ) and the corresponding standard waveguide flange dimensions, and for different and wide frequency bands.
A particular object is to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist which can be used with standard waveguide flanges.
A general object is to provide a high performance waveguide twist.
It is also a particular object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a wideband or ultra-wideband waveguide twist.
Further yet it is an object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist with a substantially arbitrary rotation angle less than or equal to ±90°.
Further yet it is an object to provide a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist with a substantially arbitrary rotation angle less than or equal to ±180°.
It is also an object to provide a transition arrangement with a variable rotation angle, and which can be easily assembled and disassembled.
Therefore a transition arrangement as initially referred to is provided.
Therefore a waveguide structure comprising a number of waveguide twists as initially referred to is also provided.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a rotary joint through which one or more of the above-mentioned problems can be overcome.
Therefore a rotary joint as initially referred to is provided.
Advantageous embodiments are given by the respective appended dependent claims.
The invention will in the following be further described, in a non-limiting manner, and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Generally the number of sections in a waveguide step twist is determined by the geometry and the specifications of the twist, especially the requirements as to frequency band. The wider the required bandwidth, the more sections are needed. At each twist interface in a twisted step waveguide, a shunt inductance, a series inductance and a shunt capacitance are introduced. The shunt inductance is the dominating component, see e.g. “Step Twist Waveguide Components” by H. A. Wheeler, et. al, IRE Trans. on Microwave Theory and Techniques, MTT, vol. 3, no. 5, pp. 44-52, 1955 referred to above. For known step waveguide twists, each step section has a length of approximately a quarter wavelength in order to convert the inductance at the next section interface to a capacitive component at each interface so that the introduced inductances can be compensated for through the use of the quarter wavelength converters to achieve a low reflection coefficient. Through the use of such a compensation technique the arrangement will be narrow banded due to the use of the quarter wavelength converters. The larger the twist angles, the narrower the bandwidth, and in order to achieve an acceptable bandwidth, many twist sections, and many twists, have been needed.
Through the arrangement of the twist section 3 according to the invention, the polarization can be changed as referred to above with a minimum of reflection.
The periodic or quasi-periodic structure or the structure comprising a plurality of pins 35 is, as referred to above, arranged to surround the rectangular waveguide opening on each side of the through waveguide 31 in the waveguide twist section 3. Metal rim or ridge sections or frame surfaces, also called wing sections, are provided such that two wide side wing sections 32,32 are provided on the respective long, wide, sides of the waveguide 31 opening and two shorter, here curved, rim or narrow side wing sections 33,33 are provided on the short or narrow sides of the waveguide openings. The height of the wing sections 32,33 is here substantially the same as the height of the protruding elements 35 of the periodic or quasi-periodic structure. The wide side wing sections 32,32 may e.g. have a width of about λ/4, λ being the wavelength in the waveguide structure (not shown to scale in
Through using the wave stopping features of the periodic structure, here the pin structure 35, it is easy to provide a cavity 34 between the gap pins 35 and the waveguide edges, or rim or ridges 32,32 to compensate for the inductance introduced by the twist at each twist interface. Since the inductance and the compensating capacitance are substantially co-located, i.e. are provided at the same locations along the direction of propagation of the waves in the waveguides, the quarter wavelength impedance converters are not needed any more, therefore a wideband performance is enabled with fewer sections.
The waveguide twist section 3 is adapted to provide a twist between two waveguide structures or components, e.g. also antennas, filters, receivers etc., here with conventional smooth waveguide flanges.
A protective or supporting element, e.g. an outer rim (not shown) may be disposed such as to surround the periodic or quasiperiodic structure e.g. comprising pins 35. The purpose of such a protective or supporting element is to act as a protective distance element assuring that, if, or when, interconnecting or fastening elements press the periodic or quasiperiodic structure 35, the textured surface, against a waveguide flange with which it is to be interconnected, it is the protective or supporting element that will be exposed to the pressure and the protruding elements 35 of the periodic or quasi-periodic structure will be protected. Further, since such an optional protective or supporting element is arranged to protrude a slight distance beyond the outer ends of the protruding elements 35, the pin surface is prevented from coming into direct mechanical contact with an opposing waveguide flange when interconnected, which otherwise might lead to the textured surface and/or the smooth surface of the interconnecting waveguide flange being damaged or ruined. The waveguide twist section 3 may also in some embodiments (not shown) comprise a number of alignment pin receiving holes, or alternatively alignment pins, serving the purpose of assuring alignment of the waveguide twist section 3 with the waveguide flanges 1,2. Particularly the waveguide twist section 3 can slide on such alignment pins.
The presence of the gap 14 can be provided or assured also through other means and the arrangement according to the invention is not limited to the provisioning of such a protective distance element.
The waveguide twist section 3 plate preferably comprises a solid part made of brass, Cu, Al or any other appropriate e.g. composite material with a good conductivity, a low resistivity and an appropriate density. It may for example be plated with e.g. Au or Ag in environments where further corrosion protection is needed. It should be clear that also other materials can be used, e.g. any appropriate alloy. It can also be fabricated from a suitable plastic/polymer compound and plated with e.g. Cu, Au or Ag.
The waveguide twist section 3 in the shown embodiment comprises a section on a central portion of which a periodical or quasi-periodic structure, a texture, with protruding elements 35 is disposed around the opening of a rectangular waveguide 31. It should be clear that in alternative embodiments the waveguide twist section 3 may have any other appropriate shape, allowing it to be connected between e.g. two waveguide flanges as referred to above, between a waveguide flange and an antenna or another device, a waveguide flange of a calibrating arrangement, a DUT (Device Under Test) etc. It may in different embodiments be provided as a separate waveguide twist section 3, in other embodiments it may be adapted to be fixedly connected to a waveguide flange, or in still other embodiments be adapted to be connected to another waveguide twist section. It may also form part of a waveguide flange. Still further, instead of being circular, the flanges may have any other shape, such as square shaped, rectangular, ellipsoid or oval. The invention is also not limited to rectangular waveguides but they may e.g. be circular.
The texture, i.e. the periodic or quasi-periodic structure, may e.g. comprise a structure comprising a plurality of protruding elements, e.g. pins 35 having a square shaped cross-section, but the protruding elements can also have other cross-sectional shapes such as circular or rectangular, comprise a corrugated structure, e.g. comprising elliptically disposed grooves and ridges or similar. Other alternative shapes for corrugations are also possible.
The gap waveguide flange adapter element disclosed in PCT/SE2016/050387, by the same applicant, and the content of which herewith is incorporated herein by reference, can be said to form a one-section 0° twist.
Through providing a connection with a twist section between a conductive smooth flange surface or plane of a waveguide on one side and a flange surface with a periodic or quasi-periodic structure on the other side, the polarization of waves or signals can be rotated, here 90° and the waveguides are connected without requiring electrical contact, but also without direct mechanical contact. The presence of a gap 14 (see
The non-propagating or non-leaking characteristics between two surfaces of which one is provided with a periodic texture (structure), is known e.g. from P.-S. Kildal, E. Alfonso, A. Valero-Nogueira, E. Raj o-Iglesias, “Local metamaterial-based waveguides in gaps between parallel metal plates”, IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation letters (AWPL), Volume 8, pp. 84-87, 2009. The non-propagating characteristic appears within a specific frequency band, referred to as a stopband. Therefore, the periodic texture and gap size must be designed to give a stopband that covers with the operating frequency band of the standard waveguide being considered in the calibration kit. It is also known that such stopbands can be provided by other types of periodic structures, as described in E. Rajo-Iglesias, P.-S. Kildal, “Numerical studies of bandwidth of parallel plate cut-off realized by bed of nails, corrugations and mushroom-type EBG for use in gap waveguides”, IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation, Vol. 5, No. 3, pp. 282-289, March 2011. These stopband characteristics are also used to form so called gap waveguides as described in Per-Simon Kildal, “Waveguides and transmission lines in gaps between parallel conducting surfaces”, WO2010003808.
Any of the periodic or quasi-periodic textures previously used or that will be used in gap waveguides also can be used in a waveguide structure interconnecting arrangement, a flange adapter element or flange structure of the present invention, and is covered by the patent claims.
The concept of using a periodic texture to improve waveguide flanges is known from P.-S. Kildal, “Contactless flanges and shielded probes”, European patent application EP 12168106.8, 15 May 2012.
According to the present invention, the two surfaces, e.g. the textured structure of the twist section, i.e. the plane formed by the free outer ends of the pins or ridges or similar of a periodic or quasiperiodic structure, and a smooth waveguide flange, or another textured surface, must not be separated more than a quarter of a wavelength of a transmitted signal, or rather have to be separated less than a quarter wavelength, which is described in the above-mentioned publications, particularly in E. Raj o-Iglesias, P.-S. Kildal, “Numerical studies of bandwidth of parallel plate cut-off realized by bed of nails, corrugations and mushroom-type EBG for use in gap waveguides”, IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation, Vol. 5, No 3, pp. 282-289, March 2011.
The periodic or quasi-periodic structure in particular embodiments comprises an array of pins 35 with a cross section e.g. having the dimensions of 0.15λ×0.15, and a height of 0.15-0.25λ.
Through the provisioning of an interface formed by a smooth conductive surface of a waveguide flange 1,2 on one side of the interface and a textured surface, here comprising pins 35, on the other side of the interface, power is prevented from leaking through the gap between the smooth conductive surface and the textured surface, or between two textured surfaces, while a desired twist is provided. Propagation in non-desired directions is prohibited by means of a high impedance, resulting from the provisioning and arrangement of a periodic or quasi-periodic structure.
According to the invention, by using a combination of a surface comprising a periodic or quasi-periodic structure and a waveguide flange 1,2 with a smooth conductive surface, or two surfaces each provided with a periodic structure, waveguides can hence be twisted without the surfaces having to be in electrical contact, and through the provisioning of the cavity 34, and in advantageous embodiments even improved through the arranging of cavity wings or rims or ridges, along the edges of the waveguide openings through which the insertion losses can be further reduced, it becomes possible to make a waveguide twist with only one section as in e.g.
The twist section 3A comprises protruding elements, also here pins, 35A on each opposing side surface thereof allowing a contactless connection to the, here, smooth waveguide flange sections 1A,2A. Features having already described with reference to
As in the embodiment described with reference to
The periodic or quasi-periodic structures comprising a plurality of pins 35B1,35B2 are as referred to above, arranged to surround the rectangular waveguide openings. Wings or metal rim sections or frame surfaces, or ridges, as discussed with reference to
In other respects the elements and the functioning are similar to that described with reference to
Similar elements bear the same reference signs as corresponding elements in
The twist section waveguides 31D1,31D2 form an angle of about 30° with the first and second waveguide 11D,21D respectively, and also form an angle of about 30° with each other, or alternatively they form an angle of about 35° with the first and the second waveguide 11D,21D respectively, and form an angle of about 20° with each other. Other selections of angles are also possible.
In the embodiment of
Also other periodic structures may be applied to a waveguide interconnecting or transition arrangement, or cavity gap waveguide twist, according to the present invention as well as wings of any appropriate shape and dimensions may be applied or not along the wide edges of the waveguides, and also optionally along the narrow waveguide edges.
The arrangement is also advantageous in that the first and second twist sections are substantially equal, which is from a manufacturing point of view. Also for a three-section arrangement it is of course possible to have one, or two, twist sections with holes on one side and pins or similar on the other, cf.
In this embodiment there are wings 32F1,32F2 on the wide as well as on the short waveguide edges, see e.g.
The waveguide flanges 1,2,1A,2A etc. may e.g. be standard waveguide flanges, e.g. V-band flanges, E-band flanges, WR15 flanges, or any other standard or non-standard waveguide flanges. They may comprise alignment pin holes (not shown in the Figs. since they are not of importance for the functioning of the inventive concept) for reception of alignment pins, and screw holes adapted for reception of fastening screws. The arrangement according to the invention may be releasably or fixedly connected to the standard waveguide flanges. In some embodiments interconnecting elements in the form of screws with heads with magnets, magnetic screw heads, or magnetic elements on the screw heads, may be used as discussed in PCT/SE2016/050387 filed on May 3, 2016 by the same Applicant as the present application which herewith is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention also covers waveguide structures comprising more than one waveguide twist as described in the foregoing.
A rotary joint according to the present invention comprises a transition arrangement comprising a waveguide twist as described in any one of the embodiments described in this application, with one or more waveguide twist sections, and a number of gear sets 107A,107B with engagement elements, here teeth, rotatable around a respective rotary axis 106A,106B. The inventive concept is applicable also for other types of gear sets, and/or other types of engagement elements.
The gear sets 107A,107B are rotatable round the respective axes 106A,106B which here are connected to a plate 104 comprising an e.g. fixed waveguide structure with a waveguide 105. A rotatable waveguide structure with a waveguide 101 is fixed to a gear plate 102 provided with engagement elements, e.g. gear teeth, thus forming another waveguide structure which is adapted for engagement with a respective first engagement element or tooth section 108A,108B of the gear sets 107A,107B. Between these waveguide structures with waveguides 105,101 a rotatable waveguide twist section arrangement with, in this embodiment, one waveguide 103 twist section is arranged which is circular and peripherally provided with engagement elements, e.g. teeth, on for engagement with respective second engagement or tooth sections 109A,109B of the gear sets 107A,107B such that the rotatable waveguide structure and the rotatable waveguide 103 twist section will rotate with different speeds depending on with which of the gear set engagement or tooth sections 108A,108B;109A,109B they engage.
The angular speed of plate 103 here e.g. is half of the angular speed of the plate 102 so when the waveguide 102 has rotated with +45°, the waveguide 103 has rotated exactly the half of +45°, e.g., +22.5°, all relative to the waveguide 104. Then, this corresponds to the embodiment shown in
The invention is not limited to a 90° scanning rotary joint. In a similar way, an 180° rotary joint can be easily made. The invention is further not limited to a one-section rotary joint. In a similar way, a three-section 180° rotary joint can be easily made. The invention is also not limited to the gear sets described above. It can have other types of gear sets or even other rotating schemes. The essence of the invention is using non-contact waveguide sections to make a rotatable configuration, where the impedance match is satisfactory and there is no leakage of wave propagation. It may also comprise more than one twist section, e.g. two, three, or more.
It should be clear that the invention is not limited to embodiments with three or fewer waveguide twist sections, even if such embodiments are extremely advantageous. The inventive concept also covers embodiments with more than three, e.g. four or even more, twist sections.
A twist section according to the invention particularly is solid and made in one piece in order not to influence the signal flow. It may e.g. be made by moulding, casting, ablation, material assembling, e.g. micro-assembling and cutting is another method. In other embodiments it comprises more than one section or elements joined in any appropriate manner.
Interconnection of twist sections and waveguide flange sections may in some embodiments be achieved by means of a snap-on operation. If screws are used, they can e.g. be applied or introduced into screw holes of the waveguide flanges on beforehand. The inventive concept is however not limited to any particular interconnection technique or to the use of any particular elements.
In some embodiments different heights are used for the sets of pins or protruding elements or corrugations of the twist sections, or flange sections. The lengths or heights of the pins or protruding elements, or corrugations, may also vary within the respective sets (not shown), as long as the total length of one another facing, or oppositely disposed, pins, protruding elements or corrugations corresponds to a length required for the desired stop band. Such different arrangements of protruding elements are disclosed in the European patent application “Waveguide and transmission lines in gaps between parallel conducting surfaces”, EP15186666.2, filed on 24 Sep. 2015 by the same Applicant, the content of which herewith is incorporated herein by reference, and which shows a microwave device which comprises two conducting layers arranged with a gap there between, wherein each of the layer comprises a set of complementary protruding elements, arranged in a periodic or quasi-periodic pattern and connected thereto, and which sets in combination for a texture for stopping wave propagation in a frequency band of operation in other directions than along intended wave guiding paths. When the lengths of the protruding elements are the same, and the full length of the periodic or quasi-periodic structure, or the texture, being formed by two protruding elements arranged on each a conducting layer, the length of a protruding element hence corresponding to half the length of the full-length of the protruding elements of the texture.
Generally, throughout the application, the length of a full-length protruding element is approximately between λ/4 and λ/2, and the height of a so called half-length element, is substantially between λ/8 and λ/4, λ, being the wavelength in free space or a dielectric media.
The air gaps between different sections are smaller than λ/4, or about 10-20 μm or up to about 100 μm for E-band.
A particular advantage with the use of half-height protruding elements is that only one type of twist section is needed instead of two different types involved if it is a two-, or three-section arrangement.
It should also be clear that the pattern of the textured surface, of the protruding elements forming the periodic or quasi-periodic structure, can be different as discussed above. It may also e.g. comprise a number of protruding elements comprising a number of grooves and ridges e.g. two or three, or in some cases more, elliptically disposed around the waveguide opening on a conductive surface to form a periodic or quasi-periodic structure on one or two sides of a twist section. The depth of such grooves is about λ/4 for a full-height implementation for interconnection with a waveguide flange or a twist section with a smooth surface, and about λ/8 for half-height implementations as described with reference to
As also mentioned earlier the edge (or rim or ridge) around the waveguide openings of the twist sections play a role for the electrical performance and the dimensions therefore should be selected appropriately. Also fabrication aspects need to be considered. E. Pucci, P.-S. Kildal, “Contactless Non-Leaking waveguide flange Realized by Bed of Nails for millimeter wave Applications”, 6th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EUCAP), pp. 3533-3536, Prague, March 2012, discloses the use of a ridge around the waveguide opening. This ridge has the same height as the pins have, and is much thicker along the wide side of the waveguide opening, and is referred to as an “Impedance Transformer”. This thickness is about λ/4, and it transforms an open circuit in a short circuit at the waveguide opening, in such way that the waves “see” a metal wall or electric contact even if physically there is a gap between the flanges where the waves could come in. A similar textured structure is used in some embodiments e.g. with a difference that there is one more, shorter, row of pins outside the outermost row on the wide sides of the waveguide opening and that the walls of the short edges (rims or ridges) are somewhat thicker. In advantageous embodiments at least the edges along the wide side of the waveguide are provided with wings as also discussed above.
It has been realized that the long edge or rim is also important for stopping waves from propagating through the gap, and even makes it possible to reduce the number of rows of pins (or more generally protruding elements) needed for the design to two or even to only one even if the invention is not limited thereto. The rectangular edge or rim or around the waveguide opening is modified in order to cover a larger frequency band, e.g. in some implementations the whole frequency band from 50 GHz to 75 GHz or for the whole E-band of 70-90 GHz, although the present invention of course not is limited thereto, but it may be adapted to cover any appropriate or desired frequency band. Advantageously the rims or ridges on the narrow or short sides of the waveguide have a sufficient thickness to allow easy manufacture, e.g. between about 200-400 μm, preferably less than 400 μm. The rims or ridges particularly along the wide or long sides of the waveguide opening may be divided into different sections, a central wing, rim or ridge section, or a platform, which has a thickness of about V4, and outer narrower rim or ridge sections with a smaller thickness. Thus, the central wing or platform section does not have to extend all along the full length of the wide side of the waveguide opening.
The length or extension of the wing or the central rim or ridge section can be optimized to give a good performance in terms of leakage within the frequency band of interest, in some embodiments e.g. 50-75 or 70-90 GHz. There is a relation between the thickness of the rim or ridge along the narrow side of the waveguide opening and the length of the ridge or platform. The larger the thickness of the short side rim or ridge, the shorter the length of the wing or the central ridge or platform section.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2017/051046 | 10/25/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/083418 | 5/2/2019 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3001159 | Hilsinger | Sep 1961 | A |
3024463 | Moeller | Mar 1962 | A |
3651435 | Riblet | Mar 1972 | A |
20110133863 | Lange | Jun 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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3147994 | Mar 2017 | EP |
2010003808 | Jan 2010 | WO |
2017192071 | Nov 2017 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report (PCT/ISA/210) and Written Opinion (PCT/ISA/237) dated Jul. 6, 2018, by the European Patent Office as the International Searching Authority for International Application No. PCT/SE2017/051046. |
Kildal, et al., “Local metamaterial-based waveguides in gaps between parallel metal plates”, IEEE Antennas and Wireless Propagation letters (AWPL), 2009 (month unknown), vol. 8, pp. 84-87. |
Pucci, et al., “Contactless Non-Leaking waveguide flange Realized by Bed of Nails for millimeter wave Applications”, 6th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EUCAP), Mar. 2012, pp. 3533-3536. |
Rahiminejad, et al., “Polymer Gap adapter for contactless, Robust, and fast Measurements at 220-325 GHz”, Journal of Microelectromechanical Systems, Feb. 2016, vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 160-169. |
Rajo-Iglesias, et al., “Numerical studies of bandwidth of parallel plate cut-off realized by bed of nails, corrugations and mushroom-type EBG for use in gap waveguides”, IET Microwaves, Antennas & Propagation, Mar. 2011, vol. 5, No. 3, pp. 282-289. |
Sun, et al., “Real time rotatable waveguide twist using contactless stacked air-gapped waveguides”, IEEE microwave and wireless component letters, Mar. 2017, vol. 27, No. 3, pp. 215-217. |
Wheeler, et al., “Step Twist Waveguide Components”, IRE Trans, on Microwave Theory and Techniques, MTT, Oct. 1955, vol. 3, No. 5, pp. 44-52. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20200365962 A1 | Nov 2020 | US |