This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. § 365 of International Application PCT/FR03/50201, filed Dec. 22, 2003 which was published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) on Aug. 5, 2004 in French and which claims the benefit of French patent application No. 0300045, filed Jan. 3, 2003.
The invention relates to a transition between a rectangular waveguide and a microstrip line. Waveguide structures are often well adapted for the realization of small loss and high performance passive functions (antenna source such as corrugated horn antennas, polarizers, filters, diplexers) more particularly at very high frequencies (centimetric and millimetric bands). As for the planar structures, they are very well suited for the low cost, high volume production of devices integrating passive and active functions using the methods for manufacturing standard printed circuits for frequencies that can reach the millimetric bands. For example, in a satellite front-end, the aerial feed, the filter and the polarizer, if there is one, are fairly frequently realized in waveguide technology while the rest of the signal processing functions (low noise amplification, mixing and intermediate filtering) are realized by standard printed circuit technology.
The European patent no. 0350324 describes a transition between a waveguide structure and a microstrip transmission line according to which a conducting line is supported within the waveguide perpendicular to its axis and the microstrip transmission line extends transversally through the wall of the waveguide in a position producing a coupling of energy between the microstrip transmission line and the conducting line.
The document IEEE—1995—CESLT—page 1502—“An improved approach to implement a microstrip to waveguide transition”—G. Zarba, G. Bertin, L. Accatino, P. Besso—describes a transition between a ribbed waveguide and a microstrip line arranged on a substrate. In the embodiment described, the substrate is slid under the ribbed part of the waveguide to provide it with good mechanical stability and easy assembly.
The document IEEE Proceedings of APMC 2001, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC—page 543—“A broadband Microstrip to Waveguide Transition using Planar Technique”—describes a Ka band (26-40 GHz) transition that is obtained by inserting the microwave substrate, on which a tapered microstrip line is engraved, into a rectangular waveguide partially filled with a dielectric to ensure contact-free transition with the hot conductor of the microstrip line.
The document IEEE MICROWAVE AND WIRELESS COMPONENTS LETTERS, Vol. 11, No. 2, February 2001—page 68—“Integrated Microstrip and Rectangular Waveguide in Planar Form”—Dominique Deslandes and Ke Wu—Cheg-Jung Lee, Hsien-Shun Wu & Ching-Kuang C. Tzuang—presents a planar version of a Ka band transition (25-31 GHz). A guided structure is realised on a microwave substrate. The rectangular waveguide is realized by a double side metallization of the microwave substrate associated with metallized holes to realise the lateral faces of the rectangular waveguide.
These embodiments of a transition between a waveguide structure and a planar structure prove to be relatively complex to realize and require the assembly of several parts that must be all the more accurate as the operating frequencies are high. Moreover, they require microwave substrates of good quality to prevent the dielectric losses but for which the cost is high.
The purpose of the invention is to propose a transition between a rectangular waveguide and a microstrip line that can be manufactured at low cost without assembling several parts.
According to the invention, the transition is characterized in that it consists of a ribbed rectangular waveguide realized in bar of synthetic material whose metallized base under the rib extends in the form of a foam plate of a synthetic material constituting a substrate for the microstrip line, the rib having a base extending between the upper plane of the ribbed waveguide and the upper plane of the substrate and the microstrip line being disposed on the upper plane of the substrate in the extension of the base of the rib.
According to the particularities of the transition according to the invention:
the base of the rib has a linear profile.
the foam plate constituting the substrate has a thickness that varies according to a longitudinal direction to modify the width of the microstrip line while maintaining its characteristic impedance almost constant.
the synthetic material is a dielectric foam presenting electrical characteristics approaching those of air, and
the foam is a polymethacrylimide foam.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will emerge more clearly upon reading the following description illustrated by the drawings.
In
As can be seen in
The base of the rib 6 of the waveguide G extends between the upper plane 4 of the waveguide and the upper plane 5 of the substrate via the shoulder 3. The base and the lateral walls of the rib 6 are metallized, the metallization of the base of the rib 6 continuing on the upper plane 5 of the substrate to constitute the microstrip line 7.
The metallized base 8 of the ribbed waveguide that extends under the rib 6 therefore continues in the form of a foam plate constituting the substrate for the microstrip line. This metallized base is therefore used as a ground plane for the microstrip 7.
The lateral faces 9 and 10 of the foam bar defining the ribbed rectangular waveguide are also metallized up to the limit of the shoulder 3 although the metallization of the lateral sides of the plate constituting the substrate of the microstrip line cannot degrade the electrical behaviour of the microstrip line.
As shown in
In
The rib 6 is centered in the width of the foam bar and its dimensions can be adjusted according to the operating frequency range required by ensuring an adequate gradual passage from the quasi-TEM propagation mode of the microstrip line to the fundamental mode of the guide. Such a gradual passage is obtained according to a given profile, linear, exponential or other. In general, the minimum length of the profile obtained to ensure correct matching over the entire operating range must be in the order of a fraction of the wavelength (for example, a quarter of the wavelength) corresponding to the lowest frequency.
At the junction of the base of the rib 6, the microstrip line 7 can have a width identical to or greater than that of the rib but it is fully known that the width of a microstrip line depends on the thickness of the substrate on which it is disposed as well as its permittivity. Hence, it is possible to adjust the height of the substrate in the junction plane to obtain a width identical or as close as possible to that of the rib. Then, to return to the most suitable thickness of substrate, for the microstrip line 7, it is sufficient to gradually vary the thickness of the foam plate constituting the substrate according to the longitudinal direction A. This variation in thickness is made at quasi-constant characteristic impedance by simultaneously modifying the width of the microstrip line which prevents using quarter wavelength type impedance transformers of the discontinuous variation line width which are the source of degradations in performance (losses, reduction in bandwidth). In
The transition according to the invention is therefore realized in a single part by using a material of low permittivity, generating low losses and having a good mechanical strength, which contributes to obtaining a microstrip line, the dimensions of which are in agreement with those of the waveguide section. Moreover, the realization of the transition according to the invention enables an electrical and physical continuity to be obtained between the waveguide and the microstrip without having recourse to impedance transformers of the line width discontinuous change type.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03 00045 | Jan 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR03/50201 | 12/22/2003 | WO | 00 | 3/3/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/066432 | 8/5/2004 | WO | A |
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2897461 | Ashbaugh et al. | Jul 1959 | A |
3265995 | Hamasaki | Aug 1966 | A |
3932823 | Lavedan, Jr. et al. | Jan 1976 | A |
6242984 | Stones et al. | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6265950 | Schmidt et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0458364 | Nov 1991 | EP |
5-335816 | Dec 1993 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060152298 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |