The present invention relates generally to the field of tunable cavity filters and more particularly to coupling plates and methods used, for example, with tunable cavity filters in broadcasting and transmission of electromagnetic signals.
In an effort to comply with upcoming Federal Communications Commission broadcast requirements, television stations across the United States are adding digital broadcasting capability while maintaining present analog broadcasting capability. The changeover from analog to digital is motivated at least in part by FCC requirements mandating that analog television broadcasts be phased out and replaced over time by all digital television broadcasts. The amount of time a station has to begin and comply with the changeover is dependent on a number of factors including the size of the television viewing market served by the station. Stations adding digital broadcast capability cannot simply reuse existing equipment in many instances due to more restrictive digital broadcasting parameters.
Broadcasting digital television signals, particularly digital UHF television signals, involves more stringent parameters than those involved with analog signal broadcasting. This is especially true with regard to the degree of frequency cutoff sharpness required at the upper and lower frequencies passed through a bandpass filter. The number of cavities in a bandpass filter are a factor in determining the sharpness of the frequency cutoff. A bandpass filter with several cavities will have a sharper cutoff at the upper and lower frequencies than a bandpass filter with fewer cavities. While a multiple cavity bandpass filter comprises a single component required for digital broadcasting, it can be a very expensive component.
Bandpass filters are very expensive due to current filter manufacturing methods and filter tuning methods. Coupling plates comprise a significant portion of the cost of a bandpass filter. Several coupling plates are used in a single cavity bandpass filter. Specifically, coupling plates are used to attach adjoining components to a filter such as a waveguide transmission feed line. Additionally, coupling plates are also used to attach multiple cavities of a filter together in the case of a multiple cavity bandpass filter. The coupling plate itself comprises an iris defining an aperture. The tuning of a bandpass filter is dependent upon the size of the iris in the coupling plate.
A bandpass filter must be tuned and adjusted prior to use for a given application. Current tuning methods involve individually tuning each iris coupling plate used in a filter by adjusting the size of the iris. Current manufacturing and assembly methods employ an iterative process that involves assembling the components of a filter, measuring the characteristics of the assembled filter, disassembling the components of the filter, adjusting the filter tuning by machining out the coupling plate iris, assembling the components of the filter and repeating the process. By virtue of the iterative tuning process, each coupling plate within the same filter has a unique iris aperture size thus limiting use of each coupling plate to a specific position in a specific filter configuration.
In addition to the long standing prior art coupling plate manufacturing problem requiring customization by individual machining of every iris coupling plate, prior art coupling plate tuning methods are also subject to a waste problem. The opening of an iris can only be made larger using prior art tuning and manufacturing methods involving machining out the iris. If an iris opening is made too large by machining it out, then another plate must be made, thus causing waste of material, as well as repeated effort to start the tuning process over again.
Another tuning method currently used involves adjusting the tuning of a filter using metal tuning components. The metal components are adjusted and then held in a fixed position with threads or a lockable sliding mechanism. Using metal tuning components, however, has several drawbacks.
Contact problems can be the biggest problem with using metal tuning components, and in some instances are destructive and quite costly. One type of contact problem is brought about by insufficient contact between tuning components and the filter. Insufficient contact can permit too much movement between tuning components and the filter. Another type of contact problem is brought about when the degree of contact between the filter and the tuning component does not permit enough or any movement between components and the filter.
Initially a contact problem causes local heating at the contacts. The accelerated heating in the apparatus may change the apparent tuning. The increased heat speeds up the rate of oxidation of metal components. Oxidation of metal components further exacerbates the initial contact problem and continues the problem cycle which will ultimately lead to the destruction of the contacts. If a filter using metal tuning components is employed in a high power application, such as digital UHF broadcasting, a slight variation in the apparent filter tuning may result in the buildup of enough heat to damage the filter.
Contact problems, in addition to adversely effecting the digital broadcast of the station in question, may interfere with other digital broadcasts. Due to stringent parameters involved with digital broadcasting, changes to the apparent tuning of a filter brought about by contact problems may interfere with the digital broadcast of neighboring television stations serving the same broadcasting market. Causing interference with other stations by broadcasting outside of the frequencies specified in a television station's broadcasting license may have adverse consequences with the FCC.
One approach to control problems is the use of silver plating to minimize corrosion and facilitate electrical conductivity. However, even with silver plating, metal tuning components may be susceptible to contact problems.
Thus, there is a need in the art for a novel coupling plate that is cost effective and can ultimately reduce the cost of bandpass filters required for applications such as digital television broadcasting. There is also a need in the art for a novel coupling plate that alleviates the contact problems associated with using metal tuning components. There is also a need for a novel coupling plate that is tunable without undesirable contact problems, and that does not require adjusting the size of the iris by machining it out.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention can solve the aforementioned manufacturing problems with tuning filters at least to some extent via a new and novel apparatus and method. Embodiments of the present invention can be used as a standard and interchangeable non-contact tunable iris coupling plate. In some embodiments, the size of the iris can be adjusted in two directions. Further, some embodiments of the present invention provide a method for assembling and tuning a filter that can avoid an iterative assembly process.
In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, a tunable coupling apparatus may comprise a plate having an iris that defines an aperture, at least one rod that extends through the plate in a direction towards the aperture wherein the position of the rod is adjustable and a sleeve disposed between the rod and the plate and at least partially surrounding the rod. The sleeve spaces the rod from the plate. Preferably the rod is a dielectric rod.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, a method for coupling components in a RF feed system may comprise providing a dielectric rod slidably supported in a passage in a plate, spacing the dielectric rod from the plate by a sleeve, transmitting a signal through an aperture in the plate, and tuning the plate by slidably adjusting the portion of the dielectric rod in the passage.
In accordance with another embodiment of the present invention, a system for coupling components for a RF feed may comprise a plate, means for defining an aperture in the plate, means for tuning the aperture having a dielectric rod that extends radially from the aperture, and means for preventing contact between the rod and the aperture.
There has thus been outlined, rather broadly, the more important features of the invention in order that the detailed description thereof that follows may be better understood, and in order that the present contribution to the art may be better appreciated. There are, of course, additional features of the invention that will be described below and which will form the subject matter of the claims appended hereto.
In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the arrangements of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced and carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein, as well as the abstract, are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting.
As such, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conception upon which this disclosure is based may readily be utilized as a basis for the designing of other structures, methods and systems for carrying out the several purposes of the present invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
A preferred embodiment of the invention generally includes a plate with an aperture slot and at least one sleeve-lined passage that radially extends outwardly through the side of the plate starting from the plate aperture. The preferred embodiment also comprises a dielectric rod slidably disposed within the sleeve(s) lining the passage(s).
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Preferably, the sleeve 32 is comprised of a non-conductive material that is thermally stable, such as TeflonĀ®. In a preferred embodiment, the sleeve 32 at least partially surrounds the probe 30. For example, the sleeve 32 may be an elongated hollow cylinder. Other embodiments of the sleeve 32, may include an elongated C-shaped cross-section, a series of short rings or short C-shapes, or elongated strips of non-conductive material arranged longitudinally and at least partially surrounding the probe 30. The probe 30 is a dielectric rod and is comprised of a material with a low loss tangent and high dielectric constant, such as ceramic. Preferably, the probe 30 has a dielectric constant of about 10 and a loss tangent of about 0.0024 and may be of a uniform or non-uniform cross section or of a homogeneous or non-homogeneous material (shown, for example, in FIG 2). The plate 26 is comprised of aluminum in a preferred embodiment although other metals may be used. In a preferred embodiment, as shown, the plate 26 is a circular plate, however, the plate 26 can be any shape. A preferred embodiment of the plate 26 features bolt holes 36, although the plate may be attached to a component using any means for attaching or attaching method. In a preferred embodiment, the iris aperture 28 is slot shaped, however, the iris aperture may be defined by other shapes such as, but not limited to an ellipse, a rectangle or cross slots. The tuning passage 34 as pictured extends radially from the iris aperture 28, however, the tuning passage 34 may extend from the iris aperture in a non-radial fashion in other embodiments of the invention.
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In operation, to assemble a tunable filter according to one of the preferred embodiments, the user begins by attaching a first waveguide transition 12 to a first plate 16. The first plate 16 is attached to a first end of a first cavity section 20. A second end of the first cavity section 20 is attached to a second plate 16 which is attached to a first end of a second cavity section 20 and a second end of the second cavity section 20 is attached to a third plate 16. The third plate 16 is attached to a second waveguide transition 12. A test signal is transmitted into the first waveguide transition 12 and through the filter 10. An analyzer is connected to the second waveguide transition 12 to analyze the test signal after it has passed through the filter. Next, the user tunes the first plate 16 by slidably adjusting a probe 30 radially by moving the probe 30 inside the passage 34 so that one end of the probe 30 protrudes into an iris aperture 28 until the first plate is tuned appropriately. The user repeats this process for the second and third plates 16 until the filter 10 has been tuned appropriately. The user then fixes the position of the probes 30 once proper adjustment has been achieved. In some embodiments, the naturally occurring friction between the probe 30 and its surrounding sleeve 32 may be sufficient to retain the probe 30 in the desired tuned position. In other embodiments it may be desirable to provide a fixing apparatus such as a fixing material, plug, or a fixing lock mechanism. Also, the sleeve 32 may tend to stay fixed in the passage 34 while the probe 30 is moved in the passage 34. Alternatively, the sleeve 32 may be adhered or tend to adhere to the outside of the probe 30, and the sleeve 32 and probe 30 may be moved together in the passage 34.
Additionally the apparatus according to the present invention features a sleeve 32 that does not permit contact between the probe 30 and the plate 16. As such the tuning components of the present invention are non-contact tuning components that are at least less susceptible or not susceptible to the problems caused by insufficient contact or by too much contact between tuning components.
The many features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the detailed specification, and thus, it is intended by the appended claims to cover all such features and advantages of the invention which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and variations will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation illustrated and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be resorted to, falling within the scope of the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20040046623 A1 | Mar 2004 | US |