This application is a national phase application based on PCT/EP2007/010318, filed Nov. 28, 2007, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention refers to delay lines, and more particularly it concerns a tunable ridge waveguide delay line in which delay tuning is obtained by varying the width of an air gap defined between the ridge and a confronting waveguide element.
Preferably, but not exclusively, the present invention has been developed in view of its use in telecommunications applications where it is required to change and control time delay and phase shift of high power electromagnetic signals in radiofrequency and microwave frequency ranges, while introducing limited power losses. Examples of such preferred applications are phased array antennas and transmitting apparatuses of wireless communication systems exploiting the so-called Dynamic Delay Diversity (DDD) technique.
Phased array antennas are electronically controlled scanning beam antennas including phase shifters or delay lines, usually tunable by electronic or electromechanical means, that provide a differential phase shift or delay on the signals feeding adjacent antenna elements or groups of elements.
DDD technique is a currently used technique for improving performance of wireless communication systems, in particular in downlink direction, by adding a delay diversity to the space and/or polarization diversity provided by transmitting antenna arrays. In other words, different elements in the array transmit differently delayed replicas of the same signal. At a receiver, the differently delayed replicas give rise to alternate constructive and destructive combinations. In the DDD technique, the delays are time-varying and are obtained by tunable delay lines connected in the signal paths towards different antenna elements.
A wireless communication system exploiting the DDD technique is disclosed for instance in WO 2006/037364 A.
Assuming for sake of simplicity that the signals to be delayed can be considered single-frequency signals, so that applying a time delay is equivalent to applying a phase shift, a delay line with length L introduces a phase shift φ=−β·L, or a delay τ=L*dβ/dω, on the signal propagating through it, β being the propagation constant of the line and ω being the signal angular frequency. Thus, in order to vary the phase shift (or the delay), either β or L is to be varied. The most commonly used solutions rely on a variation of β.
Several tunable delay lines based on the variation of β are known in the art and are commercially available. A class of such delay lines rely upon the variation of the position of a dielectric or metal member within the waveguide cavity.
The paper “Dielectric Based Frequency Agile Microwave Devices”, by Y. Poplavko, V. Kazmirenko, Y. Prokopenko, M. Jeong, and S. Baik, presented at the 15th International Conference on Microwaves, Radar and Wireless Communications, 2004, MIKON-2004, pages 828-831, discloses a tunable phase-shifter consisting of a partially dielectrically filled waveguide, where two dielectric plates are placed inside the waveguide and the phase shifting tuning is obtained by changing the width of the air gap between said dielectric plates, thereby controlling the effective dielectric constant ∈eff of the structure. This is obtained by moving at least one of the two dielectric plates up and down by means of a piezoelectric actuator. The waveguide structure has fixed impedance matching sections.
US 2003/0042997 A1 discloses a tunable phase-shifter consisting of a partially dielectric filled waveguide having an air-dielectric sandwich structure comprising either two dielectric members or a dielectric member and a metal plate separated by an air gap. The tuning of the phase shifting is obtained by changing the width of the air gap by moving either at least one or the dielectric members, or at least one out of the dielectric member and the metal plate, by means of a piezoelectric actuator.
The paper “Partially Dielectric-Slab-Filled Waveguide Phase Shifter”, by C. T. M. Chang, IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Vol. MTT-22, No. 5, May 1974, pages 481-485, discloses a possible way to optimize matching between a dielectric slab-filled waveguide and an unloaded waveguide. An intermediate block is inserted between the dielectric slab-filled waveguide and the unloaded waveguide, which is a dielectric slab of an opportune width. Experimental results show that VSWR (Voltage Standing Wave Ratio) is kept to less than 1.15 (|S11|>23 dB).
The paper “An Approximate Analysis of Dielectric-Ridge Loaded Waveguide”, R. M. Arnold and F. J. Rosenbaum, IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, Oct. 1972, pages 699-701, analyzes the behavior of a waveguide partially filled with a dielectric slab. By varying the filling ratio it is possible to control the phase shift of an electromagnetic signal propagating inside the waveguide. The maximum phase shift obtained is about 100° between the case in which the dielectric slab is totally inserted into the waveguide and the case in which the dielectric slab is flush with the waveguide wall.
PCT patent application PCT/EP2006/005202, published as WO 2007137610, discloses a tunable delay line including a ridge waveguide with a dielectric perturbing member separated by a small air gap from a longitudinal end surface of the ridge and movable relative to the ridge for varying the width of the air gap and hence the propagation characteristics of the guide and the delay imparted by the line.
The Applicant has observed that the prior-art phase shifter of the paper by Y. Poplavko et al. and US 2003/0042997 A1, while exhibiting high tuning speed and short stroke moving parts, have a number of drawbacks:
The Applicant has further observed that the prior art described in the paper by C. T. M. Chang results in a fixed matching step, no tuning of which is possible once it has been designed and realized.
The Applicant has further observed that the prior art described in the paper by R. M. Arnold and F. J. Rosenbaum lacks efficiency in terms of phase shift per displacement (for given length, at given frequency): in fact the dielectric-ridge loaded waveguide analyzed in the paper can perform significantly only with a displacement of several millimeters, at microwave operating frequencies.
Finally, the Applicant has further observed that in the prior art described in PCT/EP2006/005202 the perturbing member moves in the region where the field is the strongest, and the performance is very sensitive to the geometrical accuracy of the waveguide components: the behavior of the delay line can therefore be difficult to reproduce.
Thus, the need exists of providing a tunable delay line which: is of reduced geometrical size, so that it can be employed also when several devices are to be formed or mounted in a same component and does not cause problems for high-frequency applications; exhibits good performance even with a relatively important displacement of the perturbing member, so that no complicate and expensive control is needed; is not particularly sensitive to the geometrical accuracy of the perturbing member, so that no difficult and expensive working is required for manufacture; and allows a tuning also of the impedance matching sections.
In a first aspect, there is provided a continuously tunable delay line comprising at least a first ridge waveguide with tunable propagation characteristics and including a waveguide body and a metal ridge, longitudinally extending within said waveguide body and having a longitudinal end surface separated by an air gap with variable width from a confronting waveguide element. The ridge is inserted into said waveguide body through an air slot provided in a wall of said waveguide body opposite to said waveguide element, and is connected to an actuator arranged to continuously move said ridge through said air slot so as to vary the width of said air gap and thereby to tune the delay.
The actuator is located externally of the waveguide body.
Advantageously, the ridge waveguide has characteristics such that the fundamental propagation mode is a hybrid mode including both transversal electric and transversal magnetic components, and such that the operating frequency falls in a frequency range where the propagation constant varies substantially linearly with frequency over a whole displacement range of the ridge.
The ridge is located in a central section of the waveguide, forming the actual delay element, and the delay line further comprises input and output sections at both sides of said central section for impedance matching between input and output ports and said central section, the input and output sections comprising respective movable members for the adjustment of the impedance of the input/output sections.
In an embodiment of the invention, the impedance matching is static, i.e. the movable members are arranged to be brought, during a calibration phase, to a position corresponding to an optimized overall impedance matching condition for an operating frequency range and are locked in use in that position.
In another embodiment of the invention, the impedance matching is dynamic, i.e. the movable members are displaceable synchronously with the ridge for tuning the impedance matching depending on the ridge position. In the embodiment with dynamic impedance matching, the movable ridge and the moving members in both the input and the output section can be driven by a common actuator, or by separate and independently operable actuators.
The delay line may also comprise two identical tunable ridge waveguides with movable ridge, where the output of a first waveguide is connected to the input of the other waveguide and the moving parts in both waveguides are driven by a common actuator.
Use of a ridge waveguide allows, as known, lowering the cut-off frequency of the fundamental mode of propagation, resulting in a reduction of the size of the devices. Also, a ridge guide exhibits a high mechanical strength and is compatible with the relative high signal powers encountered in the preferred applications and minimizes ohmic loss. Moreover, since the electromagnetic field in a ridge waveguide is mostly confined in the region of the air gap and is very weak in the region remote from the air gap, having a movable ridge through a slot formed in said region of weak electromagnetic field and driven by an actuator located externally of waveguide provides the advantage that propagation of the electromagnetic field inside the waveguide is not or is minimally affected. This also results in a behavior that is substantially insensitive to the geometrical accuracy of the various parts and thus is readily reproducible. The design of the delay line allows tuning the air gap width within a range that does not require use of sophisticated and expensive control equipments, and high efficiency is obtained with limited displacements. Finally, the provision of impedance matching sections with movable members allows an optimization of the matching for the specific application and even for the instant conditions of the delay element.
In a second aspect, the invention also provides an apparatus for transmitting a signal to a plurality of users of a wireless communication system via diversity antennas, said apparatus including, along a signal path towards said diversity antennas, at least one tunable delay line generating at least one variably-delayed replica of said signal and consisting of a tunable delay line according to the invention.
In another aspect, the invention also provides a phased-array antenna in which tunable ridge waveguide delay lines according to the invention provide a differential delay on signals feeding adjacent antenna elements or groups of elements.
In yet another aspect the invention also provides a wireless communication system including the above transmitting apparatus or the above phased array antenna.
Further objects, characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments, given by way of non-limiting examples and illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which:
a and 4b are enlarged views similar to
Referring to
The physical support for delay line 100 is a ridge waveguide, which consists of a metallic waveguide 102 with generally rectangular cross section having a longitudinal partition or ridge 103 (
A ridge waveguide produces a significant lowering of the cut-off frequency of the fundamental mode of propagation. Lowering the cut-off frequency intrinsically implies a reduction of the size of the devices. Moreover, for a given cut-off frequency, a ridge waveguide has a greatly reduced cross sectional size with respect to a conventional rectangular waveguide.
Basically, delay line 100 consists of four main parts: a central section 120, forming the actual phase-shifting element; input and output sections 121A and 121B, providing RF signal impedance matching between the main central section 120 and two external ports 108A, 108B as shown in
Central section 120 corresponds to the waveguide region where ridge 103 extends. Ridge 103 is inserted into waveguide 102 through a longitudinal air slot 106 (
Central section 120 further comprises a dielectric slab 104 (
However, dielectric slab 104 could even be dispensed with, in which case delay tuning can be obtained by varying the width of the air gap between the bottom end of ridge 103 and wall 102b.
Input and output sections 121A and 121B are each composed of a signal feeder 112 (shown only in
Linear actuator 107 is placed externally of waveguide 102 and is connected to ridge 103 in order to move it up and down through slot 106 to vary the width of air gap 105. Actuator 107 can be a conventional electromechanical actuator, suitable for varying the ridge position at a frequency of several tens of Hertz, e.g. a voice coil.
The provision of a movable ridge 103 driven by an actuator 107 located externally of waveguide 102 and connected to ridge 103 through air slot 106 in upper waveguide wall 102 remote from air gap 105 is an important feature of the present invention. Indeed, as known, in a ridge waveguide like that discussed above, the electromagnetic field is mostly confined in the region between metallic ridge 103 and dielectric element 104. i.e. in the region of air gap 105, and is very weak in the region close to upper waveguide wall 102a (see also
The operation of tunable delay line 100 is as follows.
The RF signal enters the TRW device from input port (e.g. port 108A), propagates through input matching section 121A and then goes to central phase-shifting section 120. There, the electromagnetic field is mostly confined in the region between metallic ridge 103 and dielectric element 104, so that propagation properties are strongly dependent on the width of air-gap 105. Finally the signal passes through output matching section 121B and exits from output port 108B with a delay or phase shift τ(t), the instant value of which depends on the instant width of air gap 105.
More particularly, tAB may represent the delay introduced by delay line 101 for a given value of air gap 105. When the air gap is changed due to a displacement of ridge 103, a new propagation condition causes a different delay t′AB. In this way, a delay variation Δt=t′AB−tAB is produced.
Propagation properties of electromagnetic signals can be expressed in terms of propagation constant β representing the phase-shift of the signal per section of length, at a given frequency. A diagram showing the propagation constant β as a function of frequency is known as “dispersion diagram”.
In order to explain in more details how the device works, let us refer to
For a given gap between metallic ridge 103 and dielectric slab 104, curve β(f) has a linear portion in a certain frequency range, where the TRW shows a non-dispersive behaviour. By changing the air gap width, the frequency range where β(f) has a linear behavior (referred to hereinafter as “linear frequency range”) slightly changes, but it is possible to find a frequency range, independent of the air gap width, where the behavior is almost linear. It can be appreciated from
This means that the electromagnetic signal propagates from port A to port B without phase distortion.
Another important aspect in the delay line design is the impedance matching between input-output coaxial connectors 108 (suffixes A, B characterizing the input and the output, respectively, are omitted hereinafter for simplicity) and phase-shifting central section 120.
As well known, in order to have impedance matching, the characteristic impedance Zmb of matching sections 121 must satisfy the relation
Zm=√{square root over (Zc·Zp)}
where Zc is the characteristic impedance of central section 120 and Zp is the characteristic impedance of port 108. Zp is typically fixed at 50Ω, while Zc presents a dependence on the width of air gap 105. According to the invention, the impedance of matching sections 121 can be externally tuned in order to optimize impedance matching of the whole device by acting on the relative position of metallic element 109 relative to feeder 112 (
In the embodiment illustrated in
In the variants shown in
In particular, in the arrangement shown in
In the arrangement shown in
The graphs of
Finally, the graph of
This suggests that, by independently moving the ridge and the metallic member by means of different and independent linear actuators, as depicted in
It is clear that the above description has been given by way of non-limiting example and that the skilled in the art can make changes and modifications without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims. In particular, even if a horizontal waveguide body resting on a major face has been shown, a different orientation can be envisaged, provided that the ridge moves through a slot in a region where the electromagnetic field is weak. The dielectric material of slab 104, 204, 304 can be different from CaTiO3, provided it has a high dielectric constant (e.g. >100) to confine the electromagnetic field. Piezoelectric actuators could be used in place of linear actuators. Also, even if a static impedance matching has been assumed for the double-line embodiment, a dynamic impedance matching, in particular of the kind shown in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2007/010318 | 11/28/2007 | WO | 00 | 9/3/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/068051 | 6/4/2009 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2546840 | Tyrrell | Mar 1951 | A |
2591329 | Zaleski | Apr 1952 | A |
2930040 | Weil | Mar 1960 | A |
3783221 | Soulier | Jan 1974 | A |
3882396 | Schneider | May 1975 | A |
4072902 | Knox et al. | Feb 1978 | A |
8076997 | Bertin et al. | Dec 2011 | B2 |
20030042997 | Baik et al. | Mar 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
591369 | Aug 1947 | GB |
608494 | Sep 1948 | GB |
WO-2006037364 | Apr 2006 | WO |
WO-2007-137610 | Dec 2007 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report from the European Patent Office for International Application No. PCT/EP2007/010318 (Mail date Aug. 13, 2008). |
Poplavko et al., “Dielectric Based Frequency Agile Microwave Devices,” 151h International Conference on Microwave, Radar and Wireless Communications, MIKON-2004, pp. 828-831, (2004). |
Chang, “Partially Dielectric-Slab-Filled Waveguide Phase Shifter,” IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, vol. MTT-22, No. 5, pp. 481-485, (1974). |
Arnold et al., “An Approximate Analysis of Dielectric-Ridge Loaded Waveguide,” IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, pp. 699-701, (1972). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20110001579 A1 | Jan 2011 | US |