This application relates to waveguide systems and, more specifically, to waveguide interfaces for coupling sections of waveguide and waveguide components.
Waveguide flanges are used for coupling waveguide sections and waveguide components. When designing waveguide flanges for waveguide joints, consideration is given to the fact that characteristics of waveguide joints affect the mechanical strength and electrical performance of waveguides. For this reason waveguide joints are designed to provide strength and minimize energy reflections and minimal power leakage throughout the frequency range.
Ideally, flat flanges butted together with perfect ohmic contact would produce negligible reflections and negligible power leakage that are frequency insensitive. With a perfect contact-type coupling of flat flanges the waveguide is essentially continuous through the joint. However, a perfect ohmic contact to prevent leakage and reflection requires precise alignment, clean and perfectly flat surfaces and a tight face-to-face surface abutment.
With careful design and assembly, the combined waveguide sections or components are more likely to exhibit desired SWR (standing wave ratio), return loss, reflection and leakage properties over the frequency range. However, flat contact-type flanges cannot tolerate gaps between them and, being susceptible to mechanical vibrations or surface degradation, at higher levels of energy they can produce arcing at the joints. For the same reason, flat contact-type flanges are not suitable for coaxial and rotary joints.
As an alternative, waveguide joints use choke flanges. In a typical configuration, The connection between the waveguide sections is accomplished with a cover flange 14 abutting a choke flange 16 as shown in
However, conventional choke-coupled joints such as those illustrated above require precise alignment and high precision parts. This requirement is particularly important at high frequencies, for example at 38 GHz. For rotary joints the precise alignment prevents return loss and SWR variations and minimizes friction during rotation. To illustrate this point,
The present invention contemplates waveguide interface designs that address these and related issues. Interfaces for joining waveguides that are designed in accordance with the principles of the present invention exhibit desired electrical properties even with imperfect face-to-face surface abutment or alignment. These waveguide interfaces tolerate gaps between the mating surfaces of the flanges, as much as 0.06″ or more, and lower levels of parts precision. The waveguide transition is designed to minimize resonance that would otherwise introduce poor return loss and high insertion loss. This property is optimized for the entire frequency band. In addition, these waveguide interfaces require fewer parts, having no need for the spring or contacts to make the ohmic contact.
Accordingly, for the purpose of the invention as shown and broadly described herein a waveguide interface includes a choke flange associated with a waveguide and a shield flange associated with another waveguide. In one embodiment, the choke flange has a body with a perimeter and a base and a neck that forms a step at the base around the perimeter of the body. The neck is typically substantially concentric with the body. At the base, the neck has a mating face with a waveguide opening for the associated waveguide, wherein for a design frequency the body and the neck conceptually have half-wavelength and quarter wavelength dimensions, respectively, that correspond to the design frequency. The quarter wavelength dimension of the neck is its radius, or half of its width or length dimension.
In this embodiment of waveguide interface, the shield flange has a mating face with a waveguide opening for the other waveguide. The shield flange is adapted to receive the choke flange whereby the waveguide openings would face each other and the associated waveguides would be coupled. The waveguide openings are each circular, rectangular or square shaped to accommodate the shape of their associated waveguide. The shield flange and step formed by the neck and body of the received choke flange define an air gap that has the effect of creating a virtual continuity through the joint between the coupled waveguides even when the face-to-face abutment is not perfect so that the waveguide openings end up with a gap of, say, 0.06″ between them. Indeed, a waveguide interface can be adapted to maintain a loose coupling between the shield and choke flanges such that air is passable therebetween. The virtual continuity through the joint represents matched impedance across the joint and this translates to matched frequency response.
Then, for various gap sizes, over the frequency band the joint between the waveguides would exhibit insertion loss that falls below a predetermined insertion loss level, say, 1 dB, and return loss that exceeds a predetermined return loss level, say, 20 dB. Preferably also, the shield flange is adapted with shield walls that project from its base sufficiently so as to create mechanical support for retaining the received choke flange and to create an electrical block for preventing energy leakage. That is, with this configuration the waveguide interface would produce negligible reflections and negligible power leakage that are frequency insensitive.
In another embodiment of the waveguide interface, the choke flange has a body with a wall that defines its perimeter and a base that includes a mating face with an opening for the waveguide. The wall has, around the perimeter, an annular groove which is offset from the base. For a design frequency the groove has a width dimension that corresponds to half wavelength of the design frequency. In this embodiment, the shield flange again has a mating face with a waveguide opening for the other waveguide and it is adapted to engage the choke flange whereby the waveguide openings would face each other and the associated waveguides would be coupled. The shield flange and engaged choke flange with the groove define an air gap that has the effect of creating a virtual continuity across the joint between the coupled waveguides even when the waveguide openings have a gap therebetween.
In sum, a waveguide interface designed in accordance with principles of the present invention exhibits improved mechanical and electrical properties. This and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood from the description herein, appended claims, and accompanying drawings as hereafter described.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate various aspects of the invention and together with the description, serve to explain its principles. Wherever convenient, the same reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like elements.
a-1c illustrate a typical waveguide interface configured with a cover flange abutting a choke flange to form the joint between waveguide sections.
a-3b show the cover flange of a choke-coupled waveguide joint with spring contacts for mating the waveguides.
a-4b illustrate the properties of a half-wave groove at the connection point and the resonance frequency of the equivalent tank circuit within the frequency band.
a-5b illustrate a waveguide interface configured, in accordance with principles of the present invention, with a so-called step choke flange mating with a shield flange to form the joint between waveguide sections.
a-6c and 7a-7e show various top, cross section and isometric views of waveguide interfaces to illustrate a number of embodiments of the waveguide interface design in accordance with principles of the present invention.
a-8c are empirical insertion loss and return loss graphs.
As noted above, the present invention relates to waveguide interfaces. The design of waveguide interfaces in accordance with the present invention is based, in part, on the observation that, with proper geometry, a half-wave groove at the connection point between two waveguides appears to the passing waves as a virtual continuity through the joint in the transmission line.
a illustrates the foregoing principle. The transmission line is interrupted with a groove 302 having a half-wavelength dimension (λ/2). The groove is analogous to a tank circuit with inductance, L, and capacitance, C. The resonance frequency, fc, of the analogous tank circuit is derived from the equation:
The resonance frequency, fc, is the center frequency in the frequency band. The graph of
Conceptually, the geometric design would be similar but the dimensions for different frequencies such as 6, 13, 15, 18, 23, 26, 28 and 38 GHz would be different. Thus, notwithstanding the different dimensions, the description of the geometric configuration applies in general to the various frequencies.
a is a diagram of a waveguide interface joining two waveguide sections. In accordance with principles of the present invention, this embodiment of a waveguide interface is configured to join waveguide sections 414 and 416 using flanges 402 and 404. One flange 404 is a ‘choke’ flange with a new step-like choke design and the second flange 402 is a ‘shield’ flange. Structurally, the so-called choke flange 404 has a neck 420 with a quarter-wavelength (λ/4) radius designed to accommodate a circular waveguide section or components 414. Because the body of such choke flange 404 has a half-wavelength (λ/2) radius, the neck 420 forms a step 406 at the base along the perimeter of the flange body.
The neck and step formation replaces the conventional groove surrounding the waveguide opening which is carved on the mating surface with this waveguide opening. Note that instead of a circular shape, the waveguides and flanges may have a rectangular or square-like shape. In such instances, the half-wavelength (λ/2) and quarter-wavelength (λ/4) dimensions would be maintained except that instead of radius they would be length/width dimensions. A circular-square or rectangular body shape combination is likewise possible. Note also that the dimensions are designed for a particular frequency, but, as will be later explained, because of the characteristics of this design the precision of these dimensions and the smoothness of the surfaces is not as critical as it would otherwise be in conventional designs.
Turning again to
Also, the mechanical block erected by the vertical walls 410 that project (vertically in this instance) from the base of the shield flange 402 operates to block energy leakage over the frequency range, say 37-41 GHz. Thus, notwithstanding the relatively loose mating between the flanges which allows air to pass through between them, the vertical walls 410 create an effect akin to an electrical energy gasket.
Again, the geometry of the air gap 418, ridge 420 and step surfaces 406 are designed for a particular frequency, and the resulting effects can be analogized to those of a tank (LC) circuit.
a-6c illustrate an implementation of the foregoing design in a waveguide joint for interfacing two waveguide sections.
In other words, once the frequency and corresponding dimensions are selected, a waveguide interface with the foregoing configuration would produce more predictable and robust results even with imperfect manufacture and assembly precision or subsequent movement. Such waveguide interface design relaxes or substantially avoids what would otherwise be a requirement of an effectively watertight, gap free and perfectly aligned mating between the flanges.
Note that in either one of the embodiments, whether described above or below, the height and shape of mating flange members is preferably set to enhance the mechanical and electrical performance of the waveguide interface. For instance, the height of the vertical wall members 510 of the shield flange 502 and that of the inserted choke flange member 507 is relatively large and sufficient to provide mechanical stability and improve the energy leakage blocking capability. In other words, the dimensions are preferably set for providing stable mechanical retention of the mating flange members and for sealing the joint to block energy leakage.
Following the same principles as described above but with a different configuration, another waveguide joint is implemented as shown in
c illustrates an alternate configuration for part a which is a choke flange 604′. This configuration might fit for instance in a smaller space with a different shape factor. In this implementation the waveguide interface (i.e., waveguide section 606′) joins a circular waveguide in part a to a rectangular waveguide in part b (i.e., the shield flange 602 of
d provides a more detailed cross-section view, along line B-B, of the alternate choke design of
The discontinuity between the waveguides at the connection points effects properties such as insertion loss and return loss of the combined waveguide. Thus, achieving the desired virtual continuity with the foregoing designs helps minimize the insertion loss and improve the return loss even when the face-to-face abutment of mating surfaces is not gap-free metal-to-metal contact and the gap size varies. Indeed with proper dimensions (e.g., width, step size) the design can create resonance at the desired frequency within the frequency band. In other words, with proper design of the choke, the waveguide behaves predictably in the desired frequency range even with a variable gap.
a is a diagram showing an empirical insertion loss that would be exhibited by impedance matched and unmatched designs with a gap of 0.06″. A transition with well-matched impedances produces in turn well-matched frequency responses for the various gap sizes. The unmatched impedance design uses a conventional choke-based flange configuration while the matched design uses a flange with one of the new choke designs as illustrated above. The high insertion loss shown for the unmatched design at the high end of the frequency range indicates a near-by resonance. The insertion loss with an impedance-matched design in accordance with various embodiments of the present invention is minimal and significantly closer to 0 dB.
b shows empirical values for the return loss that would be obtained with impedance matched and unmatched designs. Again the unmatched designs use conventional choke-based flanges and the matched designs use one of the above-described new choke. Ideally, without the gap the desired return loss might be maintained at a level 20 dB or higher across the frequency band, but with an unmatched design the return loss for a 0.06″ gap is at the lower level of 5-10 dB. With a matched design (that removes the resonance of an unmatched design) the return loss for a 0.06″ gap is equal to or higher (in absolute value) than 22 dB across the frequency range. This improvement provided by the matched impedance designs should work for various gap sizes and, as shown in
In sum, waveguide interfaces implemented in accordance with the principles of the present invention have a waveguide transition which minimizes resonance that would otherwise introduce poor return loss and high insertion loss across the frequency range. These waveguide interfaces are designed to tolerate gaps between the mating surfaces of the flanges and lower levels of parts precision. In addition, these waveguide interfaces require fewer parts, having no need for the spring contacts to make the electrical connection.
It is worth mentioning that the new waveguide interface designs apply to and can be implemented to effect a connection between waveguides in any type of system or environment. For example, one of the new waveguide interface designs can be implemented to connect between a primary feed horn of a microwave antenna and diplexer in a microwave transceiver. In another example, such waveguide interface designs can be implemented in a connection between waveguides in test equipment.
Finally, although the present invention has been described in considerable detail with reference to certain preferred versions thereof, other versions are possible. Therefore, the spirit and scope of the appended claims should not be limited to the description and illustrations of the preferred versions contained herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080001686 A1 | Jan 2008 | US |