1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a waveguide-tube structure (waveguide structure) suitable for transmission of a microwave or a millimeter wave.
2. Description of the Related Art
For example, the waveguide tube is configured in such a way that two approximately rectangular-parallelepiped conductive members 10 and 20 are laminated, and grooves 10a and 20a formed in the respective surfaces of the conductive members 10 and 20 are made to face each other; as a result, a hollow waveguide tube 30 having an approximately rectangular cross section.
In addition, the waveguide tube 30 is formed in a linear shape, and the direction of the tube axis thereof is perpendicular to the paper plane of
The plane on which the conductive members 10 and 20 face each other is the division plane of the waveguide tube 30.
The hollow waveguide tube 30, of this kind, that is divided by a division plane and whose cross section has a rectangular shape can be manufactured through die-casting, whereby the production costs can be suppressed to be relatively low.
Methods of dividing the waveguide tube 30 include a method of dividing a waveguide tube by a division plane parallel to the transverse side of a cross section of the waveguide tube and a method of dividing a waveguide tube by a division plane parallel to the longitudinal side of a cross section of the waveguide tube.
In the case where a waveguide tube is formed through a division structure, deterioration of the transmission performance can be suppressed more effectively by utilizing the method of dividing the waveguide tube by a division plane parallel to the transverse side of a cross section of the waveguide tube, as illustrated in
However, in the case where the longitudinal side of a waveguide tube is divided by a division plane parallel to the transverse side of a rectangular cross section of the waveguide tube, the groove depth is longer than the groove width, whereby the manufacturing through molding is liable to become difficult.
In the case of die-casting or the like, in general, the longer than the groove width the groove depth is, the more difficult it is that the melted metal flows into the front end of the wall that forms the groove; therefore, there has been a problem that the molding accuracy is deteriorated.
Moreover, there has been a problem that, the longer the groove depth as compared to the groove width, the shorter the lifetime of a die that is utilized for die-casting. Also, the production costs eventually become expensive.
In Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 2004-48486 (Patent Document 1), there is disclosed “a waveguide tube characterized by having a structure in which two tub-shaped divided members obtained through division by an H-plane or an E-plane are bonded to each other, and characterized in that the cross section thereof perpendicular to the longitudinal direction thereof has a hexagonal shape”.
The structure of the waveguide tube disclosed in Patent Document 1 is similar to the structure of the waveguide tube illustrated in
As measures for the foregoing problems in the known waveguide tube, there is conceivable a method in which a waveguide tube is formed by applying metal plating to a resin member or the like that has a superior moldability.
However, in some cases, due to a structural factor, the need for heat radiation, or the like, resin cannot be utilized for both of the conductive members 10 and 20 that configure the waveguide tube 30; thus, the waveguide tube 30 cannot help being formed by utilizing metal only for one of the conductive members 10 and 20 and combining the metal member and the resin member.
In this case, due to contact friction caused by the linear-expansion difference between the members, separation of metal plating occurs in a junction surface produced by laminating the metal member 10 and the resin member 20 to which metal plating is applied.
When separation of metal plating occurs, separation powder of the metal plating becomes floating dirt in the waveguide tube, thereby deteriorating the transmission performance, or a separation portion produced by friction causes a separation area to expand; thus, there eventually occurs a problem, such as the occurrence of wall-face separation of the waveguide tube, which considerably deteriorates the function of the waveguide tube.
Moreover, there occurs a problem that, due to the linear-expansion difference between the laminated members (i.e., the laminated metal member 10 and resin member 20), “the relative position between the laminated members is displaced”.
It goes without saying that, when the relative position between the laminated members (i.e., the laminated metal member 10 and resin member 20) is displaced, the transmission performance (propagation performance) is affected.
Here, the reason why separation of metal plating occurs in the known waveguide tube will be explained in detail.
As illustrated in
With the configuration of the waveguide tube illustrated in
With such a waveguide tube configuration as illustrated in
In
As described above, in the waveguide tube 30 in which the members 10 and 20 that are made of different materials are laminated, due to the difference between the linear-expansion coefficients of the members 10 and 20, the expansion/contraction amounts of the members differ from each other, when the environmental temperature changes.
For example, in the case where the member 10 is formed of SUS having a linear-expansion coefficient of 1.7×10−5, and the member 20 is formed of ABS having a linear-expansion coefficient of 8.5×10−5, 50-degree change in the temperature causes the expansion/contraction amounts per 50-millimeter basic line to differ by 0.17 mm from each other, whereby the difference in the deformation amount causes friction.
The contact friction causes separation of metal plating in a known waveguide tube.
In the case where, as illustrated in
Accordingly, the yield rate of the product is deteriorated, and the lifetime of the die is shortened.
In order to cope with this problem, it is desired to make the depth of the groove formed in the surface portion of the metal member shorter than the depth of the groove formed in the surface portion of the resin member.
The present invention has been implemented in order to solve the foregoing problems; an objective thereof is to provide a waveguide structure in which a hollow waveguide tube whose cross section has an approximately rectangular shape is formed by laminating two conductive members in such a way that respective grooves formed in the surface portions of the conductive members face each other, and contact friction can be prevented from causing separation of metal plating at the junction portion between the two conductive members so that deterioration in the quality (deterioration in the transmission performance) can be suppressed.
Moreover, another objective thereof is to provide a waveguide structure in which, through die-casting, grooves can be formed with a high yield rate in the surface portions of metal members so that shortening of the lifetime of the die can be suppressed.
Furthermore, another objective thereof is to provide a waveguide structure in which the positional relationship between two conductive members can be prevented from being displaced by the linear-expansion difference between the conductive members.
A waveguide structure according to the present invention includes a first member, made of metal, in a surface portion of which a first groove having a linear shape is formed; and a second member, made of resin, in a surface portion of which a second groove having a linear shape is formed and to the surface of which metal plating is applied. The first member and the second member are arranged in such a way that the first groove and the second groove face each other so that a waveguide as a waveguide tube is configured, and the first member in the surface portion of which the first groove is formed and the second member in the surface portion of which the second groove is formed are held in such a way that a gap exists between the respective surfaces thereof.
Therefore, according to the present invention, by combining the first member that is made of metal and has a high heat radiation performance and the second member that is obtained by applying metal plating to a resin member having a high moldability, the heat radiation performance is improved in comparison with the case where both the first and second members are made of resin.
Moreover, because the first and second members that face each other are held in such a way that a predetermined gap exists between the respective surfaces thereof, contact friction produced between the first and second members can be prevented from causing separation of the metal plating.
The foregoing and other objects, features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of the present invention when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Embodiments of the present invention will be explained below with reference to the accompanying drawings.
In addition, the same reference characters in the figures denote the same or equivalent constituent elements and may not be described in detail for all drawing figures in which they appear.
In Embodiment 1, as is the case with the conventional waveguide tube illustrated in
A hollow waveguide tube 30, whose cross section parallel to a plane perpendicular to the tube axis has an approximately rectangular shape, is formed by making the linear grooves 10a and 20a that are formed in the respective surfaces of the metal member 10 and the resin member 20 face each other.
Reference numeral 50 denotes a plane on which the metal member 10 and the resin member 20 face each other and that is a division plane of the hollow waveguide tube 30.
In addition, the tube axis of the waveguide tube 30 is perpendicular to the paper plane of
The hollow waveguide tube 30, of this kind, that is divided by the division plane 50 and whose cross section has a rectangular shape can be manufactured through die-casting, whereby the production costs can be suppressed to be relatively low.
In a waveguide structure (waveguide tube) according to Embodiment 1, in order to solve the problem “that, due to the linear-expansion difference between the metal member 10 and the resin member 20, contact friction occurs at the contact portion; the metal plating applied to the surface of the resin member 20 is separated; and produced separation powder of the metal plating deteriorates the propagation performance (transmission performance) of the waveguide tube”, a gap 40 is intentionally provided at the division portion of the waveguide tube, as illustrated in
In a waveguide structure according to Embodiment 1, a plurality of hollow waveguide tubes 30, formed by arranging the plurality (four, in
A waveguide structure (i.e., waveguide tube) according to Embodiment 1 will be further explained in detail with reference to
In
In addition, the member 10 is a metal conductive member (referred to also as a first member, hereinafter); the member 20 is a resin conductive member (referred to also as a second member, hereinafter) to the surface of which metal plating is applied.
In Embodiment 1, the hollow waveguide tube 30 is configured by laminating the first and second members 10 and 20 in such a way that the linear grooves 10a and 20a that are formed in the respective surfaces of the first members 10 and the second member 20 face each other.
Reference numeral 40 denotes a gap intentionally provided when the first and second members 10 and 20 are laminated as depicted in
In
The groove 10a is formed in the surface portion of the metal-made first member 10.
The waveguide tube 30 that is illustrated in
The waveguide tube 30 is formed in such a way that an electric wave having a polarization plane parallel to the width direction of the grooves 10a and 20a propagates in a direction perpendicular to the first and second members 10 and 20.
The inner-tube wavelength of an electric wave that propagates through the waveguide tube 30 is determined by the sum of the overall depth of the grooves 10a and 20a, which is the longitudinal (the length thereof is designated by “a”) side of the cross section of the waveguide tube, and the gap length of the intentionally provided gap 40.
In addition, in
There will be explained the principle according to which a desired waveguide-tube performance can be obtained even in the case where the gap 40 exists between the groove 10a and the groove 20a.
In
As illustrated in
Accordingly, in the case where the waveguide tube is divided by a plane that passes through the middle point of the longitudinal side having a length of “a”, the division does not split the flow of the currents that flow on the sidewall.
In addition, because the distribution of current vectors parallel to the tube axis have some width in the longitudinal direction of the waveguide tube, the gap amount caused by the division can be allowed to some extent.
Next, there will be explained the result of a quantitative analysis on the effect of the gap 40 that is intentionally provided.
Here, there was performed the analysis on the passage loss caused throughout the waveguide tube 30, from the cross section at one end to the cross section at the other end thereof.
The subject portion to be analyzed has a shape obtained by elongating by 6 mm in the tube axis the cross section of the waveguide tube 30 including the gap 40 that is intentionally provided.
In other words, in
As the analysis conditions, the propagation frequency, the transverse-side length “b” of the waveguide tube 30, and the longitudinal-side length “a” of the waveguide 30 were fixed to 76.5 Hz, 1.27 mm, and 3.5 mm, respectively, and the position and the width of the intentionally provided gap 40 were varied.
In
The ordinate of
As represented in
As can be seen from
However, only in the case where the cross-sectional shapes of the groove 10a and the groove 20a that face each other are symmetric with each other, the position of the ideal division plane becomes 50% with respect to the longitudinal side of the waveguide tube.
In the case where the foregoing cross-sectional shapes of the waveguide tube are not symmetric with each other in the depth direction thereof, the ideal division plane is displaced from the position of 50% with respect to the longitudinal side of the waveguide tube (i.e., the center position of the longitudinal side of the waveguide tube); therefore, it is required to set an offset for the position of the division plane of the waveguide tube.
In the case where the respective electric conductivities of the electric conductors that form the grooves 10a and 20a are different from each other, the ideal division plane is displaced even in the case where the shapes of the grooves are symmetric with each other.
In Embodiment 1, as illustrated in
As in Embodiment 1, by making the shapes of the grooves asymmetric with each other with respect to the division plane and displacing the ideal division plane, “the groove 10a whose depth is shorter than the width thereof” can be formed (e.g., the groove 10a whose depth is approximately equal to the width); the shape of the groove 10a is realized in consideration of the lifetime of the die for die-casting.
The shape of the groove 20a, which is the other groove included in the waveguide tube is determined in consideration of resin molding and milling; the groove depth thereof is longer than the groove width.
As described above, a waveguide structure according to Embodiment 1 is provided with a first member 10, made of metal, in the surface portion of which a first groove 10a having a linear shape is formed; and a second member 20, made of resin, in the surface portion of which a second groove 20a having a linear shape is formed and to the surface of which metal plating is applied. In the waveguide structure, the first member 10 and the second member 20 are arranged in such a way that the first groove 10a and the second groove 20a face each other so that a waveguide as a waveguide tube is configured; and the first member 10 in the surface portion of which the first groove 10a is formed and the second member 20 in the surface portion of which the second groove 20a is formed are held in such a way that the gap 40 exists between the respective surfaces thereof.
Therefore, according to Embodiment 1, by combining the first member that is made of metal and has a high heat radiation performance and the second member that is obtained by applying metal plating to a resin member having a high moldability, the heat radiation performance is improved in comparison with the case where both the first and second members are made of resin.
Moreover, because the first and second members that face each other are held in such a way that a predetermined gap exists between the respective surfaces thereof, contact friction produced between the first and second members can be prevented from causing separation of the metal plating.
Additionally, the depth of the first groove 10a in a waveguide structure according to Embodiment 1 is shallower than the depth of the second groove 20a.
Accordingly, in the formation, through die-casting, of the first groove 10a in the surface portion of the first member made of metal, the yield rate is raised and the shortening of the lifetime of the die is suppressed; thus, inexpensive waveguide tubes can be manufactured.
For example, as illustrated in
As far as the method of providing the protrusion portions is concerned, as illustrated in
In
In
The height of the protrusion illustrated in each of
The length of a gap 40 is determined by the height of the protrusion portion.
As another method of fixing the first and second grooves 10a and 20a with a predetermined gap length maintained, for example, there may be a method in which, by inserting spacers 102 (illustrated as black portions in
In
The length of a gap 40 is determined only by the thickness of the spacer 102.
In each of the methods illustrated in
In such a way as described above, contact friction produced between the first and second members 10 and 20 is prevented from causing separation of the plating on the second member 20.
As described above, in a waveguide structure according to Embodiment 2, the gap 40 is formed of protrusions provided in at least one of the first and second members 10 and 20.
Therefore, because the first and second members can be fixed in such a way that a predetermined gap length (i.e., gap amount determined only by the height of the protrusion portion) exists between the respective surfaces thereof, contact friction produced between the first and second members can be prevented from causing separation of the metal plating applied to the surface of the second member.
Moreover, in a waveguide structure according to Embodiment 2, no metal plating is applied to the portion, of the second member 20, on which the protrusion portion and the second member 20 make contact with each other.
Accordingly, contact friction produced between the protrusion portion and the metal plating applied to the surface of the second member can be eliminated, whereby separation of the metal plating can be prevented.
Still moreover, in a waveguide structure according to Embodiment 2, the gap 40 is formed by means of the spacer 102 inserted between the first and second members 10 and 20, and no metal plating is applied to the portion, of the second member 20, on which the second member and the spacer 102 make contact with each other.
Accordingly, contact friction produced between the second member and the spacer can be prevented from causing separation of the metal plating.
As illustrated in
In Embodiment 1 described above, there has been explained a case where there exists an ideal division plane with which the leakage of an electromagnetic wave hardly occurs.
However, in a waveguide tube in which the division plane is perpendicular to the tube axis of the waveguide, no ideal division plane exists. Accordingly, a case where no ideal division plane exists will be explained below.
In Embodiment 3, waveguide tubes are arranged in such way that the thickness “t” of the tube wall between adjacent waveguide tubes (e.g., waveguide tubes 30 and 31) becomes a quarter of the free-space propagation wavelength.
As illustrated in
Accordingly, the electromagnetic wave that leaks through a gap 40 in the tube-wall portion and enters the adjacent waveguide tube can be suppressed to be minimal.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
In such a way as described above, the positioning can be performed in such a way that a groove 10a formed in the surface portion of the member 10 and a groove 20a formed in the surface portion of the member 20 accurately face each other in the longitudinal direction (the tube axis direction shown in
As explained in Embodiment 1, in the case where members having different linear-expansion coefficients are laminated, the amounts of expansion/contraction, due to change in temperature, of the members differ from each other.
A center point “C”, of the member in
Accordingly, in the positioning structure, the members are fixed at the center point C as a reference point.
In
The positioning pin 70 may be molded integrally with the resin member 20, or only the positioning member 70 may be formed of a different material.
Moreover, a structure that functions as the positioning pin 70 may be added to the protrusion position described in Embodiment 2.
Still moreover, a positioning structure may be added to the spacer 102 explained in Embodiment 2.
While the presently preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it is to be understood that these disclosures are for the purpose of illustration and that various changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2008-285428 | Nov 2008 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3157847 | Williams | Nov 1964 | A |
4020875 | Akiba | May 1977 | A |
20030137371 | Saitoh et al. | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20040104793 | Tamura et al. | Jun 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2002076716 | Mar 2002 | JP |
2003087009 | Mar 2003 | JP |
2004-048486 | Feb 2004 | JP |
2005045341 | Feb 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100109817 A1 | May 2010 | US |