Waveguide filter

Wave transmission lines and networks – Coupling networks – Wave filters including long line elements

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C333S208000, C333S202000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06285267

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The present invention relates to a waveguide filter having a stepped transformer area on the input side and/or output side as well as an area of alternate-height waveguide segments.
A waveguide filter of this type is known from “Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks and Coupling Structures”; Matthaei, Young, Jones; McGraw Hill Book Company 1964, pages 398 to 408, in particular FIG. 7.05-8 on page 405. The area of alternate-height waveguide segments in this filter has a waffle-iron filter structure. On the input and output sides of this structure are located stepped transformers with corrugated areas that each measure &lgr;
g
/4 in length, where &lgr;k represents the waveguide wavelength in the pass band.
A waveguide filter with stepped transformers on the input and output sides as well as an intermediate area of coupled resonators in the form of a corrugated waveguide filter (Matthaei, Young, Jones, page 358, paragraph 2) with low-pass action is known from ANT Nachrichtentechnische Berichte, Volume 5, November 1988, pages 114 to 120.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The waveguide filter makes it possible to build waveguide filters with a high edge steepness and a short overall length.
Waveguide filters with a high edge steepness are generally implemented using conventional corrugated waveguide filter structures. However, this would necessitate a very large number of elements, i.e., a chain of short rectangular waveguide segments with alternating greater and lesser heights, thus requiring a great overall length and mass. The large number of elements would also produce extremely high attenuation in the pass band, making it especially difficult to use the filter in satellites.
Another way to produce high edge steepness is to use additional, relatively narrow-band band-stop filters. Known band-stop waveguide filter designs use stubs that either branch off from the waveguide via a coupled cavity resonator measuring &lgr;
g
′/2 in length (where &lgr;
g
′ is equal to the waveguide wavelength in the pass band of the band-stop filter) or fully coupled stubs that measure &lgr;
g
′/4 in length and are short-circuited on one end (Matthaei, Young, Jones, pages 725 to 768). The distance between the resonators and stubs, respectively, measures unequal multiples of &lgr;
g
′/4. If three filter circuits are used, for example, this would add at least another &lgr;
g
′/2 to the total length of a conventional low-pass filter.
According to the present invention, however, geometrically closely spaced stop elements are used which are additionally integrated into the one or more stepped transformers. These two features provide a stop band with a very high stop-band attenuation directly above the pass band and simultaneously reduce the number of steps needed. This makes it possible, in particular, to build low-pass waveguide filters with a very short overall length.
If the stubs of a band-stop filter have different lengths, the width and depth of the stop band can be flexibly adjusted to the requirements at hand.
Because there is no need for the intermediate lengths measuring &lgr;
g
′/4 between the stop elements or at the end of short-circuited stubs, as is common in known band-stop filter designs, and therefore fewer matching units are also needed, the waveguide filter according to the present invention has a very short overall length. The entire structure can be produced by cost-effective milling techniques and does not require any equalization elements if properly dimensioned.
The filter according to the present invention is especially suitable for suppressing undesired spurious signals in traveling-field tubes of communications satellites because it supplies a high stop-band attenuation both directly above the pass band and at long frequency intervals despite its short overall length.
The area of alternate-height waveguide segments can also be designed as a corrugated waveguide, a ridged waveguide, or a waffle-iron waveguide filter. A waffle-iron filter design has the additional advantage that it enables signal components that are propagated in the form of higher-order waveguide modes to be attenuated on the second and third harmonics.
In communications satellites, interconnected narrow-band channel filters are used to direct the signals on the individual transmission channels to a common bus bar (output multiplexer), from where they are routed to the antenna. However, the traveling-field tubes serving as transmitter amplifiers produce not only the wanted signal but also undesired spurious signals (transmit signal noise, i.e., harmonics), which should be heavily attenuated before reaching the antenna. Because the far-off selectivity of the channel filters is poor, additional low-pass filters are be inserted into the transmission branch. These filters meet especially high stop-band attenuation requirements in the satellite receive bands, e.g., bands II and m at 14 and 18 Ghz, respectively (FIG.
3
). In the current satellite generation, band II lies just above transmission band I, where the pass band of the low-pass filter is located. The transition to the stop band therefore requires an extremely high edge steepness. At the same time, however, the filter still have a high stop-band attenuation on the second and third harmonics (bands IV and V) at 24 and 35 Ghz. The filter according to the present invention meets all of these requirements.
Further important properties of a low-pass input filter of this type include its dimensions and mass. The filter according to the present invention provides an optimum compromise between the electrical and mechanical properties (mass, volume).


REFERENCES:
patent: 3271706 (1966-09-01), Rooney
patent: 3597710 (1971-08-01), Levy
patent: 3845422 (1974-10-01), Rhodes
patent: 4661999 (1987-04-01), Ullmann et al.
patent: 5142255 (1992-08-01), Chang et al.
patent: 6169466 (2001-01-01), Goulouev
patent: 0 274 859 (1988-07-01), None
Hauth et al., “The Corrugated—Waveguide Band—Pass Filter—A New Type of Waveguide Filter,” Proceedings of the European Microwave Conference, Folkets Hus, Sweden, Sep. 12-16, 1988, No. Conf. 18, Sep. 12, 1988, pp. 945-949, Microwave Exhibitions and Publishers Ltd., p. 946.
Jones, “Microwave Filters, Impedance—Matching Networks and Coupling Structures,” McGraw Hill Book Co., 1964, pp. 358, 393-408.
ANT Nachrichtentechnische Berichte, vol. 5, Nov. 1988, pp. 114-120.

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