US1942488A - Electric wave filter - Google Patents

Electric wave filter Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1942488A
US1942488A US563013A US56301331A US1942488A US 1942488 A US1942488 A US 1942488A US 563013 A US563013 A US 563013A US 56301331 A US56301331 A US 56301331A US 1942488 A US1942488 A US 1942488A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
circuit
loop circuit
filter
longitudinal
currents
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US563013A
Inventor
Henry G Och
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US563013A priority Critical patent/US1942488A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1942488A publication Critical patent/US1942488A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H7/00Multiple-port networks comprising only passive electrical elements as network components
    • H03H7/01Frequency selective two-port networks
    • H03H7/0123Frequency selective two-port networks comprising distributed impedance elements together with lumped impedance elements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H7/00Multiple-port networks comprising only passive electrical elements as network components
    • H03H7/01Frequency selective two-port networks
    • H03H7/17Structural details of sub-circuits of frequency selective networks
    • H03H7/1741Comprising typical LC combinations, irrespective of presence and location of additional resistors
    • H03H7/1758Series LC in shunt or branch path
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H7/00Multiple-port networks comprising only passive electrical elements as network components
    • H03H7/01Frequency selective two-port networks
    • H03H7/17Structural details of sub-circuits of frequency selective networks
    • H03H7/1741Comprising typical LC combinations, irrespective of presence and location of additional resistors
    • H03H7/1766Parallel LC in series path
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03HIMPEDANCE NETWORKS, e.g. RESONANT CIRCUITS; RESONATORS
    • H03H7/00Multiple-port networks comprising only passive electrical elements as network components
    • H03H7/42Balance/unbalance networks
    • H03H7/425Balance-balance networks

Definitions

  • This invention relates to wave transmission and more particularly to electric wave filters adapted for use in a loop circuit which also carries longitudinal currents.
  • the principal object is to pass without appreciable distortion a range of frequencies in the loop circuit and at the same time to suppress the longitudinal currents over a range of frequencies.
  • a feature of the invention is a network which 10 introduces into the loop circuit a broad-band filter characteristic and, at the same time, offers to the longitudinal currents an attenuation characteristic of an entirely different type.
  • Another feature of the invention is a filter which includes reactance elements that are effective in the loop circuit but ineffectual, or effective to a different degree, to the longitudinal currents, or vice versa. 7
  • An aerial telephone line which parallels an aerial power line is exposed to electrostatic and electromagnetic induction which tends to set up longitudinal currents in the telephone line.
  • disturbances in the power line produced by switching, changes of load, grounds, lightning or the like cause corresponding disturbances in the telephone line.
  • These surges on the telephone line may, in turn, be reradiatedto other communication systems, such as a nearby radio antenna, causing noise or other undesirable interference.
  • the telephone circuit ordinarily transmits voice and carrier frequencies, the problem arises of eliminating the undesirable longitudinal currents without appreciably interfering with the transmission of signals in the loop circuit.
  • the loop circuit in accordance with this invention there is provided in the loop circuit a network which allows the free passage of voice and carrier frequencies in that circuit but attenuates to any desired degree the objectionable longitudinal current.
  • a network which allows the free passage of voice and carrier frequencies in that circuit but attenuates to any desired degree the objectionable longitudinal current.
  • the mid-point of a shunt arm of the loop circuit filter is grounded through an impedance.
  • Fig. 1 shows an embodiment of the invention in a telephone circuit
  • Fig. 2 shows various attenuation characteristics which can be obtained with the filter structure shown in Fig. 1;
  • Fig. 3 illustrates the application of the invention to a phantom circuit.
  • the telephone circuit 11 comprises a pair of wires terminated at one end in receiving apparatus 12.
  • a power line 13 or other disturbing source is shown located in such proximity to a portion of line 11 that electric disturbances in the power line induce longitudinal currents of corresponding frequency in line 11.
  • a radio receiving antenna 14, terminating in receiving apparatus 16 is shown paralleling a portion of line 11 in such a way that disturbances on the telephone line of the frequency used in the radio channel would be radiated to the antenna, causing interference with the received radio signals, either directly or by modulation.
  • One method of preventing such interference with the radio channel is to provide in line 11 a filter network which will not interfere with the passage of the signaling frequencies over the loop circuit but will offer a high attenuation to longitudinal currents of the frequency used in the radio channel.
  • the loop circuit was used for voice frequency and car rier transmission, requiring the passage over the loop circuit of all frequencies up to 30 kilocycles, and the radio channel was placed at kilocycles, requiring a suppression of longitudinal currents over the frequency range of 58 kilocycles to 62 kilocycles.
  • the filter designated 15 in Fig. 1 may be made to meet the requirements stated above.
  • the filter is of balanced construction, comprising antiresonant series arms made up of inductance L1 and capacitance C1 in parallel, and in the shunt arm a pair of equal capacitances C2.v
  • the pair of inductances L1 1n the two sides of the circuit are coupled by mutual inductance M, the purpose of which will be fully explained later in the specification.
  • the mid-point of the shunt arm of the filter is grounded through inductance L2. 100 Provided the two sides of the circuit arev perfectly balanced with respect to ground, there will be no flow of loop current through L2, and L2 will, therefore, be ineffectual in the loop circuit.
  • the structure will function in the loop 105 circuit as a low-pass, suppression type, broadband filter, the cut-off frequency of which can be so chosen that the signal currents of the loop circuit are passed without appreciable distortion.
  • the attenuation characteristic with respect to 0 value of M is chosen.
  • Filter 15 can, of course, be used in a phantom circuit, each side of which is formed from a sidecircuit, as is illustrated in Fig. 3. In this case, similar filters are placed-in each of the associated side circuits and the mid-points of the shunt arms are connected together through inductance L2. 1 l 1 If it is desired to attenuate the longitudinal currents in a way difierent from that shown by the characteristics of Fig. 2, this can be done by substituting other combinations of reactances in place of L2 and by making changes in the series and shunt arms of the loop circuit filter in accordance with the well known principles of filter design.
  • Filter 20 is shown as a single section but if greater attenuation is required it can, of course, be obtained by adding additional sections, either of the same type or of a different type.
  • a signaling circuit comprising conductors forming a loop circuit for the transmission of signal currents, said loop circuit being subject to undesired longitudinal currents from some extraneous source, means for attenuating said longitudinal currents in a certain frequency range while at the same time allowing the free transmission over said loop circuit of a second range of frequencies including the signal currents, the limits of said second range of frequencies being independent of the limits of said first mentioned range.
  • a balanced wave filter comprising a series arm and a shunt arm, the mid-point of a shunt arm of said filter being connected to ground through an impedance element having a different kind of impedancefrequency characteristic than the impedance-frequency characteristic of said shunt arm.
  • a loop circuit comprising a pair of conductors, with a signal current flowing in said loop circuit and an undesired current longitudinally traversing said pair of conductors, means associated with said loop circuit for attenuating said undesired longitudinal current over a frequency band while at the same time allowing the free transmission of said signal currents in said loop circuit, the limits of said band being independent of the range of frequencies transmitted in said loop circuit.
  • a loop circuit formed of said conductors, said loop circuit carrying signaling currents and also carrying undesired longitudinal currents introduced from some extraneous source, means for freely transmitting in said loop circuit aband of frequencies including said signaling current while at the same time attenuating said longitudinal current which falls within a band of frequencies, the limits of said last-mentioned band being independent of the limits of said first-mena tioned band.
  • a signal circuit comprising a pair of line wires balanced with respect to ground, a longitudinal circuit comprising said pair of line wires in parallel as one path and ground as a return path, and a wave filter having a series branch in each of said line wires, a branch in shunt with respect to said line wires and a reactance element connected between the mid-point of said shunt branch and. ground,,said reactance element having a difierent type of reactance-frequency characteristic than thereactance-frequency characteristic of 'said shunt branch, whereby said filter hasa different attenuation characteristic in said signal circuit than it has in said longitudinal circuit.
  • two sidecircuits each comprising a pair of'line wires balanced with respect to ground, a phantom circuit comprising one of said side circuits as one path and the other of said side circuits as the'other path, a wave filter in each of said side circuits,- each of said filters having a series branch and a shunt branch and being balanced with respect to ground, and a reactance element connecting the mid-points of said shunt branches, said reactance element having a dififerent type of reactance-frequency characteristic than the reactance-frequency characteristics of said shunt branches...
  • a signal circuit comprising a pair of line wires balanced with respect to ground, a longitudinal circuit comprising said pair of line wires in parallel as one path and ground as a return path, and a wave filter associated with said signal circuit, said filter including a pair of elements coupled by mutual impedance in such a manner that there is formed in said signal circuit a broad-band wave filter of a certain type and in said longitudinal circuit a broad-band wave filter of a difierent type.

Description

Jan. 9, 1934. H. G. ocH
ELECTRIC WAVE FILTER Filed Sept. 16, 1931 L uzhbomkk nun Dun
INVENTOR H. G. OCH
A TTORNE y Patented Jan. 9, 1934 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE ELECTRIC WAVE FILTER Henry G. Och, New York, N. Y., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New v York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application September 16, 1931 Serial No. 563,013
7 Claims.
This invention relates to wave transmission and more particularly to electric wave filters adapted for use in a loop circuit which also carries longitudinal currents.
The principal object is to pass without appreciable distortion a range of frequencies in the loop circuit and at the same time to suppress the longitudinal currents over a range of frequencies.
A feature of the invention is a network which 10 introduces into the loop circuit a broad-band filter characteristic and, at the same time, offers to the longitudinal currents an attenuation characteristic of an entirely different type.
Another feature of the invention is a filter which includes reactance elements that are effective in the loop circuit but ineffectual, or effective to a different degree, to the longitudinal currents, or vice versa. 7
An aerial telephone line which parallels an aerial power line is exposed to electrostatic and electromagnetic induction which tends to set up longitudinal currents in the telephone line. In this way disturbances in the power line produced by switching, changes of load, grounds, lightning or the like cause corresponding disturbances in the telephone line. These surges on the telephone line may, in turn, be reradiatedto other communication systems, such as a nearby radio antenna, causing noise or other undesirable interference. Since the telephone circuit ordinarily transmits voice and carrier frequencies, the problem arises of eliminating the undesirable longitudinal currents without appreciably interfering with the transmission of signals in the loop circuit.
In accordance with this invention there is provided in the loop circuit a network which allows the free passage of voice and carrier frequencies in that circuit but attenuates to any desired degree the objectionable longitudinal current. There are contemplated two general methods of accomplishing this. According to one method the mid-point of a shunt arm of the loop circuit filter is grounded through an impedance. The
other method makes use of mutual coupling between elements of the filter. By virtue of this couplingthe elements offer different impedances to the loop and to the longitudinal currents.
Referring to the drawing, Fig. 1 shows an embodiment of the invention in a telephone circuit;
Fig. 2 shows various attenuation characteristics which can be obtained with the filter structure shown in Fig. 1; and
Fig. 3 illustrates the application of the invention to a phantom circuit.
In Fig. 1 the telephone circuit 11 comprises a pair of wires terminated at one end in receiving apparatus 12. A power line 13 or other disturbing source is shown located in such proximity to a portion of line 11 that electric disturbances in the power line induce longitudinal currents of corresponding frequency in line 11. By carefully balancing the two sides and by transposing the two wires in a well known manner the effect of these disturbances on the loop circuit of line 11 can be largely overcome. There remains, however, the longitudinal current which traverses both wires of line 11 in the same direction, with ground as the return path. A radio receiving antenna 14, terminating in receiving apparatus 16 is shown paralleling a portion of line 11 in such a way that disturbances on the telephone line of the frequency used in the radio channel would be radiated to the antenna, causing interference with the received radio signals, either directly or by modulation. One method of preventing such interference with the radio channel is to provide in line 11 a filter network which will not interfere with the passage of the signaling frequencies over the loop circuit but will offer a high attenuation to longitudinal currents of the frequency used in the radio channel. In one practical instance the loop circuit was used for voice frequency and car rier transmission, requiring the passage over the loop circuit of all frequencies up to 30 kilocycles, and the radio channel was placed at kilocycles, requiring a suppression of longitudinal currents over the frequency range of 58 kilocycles to 62 kilocycles. I
The filter designated 15 in Fig. 1 may be made to meet the requirements stated above. The filter is of balanced construction, comprising antiresonant series arms made up of inductance L1 and capacitance C1 in parallel, and in the shunt arm a pair of equal capacitances C2.v The pair of inductances L1 1n the two sides of the circuit are coupled by mutual inductance M, the purpose of which will be fully explained later in the specification. The mid-point of the shunt arm of the filter is grounded through inductance L2. 100 Provided the two sides of the circuit arev perfectly balanced with respect to ground, there will be no flow of loop current through L2, and L2 will, therefore, be ineffectual in the loop circuit. The structure will function in the loop 105 circuit as a low-pass, suppression type, broadband filter, the cut-off frequency of which can be so chosen that the signal currents of the loop circuit are passed without appreciable distortion. The attenuation characteristic with respect to 0 value of M is chosen.
the loop circuit is shown symbolically as curve A of Fig. 2.
The longitudinal current fiows in the same direction along the two conductors of line 11, through the series arm of the filter and thence to ground through condensers C2 and inductance L2. Inductance L2 and all of the other elements of filter 15 are, therefore, effective in the longitudinal circuit filter, the shunt arm of which comprises capacitance and inductance in series. This configuration of elements can be designed to give for the longitudinal currents a band suppression characteristic with a single attenuation peak. Assuming that there is no coupling between coils L1, that is, M equals zero, the attenuation peak for the longitudinal currents, as shown by curve B of Fig. 2, will occur at the same frequency as the peak for the loop circuit characteristic.
If it is desired to move the peak for the longitudinal currents to one side or the other of the loop circuit attenuation peak, this can be done by regulating the coupling M and by properly poling the connections of the two windings of inductance L1. For instance, if it is desired to have the longitudinal peak occur at a higher frequency than the loop peak, inductances L1 are connected series aiding for the loop circuit, and the required coupling factor M is provided. By series aiding is meant a series connection in which the fiux produced by the current in one winding is increased by the current flowing in the .other winding. Curve C of Fig. 2 indicates how the peak for the longitudinal currents can be moved upby this method. On the other hand, if it is desired to have this peak occur at a lower frequency than the loop circuit peak, the windings of inductances L1 are connected series opposing for the loop circuit, and the proper By series opposing is meant-a series connection in which the current produced in one winding is opposed or decreased by the current flowing in the other winding. Curve D of Fig. 2 shows how the peak can be located at a lower frequency in this way.
Filter 15 can, of course, be used in a phantom circuit, each side of which is formed from a sidecircuit, as is illustrated in Fig. 3. In this case, similar filters are placed-in each of the associated side circuits and the mid-points of the shunt arms are connected together through inductance L2. 1 l 1 If it is desired to attenuate the longitudinal currents in a way difierent from that shown by the characteristics of Fig. 2, this can be done by substituting other combinations of reactances in place of L2 and by making changes in the series and shunt arms of the loop circuit filter in accordance with the well known principles of filter design.
Filter 20 is shown as a single section but if greater attenuation is required it can, of course, be obtained by adding additional sections, either of the same type or of a different type.
What is claimed is:
1. In a signaling circuit comprising conductors forming a loop circuit for the transmission of signal currents, said loop circuit being subject to undesired longitudinal currents from some extraneous source, means for attenuating said longitudinal currents in a certain frequency range while at the same time allowing the free transmission over said loop circuit of a second range of frequencies including the signal currents, the limits of said second range of frequencies being independent of the limits of said first mentioned range.
2. In a balanced telephone line, a balanced wave filter comprising a series arm and a shunt arm, the mid-point of a shunt arm of said filter being connected to ground through an impedance element having a different kind of impedancefrequency characteristic than the impedance-frequency characteristic of said shunt arm.
3. In a loop circuit comprising a pair of conductors, with a signal current flowing in said loop circuit and an undesired current longitudinally traversing said pair of conductors, means associated with said loop circuit for attenuating said undesired longitudinal current over a frequency band while at the same time allowing the free transmission of said signal currents in said loop circuit, the limits of said band being independent of the range of frequencies transmitted in said loop circuit.
4. In a telephone line comprising metallic con ductors, a loop circuit formed of said conductors, said loop circuit carrying signaling currents and also carrying undesired longitudinal currents introduced from some extraneous source, means for freely transmitting in said loop circuit aband of frequencies including said signaling current while at the same time attenuating said longitudinal current which falls within a band of frequencies, the limits of said last-mentioned band being independent of the limits of said first-mena tioned band.
5. In a signal transmission system, a signal circuit comprising a pair of line wires balanced with respect to ground, a longitudinal circuit comprising said pair of line wires in parallel as one path and ground as a return path, and a wave filter having a series branch in each of said line wires, a branch in shunt with respect to said line wires and a reactance element connected between the mid-point of said shunt branch and. ground,,said reactance element having a difierent type of reactance-frequency characteristic than thereactance-frequency characteristic of 'said shunt branch, whereby said filter hasa different attenuation characteristic in said signal circuit than it has in said longitudinal circuit.
6. In a signal transmission system, two sidecircuits each comprising a pair of'line wires balanced with respect to ground, a phantom circuit comprising one of said side circuits as one path and the other of said side circuits as the'other path, a wave filter in each of said side circuits,- each of said filters having a series branch and a shunt branch and being balanced with respect to ground, and a reactance element connecting the mid-points of said shunt branches, said reactance element having a dififerent type of reactance-frequency characteristic than the reactance-frequency characteristics of said shunt branches...
7. In a signal transmission system, a signal circuit comprising a pair of line wires balanced with respect to ground, a longitudinal circuit comprising said pair of line wires in parallel as one path and ground as a return path, and a wave filter associated with said signal circuit, said filter including a pair of elements coupled by mutual impedance in such a manner that there is formed in said signal circuit a broad-band wave filter of a certain type and in said longitudinal circuit a broad-band wave filter of a difierent type.
'I-IENRY G. OCH.
US563013A 1931-09-16 1931-09-16 Electric wave filter Expired - Lifetime US1942488A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US563013A US1942488A (en) 1931-09-16 1931-09-16 Electric wave filter

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US563013A US1942488A (en) 1931-09-16 1931-09-16 Electric wave filter

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1942488A true US1942488A (en) 1934-01-09

Family

ID=24248729

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US563013A Expired - Lifetime US1942488A (en) 1931-09-16 1931-09-16 Electric wave filter

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1942488A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3731234A (en) * 1971-12-27 1973-05-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Combined voice frequency transmission and dc signaling circuit
CN101877574A (en) * 2009-04-30 2010-11-03 意法半导体(图尔)公司 Common mode filter
EP2302793A1 (en) * 2009-09-25 2011-03-30 Elmec Corporation Common mode filter
CN102474235A (en) * 2009-11-02 2012-05-23 松江Elmec株式会社 Common mode filter

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3731234A (en) * 1971-12-27 1973-05-01 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Combined voice frequency transmission and dc signaling circuit
CN101877574A (en) * 2009-04-30 2010-11-03 意法半导体(图尔)公司 Common mode filter
CN101877574B (en) * 2009-04-30 2015-08-19 意法半导体(图尔)公司 Common-mode filter
EP2302793A1 (en) * 2009-09-25 2011-03-30 Elmec Corporation Common mode filter
US20110074525A1 (en) * 2009-09-25 2011-03-31 Elmec Corporation Common mode filter
CN102035490A (en) * 2009-09-25 2011-04-27 Elmec株式会社 Common mode filter
US8866566B2 (en) 2009-09-25 2014-10-21 Elmec Corporation Common mode filter
CN102474235A (en) * 2009-11-02 2012-05-23 松江Elmec株式会社 Common mode filter

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2093665A (en) Star and delta connection of impedances
US2226728A (en) Transmission device
US2048091A (en) Power line carrier system
US1942488A (en) Electric wave filter
US2777994A (en) Level regulating devices for transmission systems for coaxial cables
US2029014A (en) Wave transmission network
US1759332A (en) Wave transmission circuit
US2267268A (en) High frequency transmission system
US1900045A (en) Two-way negative resistance repeater
US2044047A (en) Wave transmission network
US1227114A (en) Electrical receiving, translating, or repeating circuit.
US1625840A (en) Transmission system
US2097491A (en) Transmission line for electrical signaling systems
US2373458A (en) Transmission line coupling system
US1951883A (en) Four-wire terminating set
US2035261A (en) Electrical wave filter
US2116172A (en) Composite set
US1836841A (en) Electric wave signaling system
US2669697A (en) Transformer coupling network
US1998824A (en) Method and system of speech transmission
US2258275A (en) Repeatered transmission system
US1840434A (en) Conductor system for signaling currents
US1453980A (en) Attenuation equalizer
US1487308A (en) Radio receiving system
US1866261A (en) Signal transmission system