US2595680A - Constant resistance pseudohybrid channel branching microwave filters - Google Patents

Constant resistance pseudohybrid channel branching microwave filters Download PDF

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Publication number
US2595680A
US2595680A US209276A US20927651A US2595680A US 2595680 A US2595680 A US 2595680A US 209276 A US209276 A US 209276A US 20927651 A US20927651 A US 20927651A US 2595680 A US2595680 A US 2595680A
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guide
wave
pseudohybrid
branch
wave guide
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US209276A
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Willard D Lewis
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P1/00Auxiliary devices
    • H01P1/20Frequency-selective devices, e.g. filters
    • H01P1/213Frequency-selective devices, e.g. filters combining or separating two or more different frequencies
    • H01P1/2138Frequency-selective devices, e.g. filters combining or separating two or more different frequencies using hollow waveguide filters

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  • the two orifices I04 and H6 in the top and near side, respectively, of wave guide I00 couple the guide to resonant cavities I02 and I I2, respectively, and the combination of a straight section of wave guide with two resonant cavities coupled through their respective orifices in a common ver tical plane is readily recognizable as a form ofband rejection filter of the general type described in detail and illustrated, for example, in connection with Fig. 7 of my above-mentioned parent application.
  • the input hybrid 300 having input terminal 302 and output terminal 304 can represent the main wave guide I00 of Fig. 1 or 200 of Fig. 2.
  • the other two arms 306 and 308 of the hybrid represent the couplings effected by the. irises I04 and II6of Fig. lor of probe 206 and iris 2020f Fig. 2.
  • Networks 3I0 and 3l2 representthe resonant cavities I02 and H2 of Fig. l or 2I6and 2I4 ofFig. 2, respectively.
  • the two paths connecting the main guide 400 and the branch guide 4I6 each comprise a complete pseudohybrid band-pass filter of the type illustrated in Fig. 6 of my above-mentioned parent application and describedv in detail in that application.

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Description

y 6, 1952 w. D. LEWIS 2,595,680
CONSTANT RESISTANCE PSEUDOHYBRID CHANNEL BRANCHING MICROWAVE FILTERS Original Filed Oct. 7, 1949 T m mm OH IDENT/CAL 4-POL ES RESONA TOR BRANCH GUIDE N INCOM/NG CHANNELS SEL EC TED CHANNEL INVENTOR W 0. LEW/S A 7 TORNE V Patented May 6, 1952 CONSTANT RESISTANCE PSEUDOHYBRID CHANNEL BRANCHING MICROWAVE FILTERS Willard D. Lewis, Little Silver, N. J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Original application October 7, 1949, Serial No. 120,142. Divided and this application February 3, 1951, Serial No. 209,276
9 Claims.
,This invention relates to electromagnetic wave, microwave frequency, constant resistance, transducer'sfi- More particularly, it relates to transducer's. off'the above-described character which employ pseudohybrid junctions.
This application is a division of my copending application Serial No. 120,142 filed October 7, 1949. The term pseudohybrid as applied to an electromagnetic wave, microwave frequency, junction, is to be understood in the present application to have the same meaning as is defined and explained in detail in my above-mentioned In general, all
sistive impedance over a very broad range of microwave frequencies.
Other and further objects will become apparent during the course of the following descrip tion and from the appended claims.
. The nature of structures of the invention will be more readily understood from the following detailed description of specific illustrative embodiments taken with the appended drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 shows one form of wave filter of the invention;
, Fig. 2 shows an alternative form of wave filter of the invention;
Fig. 3 shows in schematic block diagram form the equivalent electrical circuit of the wave filters of the invention; and
Fig. 4 shows a still further alternate form of wave filter of the invention.
In Fig. 1, in more detail, a complex type of "microwave or very high frequency structure is illustrated which employs two pseudohybrid junctions and, as will become apparent hereinunder, comprises a new form of constant re.- sistance, channel branching, filter related to the structures disclosed in my copending application Serial No. 789,985, filed December 5, 1947, which matured into United States Patent 2,531,447 granted November 28, 1950, and in the copending application Serial No. 789,812, filed December 5, 1947 by A. G. Fox, assignor to applicants assignee. This latter application matured into 2 United States Patent 2,531,419 granted November 28, 1950.
In Fig. 1, the portion of wave guide 100 is, for example, a transmission line carrying a plurality of communication channels comprising discrete frequency bands in the microwave frequenc) region. The portion of wave guide I08 is a second transmission line into which it is desired to branch off one only, of the plurality of frequency bands being transmitted along the wave guide I 00.
The two orifices I04 and H6 in the top and near side, respectively, of wave guide I00 couple the guide to resonant cavities I02 and I I2, respectively, and the combination of a straight section of wave guide with two resonant cavities coupled through their respective orifices in a common ver tical plane is readily recognizable as a form ofband rejection filter of the general type described in detail and illustrated, for example, in connection with Fig. 7 of my above-mentioned parent application.
Likewise, the section of wave guide I08 coupled, in a common vertical plane, by orifices H4 and I06 in its lower surface and far side, respectively, to resonators, or resonant cavities H2 and I02, respectively, also constitutes a band-rejection filter of the same general type as described in connection with Fig. 7 of my parent application as mentioned above.
As described above, all of the frequency bands remote from the resonant frequency of resonators I02 and H4 pass freely along wave guide I 00 from its input (left) end to its output (right) end.
At and near the resonant frequency of cavities, or resonators, I02 and H4, however, the energy introduced into the left end of Wave guide I00 enters the resonators and passes by way of orifices H4 and H8 into the wave guide I08, the phase relations being such that it combines to pass out'of the near or left end of wave guide I08. To avoid the possibility of establishing a balance in either of the cavities I02 or H2, the orifices I04 and I06 for cavity I02, and H4 and H6 for cavity H2, should bedisplaced from the lateral axes (i. e., the axes of the cavities which lie in a plane parallel to the plane of the axes of wave guides I00 and I03 but which cavity axes are turned degrees in their plane with respect to the direction of the Wave guide longitudinal axes). For maximum transfer of energy through a cavity from one wave guide to the other the orifices should be one-quarter wavelength nearer one side of the cavity than the other as shown in Fig. 1. Any substantial displacement would,
to absorb any energy of frequencies outside of,
the frequency band to be branched off the main guide I which may happen to leak through the pseudohybrid junctions described above and the 3 resonators I02 and H2.
With respect to each pseudohybrid junction there is an inherent difierence of. 90. electrical degrees between the energy derivedfromaniris in the wider side (such as irises I04 and H4) and that derived from the iris in the more narrow side (such as irises I06 and H6) so that the structure of Fig. 1 can be accurately represented in electrical schematic diagram form, by the diagram of Fig. 3. This will becom apparent during the detailed description of Fig. 3 given hereinunder.
InFig. 2 an alternative arrangement of structure very similar to that of'Fig. 1 is shown. In Fig. 2, however, one coupling of the main guide 200 to one cavity resonator 2I6 is effected by means of a probe 206 instead of an iris and the degree of coupling to the main wave guide 200 can be adjusted by turning screw 204 which is threaded through the upper surface of guide 200 adjacent to the end of probe 206 as shown. From elementary wave guide principles it is apparent that'with the lower end of screw 204 just flush with the inner surface'of. the upper side of wave guide 200 the portion of probe 206 extending into waveguide 200 would have no coupling with the waves;passing through the wave guide since that portion of the probe is perpendicular to the electricvectoryof the waves. Theinsertionof screw 204 downwardly and beyond the inner surface of the. upper side of wave guide 200, however, distorts the wave form to a degree determined by the amount which screw 204 protrudes into wave guide 200 and thus establishes a coupling of the probe 206-to the waves passing along Wave guide 200 which coupling is, obviously, in turn also dependent upon the protrusion of screw 204 into wave guide 200.
Wave guide 200 is coupled to resonator 2l4 by a simple iris 202 in the lower side of the wave guide, as shown.
Similarly, the branch wave guide 220 is'coupled to resonator 2 I6-by simple iris 203, as shown, and to resonator 2I4 by probe 2H1, the coupling of probe 2I0 to wave guide 220 being adjustable by turning screw 2l2 which is threaded through its lower surface, as shown, the arrangement being precisely that described immediately above for wave guide'200, probe 200 and screw 204. Aside from the adjustable couplingfeatures just described.thearrangement of Fig. 2 is substantially identical'withthat of Fig. 1. The branched channel is transmitted through resonators 2I4 and 2I6 to branch guide 220 and the phase relations are such thatthe energy of this channel is directed out the near or left endof branch guide 220. The other channels pass freely through guide 200 without. let or hindrance. The far (right). end of branch guide 220 can be closed by acopper or brass sheet or plate 2|6 or it can be terminated in a matching impedance as for the branch guide I08of Fig. 1.
In. Fig. 3, as was mentioned previously, an equivalent electrical schematic diagram of the structures of Figs. 1 and2 is shown. In Fig. 3
the input hybrid 300 having input terminal 302 and output terminal 304 can represent the main wave guide I00 of Fig. 1 or 200 of Fig. 2. The other two arms 306 and 308 of the hybrid represent the couplings effected by the. irises I04 and II6of Fig. lor of probe 206 and iris 2020f Fig. 2. As previously explained, there is an inherent electrical degree phase difierence between these two couplings ineach instance which is represented in Fig. 3 by the additional length of onequarter wavelength shown for arm 306 as compared with arm 308. Networks 3I0 and 3l2 representthe resonant cavities I02 and H2 of Fig. l or 2I6and 2I4 ofFig. 2, respectively. In a similar way the output hybrid 320 having arms 324 and 322 which later may include a matching impedance termination or a simple short circuit can comprise branch guide I00 of Fig. 1 or branch guide 220 of Fig. 2. Arms 3I4 and BIG can represent the couplings of orifices I06 and I I4 of Fig. 1 or of probe 2 I 0 and orificev 208 of Fig. 2. The circuit of Fig. 3 is demonstrated in my above-mentioned copending application Serial No. 789,985, filed December 5, 1947, to be a constant resistance, channel branching filter. Obviously, therefore. the structures of Figs. 1 and 2 of the present application are likewise of the same character.
In Fig. 4 a more complex form of the general type of constant resistance branching filter, illustrated in the above-described Figs. 1 and 2, is shown.
In Fig. 4 the two paths connecting the main guide 400 and the branch guide 4I6 each comprise a complete pseudohybrid band-pass filter of the type illustrated in Fig. 6 of my above-mentioned parent application and describedv in detail in that application.
One of. these paths consists of vertical arm 406, horizontal arm M0 and a section of wave guide comprising a throat section 408 coupled by orifices M2 and M4 to closed resonant cavities 4H and 409, respectively, all of which are proportioned and arranged as described in connection with Fig. 6 of my parent application to form a pseudohybrid band-pass filter of the invention passing the single band or channel of frequencies which is to be branched ofi to the branch wave guide 4I6. Vertical arm 406 conmeets to the main guide 400 through orifice 402 in the upper (broad) surface of guide 400 as shown. Horizontal arm 4|0 connects to the branch, guide 4I6 through orifice 420 in the far.
or left (narrow) side of guide M6.
The other path connecting the main and branch guides consists of horizontal arm 432, vertical arm 424 anda section of wave guide comprising a throat section 426 coupled by orifices 426 and 430 to closed resonant cavities 425 and 421, respectively, all of which are also proportioned and arranged as described in connection with Fig. 6 ofmy parent application to form. a pseudohybrid band-pass. filter of. the invention passing the single band or channel of frequencies which is to be. branched ofi to the branch wave guide 4I6. Horizontal arm 432 is coupled to main guide 400 through orifice 404 in the near (narrow) side of the mainguide 400. Vertical arm 424 is coupled to the branch guide 4l6 through orifice 422 in the lower (broad) surface of branch guide 4 I 6.
The main guide 400 provided withorifices 402. and 404 in a brand (upper) and narrow (side)' surface thereof, the orifices being centered in a common vertical cross-sectional plane of the guide, constitutes a pseudohybrid junction as is described in detail in my above-mentioned copending parent application. Assuming the left (near) end of guide 400 to be the input terminal and the right (far) end of guide 400 to be the output terminal, energy of all of the frequency bands or channels of the system will normally be introduced into the near end of guide 400. One of these channels, depending upon which is passed by the above-described pseudohybrid junctions and pseudohybrid band-pass filters of Fig. 4. will be transmitted to the branch guide 6. The remaining channels will all be freely transmitted to the output terminal of uide 490.
Branch guide MS with orifices 420 and 422 in its far (narrow) side and in its lower (broad) side, respectively, the orifices being centered in a common vertical cross-sectional plane of the guide, likewise constitutes a pseudohybrid junction, as described in detail in my parent application. The phase relation of the energies arriving in wave guide M6 via the two paths described in detail above, is such that they will combine to pass freely out of the left (near) end of branch guide H6. The right (far) end of guide M6 can be closed by a sheet of copper or brass 4 8 or it can be terminated by an impedance termination equal to the characteristic impedance of the guide M6 as discussed above in connection with Figs. 1 and 2.
The above-described illustrative structures by no means exhaust the possibilities of application inherent in the principles of the invention. Numerous and varied additional structures embodying the spirit and within the scope of the invention will occur to those skilled in the art.
What is claimed is:
1. An electromagnetic Wave, microwave frequency, wave-guide structure comprising a pair of electromagnetic waves, microwave frequency, wave guides and a pair of electromagnetic waves, microwave frequency resonant cavities coupling said pair of wave guides, a first one of said cavities being parallel coupled to a first one of said wave guides and series coupled to the second one of said wave guides, the second of said cavities being series coupled to the first one of said wave guides and parallel coupled to the second one of said wave guides, the center points of the two couplings to each wave guide lying in a common plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the wave guide.
2. The structure defined in claim 1, the four said couplings being electrically weak.
3. In an electromagnetic wave, microwave frequency system, a pair of wave-guide sections having like rectangular cross-sectional areas, one cross-sectional dimension of which is substantially greater than the other, a pair of resonant cavities coupled between said pair of wave-guide sections, one of said cavities being coupled to a surface of the larger cross-sectional dimension of a first one of said pair of wave-guide sections and to a surface of the smaller cross-sectional dimension of the second of said pair of wave guides, the other of said cavities being coupled to a surface of the smaller cross-sectional dimension of the first of said pair of wave guides and to a surface of the larger cross-sectional dimension of the second of said pair of Wave guides, the center points of coupling to each of said pair of wave-guide sections being located in a common plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the wave-guide section.
i. The structure of claim 3 in which the couplings between the cavities and the wave guides are electrically weak.
5. The structure of claim 3, in which the couplings are eiTected by small orifices or openings between the wave guide and resonant cavity in each instance.
6. The structure of claim 3, in which a number of the couplings are effected by probes extending through the adjacent surfaces.
7. An electromagnetic wave, microwave frequency, wave-guide pseudohybrid channel branching network comprising a main wave guide and a branch wave guide, a pair of wave-guide structures each coupled at one end to said main wave guide and at the other end to said branch wave guide, said wave-guide structures being coupled to said main wave guide with their coupling points displaced degrees in one direction and to said branch wave guide with their coupling points displaced 90 degrees in the reverse direction, the coupling points on said main wave guide being in a common plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of said main wave guide and the coupling points on said branch guide being similarly related with respect to said branch guide.
8. The arrangement of claim 7 in which said pair of wave-guide structures connecting said main and branch wave guides each includes a pseudohybrid wave filter, the filters in said pair of structures being substantially identical.
9. The arrangement of claim '7 in which said pair of wave-guide structures connecting said main and branch wave guides each includes a pseudohybrid band-pass wave filter, the filters in said pair of structures being substantially identical.
WILLARD D. LEWIS.
No references cited.
US209276A 1949-10-07 1951-02-03 Constant resistance pseudohybrid channel branching microwave filters Expired - Lifetime US2595680A (en)

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US120142A US2649576A (en) 1949-10-07 1949-10-07 Pseudohybrid microwave device
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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2801391A (en) * 1952-06-13 1957-07-30 Elliott Brothers London Ltd Wave guide magic-tee junctions
US2813198A (en) * 1954-09-28 1957-11-12 Motorola Inc Microwave system
US2851665A (en) * 1953-11-02 1958-09-09 Gilfillan Bros Inc Lossless radio frequency power mixer
US2864082A (en) * 1955-05-18 1958-12-09 Rca Corp Television transmitter system employing components in parallel
US2916712A (en) * 1954-07-09 1959-12-08 Sperry Rand Corp Microwave diplexer
US2936430A (en) * 1955-06-18 1960-05-10 Pierre G Marie Wide band resonant directional couplers
US2937345A (en) * 1957-08-29 1960-05-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Non-reciprocal wave transmission
US4602229A (en) * 1983-12-30 1986-07-22 Motorola, Inc. Resonant bandpass T filter and power splitter
US5184098A (en) * 1992-02-10 1993-02-02 Hughes Aircraft Company Switchable dual mode directional filter system
US5266911A (en) * 1991-12-23 1993-11-30 Hughes Aircraft Company Multiplexing system for plural channels of electromagnetic signals

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
None *

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2801391A (en) * 1952-06-13 1957-07-30 Elliott Brothers London Ltd Wave guide magic-tee junctions
US2851665A (en) * 1953-11-02 1958-09-09 Gilfillan Bros Inc Lossless radio frequency power mixer
US2916712A (en) * 1954-07-09 1959-12-08 Sperry Rand Corp Microwave diplexer
US2813198A (en) * 1954-09-28 1957-11-12 Motorola Inc Microwave system
US2864082A (en) * 1955-05-18 1958-12-09 Rca Corp Television transmitter system employing components in parallel
US2936430A (en) * 1955-06-18 1960-05-10 Pierre G Marie Wide band resonant directional couplers
US2937345A (en) * 1957-08-29 1960-05-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Non-reciprocal wave transmission
US4602229A (en) * 1983-12-30 1986-07-22 Motorola, Inc. Resonant bandpass T filter and power splitter
US5266911A (en) * 1991-12-23 1993-11-30 Hughes Aircraft Company Multiplexing system for plural channels of electromagnetic signals
US5184098A (en) * 1992-02-10 1993-02-02 Hughes Aircraft Company Switchable dual mode directional filter system

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