US3251011A - Filter for passing selected te circular mode and absorbing other te circular modes - Google Patents

Filter for passing selected te circular mode and absorbing other te circular modes Download PDF

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US3251011A
US3251011A US851181A US85118159A US3251011A US 3251011 A US3251011 A US 3251011A US 851181 A US851181 A US 851181A US 85118159 A US85118159 A US 85118159A US 3251011 A US3251011 A US 3251011A
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mode
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Unger Hans-Georg
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AT&T Corp
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P1/00Auxiliary devices
    • H01P1/16Auxiliary devices for mode selection, e.g. mode suppression or mode promotion; for mode conversion
    • H01P1/163Auxiliary devices for mode selection, e.g. mode suppression or mode promotion; for mode conversion specifically adapted for selection or promotion of the TE01 circular-electric mode

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  • This invention relates to electromagnetic wave transmission systems whose primary mode of propagation is the TE circular electric mode, and more particularly to mode filters for selectively attenuating all but a selected one of the plurality of circular electric modes generally present in such systems.
  • the energy can be supported in a number of transmission modes, .or characteristic electric and magnetic field configurations, depending upon the cross sectional size and shape of the guide itself and upon the operating frequency selected. It is also well known that the larger the cross section of the guide, or the higher the operating frequency, the greater is the number of modes which may be supported at a given operating frequency or within a guide of a given cross section, respectively. Generally it is desirable to confine the energy propagation to one particular mode, chosen because its propagation characteristics are particularly suited to the specific application involved. However, other considerations may dictate the use of guide sizes which accommodate not only the desired mode but also other higher order modes of the same family as well as modes having other basic configurations.
  • Propagation of microwave energy in the TE mode is well known to be ideally suited to long distance transmission of high frequency Wide band signals since the attenuation characteristic of this mode, unlike that of other modes, decreases with increasing frequency. Furthermore, transmission losses associated with the TE mode are inversely proportional tothe guide diameter.
  • current practice whenever possible, is to use uninterrupted runs of relatively large diameter pipe for long runs in an all wave guide system.
  • the use of large diameter pipe causes the system to be susceptible to generation of the unwanted, or spurious, modes which, due to the large diameter pipe, propagate concurrently with the desired mode.
  • the first class comprises both the noncircular,
  • the second class comprises higher order circular electric modes of the circularly symmetric family which are not so readily removable since their field patterns are somewhat similar to that of the TE mode.
  • filtering techniques useful for removing the noncircular modes and the circular magnetic modes have been ineffective for removing the higher order circular electric modes.
  • filtering arrangements which efiiciently removed the higher order circular electric waves either adversely affected the TE mode or were structurally somewhat diflicult to fabricate and assemble.
  • conductive metallic vanes or segments each containing a gap filled with material' capable of dissipating electric currents flowing across the gap, are disposed within a circular wave guide with the gaps positioned at locations for which the desired circular electric mode generates no radial currents. At the same time all othercircular electric modes generate currents of varying degrees within the lossy gap and thereby sufi'er attenuation.
  • the TE mode protimes a radial current null at the gap and will therefore be substantially unaffected by the vane.
  • the TE mode have substantial radial current densities at this location and are therefore significantly attenuated.
  • a plurality of highly conductive vanes or thin plates extend within a hollow circular pipe between the center and the outside wall along various radii thereof.
  • the electromagnetic field of the desired wave mode induces no radial currents in the metal vane.
  • a gap is introduced into the metal vane and the gap is filled with resistive material capable of attenuating electric currents which extend across the gap. This resistance gap continues for the longitudinal extent of the vane, always at the prescribed radius r from the central axis of the guide.
  • the metallic members take the form of segments which extend only a portion of the distance between the guide axis and the boundary wall.
  • the metallic segments are tapered at their extremities and appear ovoid in transverse cross section.
  • the radial extent of each segment is limited to the immediate vicinity of the radial location at which induced radial currents of the desired mode are minimum, and the resistance gap is positioned at this radial current minimum.
  • FIG. 1 is a partially broken away perspective view of a mode filter in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention
  • FIG. 2 is a transverse cross sectional view of a modification of the mode filter of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is a transverse cross sectional view of a mode filter in accordance with a second embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a mode filter providing filtering action for both circular and noncircular wave modes.
  • FIG. 1 there-is shown a section of hollow conductively bounded wave guide having a circular transverse cross section of radius r.
  • the radius r is selected to be sufficiently large to support, at frequencies within the contemplated range of operation, the TE circular electric mode as well as at least one higher order circular electric mode.
  • Disposed within the cross section of guide 10 and extending radially between the longitudinal axis of the guide and the inner surface of its boundary wall are a plurality of predominantly metallic highly conductive thin fiat plates or vanes 11. The vanes need not contact the wall for electrical purposes but it may be desirable that they do contact for mechanical reasons since the vane assembly would be self-supporting in the latter case. As illustrated in FIG.
  • vanes 11 are rectangular in longitudinal cross section, but such a configuration is not intended to be limiting. Indeed it may be desirable that each of the edges 12 be provided with appropriate and well-known impedance matching means such as for example a quarter wave step or a long physical taper. Such impedance matching means have been omitted from FIG. 1, but it should be understood that their use would reduce both wave energy reflection and mode conversion caused by the vanes.
  • gaps 13 Extending longitudinally parallel to the axis of guide 10 in each of vanes 11 is gap 13, which is filled with an electrically lossy material.
  • Each of gaps 13 has a radial extent of the order of the transverse thickness of the vanes, a dimension to bemore fully set out below.
  • the radial location of gaps 13 is critical in that they should be disposed in a region of the field pattern of the desired mode for which this mode induces no radial currents in the metallic vane at the gap location. Since the radial currents in a radially extending conductive vane in the presence of propagating electromagnetic waves are induced by the longitudinal magnetic components of the waves, the gaps should be located at the null of the longitudinal magnetic field pattern of the desired mode.
  • the radial distribution of the longitudinal magnetic field pattern is a Bessel function distribution.
  • the mean radius r of the lossy gaps 13 is described by the zero of the Bessel function of zero order which describes the radial magnetic distribution of the desired mode.
  • the resistive material should be adapted to dissipate radial current components induced in the vane in the vicinity of the gap by unwanted modes. Resistive material having a specific resistivity of the order of 20 ohm centimeters would be satisfactory. Carbon loaded plastics, carbon loaded paper, and resistance coated glass fibers have been found to have resistivities within the desired range.
  • the thickness of vanes 11 in a transverse direction is determined by the particular resistance material selected to fill gaps 13.
  • the vane thickness is controlled by the skin depth of penetration of the propagating wave energy into the resistance material. Since two opposite surfaces of each gap are subject to energy penetration the vane should have a thickness at least twice the skin depth. In the range of millimeter waves the skin depth in materials of the proper resistivity is of the order of one millimeter. This skin depth is independent of mode and therefore the transverse thickness of a vane for use in millimeter wave applications should be no less than two millimeters. Increasing the vane thickness of course aggravates the reflection problem by virtue of the added metallic volume within the wave path.
  • each Vane the skin depth of penetration of millimeter waves into the conductive portion of each Vane is typically in the region of tenths to hundredths of a millimeter. Accordingly, current generation in the vanes is assured when minimum vane thickness is determined by the skin depths associated with the resistance material.
  • vanes 11 extend radially but they need not be spaced at -degree intervals as illustrated illustrated there no-r need there be a total of four vanes. However, the use of four vanes is attractive from symmetry considerations.
  • An alternative arrangement to the four vane embodiment of FIG. 1 is shown in transverse cross section as FIG. 2.
  • guide section 20 is loaded with three metallic vanes'21 spaced apart degrees. Resistance gaps 22 are located within each vane at a radial location r which location is the point of vanishing longitudinal magnetic field for the desired mode of the circular electric family.
  • the amount of unwanted mode power that is capable of being attenuated is likewise increased but care must be exercised in increasing the total number of vanes too greatly since the total amount of energy reflected from the vanes would increase also.
  • the operation of the mode selective filters of FIGS. 1 and 2 may now be properly comprehended by considering that a plurality of circular electric modes, comprising primarily the TE mode and secondarily spurious higher order modes enter at one end of guide section 10, and propagate therealong until vanes 11 are encountered. Upon reaching vanes 11, the magnetic field associated with the propagating energy induces currents in the metallic vanes. Since the energy distributions associated with each mode are different, their eifects when incident on the conductive vanes are dilferent. It has been found that the radial current density in the vanes associated with the TE mode is substantially zero at a location which is 0.628 times the radius of the supporting guide,
  • the length of the mode selective vanes is preferably of the order of several wavelengths of the propagating energy, in order that substantially all wave power in the higher order circular electric wave modes present in the incident energy will be dissipated and TE Wave power free of spurious circular electric wave modes will emerge from the filter.
  • FIG. 3 is a transverse cross sectional view of another embodiment of the present invention.
  • guide section 40 of circular transverse cross section contains within its cross section four predominantly metallic segments 41.
  • Each of segments 41 contains a gap 42 loaded with electrically lossy resistive material midway between its extremities.
  • the dimensions and electrical characteristics of segments 41 and gap 42 are similar to those set out hereinabove with respect to the embodiment of FIG. 1 except that the total radial extent of segments 41 is less than that of the previously described vanes.
  • the metallic loading portions of FIG. 3 in which currents are induced by the propagating waves are confined to regions immediately adjacent the region of zero longitudinal magnetic field for the desired mode of propagation. In this manner the total amount of conductive loading with its attendant reflection problems may be minimized. As seen in FIG.
  • each of the segments 41 are tapered for the purpose of minimizing edge effects caused by the introduction of conductive metal solely in regions of relatively high TE mode field intensity.
  • the entire array of segments 41 is supported within guide 40 by means of dielectric filler 43 which may comprise polyfoam or other material of low dielectric constant.
  • the resistance material is of course positioned at the critical radius r the exact value of which depends upon the desired mode of transmission. For a particular desired mode, r is determined by the zero of the Bessel function of zero order which as set out above describes the radial variation of the longitudinal magnetic field distribution of that mode.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a mode filter for use in a circular electric mode transmission system in which conductor 53 surrounded by lossy jacket 54 which is in turn surrounded by conductive jacket 55.
  • propagating modes of the circular electric family are characterized by the absence of longitudinally directed induced wall currents whereas modes of the asymmetric and circular magnetic variety are in general characterized by such currents.
  • any asymmetric or circular magnetic mode propagating within helix guide 51 will sufi'er attenuation in the lossy material surrounding the helix while circular electric modes will propagate substantially unafiected.
  • United States Patent-2,848,696 issued August 19, 1958 to S. E. Miller.
  • conductive radial vanes 56 including gaps 57 containing electrically lossy material are disposed within the cross section of the helical winding 53.
  • the resistance gaps are disposed at a location for which no radially directed currents .are induced in the vane by the desired mode of propagation. In this manner all wave modes of the circular electric family other than the desired mode will be attenuated.
  • the mode filter of FIG. 4 is thus a filter which aifects all noncircular modes and all circular modes except the one desired propagation mode.
  • asymmetric mode filtering wave guides such as for example the lossy jacketed spaced conductive ring guide illustrated in United States Patent 2,649,578 issued August 18, 1953 to W. J. Albersheim,"may be substituted for the illustrated helix guide and that the tapered segment embodiment of the circular mode filters shown in FIG. 3 of the present disclosure may be substituted for the illustrated vanes.
  • a mode filter for all but a selected one of the modes of the circular electric mode family comprising a section of hollow conductively bounded wave guide having a circular transverse cross section with an inside radius r sufliciently large to support a plurality of said modes within a given range of operating frequencies, each of said modes being characterized by longitudinal magnetic field components, a plurality of conductive metallic members extending radially within said guide in the path of said longitudinal components, said members having a transverse thickness greater than twice the skin depth of penetration of said components into said members whereby radially directed electric currents are induced in said members by said components, and means for selectively dissipating certain of said currents comprising a region of electrically lossy material filling a longitudinally extending gap in each of said members, said gap being radially positioned at that location for which the longitudinal magnetic field components of said selected mode are 2.
  • a section of bounded hollow pipe wave guide of circular transverse cross section having a longitudinal axis and adapted to propagate a plurality of circular electric wave modes within a given operating range of frequencies, and means for selectively attenuating power in all but one of said plurality of modes, said means comprising at least one conductive metallic member extending radially within said guide in the region between said axis and said boundary, each such member having a gap therein which is filled with material adapted to dissipate electric currents, the thickness of said members in a circumferential direction being greater than twice the skin depth of penetration of said modes into said dissipative material 3.
  • the location of said gap coincides with the location at which the value of the zero order- Bessel function describing the radial variation of the longitudinal magnetic field distribution of one selected mode of said plurality of modes is equal to zero.
  • said conductive member comprises a segment of quasiovoid transverse cross section extending only a portion of the distance between said axis and said boundary.
  • a mode filter comprising a section of hollow wave guide of circular transverse cross section supportive of a plurality of circular electric modes .within a given range of operating frequencies, and means for selectively attenuating all except one of said modes, said meanscomprising at least one vane of conductive metallic material disposed within said guide and extending radially between the longitudinal axis and the inner surface of the boundary wall of said guide, each said vane containing a longitudinally extending gap at a specified radius r from said axis, said gap being filled with material adapted to dissipate electric currents, each said vane having a circumferential thickness greater than twice the skin depth of penetration of said modes into said dissipative material.

Description

M y 1966 HANS-GEORG UNGER FILTER FOR PASSING SELECTED TE CIRCULAR MODE AND ABSORBING OTHER TE CIRCULAR MODES Filed Nov. 5, 1959 R m w m HGU/VGER A TTO/PNE Y United States Patent O 7 3,251,011 FILTER FOR PASSING SELECTED TE CIRCULAR MODE AND ABSORBING OTHER TE CIRCULAR MODES Hans-Georg Unger, Lincroft, N.J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N.Y., a corporation of New York Filed Nov. 5, 1959, Ser. No. 851,181
7 Claims. (Cl. 333-98) This invention relates to electromagnetic wave transmission systems whose primary mode of propagation is the TE circular electric mode, and more particularly to mode filters for selectively attenuating all but a selected one of the plurality of circular electric modes generally present in such systems.
In the transmission of electromagnetic wave energy in a hollow pipe or other type wave guide, it is well known that the energy can be supported in a number of transmission modes, .or characteristic electric and magnetic field configurations, depending upon the cross sectional size and shape of the guide itself and upon the operating frequency selected. It is also well known that the larger the cross section of the guide, or the higher the operating frequency, the greater is the number of modes which may be supported at a given operating frequency or within a guide of a given cross section, respectively. Generally it is desirable to confine the energy propagation to one particular mode, chosen because its propagation characteristics are particularly suited to the specific application involved. However, other considerations may dictate the use of guide sizes which accommodate not only the desired mode but also other higher order modes of the same family as well as modes having other basic configurations. This is particularly true of systems utilizing TE circular electric waves. Propagation of microwave energy in the TE mode is well known to be ideally suited to long distance transmission of high frequency Wide band signals since the attenuation characteristic of this mode, unlike that of other modes, decreases with increasing frequency. Furthermore, transmission losses associated with the TE mode are inversely proportional tothe guide diameter. Thus current practice, whenever possible, is to use uninterrupted runs of relatively large diameter pipe for long runs in an all wave guide system. However, the use of large diameter pipe causes the system to be susceptible to generation of the unwanted, or spurious, modes which, due to the large diameter pipe, propagate concurrently with the desired mode.
In an ideal system utilizing a guide which is perfectly straight, uniform, and conducting, propagation of TE waves therethrough would be undisturbed, and the fact that the guide is capable of supporting other modes, once launched, is not a problem. However, terminal operations and pipe curvature within the system, as well as inherent imperfections in the guiding member itself tend to disturb the T E mode and to cause conversion of power from this mode into other unwanted modes. These latter modes are perfectly capable of being propagated in the system and therefore have a deleterious effect upon the transmission of information through the system. Obviously every reasonable effort must be made to minimize this spurious mode generation process by appropriate methods and means. However, from a standpoint of practical economics, there is a spurious mode level below which one should not attempt'to go. It thus becomes necessary to accept this spurious mode level in practice and to provide intermittently spaced mode filtering means 'along the transmission path periodically to reduce the power level of the unwanted modes.
In the past it has been recognized that there are two general classifications into which the unwanted modes fall. The first class comprises both the noncircular,
asymmetric modes and the circular symmetric magnetic modes which may be relatively easily removed from the system by means of a helix type wave guide for example. The second class comprises higher order circular electric modes of the circularly symmetric family which are not so readily removable since their field patterns are somewhat similar to that of the TE mode. In the past, filtering techniques useful for removing the noncircular modes and the circular magnetic modes have been ineffective for removing the higher order circular electric modes. Furthermore, filtering arrangements which efiiciently removed the higher order circular electric waves either adversely affected the TE mode or were structurally somewhat diflicult to fabricate and assemble.
It is therefore an object of this invention selectively to attenuatewave modes of the circular electric family to the exclusion of the TE mode and to transmit the latter mode unaffected.
In the copending application of R. Kornpfner et al., Serial No. 809,088, filed April 27, 1959, now United States Patent 3,041,559, issued June 2-6, 1962 there are disclosed gyromagnetic methods and means for selectively attenuating the higher order circular electric modes in a TE transmission system. However, in certain applications the magnetic polarization required in accordance with the Kompfner et al, disclosure may prohibit use of that filter. The present invention thus represents an alternate means ofselective circularelectric mode filtering.
In accordance with the present invention, dissipation of electric currents generated in conductive material is utilized to provide the loss mechanism for the attenuation of power in unwanted mode configurations. In specific embodiments of the invention, conductive metallic vanes or segments, each containing a gap filled with material' capable of dissipating electric currents flowing across the gap, are disposed within a circular wave guide with the gaps positioned at locations for which the desired circular electric mode generates no radial currents. At the same time all othercircular electric modes generate currents of varying degrees within the lossy gap and thereby sufi'er attenuation. In particular if the gap in the metallic member is located at a radial distance equal to 0.628 of the total radius of the guide, the TE mode protimes a radial current null at the gap and will therefore be substantially unaffected by the vane. particularly the TE mode, have substantial radial current densities at this location and are therefore significantly attenuated. 1
It is therefore a further object of the present invention to attenuate higher order circular electric wave modes to the exclusion of the TE mode by means dependent upon electrical current dissipation effects.
According to a first preferred embodiment of the invention a plurality of highly conductive vanes or thin plates extend within a hollow circular pipe between the center and the outside wall along various radii thereof. At a certain radial distance along each vane, which distance may be designated r the electromagnetic field of the desired wave mode induces no radial currents in the metal vane. At this particular radial location a gap is introduced into the metal vane and the gap is filled with resistive material capable of attenuating electric currents which extend across the gap. This resistance gap continues for the longitudinal extent of the vane, always at the prescribed radius r from the central axis of the guide. In the metallic vanes the unwanted circular electn'c'modes are characterized by non-zero radial current densities at the resistance gap and therefore power from these modes is dissipated in the resistive material. Thus the power Patented May 10, 1966 Other mod-es,
level of the unwanted modes is reduced while the power level of the desired mode remains substantially unaifected.
In a second embodiment of the invention the metallic members take the form of segments which extend only a portion of the distance between the guide axis and the boundary wall. The metallic segments are tapered at their extremities and appear ovoid in transverse cross section. The radial extent of each segment is limited to the immediate vicinity of the radial location at which induced radial currents of the desired mode are minimum, and the resistance gap is positioned at this radial current minimum. By thus limiting the transverse extent of each of the metallic members, perturbations of the desired mode are minimized.
When either of the above-described embodiments are combined with a lossy jacketed helix or spaced ring type wave guide, over-all transmission characteristics superior to those realizable in either guide alone result. This is due to the fact that the conductive members with resistance gap attenuate the spurious modes of the circular electric family and the lossy jacket surrounding the main guiding means attenuates the asymmetric and circular magnetic spurious modes generated both by inherent imperfections and curvature and by the introduction of the metallic members themselves into the transmission path.
These and other objects and advantages, together with the nature of the present invention, and the various features, will appear more fully upon consideration of the illustrative embodiments to be described in detail below and shown in the accompanying drawing, in which:
FIG. 1 is a partially broken away perspective view of a mode filter in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention;
FIG. 2 is a transverse cross sectional view of a modification of the mode filter of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a transverse cross sectional view of a mode filter in accordance with a second embodiment of the invention; and
FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a mode filter providing filtering action for both circular and noncircular wave modes.
Referring more particularly to FIG. 1, there-is shown a section of hollow conductively bounded wave guide having a circular transverse cross section of radius r. The radius r is selected to be sufficiently large to support, at frequencies within the contemplated range of operation, the TE circular electric mode as well as at least one higher order circular electric mode. Disposed within the cross section of guide 10 and extending radially between the longitudinal axis of the guide and the inner surface of its boundary wall are a plurality of predominantly metallic highly conductive thin fiat plates or vanes 11. The vanes need not contact the wall for electrical purposes but it may be desirable that they do contact for mechanical reasons since the vane assembly would be self-supporting in the latter case. As illustrated in FIG. 1 vanes 11 are rectangular in longitudinal cross section, but such a configuration is not intended to be limiting. Indeed it may be desirable that each of the edges 12 be provided with appropriate and well-known impedance matching means such as for example a quarter wave step or a long physical taper. Such impedance matching means have been omitted from FIG. 1, but it should be understood that their use would reduce both wave energy reflection and mode conversion caused by the vanes.
Extending longitudinally parallel to the axis of guide 10 in each of vanes 11 is gap 13, which is filled with an electrically lossy material. Each of gaps 13 has a radial extent of the order of the transverse thickness of the vanes, a dimension to bemore fully set out below. The radial location of gaps 13 is critical in that they should be disposed in a region of the field pattern of the desired mode for which this mode induces no radial currents in the metallic vane at the gap location. Since the radial currents in a radially extending conductive vane in the presence of propagating electromagnetic waves are induced by the longitudinal magnetic components of the waves, the gaps should be located at the null of the longitudinal magnetic field pattern of the desired mode. For the circular electric mode family the radial distribution of the longitudinal magnetic field pattern is a Bessel function distribution. Thus the mean radius r of the lossy gaps 13 is described by the zero of the Bessel function of zero order which describes the radial magnetic distribution of the desired mode.
Since the purpose of'the gaps 13 is to dissipate wave mode power, some care must be exercised in the selection of the particular filling material. In general the resistive material should be adapted to dissipate radial current components induced in the vane in the vicinity of the gap by unwanted modes. Resistive material having a specific resistivity of the order of 20 ohm centimeters would be satisfactory. Carbon loaded plastics, carbon loaded paper, and resistance coated glass fibers have been found to have resistivities within the desired range.
The thickness of vanes 11 in a transverse direction is determined by the particular resistance material selected to fill gaps 13. In all cases, the vane thickness is controlled by the skin depth of penetration of the propagating wave energy into the resistance material. Since two opposite surfaces of each gap are subject to energy penetration the vane should have a thickness at least twice the skin depth. In the range of millimeter waves the skin depth in materials of the proper resistivity is of the order of one millimeter. This skin depth is independent of mode and therefore the transverse thickness of a vane for use in millimeter wave applications should be no less than two millimeters. Increasing the vane thickness of course aggravates the reflection problem by virtue of the added metallic volume within the wave path. In this connection it should be noted that the skin depth of penetration of millimeter waves into the conductive portion of each Vane is typically in the region of tenths to hundredths of a millimeter. Accordingly, current generation in the vanes is assured when minimum vane thickness is determined by the skin depths associated with the resistance material.
As shown in FIG. 1, vanes 11 extend radially but they need not be spaced at -degree intervals as illustrated illustrated there no-r need there be a total of four vanes. However, the use of four vanes is attractive from symmetry considerations. An alternative arrangement to the four vane embodiment of FIG. 1 is shown in transverse cross section as FIG. 2. Thus in FIG. 2 guide section 20 is loaded with three metallic vanes'21 spaced apart degrees. Resistance gaps 22 are located within each vane at a radial location r which location is the point of vanishing longitudinal magnetic field for the desired mode of the circular electric family. As the total number of vanes is increased beyond the three or four illustrated the amount of unwanted mode power that is capable of being attenuated is likewise increased but care must be exercised in increasing the total number of vanes too greatly since the total amount of energy reflected from the vanes would increase also.
The operation of the mode selective filters of FIGS. 1 and 2 may now be properly comprehended by considering that a plurality of circular electric modes, comprising primarily the TE mode and secondarily spurious higher order modes enter at one end of guide section 10, and propagate therealong until vanes 11 are encountered. Upon reaching vanes 11, the magnetic field associated with the propagating energy induces currents in the metallic vanes. Since the energy distributions associated with each mode are different, their eifects when incident on the conductive vanes are dilferent. It has been found that the radial current density in the vanes associated with the TE mode is substantially zero at a location which is 0.628 times the radius of the supporting guide,
'while all other circular electric wave modes are characthe resistance gap while the spurious higher order modes will be attenuated. The length of the mode selective vanes is preferably of the order of several wavelengths of the propagating energy, in order that substantially all wave power in the higher order circular electric wave modes present in the incident energy will be dissipated and TE Wave power free of spurious circular electric wave modes will emerge from the filter.
FIG. 3 is a transverse cross sectional view of another embodiment of the present invention. In FIG. 3 guide section 40 of circular transverse cross section contains within its cross section four predominantly metallic segments 41. Each of segments 41 contains a gap 42 loaded with electrically lossy resistive material midway between its extremities. The dimensions and electrical characteristics of segments 41 and gap 42 are similar to those set out hereinabove with respect to the embodiment of FIG. 1 except that the total radial extent of segments 41 is less than that of the previously described vanes. In particular the metallic loading portions of FIG. 3 in which currents are induced by the propagating waves are confined to regions immediately adjacent the region of zero longitudinal magnetic field for the desired mode of propagation. In this manner the total amount of conductive loading with its attendant reflection problems may be minimized. As seen in FIG. 3 the transverse extremities of each of the segments 41 are tapered for the purpose of minimizing edge effects caused by the introduction of conductive metal solely in regions of relatively high TE mode field intensity. The entire array of segments 41 is supported within guide 40 by means of dielectric filler 43 which may comprise polyfoam or other material of low dielectric constant. The resistance material is of course positioned at the critical radius r the exact value of which depends upon the desired mode of transmission. For a particular desired mode, r is determined by the zero of the Bessel function of zero order which as set out above describes the radial variation of the longitudinal magnetic field distribution of that mode.
FIG. 4 is a perspective view of a mode filter for use in a circular electric mode transmission system in which conductor 53 surrounded by lossy jacket 54 which is in turn surrounded by conductive jacket 55. As is now well known in this art propagating modes of the circular electric family are characterized by the absence of longitudinally directed induced wall currents whereas modes of the asymmetric and circular magnetic variety are in general characterized by such currents. Thus any asymmetric or circular magnetic mode propagating within helix guide 51 will sufi'er attenuation in the lossy material surrounding the helix while circular electric modes will propagate substantially unafiected. For a more complete description of the helix wave guide itself, reference may be had to United States Patent-2,848,696 issued August 19, 1958 to S. E. Miller. However, since power in higher order circular electric modes is also generally undesirable, provision for filtering these modes is necessary. Thus in FIG. 4 conductive radial vanes 56 including gaps 57 containing electrically lossy material are disposed within the cross section of the helical winding 53. As set out in detail hereinabove the resistance gaps are disposed at a location for which no radially directed currents .are induced in the vane by the desired mode of propagation. In this manner all wave modes of the circular electric family other than the desired mode will be attenuated. The mode filter of FIG. 4 is thus a filter which aifects all noncircular modes and all circular modes except the one desired propagation mode. It is to be understood of course that other types of asymmetric mode filtering wave guides, such as for example the lossy jacketed spaced conductive ring guide illustrated in United States Patent 2,649,578 issued August 18, 1953 to W. J. Albersheim,"may be substituted for the illustrated helix guide and that the tapered segment embodiment of the circular mode filters shown in FIG. 3 of the present disclosure may be substituted for the illustrated vanes.
In all cases it is understood that the above-described arrangements are illustrative of a small number of the many possible specific embodiments which'can represent applications of the principles of the present invention. Numerous and varied other arrangements can readily be devised in accordance with these principles by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
What is claimed is:
1. A mode filter for all but a selected one of the modes of the circular electric mode family comprising a section of hollow conductively bounded wave guide having a circular transverse cross section with an inside radius r sufliciently large to support a plurality of said modes within a given range of operating frequencies, each of said modes being characterized by longitudinal magnetic field components, a plurality of conductive metallic members extending radially within said guide in the path of said longitudinal components, said members having a transverse thickness greater than twice the skin depth of penetration of said components into said members whereby radially directed electric currents are induced in said members by said components, and means for selectively dissipating certain of said currents comprising a region of electrically lossy material filling a longitudinally extending gap in each of said members, said gap being radially positioned at that location for which the longitudinal magnetic field components of said selected mode are 2. In combination, a section of bounded hollow pipe wave guide of circular transverse cross section having a longitudinal axis and adapted to propagate a plurality of circular electric wave modes within a given operating range of frequencies, and means for selectively attenuating power in all but one of said plurality of modes, said means comprising at least one conductive metallic member extending radially within said guide in the region between said axis and said boundary, each such member having a gap therein which is filled with material adapted to dissipate electric currents, the thickness of said members in a circumferential direction being greater than twice the skin depth of penetration of said modes into said dissipative material 3. The combination according to claim 2 in which the location of said gap coincides with the location at which the value of the zero order- Bessel function describing the radial variation of the longitudinal magnetic field distribution of one selected mode of said plurality of modes is equal to zero.
4. The combination according to claim 2 in which I said conductive member comprises a vane etxending from said axis to said boundary.
5. The combination according to claim 2 in which said conductive member comprises a segment of quasiovoid transverse cross section extending only a portion of the distance between said axis and said boundary.
6. A mode filter comprising a section of hollow wave guide of circular transverse cross section supportive of a plurality of circular electric modes .within a given range of operating frequencies, and means for selectively attenuating all except one of said modes, said meanscomprising at least one vane of conductive metallic material disposed within said guide and extending radially between the longitudinal axis and the inner surface of the boundary wall of said guide, each said vane containing a longitudinally extending gap at a specified radius r from said axis, said gap being filled with material adapted to dissipate electric currents, each said vane having a circumferential thickness greater than twice the skin depth of penetration of said modes into said dissipative material.
7. The mode filter according to claim 6 in which said radius r places said gap at the region in which the longitudinally extending magnetic field components of the desired mode of transmisssion within the circular electric family are at a minimum.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,088,749 8/ 1937 King.
2,760,171 8/1956 King 33398 2,858,512 10/1958 Barnett 33321 2,864,063 12/1958 Felsen 33398 3,041,559 6/1962 Kompener 333-98 OTHER REFERENCES Warters The Effects of Mode In 21 Circular Waveguide. Published in The Bell System Technical Journal, May 1958, pp. 157-677.
F HERMAN KARL SAALBACH, Primary Examiner.
BENNETT G. MILLER, Examiner.
S. D. SCHLOSSER, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. A MODE FILTER FOR ALL BUT A SELECTED ONE OF THE MODES OF THE CIRCULAR ELECTRIC MODE FAMILY COMPRISING A SECTION OF HOLLOW CONDUCTIVELY BOUNDED WAVE GUIDE HAVING A CIRCULAR TRANSVERSE CROSS SECTION WITH AN INSIDE RADIUS R SUFFICIENTLY LARGE TO SUPPORT A PLURALITY OF SAID MODES WITHIN A GIVEN RANGE OF OPERATING FREQUENCIES, EACH OF SAID MODES BEING CHARACTERIZED BY LONGITUDINAL MAGNETIC FIELD COMPONENTS, A PLURALITY OF CONDUCTIVE METALLIC MEMBERS EXTENDING RADIALLY WITHIN SAID GUIDE IN THE PATH OF SAID LONGITUDINAL COMPONENTS, SAID MEMBERS HAVING A TRANSVERSE THICKNESS GREATER THAN TWICE THE SKIN DEPTH OF PENETRATION OF SAID COMPONENTS INTO SAID MEMBERS WHEREBY RADIALLY DIRECTED ELECTRIC CURRENTS ARE INDUCED IN SAID MEMBERS BY SAID COMPONENTS, AND MEANS FOR SELECTIVELY DISSIPATING CERTAIN OF SAID CURRENTS COMPRISING A REGION OF ELECTRICALLY LOSSY MATERIAL FILLING A LONGITUDINALLY EXTENDING GAP IN EACH OF SAID MEMBERS, SAID GAP BEING RADIALLY POSITIONED AT THAT LOCATION FOR WHICH THE LONGITUDINAL MAGNETIC FIELD COMPONENTS OF SAID SELECTED MODE ARE MINIMUM.
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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3548348A (en) * 1968-03-29 1970-12-15 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Dielectric resonator mode suppressor
US3732511A (en) * 1972-03-15 1973-05-08 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Waveguide mode filter
US3995241A (en) * 1974-06-28 1976-11-30 Thomson-Csf Device for attenuating very short parasitic waves in electronic tubes with coaxial, cylindrical electrodes
US4222018A (en) * 1977-07-07 1980-09-09 The Marconi Company Limited Mode filters
US4240049A (en) * 1979-09-24 1980-12-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Waveguide junction circulator having spurious mode absorbing means
US4268804A (en) * 1977-08-17 1981-05-19 Spinner Gmbh Transmission line apparatus for dominant TE11 waves
US4344053A (en) * 1981-02-12 1982-08-10 Litton Systems, Inc. Mode suppressor for circular waveguides utilizing a plurality of resistance cards

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2088749A (en) * 1935-10-30 1937-08-03 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Reception of guided waves
US2760171A (en) * 1951-04-20 1956-08-21 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave-guide mode filter
US2858512A (en) * 1954-05-03 1958-10-28 Hewlett Packard Co Apparatus for varying the phase in waveguide systems
US2864063A (en) * 1957-12-20 1958-12-09 Polytechnic Inst Brooklyn Microwave control devices
US3041559A (en) * 1959-04-27 1962-06-26 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Microwave filter

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2088749A (en) * 1935-10-30 1937-08-03 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Reception of guided waves
US2760171A (en) * 1951-04-20 1956-08-21 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave-guide mode filter
US2858512A (en) * 1954-05-03 1958-10-28 Hewlett Packard Co Apparatus for varying the phase in waveguide systems
US2864063A (en) * 1957-12-20 1958-12-09 Polytechnic Inst Brooklyn Microwave control devices
US3041559A (en) * 1959-04-27 1962-06-26 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Microwave filter

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3548348A (en) * 1968-03-29 1970-12-15 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Dielectric resonator mode suppressor
US3732511A (en) * 1972-03-15 1973-05-08 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Waveguide mode filter
US3995241A (en) * 1974-06-28 1976-11-30 Thomson-Csf Device for attenuating very short parasitic waves in electronic tubes with coaxial, cylindrical electrodes
US4222018A (en) * 1977-07-07 1980-09-09 The Marconi Company Limited Mode filters
US4268804A (en) * 1977-08-17 1981-05-19 Spinner Gmbh Transmission line apparatus for dominant TE11 waves
US4240049A (en) * 1979-09-24 1980-12-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Waveguide junction circulator having spurious mode absorbing means
US4344053A (en) * 1981-02-12 1982-08-10 Litton Systems, Inc. Mode suppressor for circular waveguides utilizing a plurality of resistance cards

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