US3611214A - Waveguide reflective harmonic filter - Google Patents

Waveguide reflective harmonic filter Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3611214A
US3611214A US850843A US3611214DA US3611214A US 3611214 A US3611214 A US 3611214A US 850843 A US850843 A US 850843A US 3611214D A US3611214D A US 3611214DA US 3611214 A US3611214 A US 3611214A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
harmonic
waveguide
array
secondary waveguides
walls
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
US850843A
Inventor
Richard Z Gerlack
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.)
Varian Medical Systems Inc
Original Assignee
Varian Associates 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 Varian Associates Inc filed Critical Varian Associates Inc
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3611214A publication Critical patent/US3611214A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • 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
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P1/00Auxiliary devices
    • H01P1/20Frequency-selective devices, e.g. filters
    • H01P1/212Frequency-selective devices, e.g. filters suppressing or attenuating harmonic frequencies

Definitions

  • hollow waveguide to be cc of microwave energy y waveguides are coupled ry guide, such secondary ng harmonic band enercondary waveguides in- Inventor Richard Z. Gerlaclr 3,353,l23 ll/l967 Met.......... Cupertino, Calit'. 3,464,035 8/1969 Van K01 [2
  • the array of se cludes a first portion of the array being resonant within the second harmonic, a second portion being resonant within the third harmonic band and a third portion being resonant within the fourth harmonic band.
  • a septum, parallel to the broad walls of the primary guide, divides the primary guide into two w s. t m a mam m.W "mS1. .1 8g o u n OfOlO FBTRBJH 2782477 5556666 9999999 HHHHHH 33904 parallel sections to improve the power handling capability and 333/73 (W) to suppress certain undesired modes.
  • waveguide reflective harmonic filters have been built wherein an array of secondary waveguide, such secondary waveguides being resonant at the second harmonic for reflecting second harmonic wave energy toward the source.
  • the primary guide had a tapered height which tapered to a substantially reduced height intermediate the ends of the primary guide to discriminate against setting up certain modes of propagation associated with wave energy traveling on the narrow walls of the primary guide with the electric field vector being parallel to the broad walls of the guide.
  • the problem with this prior art filter was that it had limited power handling capability due to the reduction in height of the primary guide and the reflective filter did not reflect harmonics higher than the second.
  • the principle object of the present invention is the provision of an improved waveguide reflective harmonic filter.
  • One feature of the present invention is the provision of a waveguide reflective harmonic filter having an array of resonant secondary waveguides coupled through the walls of a primary guide and wherein the array of secondary waveguides includes first, second and third portions being resonant at the second, third and fourth harmonic, respectively, of the fundamental passband of the filter.
  • Another feature of the present invention is the same as the preceding feature wherein a conductive septum is disposed within the primary guide, such septum being disposed generally parallel to the broad walls and extending between and interconnecting the narrow walls to short out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to the narrow walls of the primary guide.
  • Another feature of the present invention is the same as any one or more of the preceding features wherein the resonant secondary waveguides are tuned to difierent frequencies within each of the respective harmonic bands for broadbanding the filter.
  • FIG. 1 is a plan view of a filter of the present invention as shown connected in circuit between a source and a load, shown in schematic block diagram form,
  • FIG. 2 is a sectional view of the structure of FIG. 1 taken along line 2-2 in the direction of the arrows, and
  • FIG. 3 is a plot of insertion loss versus frequency depicting the performance characteristics of the filter of FIGS. 1 and 2.
  • Waveguide reflective harmonic filter 1 includes a length of hollow rectangular waveguide 2 preferably having a height, h, equal to the normal height waveguide for the fundamental frequency of the filter, such as S-band.
  • Waveguide flanges 3 and 4 are provided at opposite ends of the primary waveguide 2 for connection of the filter 1 to a source of microwave energy 5, such as a high power S- band klystron amplifier or magnetron oscillator having a power output of 2 megawatts peak and to a microwave load 6, such as an antenna, respectively.
  • the filter 1 includes an array of secondary waveguides 7 coupled to the primary waveguide 2 through the top and bottom broad walls 8 and 9, respectively, of the primary guide 2.
  • the array of secondary waveguides 7 is divided into 3 portions, a second harmonic portion 11, a third harmonic portion 12, and a fourth harmonic portion 13, arranged in successive sections along the length of primary guide 2.
  • the secondary waveguides 7 are dimensioned to be cut ofl for the fundamental band frequencies to be propagated through the primary guide 2 such as not to interfere with the transmission of the fundamental band wave energy through the filter l.
  • the secondary waveguides 7 are short circuited at their outer ends to form quarter wave resonators within the second harmonic band, the third harmonic band and the fourth harmonic band, respectively, of the filter. More particularly, the resonators 7 which are midway along the length of each of the respective portions 11, 12 and 13 are dimensioned to have a length which is approximately a quarter wavelength long at the center of the respective harmonic band.
  • the other resonators within each portion of the array have lengths which taper from 110 percent of the length of the midresonator to percent of the length of the midresonator such that the resonators in each of the portions of the total array are tuned to different frequencies over the band of each of the harmonics to obtain broad band operation of the filter 1.
  • the second harmonic resonators 11 are arranged in a pair of rows on each of the broad walls of the guide 2, whereas the third harmonic resonators of the third portion 12 are arranged in three rows on each of the top and bottom walls of the waveguide 2 and the fourth harmonic resonators 13 are arranged in four rows on each of the top and bottom walls of the waveguide 2.
  • the resonators are axially spaced, on their centers, along the length of the primary guide by approximately one half of a guide wavelength at the respective hannonic within the primary guide such that the respective harmonic power reflected by that portion of the array is additive in the reflective direction back toward the microwave source 5.
  • the secondary waveguides 7 need not be of standard height for the respective harmonic but may be of reduced height, i.e., their broad dimension may be substantially greater than twice the narrow or height dimension.
  • a conductive septum 15 is disposed midway between the top and bottom walls 8 and 9 of the primary guide 2 and extends parallel to the top and bottom walls interconnecting the narrow walls 16 and 17 of the primary guide.
  • the septum serves to short out the transmission modes having electric field vectors parallel to the broad walls of the primary guide 2, thereby purifying the desired transmission mode through the waveguide 2.
  • the septum 15 divides the primary waveguide 2 into two parallel waveguiding sections 18 and 19 on opposite sides of the septum 15, each parallel waveguidin g section 18 and 19 having a height of approximately 35 percent of the normal height of a standard waveguide to further discriminate against undesired transmission modes having electric field vectors parallel to the broad walls of the primary waveguide 2.
  • the resultant two parallel waveguiding sections 18 and 19 substantially improve the power handling capability of the filter 1. More particularly, the septum 15 permits the power handling capability of the filter to be substantially double that of the prior art design which did not include the septum.
  • the primary guide 2 is typically pressurized with a gas which is not readily ionizable, such as air to a suitable pressure as of 30 p.s.i.g. to minimize the arcing at high power levels.
  • FIG. 3 there is shown a typical filter characteristic for filters of the present: invention. More particularly, the plot of FIG. 3 shows insertion loss in db. versus frequency within the fundamental band of frequencies 21 centered about F such as S-band. The insertion loss is on the order of a fraction of a db. whereas within the band of frequencies including the second, third and fourth harmonic, indicated at 22, the insertion loss is above 40 db.
  • the secondary waveguides are shown coupled through the broad walls of the guide 2; this is not a requirement and in other embodiments the secondary waveguides may be coupled through the narrow walls 16 and 17 of the primary guide 2.
  • a microwave waveguide reflective filter means forming a hollow primary waveguide to be connected in circuit between a source of microwave energy and a load, the microwave energy from the source being characterized by having a desired fundamental mode of energy at a frequency within a fundamental passband of frequencies and having undesired harmonic energy within harmonic frequency bands of the fundamental passband, said primary waveguide being dimensioned to be cut off for frequencies below the fundamental passband for transmission of the fundamental mode energy to the load, means forming an array of resonant secondary waveguides dimensioned to be cut off for the fundamental mode energy and to be above cutoff for the frequencies of the harmonic bands, said secondary waveguides being coupled through the walls of said primary waveguide to the harmonic microwave energy in said primary waveguide for reflecting harmonic band energy toward the microwave source, the improvement wherein, said array of secondary waveguides includes a first portion of said array being resonant within the second harmonic band, a second portion of said array being resonant within the third harmonic band, and a third portion of said array being resonant within the fourth harmonic
  • said primary waveguide is a rectangular waveguide having a pair of opposed broad walls interconnected by a pair of narrow walls, and means fonning a conductive structure disposed within said waveguide and extending substantially parallel to said broad walls and interconnecting said narrow walls to shot out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to said narrow walls of said primary waveguide.
  • said primary waveguide is a rectangular waveguide having a pair of opposed broad walls interconnected by a pair of narrow sidewalls, said first portion of said array of secondary waveguides including a pair of rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary guide, said second portion of said array of secondary waveguides including three rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary waveguide, and said third portion of said array of secondary waveguides including four rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary waveguide.
  • the apparatus of claim 5 including a conductive septum disposed within said waveguide and extending substantially parallel to said broad walls and interconnecting said narrow walls to short out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to said narrow walls of said primary waveguide.

Landscapes

  • Control Of Motors That Do Not Use Commutators (AREA)

Abstract

A waveguide reflective harmonic filter is disclosed. The filter includes a primary hollow waveguide to be connected in circuit between a source of microwave energy and a load. An array of secondary waveguides are coupled through the walls of the primary guide, such secondary waveguides being resonant for reflecting harmonic band energy toward the source. The array of secondary waveguides includes a first portion of the array being resonant within the second harmonic, a second portion being resonant within the third harmonic band and a third portion being resonant within the fourth harmonic band. A septum, parallel to the broad walls of the primary guide, divides the primary guide into two parallel sections to improve the power handling capability and to suppress certain undesired modes.

Description

3,Ml,2i
guide e 25 Feb.
hollow waveguide to be cc of microwave energy y waveguides are coupled ry guide, such secondary ng harmonic band enercondary waveguides in- Inventor Richard Z. Gerlaclr 3,353,l23 ll/l967 Met.......... Cupertino, Calit'. 3,464,035 8/1969 Van K01 [2|] Appl. No. 850,843 3,497,835 2/1970 Filed 8, 1969 OTHER REFERENCES g g 3 Southworth, Principles and Applications of Wave Sslgnee gzfi Transmission; D. Van Nostrand Co.. Inc: Princeton aoAm 362 (5th printing) received in U.S. Patent Offic v 1965. WAVEGUIDE REFLECTIVE HARMONIIC FILTER Primary Examiner-Herman Karl Saalbach 6 Claims, 3 Drawing Figs. Assistant Examiner-Marvin Nussbaum us. 333/73 w, Mays-Stanley Gerald more 333/76, 333/83 R, 333/98 M lint. H011) 1/16, ABSTRACT: A waveguide fl ti harmonic fil is i Help 1/20 7/02 closed. The filter includes a primary lFtelld 333/70,73, Connected in circuit beween a Soul- 73 76,98,931, 83 and a load. An array of secondar through the walls of the prima References Cmed waveguides being resonant for reflec'ti UNITED STATES PATENTS gy toward the source. The array of se cludes a first portion of the array being resonant within the second harmonic, a second portion being resonant within the third harmonic band and a third portion being resonant within the fourth harmonic band. A septum, parallel to the broad walls of the primary guide, divides the primary guide into two w s. t m a mam m.W "mS1. .1 8g o u n OfOlO FBTRBJH 2782477 5556666 9999999 HHHHHH 33904 parallel sections to improve the power handling capability and 333/73 (W) to suppress certain undesired modes.
WWWWWW 333333 777777 333333 333333 333333 willy/It'll r/llllllll I, 'i' l' PATENTEU RBI 5 B?! m 6 mmm L Z MW M m m m j BU UH m BU UH. M BU DU mws m BU UU 3 v. m BU HE G B 1 BU BU H 7 m BUB a m m BBQ 4 F M BUB m We UUU a zM w UUU 2 W2 I HA F M M EVL .MH U U flmz mm m U U E: 22%? www B H M 2 l ANORNEY WAVEGUIDE REFLECTIVE HARMONIC FILTER DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART I-Ieretofore, waveguide reflective harmonic filters have been built wherein an array of secondary waveguide, such secondary waveguides being resonant at the second harmonic for reflecting second harmonic wave energy toward the source. In such an arrangement the primary guide had a tapered height which tapered to a substantially reduced height intermediate the ends of the primary guide to discriminate against setting up certain modes of propagation associated with wave energy traveling on the narrow walls of the primary guide with the electric field vector being parallel to the broad walls of the guide. The problem with this prior art filter was that it had limited power handling capability due to the reduction in height of the primary guide and the reflective filter did not reflect harmonics higher than the second.
SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION The principle object of the present invention is the provision of an improved waveguide reflective harmonic filter.
One feature of the present invention is the provision of a waveguide reflective harmonic filter having an array of resonant secondary waveguides coupled through the walls of a primary guide and wherein the array of secondary waveguides includes first, second and third portions being resonant at the second, third and fourth harmonic, respectively, of the fundamental passband of the filter.
Another feature of the present invention is the same as the preceding feature wherein a conductive septum is disposed within the primary guide, such septum being disposed generally parallel to the broad walls and extending between and interconnecting the narrow walls to short out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to the narrow walls of the primary guide.
Another feature of the present invention is the same as any one or more of the preceding features wherein the resonant secondary waveguides are tuned to difierent frequencies within each of the respective harmonic bands for broadbanding the filter.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent upon perusal of the following specification taken in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 is a plan view of a filter of the present invention as shown connected in circuit between a source and a load, shown in schematic block diagram form,
FIG. 2 is a sectional view of the structure of FIG. 1 taken along line 2-2 in the direction of the arrows, and
FIG. 3 is a plot of insertion loss versus frequency depicting the performance characteristics of the filter of FIGS. 1 and 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 2, there is shown the filter 1 of the present invention. Waveguide reflective harmonic filter 1 includes a length of hollow rectangular waveguide 2 preferably having a height, h, equal to the normal height waveguide for the fundamental frequency of the filter, such as S-band. Waveguide flanges 3 and 4 are provided at opposite ends of the primary waveguide 2 for connection of the filter 1 to a source of microwave energy 5, such as a high power S- band klystron amplifier or magnetron oscillator having a power output of 2 megawatts peak and to a microwave load 6, such as an antenna, respectively.
The filter 1 includes an array of secondary waveguides 7 coupled to the primary waveguide 2 through the top and bottom broad walls 8 and 9, respectively, of the primary guide 2. The array of secondary waveguides 7 is divided into 3 portions, a second harmonic portion 11, a third harmonic portion 12, and a fourth harmonic portion 13, arranged in successive sections along the length of primary guide 2. The secondary waveguides 7 are dimensioned to be cut ofl for the fundamental band frequencies to be propagated through the primary guide 2 such as not to interfere with the transmission of the fundamental band wave energy through the filter l.
The secondary waveguides 7 are short circuited at their outer ends to form quarter wave resonators within the second harmonic band, the third harmonic band and the fourth harmonic band, respectively, of the filter. More particularly, the resonators 7 which are midway along the length of each of the respective portions 11, 12 and 13 are dimensioned to have a length which is approximately a quarter wavelength long at the center of the respective harmonic band. The other resonators within each portion of the array have lengths which taper from 110 percent of the length of the midresonator to percent of the length of the midresonator such that the resonators in each of the portions of the total array are tuned to different frequencies over the band of each of the harmonics to obtain broad band operation of the filter 1.
The second harmonic resonators 11 are arranged in a pair of rows on each of the broad walls of the guide 2, whereas the third harmonic resonators of the third portion 12 are arranged in three rows on each of the top and bottom walls of the waveguide 2 and the fourth harmonic resonators 13 are arranged in four rows on each of the top and bottom walls of the waveguide 2. The resonators are axially spaced, on their centers, along the length of the primary guide by approximately one half of a guide wavelength at the respective hannonic within the primary guide such that the respective harmonic power reflected by that portion of the array is additive in the reflective direction back toward the microwave source 5. The secondary waveguides 7 need not be of standard height for the respective harmonic but may be of reduced height, i.e., their broad dimension may be substantially greater than twice the narrow or height dimension.
A conductive septum 15 is disposed midway between the top and bottom walls 8 and 9 of the primary guide 2 and extends parallel to the top and bottom walls interconnecting the narrow walls 16 and 17 of the primary guide. The septum serves to short out the transmission modes having electric field vectors parallel to the broad walls of the primary guide 2, thereby purifying the desired transmission mode through the waveguide 2. In addition, the septum 15 divides the primary waveguide 2 into two parallel waveguiding sections 18 and 19 on opposite sides of the septum 15, each parallel waveguidin g section 18 and 19 having a height of approximately 35 percent of the normal height of a standard waveguide to further discriminate against undesired transmission modes having electric field vectors parallel to the broad walls of the primary waveguide 2. The resultant two parallel waveguiding sections 18 and 19 substantially improve the power handling capability of the filter 1. More particularly, the septum 15 permits the power handling capability of the filter to be substantially double that of the prior art design which did not include the septum. The primary guide 2 is typically pressurized with a gas which is not readily ionizable, such as air to a suitable pressure as of 30 p.s.i.g. to minimize the arcing at high power levels.
Referring now to FIG. 3, there is shown a typical filter characteristic for filters of the present: invention. More particularly, the plot of FIG. 3 shows insertion loss in db. versus frequency within the fundamental band of frequencies 21 centered about F such as S-band. The insertion loss is on the order of a fraction of a db. whereas within the band of frequencies including the second, third and fourth harmonic, indicated at 22, the insertion loss is above 40 db.
Thus far in the description of the present invention the secondary waveguides are shown coupled through the broad walls of the guide 2; this is not a requirement and in other embodiments the secondary waveguides may be coupled through the narrow walls 16 and 17 of the primary guide 2.
Since many changes could be made in the above construction and many apparently widely different embodiments of this invention could be made without departing from the scope thereof, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
What is claimed is:
1. In a microwave waveguide reflective filter, means forming a hollow primary waveguide to be connected in circuit between a source of microwave energy and a load, the microwave energy from the source being characterized by having a desired fundamental mode of energy at a frequency within a fundamental passband of frequencies and having undesired harmonic energy within harmonic frequency bands of the fundamental passband, said primary waveguide being dimensioned to be cut off for frequencies below the fundamental passband for transmission of the fundamental mode energy to the load, means forming an array of resonant secondary waveguides dimensioned to be cut off for the fundamental mode energy and to be above cutoff for the frequencies of the harmonic bands, said secondary waveguides being coupled through the walls of said primary waveguide to the harmonic microwave energy in said primary waveguide for reflecting harmonic band energy toward the microwave source, the improvement wherein, said array of secondary waveguides includes a first portion of said array being resonant within the second harmonic band, a second portion of said array being resonant within the third harmonic band, and a third portion of said array being resonant within the fourth harmonic band, said resonant secondary waveguides being tuned to different frequencies within each of the harmonic bands for broadbanding the filter.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said primary waveguide is a rectangular waveguide having a pair of opposed broad walls interconnected by a pair of narrow walls, and means fonning a conductive structure disposed within said waveguide and extending substantially parallel to said broad walls and interconnecting said narrow walls to shot out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to said narrow walls of said primary waveguide.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said resonant secondary waveguides are tuned to different frequencies by having different lengths.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein certain ones of said secondary waveguides within the same portion of said array are spaced center to center along the axis of said primary waveguide by one-half a guide wavelength for wave energy at the respective harmonic for which said respective secondary waveguides are resonant.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said primary waveguide is a rectangular waveguide having a pair of opposed broad walls interconnected by a pair of narrow sidewalls, said first portion of said array of secondary waveguides including a pair of rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary guide, said second portion of said array of secondary waveguides including three rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary waveguide, and said third portion of said array of secondary waveguides including four rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary waveguide.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 including a conductive septum disposed within said waveguide and extending substantially parallel to said broad walls and interconnecting said narrow walls to short out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to said narrow walls of said primary waveguide.

Claims (6)

1. In a microwave waveguide reflective filter, means forming a hollow primary waveguide to be connected in circuit between a source of microwave energy and a load, the microwave energy from the source being characterized by having a desired fundamental mode of energy at a frequency within a fundamental passband of frequencies and having undesired harmonic energy within harmonic frequency bands of the fundamental passband, said primary waveguide being dimensioned to be cut off for frequencies below the fundamental passband for transmission of the fundamental mode energy to the load, means forming an array of resonant secondary waveguides dimensioned to be cut off for the fundamental mode energy and to be above cutoff for the frequencies of the harmonic bands, said secondary waveguides being coupled through the walls of said primary waveguide to the harmonic microwave energy in said primary waveguide for reflecting harmonic band energy toward the microwave source, the improvement wherein, said array of secondary waveguides includes a first portion of said array being resonant within the second harmonic band, a second portion of said array being resonant within the third harmonic band, and a third portion of said array being resonant within the fourth harmonic band, said resonant secondary waveguides being tuned to different frequencies within each of the harmonic bands for broadbanding the filter.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said primary waveguide is a rectangular waveguide having a pair of opposed broad walls interconnected by a pair of narrow walls, and means forming a conductive structure disposed within said waveguide and extending substantially parallel to said broad walls and interconnecting said narrow walls to shot out certain undesired modEs of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to said narrow walls of said primary waveguide.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said resonant secondary waveguides are tuned to different frequencies by having different lengths.
4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein certain ones of said secondary waveguides within the same portion of said array are spaced center to center along the axis of said primary waveguide by one-half a guide wavelength for wave energy at the respective harmonic for which said respective secondary waveguides are resonant.
5. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein said primary waveguide is a rectangular waveguide having a pair of opposed broad walls interconnected by a pair of narrow sidewalls, said first portion of said array of secondary waveguides including a pair of rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary guide, said second portion of said array of secondary waveguides including three rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary waveguide, and said third portion of said array of secondary waveguides including four rows of secondary waveguides coupled through each of said broad walls of said primary waveguide.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 including a conductive septum disposed within said waveguide and extending substantially parallel to said broad walls and interconnecting said narrow walls to short out certain undesired modes of propagation having electric field vectors perpendicular to said narrow walls of said primary waveguide.
US850843A 1969-08-18 1969-08-18 Waveguide reflective harmonic filter Expired - Lifetime US3611214A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US85084369A 1969-08-18 1969-08-18

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3611214A true US3611214A (en) 1971-10-05

Family

ID=25309248

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US850843A Expired - Lifetime US3611214A (en) 1969-08-18 1969-08-18 Waveguide reflective harmonic filter

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3611214A (en)

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3819900A (en) * 1972-06-13 1974-06-25 Amana Refrigeration Inc Waveguide filter for microwave heating apparatus
JPS5224057A (en) * 1975-07-17 1977-02-23 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Band-stop filter
JPS5275157A (en) * 1975-12-18 1977-06-23 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Wave filter
US4496876A (en) * 1982-09-23 1985-01-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Frequency-spreading coupler
US4849723A (en) * 1988-05-25 1989-07-18 Oliver Jr Harry S Waveguide filter
US6169466B1 (en) * 1999-05-10 2001-01-02 Com Dev Limited Corrugated waveguide filter having coupled resonator cavities
US6429750B2 (en) * 1998-06-02 2002-08-06 The Curran Company Method for attenuating electromagnetic interference using resonant cavities of dissimilar dimensions
WO2009000841A1 (en) * 2007-06-28 2008-12-31 Thomson Licensing Channel filter, in particular for a digital television receiver
ES2334549A1 (en) * 2009-03-17 2010-03-11 Universidad Politecnica De Cartagena Self-configurable filter for microwave oven on-line processing, self-contained filtering processing for microwave oven on line processing and microwave oven for online processing. (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding)
US10597750B2 (en) * 2012-10-30 2020-03-24 Technological Resources Pty. Limited Apparatus and a method for treatment of mined material with electromagnetic radiation

Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2588226A (en) * 1942-07-30 1952-03-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave filter
US2785381A (en) * 1953-04-23 1957-03-12 Burton P Brown Electromagnetic wave filter
US2853678A (en) * 1953-11-16 1958-09-23 Sperry Rand Corp Millimeter frequency meter
US3058072A (en) * 1956-11-15 1962-10-09 Raytheon Co Microwave filters
US3130380A (en) * 1962-02-13 1964-04-21 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Adjustable waveguide filter
US3302111A (en) * 1966-06-13 1967-01-31 Edward M T Jones Multimode waveguide harmonic power sampler
US3309626A (en) * 1964-12-03 1967-03-14 Vincent J Higgins Microwave limiter
US3353123A (en) * 1965-09-01 1967-11-14 Gen Electric Microwave filter comprising absorbing structures for removing suprious wave energy
US3464035A (en) * 1966-07-25 1969-08-26 Gerald W Van Kol Filter coupled to microwave guide
US3497835A (en) * 1965-12-10 1970-02-24 Hughes Aircraft Co Microwave filter

Patent Citations (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2588226A (en) * 1942-07-30 1952-03-04 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Wave filter
US2785381A (en) * 1953-04-23 1957-03-12 Burton P Brown Electromagnetic wave filter
US2853678A (en) * 1953-11-16 1958-09-23 Sperry Rand Corp Millimeter frequency meter
US3058072A (en) * 1956-11-15 1962-10-09 Raytheon Co Microwave filters
US3130380A (en) * 1962-02-13 1964-04-21 Ite Circuit Breaker Ltd Adjustable waveguide filter
US3309626A (en) * 1964-12-03 1967-03-14 Vincent J Higgins Microwave limiter
US3353123A (en) * 1965-09-01 1967-11-14 Gen Electric Microwave filter comprising absorbing structures for removing suprious wave energy
US3497835A (en) * 1965-12-10 1970-02-24 Hughes Aircraft Co Microwave filter
US3302111A (en) * 1966-06-13 1967-01-31 Edward M T Jones Multimode waveguide harmonic power sampler
US3464035A (en) * 1966-07-25 1969-08-26 Gerald W Van Kol Filter coupled to microwave guide

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Southworth, Principles and Applications of Waveguide Transmission; D. Van Nostrand Co., Inc.: Princeton; pp. 360 362 (5th printing) received in U.S. Patent Office 25 Feb. 1965. *

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3819900A (en) * 1972-06-13 1974-06-25 Amana Refrigeration Inc Waveguide filter for microwave heating apparatus
JPS5224057A (en) * 1975-07-17 1977-02-23 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Band-stop filter
JPS5275157A (en) * 1975-12-18 1977-06-23 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Wave filter
US4496876A (en) * 1982-09-23 1985-01-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Frequency-spreading coupler
US4849723A (en) * 1988-05-25 1989-07-18 Oliver Jr Harry S Waveguide filter
US6429750B2 (en) * 1998-06-02 2002-08-06 The Curran Company Method for attenuating electromagnetic interference using resonant cavities of dissimilar dimensions
US6169466B1 (en) * 1999-05-10 2001-01-02 Com Dev Limited Corrugated waveguide filter having coupled resonator cavities
WO2009000841A1 (en) * 2007-06-28 2008-12-31 Thomson Licensing Channel filter, in particular for a digital television receiver
FR2918235A1 (en) * 2007-06-28 2009-01-02 Thomson Licensing Sas CHANNEL FILTER, IN PARTICULAR FOR A DIGITAL TELEVISION RECEIVER.
US20100134700A1 (en) * 2007-06-28 2010-06-03 Jean-Luc Robert Channel filter, in particular for a digital television receiver
CN101689842B (en) * 2007-06-28 2012-12-12 汤姆森许可贸易公司 Channel filter, in particular for a digital television receiver
US8390745B2 (en) 2007-06-28 2013-03-05 Thomson Licensing Channel filter, in particular for a digital television receiver
ES2334549A1 (en) * 2009-03-17 2010-03-11 Universidad Politecnica De Cartagena Self-configurable filter for microwave oven on-line processing, self-contained filtering processing for microwave oven on line processing and microwave oven for online processing. (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding)
US10597750B2 (en) * 2012-10-30 2020-03-24 Technological Resources Pty. Limited Apparatus and a method for treatment of mined material with electromagnetic radiation

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4567401A (en) Wide-band distributed rf coupler
EP0116418B1 (en) Multi-port, multi-frequency microwave combiner
US6847270B2 (en) Waveguide group branching filter
US4630009A (en) Cascade waveguide triple-mode filters useable as a group delay equalizer
US3611214A (en) Waveguide reflective harmonic filter
CA1341243C (en) Low-loss wide-band microwave filter
US3353123A (en) Microwave filter comprising absorbing structures for removing suprious wave energy
US3451014A (en) Waveguide filter having branch means to absorb or attenuate frequencies above pass-band
US3110000A (en) Waveguide window structure having three resonant sections giving broadband transmission with means to fluid cool center section
EP0417205B1 (en) High performance extended interaction output circuit
US4077039A (en) Launching and/or receiving network for an antenna feedhorn
US3593220A (en) High power microwave low-pass filter of the leaky wall type
US3668564A (en) Waveguide channel diplexer and mode transducer
US2739288A (en) Wave guide hybrid
US3750183A (en) Multimode antenna system
US3952270A (en) Hyperfrequency band-cut filter
US4802234A (en) Mode selective band pass filter
US3353122A (en) Waveguide filters having adjustable tuning means in narrow wall of waveguide
GB2175145A (en) Wide-band polarization diplexer
EP0401995A2 (en) Microwave diplexer
US3230484A (en) Waveguide transition between rectangular and circular waveguides
JPH01152801A (en) Waveguide band-pass filter
US3600711A (en) Coaxial filter having harmonic reflective and absorptive means
US2853682A (en) Waveguide filter
US3218586A (en) Transmission of dominant transverse electric mode in large rectangular waveguide, with polarization parallel to width, by use of mode absorber