US3680010A - Ferrite waveguide phase shifter exhibiting negative phase shift - Google Patents

Ferrite waveguide phase shifter exhibiting negative phase shift Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3680010A
US3680010A US813073A US3680010DA US3680010A US 3680010 A US3680010 A US 3680010A US 813073 A US813073 A US 813073A US 3680010D A US3680010D A US 3680010DA US 3680010 A US3680010 A US 3680010A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
ferrite
phase shifter
openings
wave guide
side 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
US813073A
Inventor
Daniel C Buck
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.)
CBS Corp
Original Assignee
Westinghouse Electric Corp
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 Westinghouse Electric Corp filed Critical Westinghouse Electric Corp
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3680010A publication Critical patent/US3680010A/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
    • H01P1/18Phase-shifters
    • H01P1/19Phase-shifters using a ferromagnetic device

Definitions

  • phase shifters are now well known and comprise ferrite bodies of various shapes disposed within a wave guide and provided with a latching coil, usually a single turn of wire, which produces a saturating magnetic field within the ferrite. Recently, it has been shown that such phase shifters show anomalous behavior in that some devices show increasing phase shift with increasing applied field, while others show decreasing phase shift with increasing applied field.
  • the phase shift experienced is negative in that the phase decreases with applied magnetic field.
  • the phase shift is positive and the phase increases with applied magnetic field.
  • phase shift there are two competing mechanisms which govern the type of phase shift. These can be termed p.- effective and Faraday rotation.”
  • the former mechanism is effective when the thickness of the wave guide is below the aforesaid critical value; while the latter sets in when the guide is thick enough to support a cross-polarized electric field of the same order of magnitude as the incident electric field.
  • phase shifters have been incorporated into thick wave guides in which the ferrite produces a positive difi'erential phase shift.
  • the entire ferrite toroid is placed within the wave guide since, among other reasons, optimum positive phase shift is acheived when the ferrite does not touch any of the guide walls.
  • this part of the ferrite acts as a dielectric filling in the guide and degrades the phase shift by dielectric loading.
  • the present invention seeks to provide a new and improved latching reciprocal ferrite phase shifter for electrically thin wave guides in which wave energy experiences a negative phase shift in passing through a longitudinally magnetized ferrite body.
  • an object of the invention is to provide a latching ferrite phase shifter of the type described wherein the ferrite body occupies only the central portion of the wave guide and is longitudinally magnetized by means of one or more U-shaped members external to the wave guide and provided with encircling latching coils means.
  • a latching ferrite phase shifter comprising a wave guide section having a ferrite body centrally disposed therein and having a thickness in the direction parallel to the electric vectors of incident wave energy which is small enough to cause wave energy to experience a negative phase shift in passing through the ferrite. Openings are provided in the long transverse dimensional walls of the wave guide section at opposite ends of the ferrite body. These openings receive the legs of a U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material provided with an encircling latching coil.
  • the ferrite body which is in engagement with the top and bottom walls of the wave guide section, is provided with a metallic coating, preferably formed by vacuum deposition or plating techniques.
  • This coating being interposed between the ends of the legs of the U-shaped member and the ferrite body, introduces points of magnetic reluctance into the closed magnetic circuit comprising the ferrite body itself and the external U-shaped member.
  • the magnetic reluctance introduced by the coatings results in only a very small degradation in remanent magnetization.
  • the ferrite body for maximum negative phase shift, extends all the way from the top to the bottom wall of the wave guide section and must be thin compared to the plane wavelength in an extended, non-tensor, ferrite dielectric medium.
  • the ferrite thickness should be no greater than about 0.13 times the aforesaid plane wavelength.
  • FIG. 1 is an illustration of a prior art phase shifter for electrically thick wave guide sections and incorporating a pair of ferrite bodies in the form of toroids;
  • FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken along line ll-ll of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 is an illustration of one embodiment of the latching ferrite phase shifter of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along line IV--IV of FIG. 3 showing the evaporated or plated film in the magnetic flux path for the ferrite body of the present invention
  • FIG. 5 is a hysteresis curve illustrating the operation of the ferrite phase shifters of the invention.
  • FIG. 6 is an illustration of another embodiment of the invention employing two U-shaped magnetically permeable members external to the wave guide.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 a prior art latching ferrite phase shifter is shown comprising a wave guide section 10 containing a pair of ferrite toroids l2 and 14 in side-by-side relationship Passing through the openings in each toroid is a latching wire 16 or l8.'
  • direct current pulses are applied to the latching wires 16 and 18
  • direct current magnetic fields H are generated in the two toroids I2 and 14. Note that the direct current magnetic field H in toroid l2 flows in a counterclockwise direction; while that in toroid l4 flows in a clockwise direction, the two direct current magnetic fields moving in the same direction along the abutting center legs of the toroids identified in FIG. 1 as the active region.”
  • the electric field, E,, of the incident wave energy is perpendicular to the long transverse dimension of the wave guide; while the magnetic field associated with the wave energy rotates in a path at right angles to the electric vectors E,.
  • the traveling magnetic field defines a closed loop and is divided into two portions, B, being that portion which moves transverse to the direction of wave propagation and H being that portion which travels parallel to the direction of wave propagation.
  • the return magnetic path in'such devices is in regions of the wave guide section in which the alternating current magnetic field, H is parallel to the direct current applied field H
  • this part of the ferrite i.e., the outer legs of the toroids
  • the coupling coefficient is proportional to the relative crosssectional guide area occupied by the active part of the ferrite, this being identified in FIG. 1 as the active region" and comprising the abutting legs of the toroids l2 and 14.
  • phase shift in a device such as that shown in FIG. 1 isdue to coupling from the incident TE. mode to a cross-polarized TE mode, which is beyond cutoff, and therefore evanescent.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 One embodiment of the present invention is shown in FIGS. 3 and 4 and comprises a wave guide section 22 in which the dimension along the Y-axis is less than that in the prior art device shown in FIG. 1 such that wave energy passing through the guide will experience a negative, rather than positive, phase shift in passing through a ferrite body 24 centrally disposed within the wave guide section 22.
  • Typical dimensions of the guide are 0.040 inch in the Y-direction and 0.5 inch in the X-direction.
  • the Y-dimension of the wave guide section 22 will be .less than one-quarter wavelength; however this is not necessarily controlling, the only requirement being that the thickness of the guide be such that the aforesaid negative phase shift will occur.
  • the ferrite slab.24 in the em- -bodiment of the invention shown in FIG. 3 can touch the upper and lower broad side walls with no degradation in performance. Th: is true because here the phase shift is due only to changes in effective permeability of the ferrite medium.
  • the toroid of the latching magnetic circuit can be completedoutside the wave guide, thereby eliminating many of the disadvantages of the embodiment of FIG. I, making use of the fact that no degradation in performance is obtained when the ferrite is brought upto the guide wall as is the case in other reciprocal latching designs.
  • a U-shaped magneticmember 26 formed from ferrite or other suitable sofi magnetic material is provided outside the wave guide section 22 and has downwardly depending legs 28 which extend through openings 30 (FIG. 4) formed in the upper wall of the wave guide.
  • metal coatings 32 Plated or evaporated onto the upper surface of the ferrite block 24 in the area of the openings 30 are metal coatings 32.
  • Such coatings will, in effect, form a continuation of the waveguide wall; but, at the same time, will present very little magnetic reluctance in the magnetic circuit comprising the ferrite block 24 and the U- shaped member 26.
  • the ferrite surfaces are preferably highly polished; and the metal film thickness is maintained as small as possible.
  • the metal thickness can be about 0.1 mil thick.
  • the magnetic reluctance is then of the order of about 4 X 10" oersteds per gauss. For typical ferrites, this results in only a small degradation in remanant magnetization.
  • Surrounding the U-shaped member 26 is a latching coil 27 having terminals 29 adapted for connection to a pulse generator 1 not shown.
  • the magnetic reluctance of the metal film can be further reduced by making it of a sofi ferromagnetic metal whose remanant flux density B, is greater than that of the ferrite.
  • the metal film thickness should be greater than a skin depth to avoid microwave energy from leaking through to the U-shaped member. This will also reduce microwave insertion loss.
  • H may be in the order of about 2 to 5 oersteds and the remanent flux density, B without considering the metal films 32 in the magnetic circuit, is 2,000 gauss. Assuming that the reluctance of the gap is 4 X oersted per gauss, the remanant flux density is then reduced to a lower value B but this is only about 0.8 oersted which is much less than the coercive force of the material. 7
  • l-35 surrounds the member 34 and is connected, along with coil 27, to a common pulse generator 36.
  • two return paths are provided for the magnetic flux passing through the ferrite body 24.
  • a rectangular wave guide section having broad side walls and narrow side walls and having disposed therein a rectangular ferrite dielectric body whose cross section hasa major dimension and a minor dimension with its major dimension being parallel to and centered along said broad side walls and having its minor dimension orthogonal to said broad side walls, said minor dimension of said body and the dimension of said narrow side walls of said wave guide section being no greater than substantially 0.13 times the wavelength in said dielectric body, said minor dimension causing incident wave energy to experience a negative phase shift in passing through said ferrite dielectric body, said ferrite body extending between, and'in I contact with said broad walls, openings in at least one of said broad walls opposite the ends of said ferrite body, a generally U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material having legs extending'through said openings and forming with said ferrite body a closed magnetic circuit, a latching coil encircling said U-shaped member to induce latched magnetic flux in said magnetic circuit.
  • phase shifter of claim 1 wherein the electric vectors of incident wave energy are perpendicular to said broad side walls.
  • phase shifter of claim 1 including a second U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material having legs extending through openings in abroad side wall opposite said s.
  • phase shifter of claim 6 wherein the film is of a soft ferromagnetic metal.

Abstract

Described is a longitudinally magnetized, latching ferrite reciprocal phase shifter for use in wave guides having a thickness which causes the wave energy to experience a negative phase shift in passing through the ferrite, and wherein the ferrite material itself fills only the center portion of the wave guide and is longitudinally magnetized by means of coil means surrounding one or more U-shaped magnetically permeable members external to the wave guide but forming with the ferrite within the wave guide a toroid-type magnetic circuit.

Description

United States Patent Buck [ 51 July 25,1972
[54] FERRITE WAVEGUIDE PHASE SHIFTER EXHIBITING NEGATIVE PHASE SHIFT [72] Inventor: Daniel C. Buck, Hanover, Md.
[73] Assignee: Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pa.
22 Filed: Aprll3, 1969 21 Appl.No.: 813,073
52 user. .333/31 A,333/24.l s11 lnt.Cl. ..H0lpl/l8 [58] FieldofSearch ..333/24,24.1,24.2, 24.3,31,
[56] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,030,593 4/1962 Aulock ..333/24.lX
3,076,946 2/ i963 Hewitt ..333/24.l X 3,080,536 3/1963 Dewhirst ..333/24.l 3,187,274 6/1965 Owen et al. ....333/24.l X 3,40l,36l 9/l968 Schloemann.... ....333/24.l X 3,434,077 3/1969 Heath et al. ..333/24.l 3,435,382 3/l969 Agrios et al ..333/24.l X
Primary Examiner--Paul L. Gensler Attorney-F. H. Henson and E. P. Klipfel [57] ABSTRACT 9 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures PATENTEDJuL2s 1912 DIELECTRIC LOADI ACTIVE REGIO iREGION Fly. 2 PRIOR ART PRIOR ART v -TE| MODE R. H 5 m N EU .M. w F 1. C L E N A D Y B \ll-i 6 7 m 2 u "an A V mm. A V ulfil v 6 1| /J N 4 3 6 2/ /k M 0(2 Fig. 6
A T TOR/VE Y FERRITE WAVEGUIDE PHASE SHIFIER EXHIBITING NEGATIVE PHASE SHIFT BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Longitudinally magnetized reciprocal ferrite phase shifters are now well known and comprise ferrite bodies of various shapes disposed within a wave guide and provided with a latching coil, usually a single turn of wire, which produces a saturating magnetic field within the ferrite. Recently, it has been shown that such phase shifters show anomalous behavior in that some devices show increasing phase shift with increasing applied field, while others show decreasing phase shift with increasing applied field. When the thickness of the wave guide (i.e., its dimension perpendicular to the broad walls) is below a certain critical value, the phase shift experienced is negative in that the phase decreases with applied magnetic field. On the other hand, when the thickness of the wave guide is above the aforesaid critical thickness, the phase shift is positive and the phase increases with applied magnetic field.
It can be shown that there are two competing mechanisms which govern the type of phase shift. These can be termed p.- effective and Faraday rotation." The former mechanism is effective when the thickness of the wave guide is below the aforesaid critical value; while the latter sets in when the guide is thick enough to support a cross-polarized electric field of the same order of magnitude as the incident electric field.
To date, most latching reciprocal wave guide phase shifters have been incorporated into thick wave guides in which the ferrite produces a positive difi'erential phase shift. In such devices, the entire ferrite toroid is placed within the wave guide since, among other reasons, optimum positive phase shift is acheived when the ferrite does not touch any of the guide walls. However, since the return path of such devices is in regions of the guide in which the alternating current magnetic field is parallel to the direct current applied field, this part of the ferrite acts as a dielectric filling in the guide and degrades the phase shift by dielectric loading. Thus, such prior art phase shifters as applied to electrically thick wave guides are inherently inefficient in operation.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION As an overall object, the present invention seeks to provide a new and improved latching reciprocal ferrite phase shifter for electrically thin wave guides in which wave energy experiences a negative phase shift in passing through a longitudinally magnetized ferrite body.
More specifically, an object of the invention is to provide a latching ferrite phase shifter of the type described wherein the ferrite body occupies only the central portion of the wave guide and is longitudinally magnetized by means of one or more U-shaped members external to the wave guide and provided with encircling latching coils means.
In accordance with the invention, a latching ferrite phase shifter is provided comprising a wave guide section having a ferrite body centrally disposed therein and having a thickness in the direction parallel to the electric vectors of incident wave energy which is small enough to cause wave energy to experience a negative phase shift in passing through the ferrite. Openings are provided in the long transverse dimensional walls of the wave guide section at opposite ends of the ferrite body. These openings receive the legs of a U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material provided with an encircling latching coil.
In order to continue the wave guide wall in the area of the openings, the ferrite body, which is in engagement with the top and bottom walls of the wave guide section, is provided with a metallic coating, preferably formed by vacuum deposition or plating techniques. This coating, being interposed between the ends of the legs of the U-shaped member and the ferrite body, introduces points of magnetic reluctance into the closed magnetic circuit comprising the ferrite body itself and the external U-shaped member. However, by having highly polished ferrite surfaces and by keeping the thickness of the metal coatings small as possible, but greater than a microwave skin depth, the magnetic reluctance introduced by the coatings results in only a very small degradation in remanent magnetization.
The ferrite body, for maximum negative phase shift, extends all the way from the top to the bottom wall of the wave guide section and must be thin compared to the plane wavelength in an extended, non-tensor, ferrite dielectric medium. In this respect, the ferrite thickness should be no greater than about 0.13 times the aforesaid plane wavelength.
The above and other objects and features of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings which form a part of this specification, and in which:
FIG. 1 is an illustration of a prior art phase shifter for electrically thick wave guide sections and incorporating a pair of ferrite bodies in the form of toroids;
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view taken along line ll-ll of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is an illustration of one embodiment of the latching ferrite phase shifter of the present invention;
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken along line IV--IV of FIG. 3 showing the evaporated or plated film in the magnetic flux path for the ferrite body of the present invention;
FIG. 5 is a hysteresis curve illustrating the operation of the ferrite phase shifters of the invention; and
FIG. 6 is an illustration of another embodiment of the invention employing two U-shaped magnetically permeable members external to the wave guide.
With reference now to the drawings, and particularly to FIGS. 1 and 2, a prior art latching ferrite phase shifter is shown comprising a wave guide section 10 containing a pair of ferrite toroids l2 and 14 in side-by-side relationship Passing through the openings in each toroid is a latching wire 16 or l8.' When direct current pulses are applied to the latching wires 16 and 18, direct current magnetic fields H are generated in the two toroids I2 and 14. Note that the direct current magnetic field H in toroid l2 flows in a counterclockwise direction; while that in toroid l4 flows in a clockwise direction, the two direct current magnetic fields moving in the same direction along the abutting center legs of the toroids identified in FIG. 1 as the active region." 7
The electric field, E,, of the incident wave energy is perpendicular to the long transverse dimension of the wave guide; while the magnetic field associated with the wave energy rotates in a path at right angles to the electric vectors E,. The traveling magnetic field defines a closed loop and is divided into two portions, B, being that portion which moves transverse to the direction of wave propagation and H being that portion which travels parallel to the direction of wave propagation.
It can be seen that the return magnetic path in'such devices is in regions of the wave guide section in which the alternating current magnetic field, H is parallel to the direct current applied field H As a result, this part of the ferrite (i.e., the outer legs of the toroids) acts as a dielectric filling in the guide, and degrades guide, phase shift by dielectric loading. The coupling coefficient is proportional to the relative crosssectional guide area occupied by the active part of the ferrite, this being identified in FIG. 1 as the active region" and comprising the abutting legs of the toroids l2 and 14. In general,
phase shift in a device such as that shown in FIG. 1 isdue to coupling from the incident TE. mode to a cross-polarized TE mode, which is beyond cutoff, and therefore evanescent.
It is well known that optimum positive phase shift in an electrically thick wave guide such as that shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 is achieved when the ferrite does not touch any of the guide walls. It should not touch the sidewalls because of the dielectric loading effects discussed above in the region where the applied direct current magnetic field is parallel to the alternating current magnetic field. The ferrite should not touch the top and bottom broad guide walls because the fields in the region of the walls are not free to rotate due to the condition 71 X E= tor normalto the wall.
One embodiment of the present invention is shown in FIGS. 3 and 4 and comprises a wave guide section 22 in which the dimension along the Y-axis is less than that in the prior art device shown in FIG. 1 such that wave energy passing through the guide will experience a negative, rather than positive, phase shift in passing through a ferrite body 24 centrally disposed within the wave guide section 22. Typical dimensions of the guide are 0.040 inch in the Y-direction and 0.5 inch in the X-direction. Ordinarily, the Y-dimension of the wave guide section 22 will be .less than one-quarter wavelength; however this is not necessarily controlling, the only requirement being that the thickness of the guide be such that the aforesaid negative phase shift will occur. In contrast to the prior art device shown in FIG. 1, the ferrite slab.24 in the em- -bodiment of the invention shown in FIG. 3 can touch the upper and lower broad side walls with no degradation in performance. Th: is true because here the phase shift is due only to changes in effective permeability of the ferrite medium. As
a result, the toroid of the latching magnetic circuit can be completedoutside the wave guide, thereby eliminating many of the disadvantages of the embodiment of FIG. I, making use of the fact that no degradation in performance is obtained when the ferrite is brought upto the guide wall as is the case in other reciprocal latching designs.
Thus, a U-shaped magneticmember 26 formed from ferrite or other suitable sofi magnetic material is provided outside the wave guide section 22 and has downwardly depending legs 28 which extend through openings 30 (FIG. 4) formed in the upper wall of the wave guide. Plated or evaporated onto the upper surface of the ferrite block 24 in the area of the openings 30 are metal coatings 32. Such coatings will, in effect, form a continuation of the waveguide wall; but, at the same time, will present very little magnetic reluctance in the magnetic circuit comprising the ferrite block 24 and the U- shaped member 26. In orderto reduce the effective magnetic reluctance in the magnetic circuit, the ferrite surfaces are preferably highly polished; and the metal film thickness is maintained as small as possible. At X-band, for example, the metal thickness can be about 0.1 mil thick. The magnetic reluctance is then of the order of about 4 X 10" oersteds per gauss. For typical ferrites, this results in only a small degradation in remanant magnetization. Surrounding the U-shaped member 26 is a latching coil 27 having terminals 29 adapted for connection to a pulse generator 1 not shown. The magnetic reluctance of the metal film can be further reduced by making it of a sofi ferromagnetic metal whose remanant flux density B, is greater than that of the ferrite. The metal film thickness should be greater than a skin depth to avoid microwave energy from leaking through to the U-shaped member. This will also reduce microwave insertion loss.
Assume, for example, that the hysteresis loop for the ferrite material 24 is as shown'in FIG. wherein the coercive force,
H may be in the order of about 2 to 5 oersteds and the remanent flux density, B without considering the metal films 32 in the magnetic circuit, is 2,000 gauss. Assuming that the reluctance of the gap is 4 X oersted per gauss, the remanant flux density is then reduced to a lower value B but this is only about 0.8 oersted which is much less than the coercive force of the material. 7
The ferrite block 24, for maximum negative phase shift, in which case it-can extend all the way to the top and bottom provided on the underside of the ferrite, similar to that shown m FIG. 4. A second latching co|l-35 surrounds the member 34 and is connected, along with coil 27, to a common pulse generator 36. Thus, two return pathsare provided for the magnetic flux passing through the ferrite body 24.
Although the invention has been shown in connection with certain specific embodiments, it will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes inform and arrangement of parts may be made to suit requirements without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
I claim as my invention:
l. in a latching ferrite phase shifter, the combination of a rectangular wave guide section having broad side walls and narrow side walls and having disposed therein a rectangular ferrite dielectric body whose cross section hasa major dimension and a minor dimension with its major dimension being parallel to and centered along said broad side walls and having its minor dimension orthogonal to said broad side walls, said minor dimension of said body and the dimension of said narrow side walls of said wave guide section being no greater than substantially 0.13 times the wavelength in said dielectric body, said minor dimension causing incident wave energy to experience a negative phase shift in passing through said ferrite dielectric body, said ferrite body extending between, and'in I contact with said broad walls, openings in at least one of said broad walls opposite the ends of said ferrite body, a generally U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material having legs extending'through said openings and forming with said ferrite body a closed magnetic circuit, a latching coil encircling said U-shaped member to induce latched magnetic flux in said magnetic circuit. c
2. The phase shifter of claim 1 wherein the electric vectors of incident wave energy are perpendicular to said broad side walls.
3. The phase shifter of claim 1 wherein said U-shaped members are formed from ferrite material also.
4. The phase shifter of claim I wherein said U-shaped mem-- bets are formed from a soft magnetic material other than ferrite.
5. The phase shifter of claim 1 including a second U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material having legs extending through openings in abroad side wall opposite said s. The phase shifter of claim 6 wherein the metal fihh is greater than a skin depth in thickness.
9. The phase shifter of claim 6 wherein the film is of a soft ferromagnetic metal.
4 1k 4 t i

Claims (9)

1. In a latching ferrite phase shifter, the combination of a rectangular wave guide section having broad side walls and narrow side walls and having disposed therein a rectangular ferrite dielectric body whose cross section has a major dimension and a minor dimension with its major dimension being parallel to and centered along said broad side walls and having its minor dimension orthogonal to said broad side walls, said minor dimension of said body and the dimension of said narrow side walls of said wave guide section being no greater than substantially 0.13 times the wavelength in said dielectric body, said minor dimension causing incident wave energy to experience a negative phase shift in passing through said ferrite dielectric body, said ferrite body extending between, and in contact with said broad walls, openings in at least one of said broad walls opposite the ends of said ferrite body, a generally U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material having legs extending through said openings and forming with said ferrite body a closed magnetic circuit, a latching coil encircling said U-shaped member to induce latched magnetic flux in said magnetic circuit.
2. The phase shifter oF claim 1 wherein the electric vectors of incident wave energy are perpendicular to said broad side walls.
3. The phase shifter of claim 1 wherein said U-shaped members are formed from ferrite material also.
4. The phase shifter of claim 1 wherein said U-shaped members are formed from a soft magnetic material other than ferrite.
5. The phase shifter of claim 1 including a second U-shaped member of magnetically permeable material having legs extending through openings in a broad side wall opposite said first-mentioned openings and also forming with said ferrite body a second closed magnetic circuit.
6. The phase shifter of claim 1 wherein opposite ends of the ferrite body beneath said openings are coated with metal films which form a continuation of the wave guide wall in the areas of the openings.
7. The phase shifter of claim 6 wherein the thickness of said metal films is about 0.0001 inch.
8. The phase shifter of claim 6 wherein the metal film is greater than a skin depth in thickness.
9. The phase shifter of claim 6 wherein the film is of a soft ferromagnetic metal.
US813073A 1969-04-03 1969-04-03 Ferrite waveguide phase shifter exhibiting negative phase shift Expired - Lifetime US3680010A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US81307369A 1969-04-03 1969-04-03

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3680010A true US3680010A (en) 1972-07-25

Family

ID=25211386

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US813073A Expired - Lifetime US3680010A (en) 1969-04-03 1969-04-03 Ferrite waveguide phase shifter exhibiting negative phase shift

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3680010A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4458218A (en) * 1982-06-14 1984-07-03 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Dielectric waveguide reciprocal ferrite phase shifter
FR2580429A1 (en) * 1985-04-15 1986-10-17 Dassault Electronique Microwave phase shifting device with shared magnetic circuit.
US4839659A (en) * 1988-08-01 1989-06-13 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Microstrip phase scan antenna array
FR2668304A1 (en) * 1990-10-17 1992-04-24 Onera (Off Nat Aerospatiale) Reciprocal phase shifter in dielectric guide with ferrite
US5229737A (en) * 1991-04-05 1993-07-20 Marconi Electronic Devices Limited Ferrite polarizer
US5440278A (en) * 1994-03-25 1995-08-08 Bartholomew; Darin Ferrite system for modulating, phase shifting, or attenuating radio frequency energy
CN105576327A (en) * 2015-12-21 2016-05-11 电子科技大学 LTCC technology-based substrate integrated waveguide type ferrite phase shifter

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3030593A (en) * 1959-05-27 1962-04-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Temperature compensated gyromagnetic device
US3076946A (en) * 1953-06-17 1963-02-05 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Nonreciprocal rectangular wave guide device
US3080536A (en) * 1959-11-02 1963-03-05 Hughes Aircraft Co Microwave phase shifter
US3187274A (en) * 1961-11-22 1965-06-01 Raytheon Co Square waveguide nonreciprocal differential phase shifter with oppositely biased ferrites
US3401361A (en) * 1966-05-17 1968-09-10 Raytheon Co Reciprocal latching ferrite phase shifter
US3434077A (en) * 1967-02-10 1969-03-18 Sylvania Electric Prod Tem mode faraday rotator
US3435382A (en) * 1966-12-05 1969-03-25 Us Army Reciprocal microwave ferrite phase shifter

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3076946A (en) * 1953-06-17 1963-02-05 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Nonreciprocal rectangular wave guide device
US3030593A (en) * 1959-05-27 1962-04-17 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Temperature compensated gyromagnetic device
US3080536A (en) * 1959-11-02 1963-03-05 Hughes Aircraft Co Microwave phase shifter
US3187274A (en) * 1961-11-22 1965-06-01 Raytheon Co Square waveguide nonreciprocal differential phase shifter with oppositely biased ferrites
US3401361A (en) * 1966-05-17 1968-09-10 Raytheon Co Reciprocal latching ferrite phase shifter
US3435382A (en) * 1966-12-05 1969-03-25 Us Army Reciprocal microwave ferrite phase shifter
US3434077A (en) * 1967-02-10 1969-03-18 Sylvania Electric Prod Tem mode faraday rotator

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4458218A (en) * 1982-06-14 1984-07-03 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Dielectric waveguide reciprocal ferrite phase shifter
FR2580429A1 (en) * 1985-04-15 1986-10-17 Dassault Electronique Microwave phase shifting device with shared magnetic circuit.
US4839659A (en) * 1988-08-01 1989-06-13 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Microstrip phase scan antenna array
FR2668304A1 (en) * 1990-10-17 1992-04-24 Onera (Off Nat Aerospatiale) Reciprocal phase shifter in dielectric guide with ferrite
US5229737A (en) * 1991-04-05 1993-07-20 Marconi Electronic Devices Limited Ferrite polarizer
US5440278A (en) * 1994-03-25 1995-08-08 Bartholomew; Darin Ferrite system for modulating, phase shifting, or attenuating radio frequency energy
CN105576327A (en) * 2015-12-21 2016-05-11 电子科技大学 LTCC technology-based substrate integrated waveguide type ferrite phase shifter

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2776412A (en) Magnetic system for microwave components
US3602845A (en) Slot line nonreciprocal phase shifter
US2802183A (en) Microwave modulator
US3680010A (en) Ferrite waveguide phase shifter exhibiting negative phase shift
US3710280A (en) Deposited latched junction circulator having magnetic flux return paths
US2870418A (en) Wave guide components controlled by ferromagnetically resonant elements
US2989709A (en) Magnetically controlled wave guide switch
US3585536A (en) Reciprocal,microstrip,latched,ferrite phase shifter
US3986149A (en) High power reciprocal co-planar waveguide phase shifter
US2849686A (en) Ferromagnetic devices
US2849687A (en) Non-reciprocal wave transmission
RU2702916C1 (en) Device on magnetostatic waves for spatial separation of microwave signals of different power level
US2922964A (en) Nonreciprocal wave transmission
US3072869A (en) Reciprocal gyromagnetic loss device
US3566311A (en) Reciprocal ferrite film phase shifter having latching conductor film
US3105946A (en) Asymmetrically conductive transmission system using adjacent dielectric plate to concentrate field in gyromagnetic plate
US3599121A (en) Microstrip latched ferrite phase shifter wherein latching pulses pass through ground plane
US2730681A (en) Inductance
US3072867A (en) Internal magnet coaxial line device
US3471809A (en) Latching reciprocal ferrite phase shifter having mode suppressing means
US3585531A (en) Magnetically variable microstrip directional coupler deposited on ferrite substrate
US3316505A (en) Fast switching microwave circulator utilizing remnant magnetization
US3078425A (en) Non-reciprocal tm mode transducer
US3063028A (en) Enhanced gyromagnetic effect in nonreciprocal wave transmission
US3401361A (en) Reciprocal latching ferrite phase shifter