WO2013190275A1 - Balun - Google Patents

Balun Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2013190275A1
WO2013190275A1 PCT/GB2013/051571 GB2013051571W WO2013190275A1 WO 2013190275 A1 WO2013190275 A1 WO 2013190275A1 GB 2013051571 W GB2013051571 W GB 2013051571W WO 2013190275 A1 WO2013190275 A1 WO 2013190275A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
slotline
balun
dielectric material
layers
output
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.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/GB2013/051571
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Mark Christopher NGUYEN
Gareth Michael Lewis
Richard John Harper
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.)
BAE Systems PLC
Original Assignee
BAE Systems PLC
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 BAE Systems PLC filed Critical BAE Systems PLC
Priority to US14/407,735 priority Critical patent/US9716305B2/en
Priority to EP13730065.3A priority patent/EP2862228B1/en
Priority to AU2013279082A priority patent/AU2013279082A1/en
Publication of WO2013190275A1 publication Critical patent/WO2013190275A1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P5/00Coupling devices of the waveguide type
    • H01P5/08Coupling devices of the waveguide type for linking dissimilar lines or devices
    • H01P5/10Coupling devices of the waveguide type for linking dissimilar lines or devices for coupling balanced lines or devices with unbalanced lines or devices
    • H01P5/1007Microstrip transitions to Slotline or finline
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P5/00Coupling devices of the waveguide type
    • H01P5/08Coupling devices of the waveguide type for linking dissimilar lines or devices
    • H01P5/10Coupling devices of the waveguide type for linking dissimilar lines or devices for coupling balanced lines or devices with unbalanced lines or devices
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01PWAVEGUIDES; RESONATORS, LINES, OR OTHER DEVICES OF THE WAVEGUIDE TYPE
    • H01P5/00Coupling devices of the waveguide type
    • H01P5/12Coupling devices having more than two ports
    • H01P5/16Conjugate devices, i.e. devices having at least one port decoupled from one other port
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01QANTENNAS, i.e. RADIO AERIALS
    • H01Q21/00Antenna arrays or systems
    • H01Q21/0006Particular feeding systems
    • H01Q21/0075Stripline fed arrays

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a balun, antenna arrangements incorporating a balun, and to associated methods of manufacturing of a balun, with particular, but not necessarily exclusive, reference to microwave baluns.
  • Baluns are well known passive electrical devices.
  • the term “balun” is derived from the abbreviation of the two terms “balance” and “unbalanced”.
  • Baluns are 3-port devices which convert signals from an unbalanced transmission line to a balanced transmission line and vice-versa. The two balanced ports should provide a signal equal in amplitude with a 180 degree phase difference.
  • Microwave balun devices can be implemented in various ways, such as in transformer-type arrangements, coupled transmission lines and transmission line junctions. It is known from US2005/0105637 and Bialkowski and Abbosh (ME Bialkowski and AM Abbosh, IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, Vol. 17, No. 4, April 2007) how to implement baluns using microwave techniques involving microstrips and slotlines. However, it would be desirable to improve the characteristics of these devices. In particular, it would be desirable to reduce the dimensions of these devices, and to provide relatively small scale baluns which can be effectively used in arrays.
  • the present invention in at least some of its embodiments, addresses the above described desires.
  • a balun including: a slotline which is coupled to an input line and an output line, in which at least a portion of the slotline is sandwiched between a first and second layer of dielectric material.
  • the balun may be of the type for dividing an input electrical signal to produce first and second output electrical signals which are substantially out of phase, the balun further including: an input port for receiving the input electrical signal, a first output port and a second output port; wherein the output line has a junction with the slotline;
  • the input line couples the input electrical signal to the slotline; the slotline couples the input electrical signal to the junction, the junction acting as a divider to produce the first and second output electrical signals; and the output line couples the first and second output electrical signals to, respectively, the first output port and the second output port.
  • Baluns of this type are known from US 2005/0105637, Bialkowski & Abbosh, and our co-pending application entitled “A Balun”, filed on the same day as the present application, the contents of all of which are herein incorporated by reference.
  • the first and second output electrical signals are substantially 180° out of phase, and are of substantially equal amplitude.
  • the invention can be applied to other types of balun.
  • a slotline includes at least one dielectric substrate on which a slot feature is formed. It is understood that both the first and second layers of dielectric material provided by the present invention are additional to the substrate dielectric material which forms part of the slotline.
  • the slotline includes at least one substrate formed from a dielectric material, and the first and second layers of dielectric material are formed from the same dielectric material as the substrate. In general, this is desirable since it provides optimal impedance matching.
  • the balun may be in the form of a printed circuit board (PCB).
  • PCB printed circuit board
  • the balun may be a microwave balun device.
  • the balun may be in the form of a microwave laminate structure.
  • Microwave laminate structures are understood to comprise one or more dielectric substrates with one or more layers of a conductor, typically copper, formed thereon in a desired pattern.
  • the first layer of dielectric material may be formed on an upper surface of the PCB, and the second layer of dielectric material may be formed on a lower surface of the PCB.
  • At least one of the input line and the output line is a microstrip or a stripline. Both of the input line and the output line may be a microstrip or a stripline.
  • the entire slotline is sandwiched between the first and second layers of dielectric material.
  • each of the first and second layers of dielectric material have a surface area which extends over the entire surface area of the slotline.
  • the dielectric material of the first and second layers may be of any suitable type. Dielectric materials which are commonly employed in microwave laminate structures or which are well known in microwave applications may be utilised. As noted above, it is generally preferred that the dielectric material of the first and second layers is the same as the dielectric material used as the substrate for the slotline.
  • the first and second layers of dielectric material may include a ceramic material.
  • the first and second layers of dielectric material may be laminates.
  • Suitable dielectric materials can be obtained from a variety of manufacturers who will be well known to the skilled reader, such Rogers Corporation (Rogers CT 06263 USA) and Taconic (Petersburg, NY 12138, USA).
  • An example of a suitable dielectric material is produced by Rogers Corporation under the trade name RO 4000 (RTM) series high frequency circuit materials.
  • RTM trade name
  • These are glass-reinforced ceramic filled thermoset laminates. Other glass based laminates may be contemplated.
  • the first and second layers of dielectric material are of any suitable thickness.
  • the first and second layers of dielectric material are each of the thickness in the range 50 - 500 microns, preferably 80 - 250 microns.
  • the thickness employed will usually be influenced by parameters such as the frequency of operation and the dielectric constant of the dielectric material.
  • the output line is substantially symmetrical about the slotline.
  • the output line may be substantially U-shaped so as to provide output ports that are opposite the input port.
  • the slotline may have two ends which are each terminated by a termination such as an open circuit termination.
  • the input line may have a first end which is coupled to the input port and a second end which is terminated by an open circuit termination or a short circuit termination.
  • the balun may have a plurality of vias formed therein.
  • the vias may be disposed so as to suppress parallel plate modes, for example parallel plate modes caused by asymmetry in components of the balun, particularly layer structures.
  • the balun may operate at input frequencies in the range 1 to 40 GHz or thereabouts. In some embodiments, the balun operates at frequencies in the range 2 to 18 GHz. Higher frequencies than 40 GHz may be possible with appropriate manufacturing techniques.
  • the present invention can provide reduced coupling between adjacent baluns.
  • an antenna arrangement including at least one antenna which is fed electrical signals from a balun according to the first aspect of the invention or an array of baluns according to the second aspect of the invention.
  • a balun including the steps of:
  • balun structure having a slotline which is coupled to an input line and an output line
  • first and a second layer of dielectric material on at least a portion of the slotline so as to sandwich at least a portion to the slotline between said first and second layers.
  • the first and second layer of dielectric material can be formed on the slotline in any suitable manner.
  • the first and second layers of dielectric material are adhered or otherwise attached to the slotline using a suitable intermediate layer, such as bond-ply.
  • Figure 1 shows (a) a plan view of a balun of the invention and (b) a cross sectional view along the line A-A';
  • Figure 2 shows cross sectional views of (a) a microstrip, (b) a stripline and (c) a slotline.
  • FIG. 1 shows an embodiment of a balun of the invention, depicted generally at 10, in the form of a PCB.
  • the balun 10 has an input port 12 leading to an input line 14 which can be a microstrip or a stripline.
  • the input line 14 terminates in an open circuit stub 16.
  • the balun 10 further comprises a slotline 18.
  • the slotline 18 is terminated at both of its ends by open circuits 20, 22. Just prior to its termination by the stub 16, the input line 14 crosses the slotline 18 substantially at right angles to form an input line - slotline junction. This junction is formed towards the end of the slotline 18 which is closest to the input port 12.
  • the balun 10 further comprises a generally U-shaped output line 24.
  • the output line 24 can be in the form of a microstrip or a stripline.
  • the output line 24 crosses the slotline 18 substantially at right angles to form a junction. This junction is formed towards the end of the slotline 18 which is nearer to output ports 26, 28.
  • the output line 24 can be regarded as comprising two arms 24a, 24b.
  • the arm 24a connects the junction of the output line 24 with the slotline 18 to the output port 26.
  • the arm 24b connects the junction of the output line 24 with the slotline 18 to the output port 28.
  • the balun 10 further comprises a plurality of circular vias 30 which, as would be readily understood by the skilled reader, are plated through holes in the PCB structure.
  • the PCB comprises a dielectric substrate 32 which is made up of a first substrate layer 32a and a second substrate layer 32b which can be attached in a suitable manner, such as by bond-ply. Layers of copper present are shown with thick lines and denoted by the numeral 34. A copper layer 34a is part of the microstrip 14. The copper layers 34 are removed in the central region of the dielectric substrate 32 as shown in Figure 1 (a) to leave a slot 35 which corresponds to the open circuit 20.
  • the balun 10 can be considered to have two sections, namely an input section which includes a transition from the input line 14 (a stripline or microstrip track) to the slotline 18, and an output section which includes a transition from a slotline 18 to the output line 24 (two stripline or microstrip tracks 24a, 24b).
  • an input electrical signal is inputted at the input port 12 and is coupled via the input line 14 and the slotline 18 to the junction between the slotline 18 and the output line 24.
  • substantially identical contra-propagating electrical signals of opposite polarity are created which are coupled by the arms 24a, 24b to the output ports 26, 28.
  • the balun 10 further comprises two discrete, additional layers of dielectric material.
  • the balun 10 comprises a discrete upper layer 38a of a dielectric material which is provided on an upper face of the PCB, and a discrete lower layer 38b of a dielectric material provided on a lower face of the PCB.
  • the upper and lower layers 38a, 38b are formed from the same dielectric material as used in the PCB.
  • the upper and lower dielectric layers 38a, 38b are formed so as to entirely cover the slotline structure 18, 20, 22.
  • the upper layer of dielectric material 38a is shown in Figure 1 (a) where it is seen to be in the form of a rectangle.
  • a slot is formed in a copper surface on one face of a microwave laminate.
  • this face has a dielectric substrate on one side and air on the other.
  • the dielectric constant of air is assumed to have a value of one, wherein the dielectric constant of a typical microwave substrate material is usually greater than 2.2.
  • the effective dielectric constant for this type of slotline is lower than that for the substrate because some of the field lines formed by a signal propagating along the transmission line appear in the substrate and some appear in the air surrounding the slot.
  • the additional layers of dielectric material provided by this aspect of the present invention has the effect that field lines which would otherwise appear in the air surrounding the slotline are instead enclosed within the dielectric material.
  • the air-dielectric boundary creates an impedance mismatch which limits propagation of field lines beyond this boundary. Accordingly, the effective dielectric constant is increased.
  • This has the advantage that smaller slotline dimensions can be employed, which in turn enables baluns of reduced dimensions to be provided.
  • a further advantage is that, because there is reduced propagation away from the transmission line structure, coupling to any adjacent baluns (or other microwave features or devices) is also reduced. This is particularly advantageous when multiple baluns are used in arrays. An example of this is when multiple baluns are used in arrays of antennas where the radiating elements spacing is limited and signal coupling between baluns may affect performance. Similar advantages may arise in other devices which feature slotline structures.
  • Typical dimensions for the stub and other terminations are of the order of a quarter of a wavelength or less at the centre frequency.
  • Representative but non-limiting dimensions for a balun operating up to 18 GHz are c 9mm x 18 mm x 1 mm, although the skilled reader will appreciate that the dimensions utilised depend upon the dielectric constant and the thickness of the laminate and substrate materials used.
  • a representative but non-limiting thickness for each of the upper and lower layers of dielectric material are ca. 100 - 200 microns.
  • the vias 30 are disposed as to suppress parallel plate modes caused by slight asymmetry in the layers making up the PCB structure.
  • Baluns such as those described with reference to Figure 1 can be fabricated using standard microwave PCB manufacturing techniques.
  • PCBs are generally of the type known as microwave laminates which make use of low-loss copper-clad dielectric substrates.
  • Suitable PCBs can be obtained from a variety of manufacturers who will be well known to the skilled reader, such as Rogers Corporation (Rogers CT 06263, USA) and Taconic (Petersburg, NY 12138, USA).
  • the device structure can be produced by removing copper from desired areas of one or both sides of the laminate. It is also possible to bond laminate sheets together to form multi-layer structures. Multi-layer structures may have multiple combinations of microstrip, stripline or slotline transmission lines.
  • FIG. 2 shows generalised cross sectional views of (a) a microstrip, (b) a stripline and (c) a slotline.
  • Figure 2 (a) shows a microstrip formed from a microwave laminate comprising a dielectric substrate 40 having a full copper layer 42 on a lower face thereof. Copper has been removed on the upper face of the dielectric substrate 40 to leave a copper track 44.
  • Figure 2(b) shows a stripline formed as a multi-layer structure comprising a first microwave laminate 46, and second microwave laminate 48, and a bond-ply sheet 50 which is used to secure the laminates 46, 48 to each other.
  • the first microwave laminate 46 comprising a dielectric substrate 52 having a complete copper layer 54 formed over a lower face thereof. Copper is removed on the upper face of the dielectric substrate 52 to leave a copper track 56. Copper is removed entirely from a lower face of a dielectric substrate 58 of the microwave laminate 48. The upper face of the dielectric substrate 58 retains a complete copper layer 60.
  • vias also known as Plated Through Holes (PTH)
  • PTH Plated Through Holes
  • Figure 2(c) shows a slotline formed from a microwave laminate which comprises a dielectric substrate 62 having a copper layer 64 on an upper face thereof. Copper is removed from the copper layer 64 to create a slot. The copper on the lower face of the dielectric substrate 62 may be removed entirely.
  • Baluns of the invention are particularly suitable for use in feeding an antenna.
  • An array of baluns may be utilised.
  • the baluns of the invention may be used for other purposes such as in a microwave circuit.

Landscapes

  • Waveguides (AREA)
  • Waveguide Aerials (AREA)
  • Details Of Aerials (AREA)
  • Production Of Multi-Layered Print Wiring Board (AREA)
  • Coils Or Transformers For Communication (AREA)

Description

BALUN
This invention relates to a balun, antenna arrangements incorporating a balun, and to associated methods of manufacturing of a balun, with particular, but not necessarily exclusive, reference to microwave baluns.
Baluns are well known passive electrical devices. The term "balun" is derived from the abbreviation of the two terms "balance" and "unbalanced". Baluns are 3-port devices which convert signals from an unbalanced transmission line to a balanced transmission line and vice-versa. The two balanced ports should provide a signal equal in amplitude with a 180 degree phase difference.
Microwave balun devices can be implemented in various ways, such as in transformer-type arrangements, coupled transmission lines and transmission line junctions. It is known from US2005/0105637 and Bialkowski and Abbosh (ME Bialkowski and AM Abbosh, IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters, Vol. 17, No. 4, April 2007) how to implement baluns using microwave techniques involving microstrips and slotlines. However, it would be desirable to improve the characteristics of these devices. In particular, it would be desirable to reduce the dimensions of these devices, and to provide relatively small scale baluns which can be effectively used in arrays.
The present invention, in at least some of its embodiments, addresses the above described desires.
According to a first aspect of the invention there is provided a balun including: a slotline which is coupled to an input line and an output line, in which at least a portion of the slotline is sandwiched between a first and second layer of dielectric material.
In this way, electric field lines which might otherwise appear in the air surrounding the slotline (so-called 'fringing fields') can instead be enclosed within the dielectric material. This increases the effective dielectric constant, resulting in the ability to utilise smaller slotline dimensions. A further advantage is that coupling to adjacent baluns or other devices or microwave features is reduced.
The balun may be of the type for dividing an input electrical signal to produce first and second output electrical signals which are substantially out of phase, the balun further including: an input port for receiving the input electrical signal, a first output port and a second output port; wherein the output line has a junction with the slotline;
in which: the input line couples the input electrical signal to the slotline; the slotline couples the input electrical signal to the junction, the junction acting as a divider to produce the first and second output electrical signals; and the output line couples the first and second output electrical signals to, respectively, the first output port and the second output port. Baluns of this type are known from US 2005/0105637, Bialkowski & Abbosh, and our co-pending application entitled "A Balun", filed on the same day as the present application, the contents of all of which are herein incorporated by reference. Generally with such devices, the first and second output electrical signals are substantially 180° out of phase, and are of substantially equal amplitude. However, the invention can be applied to other types of balun.
The skilled reader will appreciate that in general a slotline includes at least one dielectric substrate on which a slot feature is formed. It is understood that both the first and second layers of dielectric material provided by the present invention are additional to the substrate dielectric material which forms part of the slotline.
In some embodiments, the slotline includes at least one substrate formed from a dielectric material, and the first and second layers of dielectric material are formed from the same dielectric material as the substrate. In general, this is desirable since it provides optimal impedance matching.
The balun may be in the form of a printed circuit board (PCB).
The balun may be a microwave balun device. The balun may be in the form of a microwave laminate structure. Microwave laminate structures are understood to comprise one or more dielectric substrates with one or more layers of a conductor, typically copper, formed thereon in a desired pattern.
The first layer of dielectric material may be formed on an upper surface of the PCB, and the second layer of dielectric material may be formed on a lower surface of the PCB.
In some embodiments, at least one of the input line and the output line is a microstrip or a stripline. Both of the input line and the output line may be a microstrip or a stripline.
In some embodiments, the entire slotline is sandwiched between the first and second layers of dielectric material. In other words, each of the first and second layers of dielectric material have a surface area which extends over the entire surface area of the slotline.
The dielectric material of the first and second layers may be of any suitable type. Dielectric materials which are commonly employed in microwave laminate structures or which are well known in microwave applications may be utilised. As noted above, it is generally preferred that the dielectric material of the first and second layers is the same as the dielectric material used as the substrate for the slotline.
The first and second layers of dielectric material may include a ceramic material.
The first and second layers of dielectric material may be laminates.
Suitable dielectric materials can be obtained from a variety of manufacturers who will be well known to the skilled reader, such Rogers Corporation (Rogers CT 06263 USA) and Taconic (Petersburg, NY 12138, USA). An example of a suitable dielectric material is produced by Rogers Corporation under the trade name RO 4000 (RTM) series high frequency circuit materials. These are glass-reinforced ceramic filled thermoset laminates. Other glass based laminates may be contemplated.
The first and second layers of dielectric material are of any suitable thickness. Typically, the first and second layers of dielectric material are each of the thickness in the range 50 - 500 microns, preferably 80 - 250 microns. However, the skilled reader will appreciate that the thickness employed will usually be influenced by parameters such as the frequency of operation and the dielectric constant of the dielectric material.
In certain embodiments, the output line is substantially symmetrical about the slotline. The output line may be substantially U-shaped so as to provide output ports that are opposite the input port.
The slotline may have two ends which are each terminated by a termination such as an open circuit termination.
The input line may have a first end which is coupled to the input port and a second end which is terminated by an open circuit termination or a short circuit termination.
The balun may have a plurality of vias formed therein. The vias may be disposed so as to suppress parallel plate modes, for example parallel plate modes caused by asymmetry in components of the balun, particularly layer structures.
The balun may operate at input frequencies in the range 1 to 40 GHz or thereabouts. In some embodiments, the balun operates at frequencies in the range 2 to 18 GHz. Higher frequencies than 40 GHz may be possible with appropriate manufacturing techniques.
According to a second aspect of the invention there is provided an array of baluns according to the first aspect of the invention.
It is advantageous that the present invention can provide reduced coupling between adjacent baluns.
According to a third aspect of the invention there is provided an antenna arrangement including at least one antenna which is fed electrical signals from a balun according to the first aspect of the invention or an array of baluns according to the second aspect of the invention.
According to a fourth aspect of the invention there is provided a method of manufacturing a balun including the steps of:
providing a balun structure having a slotline which is coupled to an input line and an output line; and
forming a first and a second layer of dielectric material on at least a portion of the slotline so as to sandwich at least a portion to the slotline between said first and second layers.
The first and second layer of dielectric material can be formed on the slotline in any suitable manner. Typically, the first and second layers of dielectric material are adhered or otherwise attached to the slotline using a suitable intermediate layer, such as bond-ply.
Whilst the invention has been described above, it extends to any inventive combination of the features set out above, or in the following description, drawings or claims.
Embodiments of devices in accordance with the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:-
Figure 1 shows (a) a plan view of a balun of the invention and (b) a cross sectional view along the line A-A'; and
Figure 2 shows cross sectional views of (a) a microstrip, (b) a stripline and (c) a slotline.
Figure 1 shows an embodiment of a balun of the invention, depicted generally at 10, in the form of a PCB. The balun 10 has an input port 12 leading to an input line 14 which can be a microstrip or a stripline. The input line 14 terminates in an open circuit stub 16. The balun 10 further comprises a slotline 18. The slotline 18 is terminated at both of its ends by open circuits 20, 22. Just prior to its termination by the stub 16, the input line 14 crosses the slotline 18 substantially at right angles to form an input line - slotline junction. This junction is formed towards the end of the slotline 18 which is closest to the input port 12. The balun 10 further comprises a generally U-shaped output line 24. The output line 24 can be in the form of a microstrip or a stripline. The output line 24 crosses the slotline 18 substantially at right angles to form a junction. This junction is formed towards the end of the slotline 18 which is nearer to output ports 26, 28. The output line 24 can be regarded as comprising two arms 24a, 24b. The arm 24a connects the junction of the output line 24 with the slotline 18 to the output port 26. The arm 24b connects the junction of the output line 24 with the slotline 18 to the output port 28. The balun 10 further comprises a plurality of circular vias 30 which, as would be readily understood by the skilled reader, are plated through holes in the PCB structure.
The PCB comprises a dielectric substrate 32 which is made up of a first substrate layer 32a and a second substrate layer 32b which can be attached in a suitable manner, such as by bond-ply. Layers of copper present are shown with thick lines and denoted by the numeral 34. A copper layer 34a is part of the microstrip 14. The copper layers 34 are removed in the central region of the dielectric substrate 32 as shown in Figure 1 (a) to leave a slot 35 which corresponds to the open circuit 20.
The balun 10 can be considered to have two sections, namely an input section which includes a transition from the input line 14 (a stripline or microstrip track) to the slotline 18, and an output section which includes a transition from a slotline 18 to the output line 24 (two stripline or microstrip tracks 24a, 24b). In use, an input electrical signal is inputted at the input port 12 and is coupled via the input line 14 and the slotline 18 to the junction between the slotline 18 and the output line 24. At this junction substantially identical contra-propagating electrical signals of opposite polarity are created which are coupled by the arms 24a, 24b to the output ports 26, 28.
The balun 10 further comprises two discrete, additional layers of dielectric material. In particular, the balun 10 comprises a discrete upper layer 38a of a dielectric material which is provided on an upper face of the PCB, and a discrete lower layer 38b of a dielectric material provided on a lower face of the PCB. It is preferred that the upper and lower layers 38a, 38b are formed from the same dielectric material as used in the PCB. The upper and lower dielectric layers 38a, 38b are formed so as to entirely cover the slotline structure 18, 20, 22. The upper layer of dielectric material 38a is shown in Figure 1 (a) where it is seen to be in the form of a rectangle. Other shapes may be utilised, and the area of the device covered by the upper and lower layers of dielectric material 38a, 38b may be varied. Typically, the upper 38a and lower 38b layers of dielectric material are in register with each other, but it is not necessary that this is so.
In a typical prior art slotline structure, a slot is formed in a copper surface on one face of a microwave laminate. Typically this face has a dielectric substrate on one side and air on the other. This results in an effective dielectric constant which is of a value somewhere between that of the substrate and that of air. The dielectric constant of air is assumed to have a value of one, wherein the dielectric constant of a typical microwave substrate material is usually greater than 2.2. The effective dielectric constant for this type of slotline is lower than that for the substrate because some of the field lines formed by a signal propagating along the transmission line appear in the substrate and some appear in the air surrounding the slot. The additional layers of dielectric material provided by this aspect of the present invention has the effect that field lines which would otherwise appear in the air surrounding the slotline are instead enclosed within the dielectric material. The air-dielectric boundary creates an impedance mismatch which limits propagation of field lines beyond this boundary. Accordingly, the effective dielectric constant is increased. This has the advantage that smaller slotline dimensions can be employed, which in turn enables baluns of reduced dimensions to be provided. A further advantage is that, because there is reduced propagation away from the transmission line structure, coupling to any adjacent baluns (or other microwave features or devices) is also reduced. This is particularly advantageous when multiple baluns are used in arrays. An example of this is when multiple baluns are used in arrays of antennas where the radiating elements spacing is limited and signal coupling between baluns may affect performance. Similar advantages may arise in other devices which feature slotline structures.
Typical dimensions for the stub and other terminations are of the order of a quarter of a wavelength or less at the centre frequency. Representative but non-limiting dimensions for a balun operating up to 18 GHz are c 9mm x 18 mm x 1 mm, although the skilled reader will appreciate that the dimensions utilised depend upon the dielectric constant and the thickness of the laminate and substrate materials used. A representative but non-limiting thickness for each of the upper and lower layers of dielectric material are ca. 100 - 200 microns.
The vias 30 are disposed as to suppress parallel plate modes caused by slight asymmetry in the layers making up the PCB structure.
Baluns such as those described with reference to Figure 1 can be fabricated using standard microwave PCB manufacturing techniques. For microwave baluns, PCBs are generally of the type known as microwave laminates which make use of low-loss copper-clad dielectric substrates. Suitable PCBs can be obtained from a variety of manufacturers who will be well known to the skilled reader, such as Rogers Corporation (Rogers CT 06263, USA) and Taconic (Petersburg, NY 12138, USA). The device structure can be produced by removing copper from desired areas of one or both sides of the laminate. It is also possible to bond laminate sheets together to form multi-layer structures. Multi-layer structures may have multiple combinations of microstrip, stripline or slotline transmission lines. Copper removal is performed to provide copper patterns which are used to form the desired microstrip, stripline or slotline features. Figure 2 shows generalised cross sectional views of (a) a microstrip, (b) a stripline and (c) a slotline. Figure 2 (a) shows a microstrip formed from a microwave laminate comprising a dielectric substrate 40 having a full copper layer 42 on a lower face thereof. Copper has been removed on the upper face of the dielectric substrate 40 to leave a copper track 44. Figure 2(b) shows a stripline formed as a multi-layer structure comprising a first microwave laminate 46, and second microwave laminate 48, and a bond-ply sheet 50 which is used to secure the laminates 46, 48 to each other. The first microwave laminate 46 comprising a dielectric substrate 52 having a complete copper layer 54 formed over a lower face thereof. Copper is removed on the upper face of the dielectric substrate 52 to leave a copper track 56. Copper is removed entirely from a lower face of a dielectric substrate 58 of the microwave laminate 48. The upper face of the dielectric substrate 58 retains a complete copper layer 60. Typically, vias (also known as Plated Through Holes (PTH)) are used to limit the propagation of parallel plate loads resulting from the asymmetry caused by the bond-ply 50. Figure 2(c) shows a slotline formed from a microwave laminate which comprises a dielectric substrate 62 having a copper layer 64 on an upper face thereof. Copper is removed from the copper layer 64 to create a slot. The copper on the lower face of the dielectric substrate 62 may be removed entirely.
Baluns of the invention are particularly suitable for use in feeding an antenna. An array of baluns may be utilised. However, the baluns of the invention may be used for other purposes such as in a microwave circuit.

Claims

1 . A balun including: a slotline which is coupled to an input line and an output line, in which at least a portion of the slotline is sandwiched between a first and a second layer of dielectric material.
2. A balun according to claim 1 for dividing an input electrical signal to produce first and second output electrical signals which are substantially out of phase, the balun further including: an input port for receiving the input electrical signal, a first output port and a second output port; wherein the output line has a junction with the slotline;
in which: the input line couples the input electrical signal to the slotline; the slotline couples the input electrical signal to the junction, the junction acting as a divider to produce the first and second output electrical signals; and the output line couples the first and second output electrical signals to, respectively, the first output port and the second output port.
3. A balun according to claim 1 or claim 2 in which the slotline includes at least one substrate formed from a dielectric material, and the first and second layers of dielectric material are formed from the same dielectric material as the substrate.
4. A balun according to any one of claims 1 to 3 in the form of a printed circuit board (PCB).
5. A balun according to claim 4 in the form of a microwave laminate structure.
6. A balun according to claim 4 or claim 5 in which the first layer of dielectric material is formed on an upper surface of the PCB, and the second layer of dielectric material is formed on a lower surface of the PCB.
7. A balun according to any previous claim in which at least one of the input line and the output line is a microstrip or a stripline.
8. A balun according to any previous claim in which the entire slotline is sandwiched between the first and second layers of dielectric material.
9. A balun according to any previous claim in which the first and second layers of dielectric material includes a ceramic material.
10. A balun according to any previous claim in which the first and second layers of dielectric material are laminates.
1 1 . A balun according to any previous claim in which the first and second layers of dielectric material are each of a thickness in the range 50 - 500 microns, preferably 80 - 250 microns.
12. An array of baluns according to any one of claims 1 to 1 1 .
13. An antenna arrangement including at least one antenna which is fed electrical signs from a balun according to any one of claims 1 to 1 1 or an array of baluns according to claim 12.
14. A method of manufacturing a balun including the steps of:
providing a balun structure having a slotline which is coupled to an input line and an output line; and
forming a first and a second layer of dielectric material on at least a portion of the slotline so as to sandwich at least a portion of the slotline between said first and second layers.
15. A balun, antenna arrangement or method substantially as described herein with reference to the accompanying drawings.
PCT/GB2013/051571 2012-06-19 2013-06-17 Balun Ceased WO2013190275A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US14/407,735 US9716305B2 (en) 2012-06-19 2013-06-17 Balun
EP13730065.3A EP2862228B1 (en) 2012-06-19 2013-06-17 Balun
AU2013279082A AU2013279082A1 (en) 2012-06-19 2013-06-17 Balun

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1210816.3A GB2503225B (en) 2012-06-19 2012-06-19 Balun
GB1210816.3 2012-06-19

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2013190275A1 true WO2013190275A1 (en) 2013-12-27

Family

ID=46641125

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/GB2013/051571 Ceased WO2013190275A1 (en) 2012-06-19 2013-06-17 Balun

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (1) US9716305B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2862228B1 (en)
AU (1) AU2013279082A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2503225B (en)
WO (1) WO2013190275A1 (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9564868B2 (en) 2012-06-19 2017-02-07 Bae Systems Plc Balun
US9716305B2 (en) 2012-06-19 2017-07-25 Bae Systems Plc Balun

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP3598569B1 (en) * 2014-04-07 2024-05-01 Synergy Microwave Corporation Double balanced mixer
EP3676906B1 (en) 2017-08-31 2025-12-17 BAE Systems PLC A hybrid coupler
GB2566049B (en) * 2017-08-31 2022-07-27 Bae Systems Plc A Hybrid coupler
EP3451443A1 (en) * 2017-08-31 2019-03-06 BAE SYSTEMS plc A hybrid coupler
WO2022215381A1 (en) * 2021-04-09 2022-10-13 株式会社村田製作所 Connecting structure, and antenna module

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2000046921A1 (en) * 1999-02-02 2000-08-10 Nokia Networks Oy Wideband impedance coupler
US20070001779A1 (en) * 2005-07-01 2007-01-04 Fumio Asamura High-frequency balun
US20090140823A1 (en) * 2007-11-30 2009-06-04 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Broadband microstrip balun and method of manufacturing the same
WO2011094471A1 (en) * 2010-01-29 2011-08-04 Wavestream Corporation A linearizer incorporating a phase shifter

Family Cites Families (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2210510A (en) * 1987-09-25 1989-06-07 Philips Electronic Associated Microwave balun
JPH02241102A (en) * 1989-03-14 1990-09-25 Fujitsu Ltd Mount method for mic circulator
JP3881156B2 (en) 2000-05-18 2007-02-14 三菱電機株式会社 180 degree distributor
US6498540B2 (en) * 2001-04-17 2002-12-24 Agilent Technologies, Inc. Broadband millimeter wave microstrip balun
US6538614B2 (en) * 2001-04-17 2003-03-25 Lucent Technologies Inc. Broadband antenna structure
JP2003008311A (en) 2001-06-22 2003-01-10 Mitsubishi Electric Corp Balun and semiconductor device having the balun
US6674340B2 (en) * 2002-04-11 2004-01-06 Raytheon Company RF MEMS switch loop 180° phase bit radiator circuit
US6891446B2 (en) 2003-04-29 2005-05-10 Raytheon Company Compact broadband balun
US20050105637A1 (en) * 2003-11-14 2005-05-19 Fitzpatrick Douglas D. Bi-phase modulator for ultra wideband signals
US7586386B2 (en) * 2005-03-15 2009-09-08 Asahi Glass Company, Limited Transmission line transition from a coplanar strip line to a conductor pair using a semi-loop shape conductor
US7994874B2 (en) 2008-06-05 2011-08-09 Georgia Tech Research Corporation Tapered double balun
KR101311791B1 (en) * 2011-12-26 2013-09-25 고려대학교 산학협력단 Balun circuit using defected ground structure
GB2503225B (en) 2012-06-19 2020-04-22 Bae Systems Plc Balun
GB2503226A (en) 2012-06-19 2013-12-25 Bae Systems Plc A Balun for dividing an input electrical signal wherein the width of at least one of the input line, slotline and output line varies over the length

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2000046921A1 (en) * 1999-02-02 2000-08-10 Nokia Networks Oy Wideband impedance coupler
US20070001779A1 (en) * 2005-07-01 2007-01-04 Fumio Asamura High-frequency balun
US20090140823A1 (en) * 2007-11-30 2009-06-04 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Broadband microstrip balun and method of manufacturing the same
WO2011094471A1 (en) * 2010-01-29 2011-08-04 Wavestream Corporation A linearizer incorporating a phase shifter

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9564868B2 (en) 2012-06-19 2017-02-07 Bae Systems Plc Balun
US9716305B2 (en) 2012-06-19 2017-07-25 Bae Systems Plc Balun

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU2013279082A1 (en) 2015-01-22
US20150145745A1 (en) 2015-05-28
EP2862228A1 (en) 2015-04-22
GB201210816D0 (en) 2012-08-01
EP2862228B1 (en) 2020-05-06
US9716305B2 (en) 2017-07-25
GB2503225A (en) 2013-12-25
GB2503225B (en) 2020-04-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US10218071B2 (en) Antenna and electronic device
EP2862228B1 (en) Balun
US9865928B2 (en) Dual-polarized antenna
EP2979323B1 (en) A siw antenna arrangement
US9130252B2 (en) Symmetric baluns and isolation techniques
US20200220273A1 (en) System and Method with Multilayer Laminated Waveguide Antenna
US8362856B2 (en) RF transition with 3-dimensional molded RF structure
WO2007149046A1 (en) Quasi-planar circuits with air cavities
US8547187B2 (en) Printed circuit board impedance matching step for microwave (millimeter wave) devices
US9564868B2 (en) Balun
CN105958167A (en) Vertical substrate integrated waveguide and vertical connection structure comprising the waveguide
WO2010013610A1 (en) Planar antenna
CN111048879B (en) A broadband constant amplitude conversion structure from rectangular waveguide to double-terminal stripline
CN115882212A (en) Circularly polarized antenna unit
JP5225188B2 (en) Directional coupler
US20250062519A1 (en) Ultra wideband board-to-board transitions for stripline rf transmission lines
KR20100005616A (en) Rf transmission line for preventing loss
JP2017184057A (en) High frequency circuit board
JP2017069837A (en) Microstrip line / strip line converter and planar antenna device
CN113871830A (en) Balun structure and electronic device with same
JP6484155B2 (en) Microstrip line / strip line converter and planar antenna device
CN115513675A (en) Dual-band common-aperture high-isolation circularly polarized array antenna

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 13730065

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A1

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 14407735

Country of ref document: US

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2013730065

Country of ref document: EP

ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 2013279082

Country of ref document: AU

Date of ref document: 20130617

Kind code of ref document: A