Handbook of Microwave Component Measurements. Joel P. Dunsmore. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Joel P. Dunsmore
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Техническая литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119477129
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PC board materials (Duriod™ or GTEK™ are common trade names), the material known as FR4 is most common, and the dielectric constant and loss of this PC board material can be uncertain. The finished substrate can be comprised of layers of board material sandwiched together with glue, and the final thickness can depend upon processing steps, so it is best when evaluating microstrip transmission lines to produce sample structures that can help determine the exact nature of the material.

      One high‐performance material used is single‐crystal sapphire, and it has the unusual property of having a dielectric constant that has a directionality, with a higher constant of 10.4 in one of the three dimensions, and a lower constant of 9.8 in the other two. A second, common high‐performance dielectric is ceramic found in thin‐film, thick‐film, and LTCC applications. It has a uniform dielectric constant typically between 9.6 and 9.8 depending upon the purity and grain structure of the ceramic.

      1.8.3.2 Other Quasi‐Microstrip Structures

      1.8.3.3 Coplaner Waveguide

Schematic illustration of the CPW-mounted IC.

      1.8.3.4 Stripline

      More common as a transmission line on an inner layer of a PC board, strip line consists of a thin strip or rectangle of metal sandwiched between two ground planes embedded in a uniform dielectric constant, as shown in Figure 1.30c. The impedance of these lines is much lower than the equivalent‐width microstrip line, but they have an advantage of being fully TEM in nature and so often the design of components such as coupled lines is easier as the even‐ and odd‐mode velocity factors are the same. An approximate formula for computing the value of a stripline impedance with a zero thickness strip is (Pozar 1990)

      (1.88)equation

      (1.89)equation

      More complex formulas that include a broad range of applicability and include effects for finite strip thickness and asymmetric placement of the strip can be found in many references (IPC 2004; Cohn 1954).

      Filters come in a variety of types including low pass, band pass, high pass, and band stop. Multiport filters form diplexers or multiplexers, which are used to separate or combine signals of different frequency from a common port to a port associated with the different frequencies of interest. Diplexers are sometimes called duplexers, but duplexing is a function of the operation of a communication system. That is, a system that can transmit and receive at the same time is said to operating in a duplex mode. A diplexer is used to support the duplex operation by keeping the transmit signal from saturating the receiver.

      The structure and variety of filters are almost endless, but they all share these common attributes: low loss in the pass band, low reflection in the pass band, high reflection, and high loss in the stop band. In nearly every case, the goal of the design is to minimize unwanted loss, and this quality of a filter is often referred to as the Q of the filter. In microwave cases, filters are designed to operate into a matched impedance, so there is always loss associated with power from the source being absorbed by the load. The Q of a filter in operation is fixed by the loading of the ports and can never be infinite. The quality of a filter is usually defined by its unloaded Q, which accounts for the (desired) power loss from the source to the load.

      In modern communications systems using complex modulation, the phase response of the filters is also critical, and a significant design parameter is controlling the phase of the filter to follow a linear response, with a key measurement parameter being deviation from linear phase. Closely aligned to that is maintaining a constant group delay through the passband. Equalization techniques are utilized that can remove higher‐order phase responses, such that another measure of filter phase response is deviation from parabolic phase, where the phase is fitted to a second‐order response, and