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The Maloratsky publication date is neither 2003 nor 2009, it's 2004 from the actual book imprint page. 2003 is a gbooks error, no idea where 2009 came from, prob. transcription error |
Undid revision 1225173465 by Liz (talk) The image file still exists |
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{{Short description|Electrical circuits composed of lengths of transmission lines or other distributed components}}
[[File:LNB circuit.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|alt=Satellite-TV block-converter circuit board|A [[low-noise block converter]] with distributed
'''Distributed
Conventional circuits consist of individual components manufactured separately then connected together with a conducting medium. Distributed
A phenomenon commonly used in distributed
Distributed
[[File:Lumped-distributed comparison.png|thumb|upright=2|A [[low-pass filter]] as conventional discrete components connected on a [[printed circuit board]] (left), and as a distributed
== Circuit modelling ==
Distributed
There is no clear-cut demarcation in the frequency at which these models should be used. Although the changeover is usually somewhere in the 100-to-{{nowrap|500 MHz}} range, the technological scale is also significant; miniaturised circuits can use the lumped model at a higher frequency. [[Printed circuit board]]s (PCBs) using [[through-hole technology]] are larger than equivalent designs using [[surface-mount technology]]. [[Hybrid integrated circuit]]s are smaller than PCB technologies, and [[monolithic integrated circuit]]s are smaller than both. [[Integrated circuit]]s can use lumped designs at higher frequencies than printed circuits, and this is done in some [[radio frequency]] integrated circuits. This choice is particularly significant for hand-held devices, because lumped
=== Construction with transmission lines ===
[[File:Richards transform of Chebyshev filter.svg|thumb|upright=1.7|alt=Graph of two filtered waves|Frequency response of a fifth-order [[Chebyshev filter]] constructed from lumped (top) and distributed components (bottom)]]
The overwhelming majority of distributed
Commensurate line circuits are important because a design theory for producing them exists; no general theory exists for circuits consisting of arbitrary lengths of transmission line (or any arbitrary shapes). Although an arbitrary shape can be analysed with [[Maxwell's equations]] to determine its behaviour, finding useful structures is a matter of trial and error or guesswork.<ref>Hunter, p. 137</ref>
An important difference between distributed
== Advantages and disadvantages ==
Distributed
== Media ==
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=== Paired conductors ===
Several types of transmission line exist, and any of them can be used to construct distributed
=== Coaxial ===
[[File:Koaxrichtkoppler.jpg|thumb|alt=Photograph|A collection of coaxial [[directional coupler]]s. One has the cover removed, showing its internal structure.]]
[[Coaxial cable|Coaxial line]], a centre conductor surrounded by an insulated shielding conductor, is widely used for interconnecting units of microwave equipment and for longer-distance transmissions. Although coaxial distributed-element devices were commonly manufactured during the second half of the 20th century, they have been replaced in many applications by planar forms due to cost and size considerations. Air-[[dielectric]] coaxial line is used for low-loss and high-power applications. Distributed-element circuits in other media still commonly transition to [[coaxial connector]]s at the circuit [[Port (circuit theory)|ports]] for
=== Planar ===
{{main|Planar transmission line}}
The majority of modern distributed
=== Waveguide ===
{{main|
[[File:Waveguide-post-filter.JPG|thumb|alt=Rectangular waveguide filter with five tuning screws|A [[waveguide filter]]]]
Many
=== Mechanical ===
In a few specialist applications, such as the [[mechanical filter]]s in high-end radio transmitters (marine, military, amateur radio), electronic circuits can be implemented as mechanical components; this is done largely because of the high quality of the mechanical resonators. They are used in the [[radio frequency]] band (below microwave frequencies), where waveguides might otherwise be used. Mechanical circuits can also be implemented, in whole or in part, as distributed
== Circuit components ==
There are several structures that are repeatedly used in distributed
=== Stub ===
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A stub is a short length of line that branches to the side of a main line. The end of the stub is often left open- or short-circuited, but may also be terminated with a lumped component. A stub can be used on its own (for instance, for [[impedance matching]]), or several of them can be used together in a more complex circuit such as a filter. A stub can be designed as the equivalent of a lumped capacitor, inductor, or resonator.<ref>{{multiref|Edwards & Steer, pp. 78, 345–347|Banerjee, p. 74}}</ref>
[[File:Microstrip Low Pass Bowtie Stub Filter.jpg|thumb|alt=Five butterfly-shaped stubs in a filter|Butterfly stub filter]]
Departures from constructing with uniform transmission lines in distributed
=== Coupled lines ===
Coupled lines are two transmission lines between which there is some electromagnetic [[coupling (physics)|coupling]]. The coupling can be direct or indirect. In indirect coupling, the two lines are run closely together for a distance with no screening between them. The strength of the coupling depends on the distance between the lines and the cross-section presented to the other line. In direct coupling, branch lines directly connect the two main lines together at intervals.<ref>{{multiref|Magnusson ''et al.'', p. 199|Garg ''et al.'', p. 433|Chang & Hsieh, pp. 227–229|Bhat & Koul, pp. 602–609}}</ref>
Coupled lines are a common method of constructing [[power dividers and directional couplers]]. Another property of coupled lines is that they act as a pair of coupled [[resonator]]s. This property is used in many distributed
=== Cascaded lines ===
[[File:Orthomode transducer.jpg|thumb|alt=Device with three rectangular ports|An [[orthomode transducer]] (a variety of [[duplexer]]) with stepped impedance matching]]
Cascaded lines are lengths of transmission line where the output of one line is connected to the input of the next. Multiple cascaded lines of different characteristic impedances can be used to construct a filter or a wide-band impedance matching network. This is called a stepped impedance structure.<ref>Lee, p. 787</ref> A single, cascaded line one-quarter wavelength long forms a [[quarter-wave impedance transformer]]. This has the useful property of transforming any impedance network into its [[dual impedance|dual]]; in this role, it is called an impedance inverter. This structure can be used in filters to implement a lumped
=== Cavity resonator ===
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=== Dielectric resonator ===
{{main|
A dielectric resonator is a piece of dielectric material exposed to electromagnetic waves. It is most often in the form of a cylinder or thick disc. Although cavity resonators can be filled with dielectric, the essential difference is that in cavity resonators the electromagnetic field is entirely contained within the cavity walls. A dielectric resonator has some field in the surrounding space. This can lead to undesirable coupling with other components. The major advantage of dielectric resonators is that they are considerably smaller than the equivalent air-filled cavity.<ref>Penn & Alford, pp. 524–530</ref>
=== Helical resonator ===
{{main|Helical resonator}}
A helical resonator is a [[helix]] of wire in a cavity; one end is unconnected, and the other is bonded to the cavity wall. Although they are superficially similar to lumped inductors, helical resonators are distributed
=== Fractals ===
{{see also|Fractal antenna}}
[[file:Hilbert resonator.svg|thumb|upright|alt=diagram|Three-iteration Hilbert fractal resonator in microstrip<ref>Janković ''et al.'', p. 197</ref>]]
The use of [[fractal]]-like curves as a circuit component is an emerging field in distributed
Fractals that have been used as a circuit component include the [[Koch snowflake]], [[Minkowski island]], [[Sierpiński curve]], [[Hilbert curve]], and [[Peano curve]].<ref>Janković ''et al.'', p. 196</ref> The first three are closed curves, suitable for patch antennae. The latter two are open curves with terminations on opposite sides of the fractal. This makes them suitable for use where a connection in [[cascade connection|cascade]] is required.<ref>Janković ''et al.'', p. 196</ref>
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=== Distributed resistance ===
Resistive elements are generally not useful in a distributed
== Circuit blocks ==
=== Filters and impedance matching ===
{{main|Distributed
[[File:Microstrip Hairpin Filter And Low Pass Stub Filter.jpg|thumb|alt=See caption|upright=1.3|Microstrip [[band-pass]] hairpin filter
Filters are a large percentage of circuits constructed with distributed elements. A wide range of structures are used for constructing them, including stubs, coupled lines and cascaded lines. Variations include interdigital filters, combline filters and hairpin filters. More-recent developments include [[fractal]] filters.<ref>Cohen, p. 220</ref> Many filters are constructed in conjunction with [[dielectric resonator]]s.<ref>{{multiref| Hong & Lancaster, pp. 109, 235|Makimoto & Yamashita, p. 2}}</ref>
As with lumped-element filters, the more elements used, the closer the filter comes to an [[brickwall filter|ideal response]]; the structure can become quite complex.<ref>Harrell, p. 150</ref> For simple, narrow-band requirements, a single resonator may suffice (such as a stub or [[spurline filter]]).<ref>Awang, p. 296</ref>
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A directional coupler is a four-port device which couples power flowing in one direction from one path to another. Two of the ports are the input and output ports of the main line. A portion of the power entering the input port is coupled to a third port, known as the ''coupled port''. None of the power entering the input port is coupled to the fourth port, usually known as the ''isolated port''. For power flowing in the reverse direction and entering the output port, a reciprocal situation occurs; some power is coupled to the isolated port, but none is coupled to the coupled port.<ref>Sisodia & Raghuvansh, p. 70</ref>
A power divider is often constructed as a directional coupler, with the isolated port permanently terminated in a matched load (making it effectively a three-port device). There is no essential difference between the two devices. The term ''directional coupler'' is usually used when the coupling factor (the proportion of power reaching the coupled port) is low, and ''power divider'' when the coupling factor is high. A power combiner is simply a power splitter used in reverse. In distributed
Distributed
==== Hybrids ====
[[File:Ratracecoupler-arithmetics.svg|thumb|upright|alt=Drawing of a four-port ring|Hybrid ring, used to produce sum and difference signals]]
A directional coupler which splits power equally between the output and coupled ports (a {{nowrap|3 [[decibel|dB]]}} coupler) is called a ''hybrid''.<ref>Maloratsky (2004), p. 117</ref> Although "hybrid" originally referred to a [[hybrid transformer]] (a lumped device used in telephones), it now has a broader meaning. A widely
Another use for a hybrid coupler is to produce the sum and difference of two signals. In the illustration, two input signals are fed into the ports marked 1
=== Circulators ===
[[File:Ferritzirkulator1.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Square, grey, three-port device with an identifying sticker|A coaxial ferrite circulator operating at {{nowrap|1 GHz}}]]
{{main|Circulator}}
A circulator is usually a three- or four-port device in which power entering one port is transferred to the next port in rotation, as if round a circle. Power can
An unusual application of a circulator is in a [[reflection amplifier]], where the [[negative resistance]] of a [[Gunn diode]] is used to reflect back more power than it received. The circulator is used to direct the input and output power flows to separate ports.<ref>Roer, pp. 255–256</ref>
Passive circuits, both lumped and distributed, are nearly always [[Reciprocity (network theory)|reciprocal]]; however, circulators are an exception. There are several equivalent ways to define or represent reciprocity. A convenient one for circuits at microwave frequencies (where distributed
:<math>[S] = \begin{pmatrix}
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== Active components ==
[[File:Transistors in microstrip.jpg|thumb|alt=Transistors, capacitors and resistors on a circuit board|Microstrip circuit with discrete transistors in miniature [[surface-mount technology|surface-mount]] packages, capacitors and resistors in chip form, and [[biasing]] filters as distributed elements]]
Distributed elements are usually passive, but most applications will require active components in some role. A microwave [[hybrid integrated circuit]] uses distributed elements for many passive components, but active components (such as [[diode]]s, [[transistor]]s, and some passive components) are discrete. The active components may be packaged, or they may be placed on the [[Substrate (electronics)|substrate]] in chip form without individual packaging to reduce size and eliminate packaging-induced [[Parasitic element (electrical networks)|parasitics]].<ref>Bhat & Khoul, pp. 9–10, 15</ref>
[[Distributed amplifier]]s consist of a number of amplifying devices (usually [[FET]]s), with all their inputs connected via one transmission line and all their outputs via another transmission line. The lengths of the two lines must be equal between each transistor for the circuit to work correctly, and each transistor adds to the output of the amplifier. This is different from a conventional [[multistage amplifier]], where the [[Gain (electronics)|gain]] is multiplied by the gain of each stage. Although a distributed amplifier has lower gain than a conventional amplifier with the same number of transistors, it has significantly greater bandwidth. In a conventional amplifier, the bandwidth is reduced by each additional stage; in a distributed amplifier, the overall bandwidth is the same as the bandwidth of a single stage. Distributed amplifiers are used when a single large transistor (or a complex, multi-transistor amplifier) would be too large to treat as a lumped component; the linking transmission lines separate the individual transistors.<ref>Kumar & Grebennikov, pp. 153–154</ref>
== History ==
{{see also|Distributed
[[File:Heaviside face.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Photo of a bearded, middle-aged Oliver Heaviside|Oliver Heaviside]]
Distributed
[[Warren P. Mason]] was the first to investigate the possibility of distributed
Before [[World War II]], there was little demand for distributed
The wartime work was mostly unpublished until after the war for security reasons, which made it difficult to ascertain who was responsible for each development. An important centre for this research was the [[MIT Radiation Laboratory]] (Rad Lab), but work was also done elsewhere in the US and Britain. The Rad Lab work was published<ref>Fano & Lawson (1948)</ref> by Fano and Lawson.<ref>Levy & Cohn, p. 1055</ref> Another wartime development was the hybrid ring. This work was carried out at [[Bell Labs]], and was published<ref>Tyrrell (1947)</ref> after the war by W. A. Tyrrell. Tyrrell describes hybrid rings implemented in waveguide, and analyses them in terms of the well-known waveguide [[magic tee]]. Other researchers<ref>{{multiref|Sheingold & Morita (1953)|Albanese & Peyser (1958)}}</ref> soon published coaxial versions of this device.<ref>Ahn, p. 3</ref>
George Matthaei led a research group at [[Stanford Research Institute]] which included [[Leo C. Young|Leo Young]] and was responsible for many filter designs. Matthaei first described the interdigital filter<ref>Matthaei (1962)</ref> and the combline filter.<ref>Matthaei (1963)</ref> The group's work was published<ref>Matthaei ''et al.'' (1964)</ref> in a landmark 1964 book covering the state of distributed
Planar formats began to be used with the invention of [[stripline]] by [[Robert M. Barrett]]. Although stripline was another wartime invention, its details were not published<ref>Barrett & Barnes (1951)</ref> until 1951. [[Microstrip]], invented in 1952,<ref>Grieg and Englemann (1952)</ref> became a commercial rival of stripline; however, planar formats did not start to become widely used in microwave applications until better dielectric materials became available for the substrates in the 1960s.<ref>Bhat & Koul, p. 3</ref> Another structure which had to wait for better materials was the dielectric resonator. Its advantages (compact size and high quality) were first pointed out<ref>Richtmeyer (1939)</ref> by R. D. Richtmeyer in 1939, but materials with good temperature stability were not developed until the 1970s. Dielectric resonator filters are now common in waveguide and transmission line filters.<ref>Makimoto & Yamashita, pp. 1–2</ref>
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* Craig, Edwin C, ''Electronics via Waveform Analysis'', Springer, 2012 {{ISBN|1461243386}}.
* Doumanis, Efstratios; Goussetis, George; Kosmopoulos, Savvas, ''Filter Design for Satellite Communications: Helical Resonator Technology'', Artech House, 2015 {{ISBN|160807756X}}.
* DuHamell, R; Isbell, D, [https://
* Edwards, Terry C; Steer, Michael B, ''Foundations of Microstrip Circuit Design'', John Wiley & Sons, 2016 {{ISBN|1118936191}}.
* Fagen, M D; Millman, S, ''A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell System: Volume 5: Communications Sciences (1925–1980)'', AT&T Bell Laboratories, 1984 {{ISBN|0932764061}}.
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* Garg, Ramesh; Bahl, Inder; Bozzi, Maurizio, ''Microstrip Lines and Slotlines'', Artech House, 2013 {{ISBN|1608075354}}.
* Ghione, Giovanni; Pirola, Marco, ''Microwave Electronics'', Cambridge University Press, 2017 {{ISBN|1107170273}}.
* Grieg, D D; Englemann, H F, [
* Gupta, S K, ''Electro Magnetic Field Theory'', Krishna Prakashan Media, 2010 {{ISBN|8187224754}}.
* Harrel, Bobby, ''The Cable Television Technical Handbook'', Artech House, 1985 {{ISBN|0890061572}}.
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* Helszajn, J, ''Ridge Waveguides and Passive Microwave Components'', IET, 2000 {{ISBN|0852967942}}.
* Henderson, Bert; Camargo, Edmar, ''Microwave Mixer Technology and Applications'', Artech House, 2013 {{ISBN|1608074897}}.
* Hilty, Kurt, "Attenuation measurement", pp.
* Hong, Jia-Shen G; Lancaster, M J, ''Microstrip Filters for RF/Microwave Applications'', John Wiley & Sons, 2004 {{ISBN|0471464201}}.
* Hunter, Ian, ''Theory and Design of Microwave Filters'', IET, 2001 {{ISBN|0852967772}}.
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* Janković, Nikolina; Zemlyakov, Kiril; Geschke, Riana Helena; Vendik, Irina; Crnojević-Bengin, Vesna, "Fractal-based multi-band microstrip filters", ch. 6 in, Crnojević-Bengin, Vesna (ed), ''Advances in Multi-Band Microstrip Filters'', Cambridge University Press, 2015 {{ISBN|1107081971}}.
* Johnson, Robert A, ''Mechanical Filters in Electronics'', John Wiley & Sons Australia, 1983 {{ISBN|0471089192}}.
* Johnson, Robert A; Börner, Manfred; Konno, Masashi, [https://
* Kumar, Narendra; Grebennikov, Andrei, ''Distributed Power Amplifiers for RF and Microwave Communications'', Artech House, 2015 {{ISBN|1608078329}}.
* Lacomme, Philippe; Marchais, Jean-Claude; Hardange, Jean-Philippe; Normant, Eric, ''Air and Spaceborne Radar Systems'', William Andrew, 2001 {{ISBN|0815516134}}.
* Lee, Thomas H, ''Planar Microwave Engineering'', Cambridge University Press, 2004 {{ISBN|0521835267}}.
* Levy, R; Cohn, S B, [https://
* Linkhart, Douglas K, ''Microwave Circulator Design'', Artech House, 2014 {{ISBN|1608075834}}.
* Magnusson, Philip C; Weisshaar, Andreas; Tripathi, Vijai K; Alexander, Gerald C, ''Transmission Lines and Wave Propagation'', CRC Press, 2000 {{ISBN|0849302692}}.
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* Mason, Warren P, "Electromechanical wave filter", {{US patent|2981905}}, filed 20 August 1958, issued 25 April 1961.
* Mason, W P; Sykes, R A, [https://archive.org/stream/bellsystemtechni16amerrich#page/274/mode/2up "The use of coaxial and balanced transmission lines in filters and wide band transformers for high radio frequencies"], ''Bell System Technical Journal'', vol. 16, pp. 275–302, 1937.
* Matthaei, G L, [https://
* Matthaei, G L, "Comb-line band-pass filters of narrow or moderate bandwidth", ''Microwave Journal'', vol. 6, pp. 82–91, August 1963 {{issn|0026-2897}}.
* Matthaei, George L; Young, Leo; Jones, E M T, ''Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks, and Coupling Structures'' McGraw-Hill 1964 {{oclc|830829462}}.
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* Natarajan, Dhanasekharan, ''A Practical Design of Lumped, Semi-lumped & Microwave Cavity Filters'', Springer Science & Business Media, 2012 {{ISBN|364232861X}}.
* Nguyen, Cam, ''Radio-Frequency Integrated-Circuit Engineering'', John Wiley & Sons, 2015 {{ISBN|0471398209}}.
* Ozaki, H; Ishii, J, [
* Penn, Stuart; Alford, Neil, "Ceramic dielectrics for microwave applications", ch. 10 in, Nalwa, Hari Singh (ed), ''Handbook of Low and High Dielectric Constant Materials and Their Applications'', Academic Press, 1999 {{ISBN|0080533531}}.
* Polkinghorn, Frank A, [http://ethw.org/Oral-History:Warren_P._Mason "Oral-History: Warren P. Mason"], interview no. 005 for the IEEE History Centre, 3 March 1973, Engineering and Technology History Wiki, retrieved 15 April 2018.
* Ramadan, Ali; Al-Husseini, Mohammed; Kabalan Karim Y; El-Hajj, Ali, "Fractal-shaped reconfigurable antennas", ch. 10 in, Nasimuddin, Nasimuddin, ''Microstrip Antennas'', BoD – Books on Demand, 2011 {{ISBN|9533072474}}.<!-- Rationale for using self-published source on talk page -->
* Richards, Paul I, [
* Richtmeyer, R D, [https://
* Roer, T G, ''Microwave Electronic Devices'', Springer, 2012 {{ISBN|1461525004}}.
* Sharma, K K, ''Fundamental of Microwave and Radar Engineering'', S. Chand Publishing, 2011 {{ISBN|8121935377}}.
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* Sisodia, M L; Raghuvanshi, G S, ''Basic Microwave Techniques and Laboratory Manual'', New Age International, 1987 {{ISBN|0852268580}}.
* Taylor, John; Huang, Qiuting, ''CRC Handbook of Electrical Filters'', CRC Press, 1997 {{ISBN|0849389518}}.
* Tyrrell, W A, [https://
* Vendelin, George D; Pavio, Anthony M; Rohde, Ulrich L, ''Microwave Circuit Design Using Linear and Nonlinear Techniques'', John Wiley & Sons, 2005 {{ISBN|0471715824}}.
* Whitaker, Jerry C, ''The Resource Handbook of Electronics'', CRC Press, 2000 {{ISBN|1420036866}}.
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