Everything about Directional Coupler totally explained
Power dividers and directional couplers are
passive devices used in the field of radio technology. They couple part of the transmission power in a
transmission line by a known amount out through another port, often by using two transmission lines set
close enough together such that energy passing through one is coupled to the other. As shown in
Figure 1, the device has four ports: input, transmitted, coupled, and isolated. The term "main
line" refers to the section between ports 1 and 2. On some directional couplers, the main line is
designed for high power operation (large connectors), while the coupled port may use a small
SMA connector. Often the isolated port is terminated with an internal or external
matched load
(typically 50 ohms). It should be pointed out that since the directional coupler is a linear device,
the notations on Figure 1 are arbitrary. Any port can be the input, (as in Figure 3) which will
result in the directly connected port being the transmitted port, the adjacent port being the coupled
port, and the diagonal port being the isolated port.
Physical considerations such as
internal load on the isolated port will limit port operation. The
coupled output from the directional coupler can be used to obtain the information (for example, frequency
and power level) on the signal without interrupting the main power flow in the system (except for
a power reduction - see Figure 2). When the power coupled out to port three is half the input
power (for example 3
dB below the input power level), the power on the main transmission line is also 3
dB below the input power and equals the coupled power. Such a coupler is referred to as a 90
degree hybrid, hybrid, or 3 dB coupler. The frequency range for coaxial couplers specified by
manufacturers is that of the coupling arm. The main arm response is much wider (for example if the spec
is 2-4 GHz, the main arm could operate at 1 or 5
GHz - see Figure 3). However it should be
recognized that the coupled response is periodic with frequency. For example, a λ/4
coupled line coupler will have responses at nλ/4 where n is an odd integer.
Common properties desired for all directional couplers are wide operational
bandwidth, high
directivity, and a good
impedance match at all ports when the other ports are terminated in
matched loads. These performance characteristics of hybrid or non-hybrid directional couplers are
self-explanatory. Some other general characteristics will be discussed below.
Coupling factor
The coupling factor is defined as:
where P
1 is the input power at port 1 and P
3 is the output
power from the coupled port (see Figure 1)
The coupling factor represents the primary property of a directional coupler. Coupling is not
constant, but varies with frequency. While different designs may reduce the variance, a perfectly
flat coupler theoretically can't be built. Directional couplers are specified in terms of the
coupling accuracy at the frequency band center. For example, a 10 dB coupling +/- 0.5 dB means
that the directional coupler can have 9.5 dB to 10.5 dB coupling at the frequency band center.
The accuracy is due to dimensional tolerances that can be held for the spacing of the two coupled
lines. Another coupling specification is frequency sensitivity. A larger frequency sensitivity will
allow a larger frequency band of operation. Multiple quarter-wavelength coupling sections are
used to obtain wide frequency bandwidth directional couplers. Typically this type of directional
coupler is designed to a frequency bandwidth ratio and a maximum coupling
ripple within the
frequency band. For example a typical 2:1 frequency bandwidth coupler design that produces a
10 dB coupling with a +/- 0.1 dB ripple would, using the previous accuracy specification, be said to
have 9.6 +/- 0.1 dB to 10.4 +/- 0.1 dB of coupling across the frequency range.
Loss
In an ideal directional coupler, the main line
loss from port 1 to port 2 (P
1 -
P
2) due to power coupled to the coupled output port is:
The actual directional coupler loss will be a combination of
coupling loss,
dielectric loss,
conductor loss, and
VSWR loss. Depending on the frequency range, coupling loss becomes less
significant above 15 dB coupling where the other losses constitute the majority of the total loss.
A graph of the theoretical insertion loss (dB) vs coupling (dB) for a
dissipationless coupler is
shown in Figure 2.
Isolation
Isolation of a directional coupler can be defined as the difference in signal levels in dB between
the input port and the isolated port when the two other ports are terminated by matched loads,
or:
Isolation can also be defined between the two output ports. In this case, one of the output ports
is used as the input; the other is considered the output port while the other two ports (input and
isolated) are terminated by matched loads.
Consequently:
The isolation between the input and the isolated ports may be different from the isolation between
the two output ports. For example, the isolation between ports 1 and 4 can be 30 dB while the
isolation between ports 2 and 3 can be a different value such as 25 dB. If both isolation
measurements are not available, they can be assumed to be equal. If neither are available, an
estimate of the isolation is the coupling plus return loss (
Standing wave ratio). The isolation
should be as high as possible. In actual couplers the isolated port is never completely isolated.
Some
RF power will always be present.
Waveguide directional couplers will have the best isolation.
If isolation is high, directional couplers are excellent for combining signals to feed
a single line to a receiver for two-tone receiver tests. In Figure 3, one signal enters port
P
3 and one enters port P
2, while both exit port
P
1. The signal from port P
3 to port P
1 will
experience 10 dB of loss, and the signal from port P
2 to port P
1
will have 0.5 dB loss. The internal load on the isolated port will dissipate the signal losses from
port P
3 and port P
2. If the isolators in Figure 3 are neglected,
the isolation measurement (port P
2 to port P
3) determines the
amount of power from the
signal generator F
2 that will be injected into the signal
generator F
1. As the injection level increases, it may cause
modulation of signal
generator F
1, or even injection phase locking. Because of the symmetry of the
directional coupler, the reverse injection will happen with the same possible modulation problems
of signal generator F
2 by F
1. Therefore the isolators are used in
Figure 3 to effectively increase the isolation (or directivity) of the directional coupler.
Consequently the injection loss will be the isolation of the directional coupler plus the reverse
isolation of the isolator.
Directivity
Directivity is directly related to isolation. It is defined as:
where: P
3 is the output power from the coupled port and P
4 is
the power output from the isolated port.
The directivity should be as high as possible. Waveguide directional couplers will have the best
directivity. Directivity isn't directly measurable, and is calculated from the isolation and coupling
measurements as:
Directivity (dB) = Isolation (dB) - Coupling (dB)
Hybrids
The
hybrid coupler, or 3 dB directional coupler, in which the two outputs are of equal
amplitude
takes many forms. Not too long ago the
quadrature (90 degree) 3 dB coupler with outputs 90
degrees out of phase was what came to mind when a hybrid coupler was mentioned. Now any
matched 4-port with isolated arms and equal power division is called a hybrid or hybrid coupler.
Today the characterizing feature is the phase difference of the outputs. If 90 degrees, it's a 90
degree hybrid. If 180 degrees, it's a 180 degree hybrid. Even the
Wilkinson power divider which
has 0 degrees phase difference is actually a hybrid although the fourth arm is normally imbedded.
Applications of the hybrid include monopulse comparators,
mixers, power combiners, dividers,
modulators, and
phased array radar antenna systems.
Amplitude balance
This terminology defines the power difference in dB between the two output ports of a 3 dB
hybrid. In an ideal hybrid circuit, the difference should be 0 dB. However, in a practical device
the amplitude balance is frequency dependent and departs from the ideal 0 dB difference.
Phase balance
The phase difference between the two output ports of a hybrid coupler should be 0, 90, or 180
degrees depending on the type used. However, like amplitude balance, the phase difference is
sensitive to the input frequency and typically will vary a few degrees.
The phase properties of a 90 degree hybrid coupler can be used to great advantage
in
microwave circuits. For example in a balanced microwave amplifier the two input stages are
fed through a hybrid coupler. The
FET device normally has a very poor match and reflects much
of the incident energy. However, since the devices are essentially identical the reflection coefficients from each device are equal. The reflected voltage from the FETs are in phase at the
isolated port and are 180 degrees different at the input port. Therefore, all of the reflected power
from the FETs goes to the load at the isolated port and no power goes to the input port. This
results in a good input match (low VSWR).
If phase matched lines are used for an antenna input to a 180° hybrid coupler as shown in
Figure 4, a
null will occur directly between the antennas. If you want to receive a signal in that
position, you'd have to either change the hybrid type or line length. If you want to reject a
signal from a given direction, or create the difference pattern for a
monopulse radar, this is a good
approach.
Other power dividers
Both in-phase (Wilkinson) and quadrature (90°) hybrid couplers may be used for coherent
power divider applications. The Wilkinson power divider has low VSWR at all ports and high
isolation between output ports. The input and output impedances at each port are designed to be
equal to the characteristic impedance of the microwave system.
A typical power divider is shown in Figure 5. Ideally, input power would be
divided equally between the output ports. Dividers are made up of multiple couplers and, like
couplers, may be reversed and used as
multiplexers. The drawback is that for a four channel
multiplexer, the output consists of only 1/4 the power from each, and is relatively inefficient.
Lossless multiplexing can only be done with filter networks.
Coherent power division was first accomplished by means of simple Tee junctions. At microwave
frequencies, waveguide tees have two possible forms - the
H-Plane or the E-Plane. These two
junctions split power equally, but because of the different field configurations at the junction, the
electric fields at the output arms are in-phase for the H-Plane tee and are anti-phase for the E-Plane tee. The combination of these two tees to form a hybrid tee allowed the realization of a
four-port component which could perform the vector sum (Σ) and difference
(Δ) of two coherent microwave signals. This device is known as the magic tee.
Power combiners
Since hybrid circuits are bi-directional, they can be used to split up a signal to feed multiple low
power amplifiers, then recombine to feed a single antenna with high power as shown in Figure 6.
This approach allows the use of numerous less expensive and lower power amplifiers in the
circuitry instead of a single high power
TWT. Yet another approach is to have each solid state
amplifier (SSA) feed an antenna and let the power be combined in space or be used to feed a lens
which is attached to an antenna. (See
(External Link
))
Sample Problem
If two 1 watt peak unmodulated RF carrier signals at 10 GHz are received, how much peak
power could one measure?
- 0 watts
- 0.5 watts
- 1 watt
- 2 watts
- All of these
The answer is all of these as shown in Figure 7.
Low frequency directional couplers
For lower frequencies a compact
broadband implementation by means of unidirectional couplers (
transformers) is possible. In the figure a circuit is shown which is meant for weak coupling and can be understood along these lines: A signal is coming in one line pair. One transformer reduces the voltage of the signal the other reduces the current. Therefore the impedance is matched. The same argument holds for every other direction of a signal through the coupler. The relative sign of the induced voltage and current determines the direction of the outgoing signal.
For a 3 dB coupling, that's equal splitting of the signal, another view might be more appropriate:
Two of the line pairs are combined into a
polyphase line.
A
polyphase_transformer can be used to redistribute
the signal onto a set of 45° rotated lines.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Directional Coupler'.
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