Characterization Techniques of Millimeter-Wave Orthomode Transducers (OMTs)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Ideal OMT and Definition of OMT Parameters
- The Insertion Loss, IL, of the two polarization channels;
- The Input Return Loss, IRL, of the two polarizations at the common port;
- The Output Return Loss, ORL, of the two single polarization waveguide outputs;
- The Cross-Polarization, XP, between an input and an output port associated with different polarization channels;
- The Isolation, ISO, between the two output ports.
3. Real OMT
4. Test Equipment and VNA Calibration Procedures
4.1. Guided Wavelength
4.2. OMT Test Equipment
- A Vector Network Analyzer with WR10 extenders operating across the full OMT band, assumed to include the standard 75–110 GHz band. We name it “VNA”;
- Two WR10-to-2.93 mm circular waveguide transitions (with UG387 flange at both ends). We name them “WR10-to-circular wg transition”. The single transition optimum length will be approximately 3 to 4 guided wavelengths (≈3–4 λg) at the central frequency; its internal part might be similar to the EM model shown in Figure 4. In this example, the rectangular waveguide is a standard WR10 (2.54 × 1.27 mm2), the circular waveguide diameter is 2.93 mm, and the transition length is 15 mm, about 3.6 λg(ν = 93 GHz) of the rectangular waveguide TE10 mode. The input reflection is less than −30 dB across 70–116 GHz. The E-field vectors of the two orthogonal TE11 modes in the circular waveguide (associated with VP and HP) and of the TE10 mode in the rectangular waveguide are shown in Figure 4. Two of these transitions will be tested back-to-back and calibrated out when necessary (see further down for details);
- Two waveguide short circuits (with UG387 flange), i.e., a flat metal surface, with high-electrical conductivity, orthogonal to the waveguide propagation direction. The flatness and orthogonality requirement allows avoiding excitation of higher-order modes and should provide a total reflection of the incoming waves with no RF leakage and negligible electrical losses at the interface plane of the waveguide to which it is attached. We name the waveguide short “WG SC”. Please note that the same waveguide short circuits can be used as a total-reflective reactive load for both the 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide and the two WR10 rectangular waveguides;
- One WR10 quarter-wave long rectangular waveguide section. This is usually part of the WR10 calibration kit of the VNA (for TRL or other calibration methods). The length of the quarter-wave section is approximately 1.0 mm for the TE10 mode at the central frequency of the W-band (λg/4). This length must not be a given exact value, but must be known with high accuracy as it will be used in the calibration process;
- One 2.93 mm diameter quarter-wave long circular waveguide section. The length of the quarter-wave section is approximately 1.0 mm for the TE11 circular waveguide mode at the central frequency of W-band. This length must not be a given exact value, but must be known with high accuracy as it will be used in the calibration process;
- One 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide section with a length of at least 4 λg, i.e., at least 16 mm long. The length value does not need to be very precise. This waveguide section will be used for the time-domain VNA test of the OMT to more accurately separate the reflections of the OMT from those of other components to determine the correct time-gating position that allows removal of the reflection effect of the other components. Please note that in higher frequency OMTs (such as ALMA Band 6, 211–275 GHz, or ALMA Band 8, 385–500 GHz) the 4λg section length may not be practical, given the flange-to-flange minimum allowed distance for feasibility and interfacing operability (tightening the screws, …). Thus, for mechanical construction and operability reasons, the 4λg is a lower bound for the length of the waveguide section at sub-mm waves;
- Well-matched loads. At least one in the circular waveguide and two in the WR10 waveguide. These are typically made with a conical or pyramidal absorber, with an electrical length of approximately 3–4λg, mounted inside the waveguides, whose dimensions are the same as the waveguide ports of the OMT (in this specific case the 2.93 mm diameter for the circular waveguide and WR10 standards for the rectangular waveguides);
- One well-matched feed-horn, with 2.93 mm output waveguide connected to the OMT input common port circular waveguide (with 2.93 mm diameter). With “well matched” we intend a feed with input reflection coefficient possibly 10 dB lower (better) than the OMT, i.e., if the OMT has −20 dB reflection, then the “well-matched” feed will have −30 dB reflection (worst case);
- One second OMT, with a cross-section of input and output waveguides identical to the OMT under test. Ideally, the second OMT is a copy of the OMT to be tested, so that the performances of the two units are very similar and can be more easily accounted for in the estimated performance of the single device.
4.3. Considerations on Circular Waveguide-to-Rectangular Waveguide Test Transition
- 1.
- Error in insertion loss measure with adapter: Let us consider the example of S31 measurement (to be discussed in more detail in Section 6.1, see Figure 12), i.e., with the adapter aligned to excite the VP input signal at the OMT common port, as represented in Figure 6, top panel. As the adapter has a cross-polarization coupling of −30 dB, OMT Port 2 is excited at the same time as OMT Port 1 (the only port we would like to excite in this measurement) with a signal level 30 dB lower than at Port 1. This weakly coupled signal at Port 2 exits the OMT output Port 3 through the OMT cross-polarization parameter S32 and combines with the desired signal to be measured, S31. Thus, if the OMT S32 is −30 dB, the first-order measurement error in the IL31 parameter due to the OMT cross-polarization and to the adapter cross-polarization is about −60 dB, associated with the term ILe1 (the green dashed-line path in Figure 6, top panel). We conclude that a negligible error is made in the insertion loss measurement, of about 10−3 in signals amplitude, if compared to the IL31 = 0.5 dB (the green solid-line path in Figure 6, top panel), when this first-order error term is considered. However, for completeness of analysis, we should consider that this is not the only error term in this kind of measurement, as the finite OMT return loss should also be accounted for, resulting in higher-order error terms that have an even more negligible impact on the final measurement error: if the OMT cross-polarization were ideal (∞ dB), the first-order error term in the measurement of IL31 due to the 30 dB adapter cross-polarization (as discussed above) would be zero.Nevertheless, as represented in the mid sketch in Figure 6, due to the finite OMT return loss (20 dB assumed at both OMT Port 1 and Port 2) and the 30 dB cross-polarization of the adapter, two signals at a level of −50 dB below the OMT Port 1 excitation signal will impinge on and be completely reflected by the adapter, as they cannot couple to the under-cut-off TE01 mode at the adapter Port 2. Thus, the adapter cross-polarization transfers a fraction of both totally reflected contributions (−30 dB each) into the other polarization, which will be directed to OMT Port 1 with a total relative level of the order of −80 dB. These two secondary-order error signals to the IL, named ILs1 and ILs2 and whose paths are shown as solid red and solid blue lines in the mid sketch of Figure 6, are combined with the S31 parameter we want to measure and with the first-order error ILe1 (−60 dB) previously discussed (if the OMT cross-polarization of 30 dB is again considered), thus determining two negligible second-order error terms in the measurement of the insertion loss IL31. Additional higher-order error terms with progressively negligible impact could also be considered. We can thus conclude that the adapter cross-polarization and the OMT mismatch result in negligible first- and higher-order error terms during measurement of the OMT insertion loss parameter IL31. Similar reasoning holds also for S42 in the measurement of IL42.
- 2.
- Error in cross-polarization measure with adapter: Let us consider the example of the S41 measurement. As depicted in the top panel of Figure 6, the first-order error term signal from the adapter (dashed red line) adds to the cross-coupled signal from the OMT (solid red line). In case the cross-polarization coupling of the adapter and the OMT have similar levels of −30 dB, at OMT Port 4, the maximum and minimum signal levels will range between −24 dB and −∞ dB in the operative bandwidth, depending on whether these two signals add, respectively, in phase or out of phase. Thus, a VNA measurement of the cascaded adapter-OMT combination will determine the OMT cross-polarization level with a non-negligible error. Unless the XP of the circular-to-rectangular transition is much greater than the one of the OMT it is not possible to accurately characterize the OMT cross-polarization level. For example, if the adapter cross-polarization is 50 dB (20 dB greater than the OMT cross-polarization) the VNA measured signal at OMT Port 4, due to the combination of such contributions, will be in the range −30.92 dB to −29.17 dB, which represents a better accuracy in the measurement of the “true” −30 dB cross-coupling level of the OMT.For completeness of analysis, we should consider that in addition to the first-order XP term, higher-order error terms also exist, as depicted in Figure 6, bottom panel. When measuring the cross-polarization associated with the S41 scattering parameter, the reasoning previously presented about the reflection due to the OMT Port 2 mismatch still holds. Therefore, after being coupled to the orthogonal polarization by the adapter cross-polarization and two more reflections, a signal injected by the VNA into Port 1 of the adapter will be directed towards OMT Port 2 with a relative signal level of −50 dB (see the blue solid-line signal path in Figure 6, bottom panel). This signal XPS2 will exit from Port 4 of the OMT almost completely unattenuated (except for the insertion losses of the OMT, IL42, and the adapter). Similarly, by following the signal path indicated by the red solid line in Figure 6, bottom panel, we find that the signal injected by the VNA into Port 1 of the adapter, after reflection from Port 1 of the OMT, is reflected towards the adapter, coupled to the orthogonal polarization by the adapter cross-polarization, reflected by the adapter reactively loaded Port 2 and added to the S42 path of the OMT with a 50 dB level below the injected signal (XPS1). Thus, we expect two second-order error terms, XPS1 and XPS2, both with a level of −50 dB, to add to the OMT cross-coupling S41 at Port 4, along with the first-order term XPe1. We can thus conclude that the adapter cross-polarization has a non-negligible effect in measurement of the OMT cross-polarization unless the XP of the adapter is much greater than the one of the OMT (for example 20 dB greater). The second-order error terms affect the OMT cross-polarization measurement with a level below the first-order error term (XPe1) of the order of the OMT return loss, while the higher-order error terms have more negligible effects. Similar reasoning holds also for S32, associated with XP32.
4.4. Calibration Procedures
- The use of standards that are easy to fabricate and have simpler definitions than SOLT;
- The need for only transmission lines and high-reflect standards;
- Minimum requirement of impedance and approximate electrical length of line standards;
- Reflect standards can be any high-reflection standards such as shorts or opens;
- Load not required; capacitance and inductance terms not required;
- Potential for more accurate calibration (depends on the quality of the transmission lines).
- THRU—connection of Port 1 and Port 2 of the VNA ports extender, directly or with a short length of a transmission line;
- REFLECT—connect identical one-port high-reflection coefficient devices to each port. This is achieved by connecting the waveguide short circuit “WG SC” to both VNA ports;
- LINE—insert a short length of transmission line between Port 1 and 2 (a quarter-wave difference in the line lengths of the THRU and the LINE is required). This is achieved by connecting a quarter-wave extra-length waveguide between the reference plane of the calibration: (a) a quarter-wave extra-length WR10 waveguide section between the two WR10 ports of the VNA extender, when the calibration plane reference is at the WR10 VNA ports; (b) a quarter-wave extra-length 2.93 mm diameter waveguide section between the 2.93 mm diameter waveguide sections of the WR10-to-circular transition “WR10-to-circ”, when the calibration plane reference is at the circular waveguide port.
4.5. Adapter Removal
- Perform calibration with the adapter in use;
- Remove the adapter from the port and measure Open, Short, and Load values to determine the adapter’s characteristics;
- Remove the obtained adapter characteristics from the error coefficients in a de-embedding fashion.
- Without adapter: one standard calibration at the WR10 waveguides of the VNA extender, without waveguide transition (without adapter), as shown in Figure 7;
- With adapter: one calibration with two 2.93 mm diameter circular-to-WR10 waveguide transitions connected back-to-back (Thru), as shown in Figure 8. In this case, the calibration is made in 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide, at the interface plane between the two transitions. This TRL calibration requires the insertion of the quarter-wave circular cross-section line between the two back-to-back transitions (Line) and the insertion of the two short circuits at the circular waveguide (Reflect). The adapters do not need to be identical. Their effects are saved and stored in the VNA during calibration. The effects of one of the two adapters can be removed from the OMT measurements.
4.6. OMT Ports Access and Additional Waveguide Components
- The two waveguide outputs are in line with the input waveguide, and aligned on their E-planes (the E-field vectors of the fundamental TE10 modes of the rectangular waveguide are coplanar), i.e., the two outputs are on the same face of the OMT block, opposite to the OMT waveguide input. This is usually required when the OMT is part of an array, to benefit the integration of the receiver components. An example of this configuration is given in [17];
- Same as previous, but with the H-planes of the output waveguides aligned;
- The two waveguide outputs are in line with the input waveguide, and have their E-planes orthogonal to each other on the same OMT block face (similar to the two previous cases, but with output waveguide orientations at 90° to each other);
- The two waveguide outputs are orthogonal (not inline) to the waveguide input: the two outputs are located on opposite sides of the OMT block faces, and the input is orthogonal to both (T-shape configuration). The orientation of the E-planes (and the H-planes) of the output waveguides (on opposite OMT block faces) are parallel;
- Same as previous point, but with orthogonal orientation of the E-planes (and H-planes) of the output waveguides (on opposite OMT block faces);
- The two waveguide outputs are orthogonal (not inline) to the waveguide input, and they are also orthogonal to each other, i.e., the three access ports are located on three different and orthogonal faces of the OMT block. An example of this OMT configuration is given in [4].
5. VNA Time-Domain Method and Time Gating
- Bandpass—removes the response outside the gate span;
- Notch—removes the response inside the gate.
6. OMT Characterization Methods
6.1. Measurement of OMT Insertion Losses
- (a)
- With a 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide-to-WR10 waveguide transition connected between the OMT circular input and the WR10 waveguide Port 1 of the VNA extender, as shown in Figure 12. Port 2 of the VNA extender is connected to the coupled polarization WR10 output of the OMT, while the uncoupled OMT WR10 output is terminated into a matched load. The effects of the circular transition are removed using the adapter removal calibration method described previously. We note that this setup can also be used for the measurement of the input return loss, as explained further down.
- (b)
- With a short circuit (SC) at the circular waveguide input of the OMT, as illustrated on the left panel in Figure 13. This requires two measurements: one with the SC directly connected to the input common port of the OMT, another with the SC and OMT connected through a quarter-wave circular waveguide. The VNA extender ports are connected to the OMT waveguide outputs. Both measurements provide a total reflection of the signals from the short-circuited OMT. If we use the symbol (“overline Sij”) to indicate the reflection coefficients measured by the VNA in the setup in Figure 13 (see right panel) and the symbol Sij to indicate the scattering parameters of the OMT, as defined in Equation (2), by neglecting the cross-polarization terms of both the OMT and the SC and the loss of the SC, we have:
- (c)
- With a second OMT connected to the circular waveguide input of the OMT under test, i.e., two back-to-back OMTs, as illustrated in Figure 14. If the OMT under test and the second OMT have identical dimensions of the input and output ports and have similar performance, their insertion loss can be obtained by dividing by two the insertion loss of the two combined OMTs. If the performances of the two OMTs are different, the insertion loss of the OMT under test can be obtained by subtracting the insertion loss of the second OMT, measured with one of the two previously indicated methods. The advantage of this method over the one described in a) and Figure 12, is that the second polarization channel at the input of the OMT under test (Pol H, if referring to the example of Pol V measurement of Figure 14) is correctly terminated. However, we have seen that the error made in measuring the insertion loss with the adapter is negligible. In case three OMTs are available (OMT1, OMT2, and OMT3), it is possible to pair them in three possible combinations (OMT1 with OMT2, OMT1 with OMT3, and OMT2 with OMT3). The measurement of each pair provides the total insertion losses of the pair (insertion loss of two OMTs cascaded), which results from the combination of the insertion losses of the individual OMTs. By measuring the total insertion losses of the three OMT pairs it is possible to derive the insertion losses of the three individual OMTs by solving a system of three equations with three unknowns.
6.2. Measurement of OMT Input Return Loss
- (a)
- With a 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide-to-WR10 waveguide transition connected between the OMT circular input and the WR10 waveguide Port 1 of the VNA extender. The setup is the same one used for the insertion loss shown in Figure 12. The coupled polarization output of the OMT can be connected with the Port 2 of the VNA or with a matched load. The uncoupled OMT output is terminated into a matched load. The effects of the circular transition can be removed using the adapter removal calibration method described previously. The measurement is repeated to characterize the return loss of both input channels after rotation of 90° around its axis of the circular waveguide-to-WR10 waveguide transition (together with the VNA extender block) at the OMT input or, better, by rotating of 90° the OMT around its axis and leaving untouched the VNA Port 1 extender and the transition, with major benefits in keeping the calibration accuracy.
- (b)
- Using the VNA time-domain method. In the setup, the OMT circular waveguide input is connected to the VNA extender WR10 Port 1 through a 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide-to-WR10 waveguide transition. This is cascaded with a ≈4λg circular waveguide, see Figure 15. The circular waveguide section allows the reflection from the transition to be more accurately separated from the one of the OMT and the time-gating bandpass filter more precisely be applied. In this case, the adapter removal has not to be applied since the adapter effect is filtered out by the time-gating technique. The loss of the adapter and the circular waveguide section has most often negligible influence (a few tenths of a dB) on the return loss but, if high-accuracy measurement is required, it must be characterized and taken into account (the effect of the loss is to improve the return loss by twice the loss of the adapter cascaded with the waveguide section). VNA extender WR10 Port 2 is connected to the coupled polarization output port while the uncoupled port is terminated (as before, the VNA Port 2 can be replaced with a matched load). The measurement of the OMT Input Return Loss IRL11 (associated with the excitation of VP, S11) is obtained by 90° rotation of the WR10-to-circular waveguide transition around its axis.
6.3. Measurement of OMT Output Return Loss
- (a)
- With a circular waveguide matched load attached to the 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide of the OMT and with OMT Port 3 and Port 4 connected to the WR10 ports of the VNA extender (respectively Port 2 and Port 1). The setup is shown on the left of Figure 16. The matched load is commonly fabricated using a conical-shaped lossy material inside a circular waveguide. The measurement accuracy relies on the quality of the conical load, whose reflection can be as low as −40 dB across the full band. The conical load provides a good match for both polarization channels and the return losses are measured for both outputs with a single setup.
- (b)
- With a well-matched feed-horn attached to the 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide of the OMT, and with Port 3 and Port 4 connected to the WR10 ports of the VNA. The setup is shown on the right of Figure 16. The accuracy of the measurement relies on the quality of the feed-horn return loss, which is expected to be better than 30 dB across the full band. The feed-horn must be terminated into an external absorber (not represented on the right of Figure 16).An alternative to the feed-horn loading is to leave the OMT common port open, with the circular waveguide radiating to free space (or also faced to external absorbers). The two orthogonal TE11 waveguide modes in the circular waveguide are well matched with the free space across the upper part of the operating band. For example, the reflection over 70–116 GHz of an open 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide is in the range −22 to −37 dB (the reflection being highest, −22 dB, at the lowest frequency of 70 GHz and always below −30 dB above 80 GHz). This is as good as most feed-horns. However, the matching of the circular open-ended waveguide strongly depends on the circular diameter and frequency, so that this should be evaluated case by case. An open square waveguide is also quite well matched as the circular one. For example, a 2.54 × 2.54 mm2 square waveguide has a reflection in the range −30 to −20 dB across 70–116 GHz (the reflection being highest, −20 dB, at the lowest frequency of 70 GHz and always below −25 dB above 75 GHz). For comparison, the typical reflection in the 70–116 GHz bandwidth of an open WR10 waveguide is in the range of about −10 to −14 dB.
- (c)
- If the return loss of the circular waveguide conical load or the feed-horn (or opened circular waveguide) used in the previously described setups of Figure 16 is of the same order as the OMT expected ORL, and more accurate characterization of the OMT ORL is required, then a time-domain method can be used. The test setup, making use of an added ≈4 λg long circular waveguide section connected to the OMT input, is shown in Figure 17. The circular waveguide section is opened on external absorbers, reproducing a matched load. The effects of the open-ended circular waveguide can be removed with time gating and the ORL of the OMT be measured simultaneously for both output waveguides of the OMT. The setup of Figure 17 can also be used to measure the OMT isolation.
6.4. Measurement of OMT Cross-polarizations
- (a)
- With a 2.93 mm diameter circular waveguide-to-WR10 waveguide transition connected between the OMT circular input and Port 1 of the VNA extender, as shown in Figure 18, suitably aligned to electrically connect OMT Port 2 that is matching the OMT HP. Port 2 of the VNA extender is connected to the uncoupled polarization output of the OMT (OMT Port 3), while the coupled OMT output (OMT Port 4) is terminated into a matched load. The return loss and insertion loss effects of the circular transition can be removed using the adapter removal calibration method described previously, although these effects can be neglected in this case. The setup is similar to the one described in Figure 12 that refers to the measure of the OMT insertion loss, but with mm-wave extender Port 2 and load swapped at the OMT output ports. In Figure 18, the transmission from the OMT input to the uncoupled VP output (OMT Port 3) provides the cross-polarization of the OMT in case the adapter is ideal, i.e., it does not present cross-polarization nor mismatch. The main limitation of this method is the poor measurement accuracy due to the finite cross-polarization of the adapter itself, which is often of the same order of magnitude as the one of the OMT, as discussed in Section 4.3. If the elliptical cross-polarization effects of the rectangular-to-circular waveguide transition are negligible, while its linearly polarized cross-polarization effects are not, the polarization injected by the adapter into the OMT circular waveguide is linear but not exactly aligned to the polarization direction (HP) we want to excite, thus having a small component in the VP direction. Thus, the measurement will be contaminated by the error terms already discussed in Section 4.3 and shown in Figure 6. The situation is similar but opposite for the orientation of the E-field to the one shown on the right panel in Figure 5, where we assume the VP as the one that couples. If a centering ring (type IEEE 1785-2b, see ref. [31]) is used as the primary alignment mechanism at the OMT circular input, or if the alignment dowel pins can be removed from the input UG387 flange, then it should be possible to rotate the OMT with respect to the adapter to determine a minimum of transmission between the VNA ports. The minimum is obtained when the polarization injected by the adapter is aligned with the HP. In that situation, the measured transmission provides a good estimate of the cross-polarization of the OMT, as the cross-polarization effects of the adapter have been corrected to remove the first-order error term, and the effects of the finite OMT return loss and adapter cross-polarization have negligible higher-order contributions (see Section 4.3 and Figure 6).
- (b)
- With a second OMT (“OMT B”) connected to the common (circular) waveguide input of the OMT under test (“OMT A”), as illustrated by the two schematics of Figure 19 (two OMTs cascaded through their common port interface): in the top panel the two OMTs have a “straight connection”, where port 1 (VP) of “OMT A” is connected to port 1 (VP) of “OMT B”, while in the bottom panel the two OMTs have a “cross-connection” (90° rotation around the common port axis), where Port 1 (VP) of “OMT B” is connected to Port 2 (HP) of “OMT A”. In the “straight-connection” schematic (Figure 19, top panel) the two VNA ports are linked to two different polarization outputs of the two OMTs, while the other pair of output ports are matched. Instead, in the “cross-connection” schematic (Figure 19, bottom panel) the two VNA ports are connected to the same polarization outputs (VP) of the two OMTs, while the other pair of output ports (HP) are matched (the depicted setup refers to the measure of XP32). We assume the two OMTs have a low level of insertion losses IL (|S31|, |S13|, |S42|, |S24| very close to 1 in linear scale) and a high level of input return losses (|S11|, |S22| << 1) and indicate with superscript A and B, respectively, the S-parameters of the OMT under test and of the second OMT. In the case of “straight connection”, we can approximate the measured scattering parameters of the two cascaded OMTs as follows
- (c)
- With a short circuit (SC) at the OMT circular waveguide input, as illustrated in the setup of Figure 13 (left panel). The cross-polarization of the OMT can be estimated by measuring the transmission between the two OMT rectangular waveguide outputs when its input is terminated into a short circuit. The signal injected from one of the OMT output waveguides, for example, HP at Port 4, as shown in the schematic in Figure 20, travels through the internal OMT waveguide path; only a small fraction of that signal, associated with the OMT isolation, is directly coupled to the other OMT waveguide output (Port 3 of OMT, VP) through the internal OMT structure as represented by the purple line in Figure 20. The OMT isolation is typically very high, of the same order of the cross-polarization or better (higher). In Figure 20, we have assumed a value of ISO = 50 dB, i.e., 20 dB greater than XP = 30 dB, and the short circuit is represented as a pair of reactive loads (0 dB/180° phase reflection). Therefore, the wave from OMT Port 4 is almost fully directed towards the short-circuited OMT input, being slightly depolarized due to the OMT cross-polarization. Referring to Figure 20, two signals are incident at the two electrical input ports of the OMT (the level at VP OMT Port 1, red line, is of the order of −30 dB with respect to the signal at HP OMT Port 2, green line) where they are fully reflected by the short circuit with the same impinging linear polarization direction, but 180° out of phase. This situation is virtually equivalent to the schematic in Figure 19 top panel, where: (1) the load at the OMT “under test” Port 4 is substituted by the Port 1 of the VNA; (2) the left side of the test setup is the mirroring of the right side (thus the “Second” OMT is the virtual copy of the OMT under test), and (3) the excitation and reflection coefficients to be considered at the mirrored HP Port 4 and VP Port 3 are both −1 (the mirroring effect due to the short circuit). Thus, we have the equivalent configuration of the “straight connection” (Figure 19, top panel), except for the −1 excitation (or detection when used as a receiver) signal coefficients for the mirrored side and the ISO term to take into account. This equivalent configuration is represented in Figure 21. The mirroring added effect is to introduce an E-plane symmetry that acts in such a way that each time the signal travels from one port on the mirrored side it is multiplied by a factor −1. In Figure 21, this is indicated inside the “Mirrored mm-wave extender” block by the multiplication symbol “(−1)”. The mirroring does not affect the ISO parameter measurement (S34 = S43). We can therefore use a slightly modified version of Equation (18), including such effects, leading to the following expressions for the measured transmission parameters
6.5. Measurement of OMT Isolation
7. Conclusions
- Three methods for the characterization of the OMT insertion losses;
- Two methods for the characterization of the OMT input return losses;
- Three methods for the characterization of the OMT output return losses;
- Three methods for the characterization of the OMT cross-polarizations;
- Two methods for the characterization of the OMT isolation.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Derivation of Equation (15)
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Performance Parameter | Reference S-Parameter | Specification |
---|---|---|
Frequency range | - | 84–116 GHz |
Insertion Loss of signal VP from Port 1 to output Port 3, IL31 | |S31| | <0.5 dB |
Insertion Loss of signal HP from Port 2 to output Port 4, IL42 | |S42| | <0.5 dB |
Input Return Loss of signal VP at Port 1, IRL11 | |S11| | >20 dB |
Input Return Loss of signal HP at Port 2, IRL22 | |S22| | >20 dB |
Output Return Loss of signal VP at Port 3, ORL33 | |S33| | >20 dB |
Output Return Loss of signal HP at Port 4, ORL44 | |S44| | >20 dB |
Cross-polarization of signal VP from Port 1 to output Port 4, XP41 | |S41| | >30 dB |
Cross-polarization of signal HP from Port 2 to output Port3, XP32 | |S32| | >30 dB |
Isolation between Port 3 and Port 4, ISO43 | |S43| | >30 dB |
Isolation between Port 4 and Port 3, ISO34 | |S34| | >30 dB |
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Navarrini, A.; Nesti, R. Characterization Techniques of Millimeter-Wave Orthomode Transducers (OMTs). Electronics 2021, 10, 1844. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10151844
Navarrini A, Nesti R. Characterization Techniques of Millimeter-Wave Orthomode Transducers (OMTs). Electronics. 2021; 10(15):1844. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10151844
Chicago/Turabian StyleNavarrini, Alessandro, and Renzo Nesti. 2021. "Characterization Techniques of Millimeter-Wave Orthomode Transducers (OMTs)" Electronics 10, no. 15: 1844. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10151844
APA StyleNavarrini, A., & Nesti, R. (2021). Characterization Techniques of Millimeter-Wave Orthomode Transducers (OMTs). Electronics, 10(15), 1844. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10151844