Abstract

Sensitive millimeter wave diagnostics need often to be protected against unwanted radiation like, for example, stray radiation from high power Electron Cyclotron Heating applied in nuclear fusion plasmas. A notch filter based on a waveguide Bragg reflector (photonic band-gap) may provide several stop bands of defined width within up to two standard waveguide frequency bands. A Bragg reflector that reflects an incident fundamental TE11 into a TM1n mode close to cutoff is combined with two waveguide tapers to fundamental waveguide diameter. Here the fundamental TE11 mode is the only propagating mode at both ends of the reflector. The incident TE11 mode couples through the taper and is converted to the high order TM1n mode by the Bragg structure at the specific Bragg resonances. The TM1n mode is trapped in the oversized waveguide section by the tapers. Once reflected at the input taper it will be converted back into the TE11 mode which then can pass through the taper. Therefore at higher order Bragg resonances, the filter acts as a reflector for the incoming TE11 mode. Outside of the Bragg resonances the TE11 mode can propagate through the oversized waveguide structure with only very small Ohmic attenuation compared to propagating in a fundamental waveguide. Coupling to other modes is negligible in the non-resonant case due to the small corrugation amplitude (typically 0.05·λ0, where λ0 is the free space wavelength). A Bragg reflector for 105 and 140 GHz was optimized by mode matching (scattering matrix) simulations and manufactured by SWISSto12 SA, where the required mechanical accuracy of ± 5 μm could be achieved by stacking stainless steel rings, manufactured by micro-machining, in a high precision guiding pipe. The two smooth-wall tapers were fabricated by electroforming. Several measurements were performed using vector network analyzers from Agilent (E8362B), ABmm (MVNA 8-350) and Rohde&Schwarz (ZVA24) together with frequency multipliers. The stop bands around 105 GHz (- 55dB) and 140 GHz (-60dB) correspond to the TE11-TM12 and TE11-TM13 Bragg resonances. Experiments are in good agreement with theory.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe stop band must include slightly different oscillating frequencies in systems using more than one gyrotron

  • The Bragg reflector was optimized by mode matching simulations and manufactured by SWISSto12 SA, where the required mechanical accuracy of ± 5 μm could be achieved by stacking stainless steel rings, manufactured by micro-machining, in a high precision guiding pipe [4]

  • A Bragg reflector that reflects an incident circular waveguide TE11 mode into a TM1n mode close to cutoff is combined with two mode-conserving non-linear waveguide tapers to fundamental waveguide diameter

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Summary

Introduction

The stop band must include slightly different oscillating frequencies in systems using more than one gyrotron. Both requirements are difficult to fulfill using the available filter technology (coupled cavity filters or quasi-optical resonance filters) [1]. A filter based on an oversized circular corrugated waveguide with a corrugation period satisfying the Bragg condition can provide several defined stop bands with steep frequency slopes and well defined width. Such a filter was successfully built and tested in Ka-Band [2]. The Bragg reflector was optimized by mode matching (scattering matrix) simulations and manufactured by SWISSto SA, where the required mechanical accuracy of ± 5 μm could be achieved by stacking stainless steel rings, manufactured by micro-machining, in a high precision guiding pipe (patent is pending) [4]

Notch filter principle
Notch filter design
Experimental results
Conclusions
Full Text
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