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Why does the coupled-line have a natural 90 degree phase split? Look on this page (https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/the-quadrature-
90-degree-property-of-symmetric-coupled-lines)!
Coupled lines are used in couplers (usually quadrature (https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/quadrature-couplers) couplers) as well as
transmission line lters. Coupled line couplers are not "DC connected", as opposed to "direct coupled" couplers such as the Wilkinson and the
branchline. Coupled lines occur when two transmission lines are close enough in proximity so that energy from one line passes to the other. Usually we
are talking about lines that are coupled over a quarterwave section, or multiple sections. As you should know, that is where the magic occurs
(https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/quadrature-couplers).
Edge coupled
Broadside coupled
End coupled (used in lters but not used in couplers)
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For two transmission lines coupled together to form a four-port network, there are two things that have to occur with coupled lines to become a
usable coupler with directivity and quadrature phase:
It's time to de ne some port numbers. Let port 1 be the input port. The port that is directly coupled to port 2, which is one of the two output ports.
The other output port is directly across from the input port, we'll call it port 3. Under ideal conditions, a signal incident on port 1 will transfer zero
power to port 4; this is called the isolated port.
Why Quadrature?
This is a great question and it takes a little explanation to do it justice.
The quadrature property of the coupled lines is a subset of the amazing properties of lossless, symmetric four-port microwave circuits - with or without
coupling. For double symmetry circuits (like two coupled lines) the 16 S-parameters of the scattering matrix of the four-port reduce to 4 independent
S-parameter values: S11, S12, S13, and S14. The resulting scattering matrix is shown below.
Because we are assuming that the circuit is lossless (no heat or radiation losses), conservation of power is applicable to the four ports. This means that
the multiplication of the scattering matrix by its complex conjugate transposed matrix will be equal to the unity matrix [S]T*[S]=1. This matrix
multiplication produces a new matrix lled with 16 equations all of which are equal to zero except the four equations lling the diagonal spots of the
matrix each of which will be equal to 1 due to the identity matrix I. Of these 16 equations ,12 of them are not independent and are just variations of
the rst four. Click here (http://d2xunoxnk3vwmv.cloudfront.net/uploads/CouplerMath.pdf) to see the bloody details of the matrix multiplication.
After simpli cation the remaining four independent equations become:
All the lossless symmetric four-ports in the world must satisfy these equations. Let’s just look at one of those circuits – a pair of transmission lines
whose elds interact with each other to produce a coupler network.
From the even and odd mode (https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/even-and-odd-mode-impedances) analysis of a pair of coupled lines in
the Microwaves101 page on couplers, (https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/coupler-fundamentals)
if the values of and satisfy the equation , then and the four equations reduce to two equations:
If neither (3dB or 10 dB or whatever non-zero coupling) then and nally we have the result that ports 2 and 3
di er in phase by 90 degrees. This is true for all frequencies, for any value of coupling and for any length of the coupled lines! Further, if
, then
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for all frequencies and line lengths. If you don’t believe this, then plug into AWR Microwave O ce and it will compute that and have a return
loss and isolation greater that 300dB over the frequency range from 1 to 200 GHz and that regardless of the length of the lines.
Now you can use ADS's tune feature to vary Ze until a 3 dB split is achieved. It turns out that to get a 3 dB split (equal power) in fty ohm system
impedance the even mode needs to be ~121.5 ohms and the odd mode impedance must be ~20.6 ohms (in our ADS network Z0 is calculated
automatically from Ze and Zo).
For the ideal coupler, you don't have to plot the phase between the two output arms (port 2 and port 3 in this case). It's automatically 90 degrees! Of
course, if you need to maintain quadrature, be sure to phase-match the lines leading up to the through and coupled ports.
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When we discuss asymmetric couplers further down the page, we are talking about cascaded coupled lines where the geometries are A, B and C and
the coupled sections are in order A-B-C-B-A, for example. In this case, the port VSWRs will also be equal across frequency.
Symmetry is interesting. Note that you cannot tell the di erence between port 1 (or 2) and port 4 (or 3) if the coupler is rotated about its center 180
degrees
Likewise if it is rotated about a center line axis, you cannot tell the di erence between ports 1 and 3 and between 2 and 4.
Therefore the VSWR of port 1 must equal that of port 4 and also port 3. And it follows by similar reasoning that all ports have the same VSWR if
loaded by Z0.
S11=S22=S33=S44
Bottom line is that in most cases, if the return loss of a coupler is speci ed at 15 dB, all of the ports are expected to meet that requirement, over the
speci ed bandwidth.
Branchline couplers (https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/branchline-couplers) have exactly the same symmetries and so the same results
are true for them.
Here's something that is much less obvious. S11 return loss and S41 isolation are nearly identical. If anyone can explain why this is so, please contact us!
New for January 2019! Our new friend Carl has sent us an explanation:
I have an explanation for why this is so. The reason the return loss is virtually identical to the S41 isolation is very similar to the discussion of
the disappearing re ection coe cient (https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/quadrature-couplers#disappear) in a balanced
ampli er. Let every port have an identical and small mismatch loss of |Γ| ≪ 1. When port 1 is excited, |Γ| is initially re ected back into port 1 and
the remainder 1-|Γ|2 ≈ 1 goes into the coupler. The signal then reaches the output ports 2 and 3, and |Γ| is again re ected back into the coupler
at these ports. Since the re ection coe cients seen at ports 2 and 3 are identical, all this re ected power ends up at port 4 due to the
explanation in the disappearing re ection coe cient. Therefore, S11 return loss and S41 isolation are nearly identical when |Γ| is small. This also
explains why the return loss and isolation are only identical for 3 dB quad-couplers. For example, near the bottom of this page, the ‘Microstrip
coupled line coupler on GaAs’ is a 10 dB coupler that does not have a similar return loss and insertion loss.
Thanks, Carl! We hope you enjoy your new MW101 pocket knife keychain (/encyclopedias/pocket-knife-keychain)!
Z02=Z0e*Z0o
Z0e=Z0((1+CF)/(1-CF))0.5
Z0o=Z0*((1-CF)/(1+CF))0.5
Note that the coupling factor CF in the above equations is a voltage ratio (not power), is NOT in dB, and is a number less than 1. For a 20 dB coupler, CF
is 0.1; when you square CF=0.1 you get the power coupling (0.01, or 1/100 of the power for 20 dB). Thanks to Ernest for correcting this! Also note that
Z0e is always greater than Z0, and Z0o is always less than Z0 (thanks to Tyler for the correction!) You can rearrange the equations into new forms, this is
a situation where there are four unknowns and you only need to specify two of them to solve for the others, just like in attenuator math.
(https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/attenuator-math)
Here's the same coupler we analyzed in ADS, now in Excel. You can get a free copy of the spreadsheet that did this remarkable piece of work in our
download area! (https://www.microwaves101.com/download-area)
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We wanted to create a "coupler" that we could drop into a much bigger circuit, such as a balanced ampli er, just to see what some stray coupling could
do between parallel circuit paths. The "coupler" could be a quarterwave at an arbitrary frequency in this case. We created the coupler in a hierarchy:
the coupler itself is shown below, and the coupling coe cient in dB is passed to the next higher "archy" by the statement "CdB<<0". Note that we xed
the impedance at 50 ohms, and the center frequency at 10 GHz: these parameters could also be passed upward. Why did we number the ports in such
an odd fashion? We'll tell you in a second if you are patient...
Now let's drop the coupler as an element into an upper schematic. Although it is possible to de ne your own icon for this coupler, we stuck with the
normal "box". Now you can see that ports 1 and 4 are on the left and top and can serve as inputs, while ports 3 and 2 and on the right and bottom and
serve as outputs, which will eliminate any crossed connections when we place this into a circuit. Also, note that we have de ned CdB two ways: it is set
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to a constant -10 dB, then that is overridden buy the SWPVAR icon where coupling is varied over a large range.
In the plot below we disabled the SWPVAR, just to see what a perfect 10 dB coupler looks like. We didn't bother plotting S11 or S21, in this perfect
coupler they are zero. Note that the "perfect" quarterwave coupler does not have a at coupling coe cient versus frequency; it takes some work to
improve that, if that is what you are after.
Below we cut loose the SWPVAR so that coupling is varied from -1 to -20 dB. In real life you will never make a -1 dB coupler in a single quarterwave
section, but you might hit the elusive 3 dB point (equal split) which is called a 3 dB hybrid.
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Next, we looked at a microstrip coupler in MWO. There are no closed form equations for the line widths, so we used the tune function to set it for - 10
dB and as good a return loss as possible. The substrate de nition is consistent with gallium arsenide in a MMIC (ER=12.9, 100um tall).
In microstrip, the even and odd mode wave velocities are di erent, so you never achieve a perfect coupler. The two parameters that are corrupted are
the input re ection coe cient, and the power delivered to the isolated port (port 2 in our nomenclature). The directivity in the coupler below is barely
13 dB (ratio of S41 to S21). This is why commercial couplers are always made in stripline.
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Symmetric: the impedances increase toward the center symmetrically. This class is a form of backward-wave wave coupler
(https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/directional-couplers#forward). The outputs are in quadrature (90 degrees apart).
Asymmetric: the impedances increase along the entire length of the cascade. This class is a form of forward-wave coupler
(https://www.microwaves101.com/encyclopedias/directional-couplers#forward). The outputs are in-phase.
The electrical length of the quarterwave sections should be 1/4 at center frequency. The impedances can be found by trial and error, optimization, or
looking up in a book, like the reference at the end of the page.
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Below is the response. This provides a much atter coupling than a single section, that is the beauty of multi-section couplers. If only you could get
that high-impedance section in the middle. We'll show some ideas on how to work around that problem later. Maybe you have your own technique and
would like to share it? (mailto:webmaster@microwaves101.com)
References
Here's a great book on coupled line circuits:
RF and Microwave Coupled-Line Circuits, by R. K. Mongia, I. J. Bahl, P. Bhartia. You can nd it on Amazon. (http://www.amazon.com/RF-Microwave-
Coupled-Line-Circuits-Mongia/dp/1596931566/ref=pd_sim_sbs_b_2)
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