Journal of Electrical Systems and Information Technology (Jul 2024)

Design of CRLH-TL BPF with controllable attenuation poles

  • Atsuya Hirayama,
  • Hinata Ishikawa,
  • Takanobu Ohno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43067-024-00154-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Compact and pole-controllable resonators and bandpass filter (BPF) using a composite right/left-handed transmission line (CRLH-TL) are designed in this study. The distributed constant line in the CRLH-TL has applied a tap-coupling technique, and one tap-coupled stub is loaded with the left-handed (LH) circuit. Attenuation poles are generated when the input susceptance of the stub diverges. In the tap-coupled CRLH-TL resonator, the attenuation pole is controlled at either the desired lower or higher region frequency than a resonant frequency by adjusting the circuit parameters. Also, the BPF constructed by the CRLH-TL resonators is designed based on a filter design theory, where the attenuation poles are located at lower and higher region frequencies than a negative-first-order frequency. The BPF with microstrip structure is fabricated using MEGTRON6 R-5775 ( $$\varepsilon _\text {r}$$ ε r : 3.7, h: 0.63 mm, t: 18 μm), chip capacitors, and wire inductors. The simulated results show that the desired characteristics are approximately satisfied, i.e., we can design the CRLH-TL BPF which is controllable for the attenuation poles at both lower and higher region frequencies than a resonant frequency. The measured results are good agreement with the simulation. The negative-first-order frequency is generated at 2.00 GHz with 133 MHz bandwidth, i.e., the fractional bandwidth is 6.65 %. The resonator lengths in the BPF are shortened by 81.5 % and 75.0 % in comparison with a conventional half-wavelength ( $$\lambda /2$$ λ / 2 ) openstub, and the size of the fabricated BPF is 0.18 $$\lambda _\text {g} \times$$ λ g × 0.17 $$\lambda _\text {g}$$ λ g . Therefore, a compact BPF with two controllable attenuation poles is realized by the tap-coupled CRLH-TL.