专利摘要:
A cable tapping device (70) is provided for a CATV network that includes a microstrip directional coupler (71) on an electrical path (14) between an input (16) and an output (18) adapted to communicate with a distribution device (34) ) associated with multiple tap ports (44, 46, 48, 50). A direction coupler with a ferrite core (72) is arranged in parallel with microstrip directional coupler (71) wherein low-frequency signals pass through directional coupler with a ferrite core (71) and high-frequency signals pass through microstrip directional coupler (71).
公开号:BE1024223B1
申请号:E2016/5881
申请日:2016-11-25
公开日:2017-12-18
发明作者:
申请人:Technetix B.V.;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

Title: Cable tap Field of the invention
This invention relates to a cable tap for a cable network, and in particular to an outside tap.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Many cable networks are built in a cascade circuit (tree and branch) structure. This means that different amplifiers and taps are all placed in series with talc tapping a part of the signal and again feeding a cascade of amplifiers and taps. These branches can be tapped to feed another cascade of taps. Because taps are arranged in series and therefore have different input signal levels caused by attenuation in the coaxial cable and in the taps themselves, different models of taps with different tap loss values are used. Usually, the first taps have a high input signal level and therefore require a high attenuation input to tap output port, which is known as tap loss, and automatically require a low input loss from input to output. When migrating down the line, the tap loss must be lower if there is less energy due to loss in the previous taps and in the coaxial cable, and the input loss automatically increases as more energy is tapped from the line.
These taps are known in the industry as "outside taps" because such a network is typically not mounted in cabinets but on overhead wiring or posts or on the walls of houses. In such a network a small deviation from the ideal frequency response from input to output (so-called ripple) in the outside taps reinforced by the total number of outside taps placed in series. This means that, for example, a small and apparently unimportant ripple in the frequency response of 0.2 dB in a single outdoor tap is multiplied to a more significant 2 dB when 10 outdoor taps are cascaded. Because the outer taps usually have more or less the same frequency response, this is a real problem,
The same applies to the input loss from the input to the output. If the input loss can be reduced by as little as 0.1 dB, this means that at the end of the coaxial cable the input loss will be 0.1 dB x the number of external taps cascaded. This is of great importance as many networks are extended to higher frequencies to transport more and more data and programs. Higher frequencies mean essentially more loss in the coaxial cables and therefore lower levels at the end of the line. Redesigning or adding amplifiers that are placed in the cascade switching network is normally not possible or only at very high costs. A lower loss in the outer taps is therefore a real advantage.
Summary of the invention
In accordance with the present invention, a cable tapping device is provided for use in a cable television, CATV, network comprising a first direction coupler and a second direction coupler electrically arranged in parallel between an input and a output, wherein each direction coupler is adapted to communicate with a common distribution device associated with a plurality of tapping ports, the first direction coupler being a microstrip direction coupler and the second direction coupler being a direction coupler with a ferrite core. By using a microstrip directional coupler and a directional coupler with a ferrite core, separate signal paths can be provided.
Capacitive elements can be associated with the microstrip directional coupler to prevent transmission of low frequency signals through the microstrip directional coupler, and preferably there is a separate capacitive element associated with each of the input port, output port, and a coupled port of the microstrip directional coupler. In this way, the disadvantages of using a microstrip directional coupler for lower frequencies, typically lower than 400 MHz, can be avoided.
A coupling port of the microstrip directional coupler is preferably connected to an input port of the distribution device.
Capacitive and inductive elements can be associated with the direction coupler with a ferrite core to prevent transmission of high frequency signals through the direction coupler with a ferrite core. With this, the disadvantages of using a directional coupler with a ferrite core for higher frequencies, usually above 400 MHz, can be avoided.
Inductive elements associated with the direction coupler with a ferrite core are preferably air core inductors to prevent humulation of the RF signal.
Signal adjusting elements such as reducers or frequency dependent reducers may be located in one or both of the signal path between the microstoccurrent coupler and distribution device and the signal path between the direction coupler with a ferrite core and the distribution device. This allows the tuning of the signal characteristics of the cable tap.
The invention will now be described with reference to an example with reference to the following drawings in which:
Figure 1 shows a schematic diagram of an outside tap according to the prior art;
Figure 2 shows a schematic diagram of a directional coupler according to the prior art;
Figure 3 shows a schematic diagram of a first embodiment of a cable tap; and
Figure 4 shows a schematic diagram of a second embodiment. Description
Figure 1 shows an outside tap 10 as used in existing broadband cable television (CATV) networks. Multiple interconnected taps are placed between a head end associated with a cable provider and a plurality of downward users, usually in a cascade circuit structure as described above.
Outer tap 10 as used in cascade switching networks includes a directional coupler 12 made of a ferrite core in the line 14 from input 16 to output 18, which is diverted by a power choke 22 and capacitors 24, 26. The coupled gate 30 which also known as tap, directional coupler with a ferrite core 12 is usually connected to an input port 32 of a distributor 34 with the output ports 36, 38, 40, 42 of distributor 34 connected to output ports or connectors 44, 46, 48, 50 from outside tap 10. Distributor 34 can be of a different design, for example two-way, three-way, four-way, six-way or eight-way depending on the required number of user output ports of the outside tap.
Power choke 22 is needed if these networks are powered using a maximum of 10 Amp at 50 or 60 Hz alternating current that travels along the coaxial cable and the directional coupler with a ferrite core 12 is unable to carry any significant alternating or direct current. Power choke 22 is a large inductor and bridges the RF components in taps (and also in amplifiers). The power choke must be wide bands because most cable networks use a frequency range from 5 MHz to 1 GHz, must be able to divert currents that can be as large as 10 Amps, and must also have low humulation with this current.
With the need to go to higher frequencies such as 5 MHz to 1200 MHz or even to 1700 MHz, the design of the power chokes becomes more critical as the power choke itself becomes the limiting factor in the RF performance of the tap. Power chokes typically introduce ripple in the frequency response at certain frequencies, input loss at higher frequencies, and lower the feedback loss.
As can be seen in Figure 2, sometimes only one output 60 is needed and in the industry such an outside tap 62 is known as a directional coupler.
The direction coupler with a ferrite core has some inherent limitations: - It is unable to carry any significant alternating or direct current, and therefore a re-winding choke is required in the outside tap. As discussed, this power choke is a limiting factor. - It is subject to DC or AC pulses if this changes the magnetic parameters of the ferrite and the direction coupler will generate so-called Passive Intermodulation (PIM) products with the RF levels that are usually found in cable networks . - A direction coupler with a ferrite core has a significantly added input loss compared to the theoretical value. - The direction coupler with a ferrite core must be aligned in the practical world to get the best performance. - It is difficult to get a good broadband RF performance that is needed when cable networks migrate to, for example, 5 MHz to 1200 MHz or even 5 MHz to 1700 MHz. - In the practical world, the direction coupler with a ferrite core has a limit in the coupled value that it can reach. More than -16 dB coupled value is not possible to produce in the real world. This means that when an outside tap with a higher tap loss is required, this is achieved by adding a lowering element in the line from the coupled gate to the distributor or, in the case of a direction coupler, in the line of the output connector. However, the input loss from input to output from the outer tap is still the same as a 16 dB direction coupler with a ferrite core. - The direction coupler with a ferrite core has a flat frequency response. This means that the tap loss, and also the input loss, are the same for all frequencies. No matter how the loss in the coaxial cable changes with the frequency, it is very low on low frequencies and quite high on high frequencies. Because the network is built with outside taps with different tap losses and the coaxial cable loss is very low at low frequencies, the actual loss in the entire network at low frequencies varies enormously and this depends on the tap output port.
This means that in the case of a return path, the input (or noise) signals coming from the indoor installations are of equal different levels. This is known in the industry as a return path imbalance and it is very problematic because some indoor networks have the desired Signals received from other indoor installations will limit. The input (or noise) level of the indoor installation connected to a low-tap loss outdoor tap will have a much higher level and therefore be dominant when it is added to wanted signals coming from a loss indoor installation connected to a high-tap loss outdoor tap.
To address the limitations of the directional coupler with a ferrite core, an embodiment of cable tap 70 in accordance with the invention is shown in Figure 3.
Outer tap 70 includes a micro-directional coupler 71 connected in path 14 that extends from input 16 to output 18 so as to provide a high-frequency signal path to tap distributor 34, with a direction coupler having a ferrite core 72 electrically connected in parallel with tap distributor 34 around a to provide a low frequency signal path.
Microstrip directional coupler 71 has an input port 73 and an output port 75 connected between input 16 and output 18, with a coupled port 74 in two-way communication with four-way distributor 34 to provide signals to, and to receive, signals from tapping connector ports 44, 46, 48 and 50. Isolated port 76 of coupler 71 is connected to ground via resistor 80. Capacitors 82, 82 'and 82 ”are connected to input port 73, coupled port 74, and output port 75 respectively to prevent low-frequency signals from traveling through the microstrip directional coupler in either the upward or downward direction.
For low frequency signals, there is an alternative signal path 84 electrically provided in parallel with microstrip directional coupler 71, such that low frequency signals are passed through directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 before tap distributor 34 is reached. Signal path 84 is bi-directional which allows low-frequency signals to be transmitted from and to tap distributor 34.
Low frequency path 84 includes first and second inductive air cores 86, 88 disposed on both sides of directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 associated with a power choke coil 22, signals to directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 being routed from a main line between input 16 and output 18 for passing through inductive air cores 86, 88. Air cores 86, 88 are connected to ground via capacitors 90, 90 'and capacitors 92, 92' associated with directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 to provide protection for AC and DC voltages.
Coupled port 94 of directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 is connected to a tap distributor 34 with inductor 100 which is placed between port 94 and tap 34, Signal path 84 connects to input port 32 of tap 34 under capacitor 82 ', such that capacitor 82' is placed between coupled port 74 and the point where high frequency and low frequency signal paths meet.
The values of the inductive components, air core 86 and 88 and inductor 100 and also the values of the capacitors 82, 82 ', 82 ”, 90, 90', 90 'are selected to ensure that low frequency signals of 400 MHz or lower are conducted by low-frequency signal path 84 and prevented from being transferred to micro-current coupler 71 by capacitors 82, 82 ', 82 ". Higher frequencies above 400 MHz are not blocked by capacitors 82, 82 ", 82" and thus high frequencies are free to travel through microstrip directional coupler 71 to reach taps 44} 46, 48 and 50. The switching system shown in Figure 3 is bi-directional, where high-frequency signals are separated from low-frequency signals, where high-frequency signals are guided by microstrip directional coupler 71 for both upward and downward signals, and wherein low-frequency signals are guided upward and where downward signals are guided by directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 to become.
At low frequencies, alternating or direct current voltage is blocked by capacitors 82, 82 ", 82" of microstrip directional coupler 71 and current flows through air core 86, power choke 22 and directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 to reach tap distributor 34.
The alternating or direct current may be several amps and the use of an air core inductor for each of the inductive elements 86, 88 avoids humulation of the RF signal.
There are many advantages of the proposed architecture of this hybrid tap when compared to an outside tap with a direction coupler with a ferrite core: - The microstrip direction coupler is not subject to alternating or direct current pulses, because it has no ferrite core, and has no Passive Intermodulation when it is used with the RF levels that are usually found in cable networks. - It has a very low input loss from input to output when compared to a direction coupler with a ferrite core. - It can easily be produced in higher coupled values and thus an outside tap constructed according to the proposed architecture has an even lower input loss from input to output on the high-step loss models. - There is no need to align because the linked loss is defined by the lengths, widths and the gap between the lines. These values can all be accurately fixed at production, because there is a cost reduction. - In the proposed architecture, a broadband response, for example 5 MHz to 1200 MHz or 5 MHz to 1700 MHz, is much easier to achieve when compared to a direction coupler with a ferrite core. - In the proposed outside tap architecture, the tap loss on the return path can be the same for all models. Return path imbalance is no longer a problem. This results in much higher upward data rates. - It has a very low input loss for high frequencies associated with microstrip direction couplers, usually above 400 MHz from input to output when compared to a direction coupler with a ferrite core as shown in Figure 1. - Because the low frequency response is made by the direction coupler 72 with a ferrite core, the tap loss is reduced at low frequencies. - The isolation tap to be performed at low frequencies is improved if the direction coupler with a ferrite core is added to the tap loss resulting in higher isolation. There are no problems with ripple or micro-reflection if the RF termination of the main line is not ideal is. - The power choke is mounted in the low-frequency path so that the inherent high-frequency problems of power chokes (loss, ripple usually for frequencies above 400 MHz) are avoided.
The arrangement shown in Figure 3 provides high tap to output isolation and low tap loss associated with directional couplers with a ferrite core for lower frequencies below 400 MHz and provides for higher frequencies above 400 MHz the low input loss and cable compensation tap loss associated with micro strip direction couplers .
An additional embodiment of a conditioned tap is shown in Figure 4. Electrical components of electrical switching systems 102, 104 such as lowering elements or frequency-dependent lowering elements can be placed in the high-frequency path between micro current direction coupler 71 and four-way distributor 34 and alternatively or in combination placed in the low frequency path between directional coupler with a ferrite core 72 and distributor 34, Electrical components 102, 104 allow the adjustment of the signal characteristics of the cable tap to meet the requirements of the network in which the cable tap is installed. Typically, plug connectors 106 are provided within the high and low frequency paths so that the electrical components or electrical switching systems 102, 104 can be added as needed, rather than being permanently connected.
权利要求:
Claims (9)
[1]
Conclusions
A cable tapping device comprising a first direction coupler and a second direction coupler arranged electrically in parallel between an input and an output, each direction coupler being adapted to communicate with a common distribution device associated with a plurality of tapping ports, the first direction coupler being a microstrip direction coupler and the second directional coupler is a directional coupler with a ferrite core.
[2]
The cable tap device of claim 1, wherein capacitive elements are associated with the microstrip directional coupler to prevent transmission of low frequency signals through the microstrip directional coupler.
[3]
The cable tapping device of claim 2, wherein a separate capacitive element is associated with each of an input port, an output port, and a coupled port of the microstrip directional coupler.
[4]
A cable tapping device according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein a coupling port of the microstrip directional coupler is connected to an input port of the distribution device.
[5]
Cable tapping device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein inductive and capacitive elements are associated with the direction coupler with a ferrite core to prevent transmission of high frequency signals by the direction coupler with a ferrite core.
[6]
The cable tapping device of claim 5, wherein inductive elements associated with the direction coupler with a ferrite core are air core inductors.
[7]
Cable tapping device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein signal adaptation elements are placed in a signal path between the microstrip direction coupler and the distribution device.
[8]
A cable tapping device according to any one of the preceding claims, wherein signal adjusting elements are placed in a signal path between the direction coupler with a ferrite core and the distributing device.
[9]
A cable tapping device that is substantially as described herein with reference to and as illustrated in Figures 3 and 4.
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法律状态:
2018-02-15| FG| Patent granted|Effective date: 20171218 |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
GB1520975.2|2015-11-27|
GBGB1520975.2A|GB201520975D0|2015-11-27|2015-11-27|Cable tap|
GB1604631.0A|GB2544826B|2015-11-27|2016-03-18|Cable tap|
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