Double-resonance SAW filters

A novel surface acoustic wave filter on a leaky-wave substrate is studied. It features a hiccup-type resonance occurring around a distributed gap between two long interdigital transducers. Compared to a classical coupled resonator filter, it enables a relatively narrow passband (1% to 2% of center f...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on ultrasonics, ferroelectrics, and frequency control ferroelectrics, and frequency control, 2007-03, Vol.54 (3), p.659-667
Hauptverfasser: Meltaus, J., Hong, S.S., Holmgren, O., Kokkonen, K., Plessky, V.P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A novel surface acoustic wave filter on a leaky-wave substrate is studied. It features a hiccup-type resonance occurring around a distributed gap between two long interdigital transducers. Compared to a classical coupled resonator filter, it enables a relatively narrow passband (1% to 2% of center frequency) with low insertion loss, steep skirts, and improved suppression levels. The structure consists of long transducers having the number of fingers greater than 1/K 2 and 1/K, where K 2 is the coupling coefficient of the substrate material and K is the reflectivity per wavelength, separated with short transducer sections constituting a distributed gap. A strong, localized resonance is formed in the gap region, in addition to the resonance arising in the long structures - hence, the name double-resonance filter. The substrate studied here is 42deg-rotated lithium tantalite. We show experimental results for both single-ended and unbalanced-to-balanced filters at 1.6 GHz, having a minimum insertion loss of 1.07 dB, suppressions of 30 dB, and absolute -3-dB bandwidth of 29 MHz (1.9% of the center frequency). For the balanced device, the amplitude imbalance over the passband ranges from -0.6 dB to 2 dB arid the phase imbalance from 1deg to 4.5deg. Furthermore, we have measured the acoustical power distributions using a scanning laser interferometer, and we compare these results with the profiles simulated using a coupling-of-modes model
ISSN:0885-3010
1525-8955
DOI:10.1109/TUFFC.2007.289