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Maximally
flat impedance transformers
Updated July 9,
2010
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here to go to our main page on quarterwave transformers
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Here we will review the math
behind the maximally-flat impedance transformation. The maximally-flat
transformer is a multi-section stepped-impedance transformer, where
the sections are all one quarter-wavelength at center frequency.
This may take some time to post, so be patient!
There's a really great spreadsheet
in our download area that
performs the maximally-flat impedance transformation for up to eight
sections.
References:
You can learn more about the
math by picking up a copy of Matthai Young and Jones, or Pozar,
or Rizzi, or Collin's books. Look for them on our book
page.
Some of the early work on this
topic was authored by Collin, Cohn, Riblett and others in the IRE
digests in the 1950s, and during the RadLab days. The foundation
for this analysis is called the Theory of Small Reflections which
we'll cover later.
Max-flat transformer: exact
solution
The N-section max-flat transformer
is maximally flat because the first N derivatives of the frequency
response have been set to zero at the center frequency.
For the max flat solution or
the binomial approximation, the bandwidth of what you are trying
to achieve is not a parameter you get to optimize, it is a function
of the number of sections and the ratio of the two impedances you
are trying to match. Mostly, you get what you have room for, or
how much loss you can stand. That is why many transformers end up
being Chebychev, where you get to specify maximum ripple across
the band of interest.
This problem is not easy to solve.
Early researchers used mainframe computers, solved for the coefficients
numerically, and published tables on the topic which are still used
today. The Microwaves101 transformer calculator (located in our
download area) uses interpolation
from an ancient table to provide you with the true max flat solution
without the messy math!
More to come!
Binomial
transformer: approximate solution
The binomial transformer is an
easy-to-calculate solution to the max-flat transformer problem.
In the binomial transformer,
the reflection coefficients (and therefore the impedance steps)
are related to the binomial coefficient, which you may be familiar
with from probability theory, or the binomial transformation of
(X+Y)^N.
The binomial transformer provides
the exact solution for N=1(which is trivial) and N=2 (which
is useful), but higher-order transformers it only offers an approximation.
The approximation falls apart
rapidly (compared to the exact solution) as mismatch between source
and load becomes greater than 2:1, and should not be used. Even
though this is just an approximation, and therefore should not be
used unless you are in a hurry or don't care about degraded performance,
the math is quite elegant. If you disagree with that last statement,
go get yourself another snack and then watch some youtube.
Binomial coefficients
In probability theory, the binomial
coefficients are the answer to the question, how many ways can I
choose n things from a group of N things? For example, how many
ways can you choose 3 objects from 5? The answer is 10. Rather than
counting the choices in your head, here's the formula:

Binomial coefficients can also
be found using Pascal's triangle, instead of applying the above
equation. Blaise Pascal was a 17th century French mathematician,
who accomplished much in his short 39 years, but eventually ended
up weirded
out in a religious cult. The triangle is constructed so each
number is equal to the sum of the two numbers directly above it.
The edge numbers are all "1" because there are only a
single number above them. Below we have plotted the Pascal's triangle
up to the 10th row. We didn't use a calculator, contact us if you
find any mistakes! Oops, the 200's in the last row should be 210...
thanks, Dan! We'll fix that later when we have nothing to do.

Note that C(N,0)=C(N,N)=1 (there's
only one way to choose all or nothing). Also the binomial coefficients
are symmetric C(N,n)=C(N,N-n), and the coefficients are highest
in the middle (the most choices you can have in a deck of 52 cards
is when you pick 26).
Below we show how the coefficients
are calculated, and how they are related to the binomial expansion.
We found the math in Peter Rizzi's book,
Microwave Engineering.
The section impedances for the
approximate max-flat transformer solution are found from:

Where Mk is related to coefficients
Ck which are almost exactly the binomial coefficients. Sorry, we
don't have a derivation on how this solution satisfies the max flat
transformer, perhaps someday we will. Here's how to calculate Ck:

Thus Ck is the the array of "N
choose n" coefficients, but slightly modified. Below we show
the Ck array on Pascal's triangle, the "trick" is that
the coefficients start on the second row and omit the last value.
Again, the 200's in the last row should read 210 in the graphic...

An interesting thing about Ck
coefficients is that when you sum them for a group of N, the
sum is equal to N^2. We'll let you ponder that mystery while
we move on to something more useful.
Here is how to calculate the
Mk coefficients from the Ck coefficients, this is just a simple
summing operation:

Below we have calculated the
Ck's and Mk's for binomial transformers up to N=5:
| N |
Ck |
Mk |
| 1 |
C1=1 |
M1=1 |
| 2 |
C1=1, C2=2 |
M1=1, M2=3 |
| 3 |
C1=1, C2=3,
C3=3 |
M1=1, M2=4,
M3=7 |
| 4 |
C1=1, C2=4,
C3=6, C4=4 |
M1=1, M2=5,
M3=11, M4=15 |
| 5 |
C1=1,
C2=5, C3=10, C4=10, C4=5 |
M1=1,
M2=6, M3=16, M4=26, M5=31 |
An interesting thing about binomial
coefficients Mk is that when you sum them for a group of N, the
sum is equal to N^2. We'll let you ponder that mystery while
we move on to something more useful.
Finally, below we have solved
for each impedance in terms of the source impedance Z0 and load
impedance RL, for up to N=5. Any higher than that will be easy for
you to solve, now that we have revealed the pattern!
N=2

N=3

N=4

N=5

Example 1: N=2, 50 to 100 ohms
Below is the frequency response
of an N=2 maximally-flat transformer which was used to match a 2:1
load (100 ohms to 50 ohms). The two section impedances work out
to 84.09 ohms and 59.46 ohms. We plotted the response using the
Professor's transformer spreadsheet which you can get for free in
our download area. By the
way, it offers the exact solution to the max-flat problem for up
to ten sections (N=10), by interpolating a lookup table which contains
data discovered by ancient microwave scholars in the middle of the
20th century!
Why did we pick N=2 for our first
example? This is the one case where the approximate formula gives
the exact max-flat results. Just don't ask us to prove that statement!

So, how close is the binomial
approximation to the actual max-flat case? We'll try to answer that
in the next two examples...
Example 2: N=5, 50 to 40 ohm
mismatch
Here, we use a five section transformer
to match a 40 ohm load to a 50 ohm source. We compare the binomial
transformer (port 1) to the max-flat case (port 2). We calculated
the max-flat impedance steps using the transformer calculator from
our download area. The binomial
equations are easy to enter into a VAR block in an ADS simulation,
as shown.

Here's the line impedances compared.
Z1 is close to the 50 ohms generator. Notice they are almost the
same values, so close it would be impossible to fabricate transformers
with impedances controlled enough to actually witness the differences.
The center impedance (Z3) is the exact same value for both, in both
types of transformers for odd values of N, the center section impedance
is the geometric mean between the mismatched impedances.
| |
Z1 |
Z2 |
Z3 |
Z4 |
Z5 |
| Binomial |
49.653 |
47.951 |
44.721 |
41.709 |
40.280 |
| Max flat |
49.584 |
47.842 |
44.721 |
41.804 |
40.336 |
Here's the reflection coefficients
compared. The two transformers are almost identical, but the max-flat
(blue line) has just a small advantage in bandwidth.

Below are the VSWRs of the two
transformers. At"DC" it is easy to see that the mismatch
is 1.25:1 for both (50:40 ohms).

Example 3: N=5, 50 to 40 ohm
mismatch
Here we've increased the mismatch
to 5:1 (50 to 10 ohm transformation). Again, the binomial transformer
is represented by port 1, while max flat is port 2. The max-flat
impedances came from our downloadable transformer Excel file.
| |
Z1 |
Z2 |
Z3 |
Z4 |
Z5 |
| Binomial |
47.547 |
36.975 |
22.361 |
13.522 |
10.516 |
| Max flat |
47.294 |
36.612 |
22.361 |
13.657 |
10.572 |

Again, the reflection coefficient
is zero at center frequency, and the binomial transformer behaves
very nearly like the max-flat.

Here's the comparison in terms
of VSWR; at DC the 5:1 mismatch makes sense (50:10 ohms).

In conclusion, since we don't
see an appreciable difference, we recommend using the binomial transformer
as it is so convenient to calculate. On the other hand, maybe something
is incorrect with the max-flat calculation in the downloadable spreadsheet...
we'll have to check this out and get back to you. If anyone has
any comments send them our way!
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