Switched
line phase shifters
Updated April 13,
2006
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A simple switched-line phase
shifter is shown in below. The phase shift can easily be computed
from the difference in the electrical lengths of the reference arm
and the delay arm. The phase of any transmission line is equal to
its length times it propagation constant; typically we use electrical
degrees for this, not radians.
SPDT switches can be realized
in a wide variety of ways, using FET, diode, or MEM (micro-electro-mechanical)
switches. The combined isolation of the two switches must exceed
20 dB in the design frequency band, or there will be ripple in the
amplitude and phase response due to leakage of the "off"
arm, sensitivities to FET parameters, etc.

Switched line
phase shifter topology
It is important to choose a switch
technology appropriately for the frequency band of interest. PIN
diode switches are often used through 18 GHz for "chip-and
wire" construction (this practice is known as MIC, or microwave
integrated circuit). In MMIC design (monolithic microwave integrated
circuit), the switches are often realized with FETs, up into millimeterwaves.
The weird thing here is that a diode is usually a better switch
element than a FET, but when employed on a monolithic circuit, FETs
can overcome their off-state capacitance by using a shunt inductor
trick at very high frequencies (we will cover that topic at a future
time in a section about microwave switches… UE). Diodes are almost
never employed monolithically (exceptions are offered by TriQuint
and M/A-COM), so they have to suffer the variations in wirebond
inductance associated with MIC construction, and hence the frequency
limitation.
An example of a millimeter-wave
MMIC switched-line phase shifter is shown in below. The insertion
loss of a switched-line phase shifter is dominated by the switch
losses. Typical values are one dB loss per bit through X-band, 2
dB per bit at Ka band and 3 dB or more per bit at W-band. Two complimentary
control signals are always required for switched line phase shifters.

Example of 6-bit
MMIC switched-line phase shifter
The figure shows the response
of an ideal switched-line phase shifter. The difference in length
between the reference arm and the delay arm is one-quarter wavelength
at 10 GHz. Such a design would be used to provide a 90-degree phase
shift at 10 GHz as shown (see the green trace on the plot). Switched-line
phase shifters are often used for the two largest phase bits of
a multi-bit phase shifter (180 and 90 degrees). Less complex circuits
such as loaded-line elements can be used for 45 degree and lesser
bits (see the loaded-line phase shifter discussion below).

Ideal switched-line
phase shifter response, 10 GHz 90 degree bit
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