Patent · US Expired

Superconducting variable phase shifter using SQUID's to effect phase shift

US5153171A · kind A · utility

18Cited by
7References
12Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateSep 17, 1990
Grant dateOct 6, 1992
Priority date
Expiry dateSep 17, 2010

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC Y)Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies
  • CPC primaryY10S505/874
  • WIPO fieldTelecommunications
  • WIPO sectorElectrical engineering

Abstract

A superconducting variable phase shifter providing improved performance in the microwave and millimeter wave frequency ranges. The superconducting variable phase shifter includes a transmission line and an array of superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUID's) connected in parallel with and distributed along the length of the transmission line. A DC control current I.sub.DC varies the inductance of the individual SQUID's and thereby the distributed inductance of the transmission line, thus controlling the propagation speed, or phase shift, of signals carried by the transmission line. The superconducting variable phase shifter provides a continuously variable time delay or phase shift over a wide signal bandwidth and over a wide range of frequencies, with an insertion loss of less than 1 dB. The phase shifter requires less than a milliwatt of power and, if one or more of the Josephson junctions fails, the whole device remains operational, since the SQUID's are connected in parallel.

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.