Air stripline
Air stripline is a form of electrical planar transmission line whereby a conductor in the form of a thin metal strip is suspended between two ground planes. The idea is to make the dielectric essentially air. Mechanical support of the line may be a thin substrate, periodical insulated supports, or the device connectors and other electrical items.
Air stripline is most commonly used at microwave frequencies, especially in the C band. Its advantage over standard stripline and other planar technologies is that its air dielectric avoids dielectric loss. Many useful circuits can be constructed with air stripline and it is also easier to achieve strong coupling between components in this technology than with other planar formats. It was invented by Robert M. Barrett in the 1950s.
Structure

Air stripline is a form of stripline using air as the dielectric material between the central conductor and the ground planes. Using air as the dielectric has the advantage that it avoids the transmission losses usually associated with dielectric materials.[1]
There are two basic ways that air stripline is constructed. In dielectric supported stripline, also called suspended stripline or suspended substrate, the strip conductor is deposited on a thin solid dielectric substrate, sometimes on both sides and connected together to form a single conductor.[2] This substrate is then clamped in place between the walls supporting the two ground planes. In this method the strip can be manufactured by printed circuit techniques making it cheap and leading to the further advantage that other components can be printed on the dielectric in the same operation. The purpose of the solid dielectric is mechanical support for the conductor,[3] but it is made as thin as possible to minimise its electrical effect. The flimsy nature of the substrate means that it can easily be distorted. Because of this, the design needs to take account of thermal stability issues.[4] High end designs may use a crystalline substrate, such as boron nitride or sapphire, as the suspended substrate.[5]
The other method of construction uses a more substantial solid metal bar as the strip, supported on periodically spaced insulators. This method may be more suitable for high power applications. In such applications the corners of the conductor cross-section may be rounded to prevent high field intensities and
Uses

Air stripline finds its greatest use at microwave frequencies in the C band (4–8 GHz). At these frequencies and below[8] it has the advantage of compactness over waveguide. Air stripline can be used outside the C band, but at the higher Ku band (12–18 GHz) waveguide tends to dominate because of its lower loss.[9]
At microwave frequencies, passive circuits such as
Air stripline can achieve strong indirect coupling in these components more easily than other planar formats. In standard stripline, coupling is usually achieved by running the lines side-by-side for a distance. Coupling between the edges of the lines in this way is relatively weak and is limited by the closest distance the lines can be set together. This limit is governed by the maximum resolution of the printing process and, in power applications, by the
History
Stripline was invented by Robert M Barrett of the US
References
- ^ Maichen, pp. 87–88
- ^ Oliner, p. 557–558
- ^ Rosloniec, p. 253
- ^ Han & Hwang, p. 21-60
- ^ Bhat & Koul, p. 302
- ^
- Han & Hwang, p. 21-60
- Matthaei et al., p. 172–173
- ^ Matthaei et al., pp. 422–423
- ^ Pradhan & Barrow, 1977 for instance
- ^ Han & Hwang, pp. 21–7, 21–50
- ^ Besser & Gilmore, pp. 49-50
- ^ Han & Hwang, p. 21-50
- ^ Bhat & Koul, pp. 212, 280–287, 302–311
- ^ Oliner, pp. 557–558
Bibliography
- Bhat, Bharathi; Koul, Shiban K, Stripline-like Transmission Lines for Microwave Integrated Circuits, New Age International, 1989 ISBN 8122400523.
- Pradhan, B P; Barrow, E A, "Microwave air strip transmission line for S-band", IETE Journal of Research, vol. 23, iss. 10, pp. 618–619, 1977.
- Han, C C; Hwang, Y, "Satellite antennas", in, ISBN 0442015941.
- Maichen, Wolfgang, Digital Timing Measurements, Springer, 2006 ISBN 0387314199.
- Matthaei, George L; Young, Leo; Jones, E M T, Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks, and Coupling Structures, McGraw-Hill 1964 OCLC 282667.
- Oliner, Arthur A, "The evolution of electromagnetic waveguides: from hollow metallic guides to microwave integrated circuits", chapter 16 in, Sarkar, Tapan K; Mailloux, Robert J; Oliner, Arthur A; ISBN 0471783013.
- Rosloniec, Stanislaw, Fundamental Numerical Methods for Electrical Engineering, Springer, 2008 ISBN 3540795197.