![]() ARCHITECTURE OF A BROADBAND DISTRIBUTED AMPLIFICATION DEVICE
专利摘要:
A distributed amplification device (2) with p inputs, p outputs, p amplification paths comprises a redundant tank (4) of n amplifiers (56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, 74) of which np backup amplifiers (56, 74), an input redundancy ring (48) and an output redundancy ring (50) formed of rotary switches, the input and output redundancy rings (48). , 50) sharing the same technology. The internal amplification channels (76, 94) associated with the np backup amplifiers internally enclose the amplification internal channels associated with the p nominal amplifiers (58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72) and the amplification paths of the routing configurations each go through at least five rotary switches. The input and output redundancy rings (48, 50) are topologically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations is chosen such that the electrical lengths of all the paths of the same routing configuration (172) of the family are equal. 公开号:FR3042358A1 申请号:FR1502128 申请日:2015-10-09 公开日:2017-04-14 发明作者:Esteban Eva Maria Gonzales;Philippe Voisin;Aline Briand;Bertrand Onillon;Jean Philippe Taisant 申请人:Centre National dEtudes Spatiales CNES;Thales SA; IPC主号:
专利说明:
Architecture of a wideband distributed amplification device The present invention relates to a broadband distributed satellite amplification device operating in a microwave radio frequency band. The applications of the invention relate to telecommunications payloads, in particular those which require the provision of high power to a single beam, and more particularly the flexible telecommunications payloads. In these applications, the operators who do not always have a very clear visibility on the future distribution of traffic (and therefore power) on the addressed covers need to have some flexibility to adapt the satellite during its duration. to the traffic needs resulting from the demand and success of service in different geographical areas. It is therefore important to be able to route the channels flexibly to the beams, i.e. in such a way that the total number of channels processed by the payload can be distributed to the different beams according to the traffic demand. and this during the life of the satellite. In order to ensure this flexibility, it is known to use distributed amplification in which all the amplifiers in parallel amplify all input channels of the payload. According to this architecture, the channels are combined before amplification, the amplification is common to all the channels and each amplifier supplies all the signals of the beams. This architecture is compatible with the amplification of any frequency distribution of the channels. The article by P. Angeletti et al., Entitled "Multiport Power Amplifiers for Flexible Satellite Antennas and Payloads", published in the Microwave Journal of May 2010, describes the general principle that the architecture of a telecommunications payload, reconfigurable in real time to distribute the available radiofrequency (RF) power according to the demand, is based on the possibility of exploiting a tank or radio power bank, formed by a set of amplifiers arranged in parallel, and which sets implement a distributed amplification of one or more signals, each of the signals being amplified by all the amplifiers. The article by P. Angeletti describes examples of architectures illustrating this general principle such as the multi-beam mobile repeater of the Japanese satellite ETS-VI, the mobile communications repeaters of the MTSAT-1 and MTSAT-2 satellites, and the payload of the lnmarsat-3 satellite. The article by Hosoda I. et al., "Ka Band High Power Multiport Amplifier (MPA) with TWTA for WINDS Satellite," IEEE 2007, describes the architecture of a reconfigurable telecommunication payload using the principle of distributed amplification. If the principle of a distributed amplification as described above answers the problem of real-time adaptation of the available RF power of the payload to the traffic requirements, there are the problems of paralleling amplifiers on a total transmission band wider than those currently used and the realization of a redundancy scheme (backup amplifiers) compatible with this broadband constraint. Indeed, current conventional systems operate on relatively narrow bands. For example, the WINDS satellite Multiport Port Amplifier (MPA) operates in Ka-band with 6% of the wanted band. In these conventional systems, the individual tuning of the amplifiers is typically done at the center frequency of the band to be processed, which limits the correction over the entire band. When seeking to increase the transmission bandwidth, the gain and phase dispersion increases in the edges of the band, and it exceeds the "acceptable" dispersion to have good recombination of the power. However, an operation of an amplification device distributed over wider useful transmission bands is desired, for example a useful band of 2 GHz at the frequency of 11.7 GHz for the Ku band. Patent application WO 2008/017699 A1 describes a solution to the above problem by proposing an architecture in which a distributed amplification device amplifies and flexibly distributes a plurality of s input transmission channels to an output corresponding to an antenna beam with acceptable performance of amplitude and phase tuning of the amplifiers over a wide frequency band. The proposed distributed amplification device comprises means for combining the frequency bands comprising s inputs to receive the transmission channels and q outputs for respectively providing the transmission channels grouped together in q frequency bands. power amplification including p active amplifiers, arranged in parallel for the distributed amplification of the channels, and means for adjusting the gain and the phase associated with the p power amplifiers on the q frequency bands. However, even though this architecture allows gain and phase alignment between amplifiers over a broad wide frequency band and thus the use of paralleled amplifiers in multichannel applications of flexible payloads, the distribution of the transmission channels according to the q frequency bands and the use of p active amplifiers induces the need to use q * p phase shifters / attenuators, which leads to a more complex solution due to the use of controllable phase shifters and attenuators. In addition, the proposed architecture describes adjustments made upstream of the set of eight amplifiers considered a priori as nominal amplifiers and therefore the settings of a single nominal routing configuration. The document WO 2008/017699 A1 does not describe the consideration for the adjustments of the gain and phase adjustment means effects induced by routing reconfigurations that implement backup configurations involving one or more backup amplifiers. The effects induced by a passage on the backup amplifiers are caused in particular by the introduction of disparities of electrical lengths between the active amplification paths created during the reconfiguration by input and output redundancy rings, and these effects increase the dispersion in gain and phase of active amplification channels, especially as the width of the total useful band of transmission increases. Thus, for all architectures of redundant distributed amplification devices known to date, when seeking to extend the useful transmission band to achieve a wide band of use of the reservoir in respect of a dispersion in gain and phase acceptable active amplification channels of the same configuration, amplitude and phase equalization of said channels or amplification paths of the tank by conventional gain and phase adjustment means on all nominal operating configurations and Rescue tank does not allow such broad band extension. A first technical problem is to propose an architecture of a redundant distributed amplification device which decreases the gain and phase dispersion of the active amplification channels of the same configuration over a wide band. A second technical problem, related to the first problem, is to propose a redundant distributed amplification device which allows, with sufficient performance in terms of acceptable dispersion, to equalize in amplitude and in phase over a wide band the internal amplification active paths. of all the operating configurations of the device. For this purpose, the subject of the invention is a distributed amplification device, intended for a satellite communications payload, comprising a distributed amplification reservoir for amplifying a first plurality of a first higher integer number p or equal to 2 of input radio signals (RF) to be amplified, received by a first input terminal input port, identical to each other at one phase and out of phase with each other according to a predetermined phase law, in a second plurality of p amplified RF signals provided by a second output terminal output port, respectively associated with the input terminals of the first port in the same order, the distributed amplification reservoir comprising: a set of a second integer number n , greater than p and less than or equal to 2p + 1, amplifiers arranged electrically in parallel and respectively defining amplifica internal channels electromagnetically mutually isolated and respectively numbered by a line index ranging from 1 to the second integer number n, the set of n amplifiers being composed of a first series of p nominal radio frequency amplifiers and a second series of np backup amplifiers, an input redundancy ring, formed by a first quadrupole rotating switch array, and an output redundancy ring, formed by a second quadrupole rotating switch array, the input and output redundancy rings being respectively connected between the first input port and a third input terminal port of all n amplifiers and between a fourth output terminal port of all n amplifiers and the second output port, for router according to a routing configuration among a family of routing configurations whose implementation is planned, on the one hand the p input signals supplied to the first port on p selected input terminals of the third port, and on the other hand the p amplified signals, delivered to the p output terminals of the fourth port associated with the p terminals of selected inputs of the third port on the p port output terminals of the second port associated with the input terminals of the first port; the distributed amplification device being characterized in that: the input and output redundancy rings use similar propagation conditions; and the internal amplification channels associated with the n-p backup amplifiers internally enclose the amplification internal channels associated with the p nominal amplifiers; and each expected routing configuration comprises a set of p independent distributed amplification paths, each amplification path individually including an input terminal of the first port, the output terminal of the second port associated with the input terminal of the first port. , an active amplifier and its line number, first passive links connected in series and traversing at least three rotary switches of the input redundancy ring and connecting the input terminal of the first port to the input terminal of the active amplifier, and second passive links connected in series and passing through at least one switch of the output redundancy ring and connecting the output terminal of the active amplifier to the output terminal of the second port; and the input and output redundancy rings are topo-logically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations, is chosen so that the electrical lengths of all the paths of the same routing configuration of the family are equal. . According to particular embodiments, the distributed amplification device comprises one or more of the following characteristics: the input and output redundancy rings are topo-logically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations is chosen from so that the electric lengths of all the paths of the whole family are equal; when reconfiguring a first routing configuration of the family into a second routing configuration of the family, the differences in electrical lengths resulting from the reconfiguration of the input ring are compensated by the reconfiguration of the ring output redundancy for each modified distributed amplification path; the same technology is shared by the input and output redundancy rings (48, 50), and is included in the set formed by coaxial technology, waveguide technology; independently of all the paths of all the planned routing configurations of the reservoir, the rotary switches of the same amplification path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches crossed by the same path and the distribution digital switching configurations of rotary switches activated in this path; the family of routing configurations includes a nominal routing configuration that uses the first series of nominal amplifiers as active amplifiers, and one or more spare routing configurations that each use at least one of the backup amplifiers np among the p amplifiers selected assets in the set of n amplifiers; the family of routing configurations includes a nominal routing configuration that uses the first series of nominal amplifiers p as active amplifiers, and one or more backup routing configurations each using at least one of the np backup amplifiers among the p amplifiers selected assets in the set of n amplifiers; the backup routing configuration (s) being determined to maintain a maximum capacity of amplification of the tank in all cases of failures of at most p amplifiers among the set of n amplifiers when p is less than or equal to n, and d at most p + 1 amplifiers out of the set of n amplifiers when n is equal to 2p + 1. the first network of the interconnected switches of the input redundancy ring is arranged in a first matrix whose elements are the quadrupole input rotary switches and form first nodes arranged along at least two columns and n lines, the corresponding lines to the lines of the internal amplification channels, p first upstream end nodes of a first upstream end column being connected to the input terminals of the first port and p + r first downstream end nodes of a first column end-end, being respectively connected one by one to the input terminals of the p + r amplifiers; and the second network of interconnected switches of the output redundancy ring is arranged in a second matrix whose elements are the output rotary switches and form second nodes arranged in at least one column and n lines, the n lines corresponding to the lines of internal amplification channels with the same numbering, p second downstream end nominal nodes of a second downstream end column being connected to the output terminals of the second port and p + r second upstream end nodes of a second upstream end column being connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the amplifiers in a same rank i, when the second matrix comprises at least two second columns; or p second downstream and upstream end nodes of a single second end column connected downstream to the output terminals of the second port and connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the nominal amplifiers in the same rank i, and r second remaining upstream end nodes connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the amplifiers when the second matrix comprises a single second column; at least one switch among the switches of the first upstream end column and the second upstream end column is replaced by a link of the same electrical length; the first matrix has two or three columns and the second matrix has a single column; the distributed amplification tank comprises amplitude and phase adjustment means arranged upstream and / or downstream of each amplifier between the input and output redundancy rings, preferably upstream when the amplifiers are amplifiers of power and preferably downstream when the amplifiers are low noise amplifiers; and the amplitude and phase adjusting means are configured to balance all distributed internal amplification paths of the intended operating configurations of the reservoir in a wide frequency band; the amplitude and phase adjustment means of each internal distributed amplification path comprise an amplitude attenuator, a first phase-shifter and a second phase-shifter, the first phase-shifter being a phase shifter of the "electrical length" type included in the assembly formed by the "phase trimmers", and the second phase-shifter being a phase-shifter constant over the entire wide band of frequencies; and the amplitude attenuators, the first phase shifters and the second phase shifters are respectively configured to balance the gain of the amplifiers over the wide frequency band, to bring the phase variations as a function of frequency over a wide frequency band of all the paths. internal distributed amplification of the expected operating configurations of the tank, compensating for the dispersions of the constant phase offsets introduced by the active amplifiers of all internal distributed amplification paths of the expected operating configurations of the tank; the reservoir amplifiers are power amplifiers included in the assembly formed by the amplifiers using traveling wave tubes (TWTAs) and the solid state amplifiers (SSPAs), and the distributed amplification device is a multiport power amplifier further comprising an equi-distribution network of the input power at the input terminals of the input port; and an output power distribution network; the input power distribution network is a beam forming input network and the output power distribution network is an output forming network; the amplifiers of the distributed amplification tank are low noise solid state amplifiers and the receiving stage of an active receiving antenna; the amplification device described above further comprises means for combining frequency bands comprising n inputs for receiving n transmission channels and q outputs for respectively providing channels grouped together in q frequency bands in q band signals frequencies; and a set of dividers for power splitting the band signals on the p inputs of the input port of the amplification tank; and gain and phase control means corresponding to the p amplifiers on the q frequency bands; the means for adjusting the gain and the phase comprise p times q phase shifters and attenuators arranged within the set of dividers. The invention will be better understood on reading the description of several embodiments which will follow, given solely by way of example and with reference to the drawings in which: FIG. 1 is a view of an architecture a first embodiment of distributed amplification device according to the invention in a nominal routing configuration of an amplification tank; Figures 2A, 2B, 2C are views of possible configurations of a quadrupole rotary switch of a redundancy ring of the distributed amplification device of Figure 1; FIG. 3 is a view of a first backup routing configuration of the distributed amplification device of FIG. 1 corresponding to a single failure of the rank 2 amplifier; Figure 4 is a view of a second backup routing configuration of the distributed amplification device of Figure 1 corresponding to a single failure of the rank 9 amplifier; FIG. 5 is a view of a third backup routing configuration of the distributed amplification device of FIG. 1 corresponding to a single failure of the rank 6 amplifier; Figure 6 is a view of a fourth spare routing configuration of the distributed amplification device of Figure 1 corresponding to a dual failure, that of the rank 2 amplifier and that of the rank amplifier 9; Figure 7 is a view of a fifth spare routing configuration of the distributed amplification device of Figure 1 corresponding to a dual failure, that of the rank amplifier 6 and that of the rank amplifier 9; Figure 8 is a matrix representation of the input and output redundancy rings of the first distributed amplifier embodiment of the invention of Figure 1; 9 is a matrix representation of the input and output redundancy rings of a second embodiment of a distributed amplification device with 5 amplifiers with two inputs and two tank outputs with a redundancy of 3 backup amplifiers for two nominal amplifiers (p equal to 2 and r equal to 3); FIG. 10 is a matrix representation of the input and output redundancy rings of a third embodiment of a distributed amplification device with 7 amplifiers with three inputs and three tank outputs with a redundancy of four amplifiers of backup for three nominal amplifiers (p equal to 3 and r equal to 4); 11 is a matrix representation of the input and output redundancy rings of a fourth embodiment of a distributed amplification device with 4 amplifiers with three inputs and three tank outputs a redundancy of four backup amplifiers for three nominal amplifiers (p equal to 3 and r equal to 1) FIG. 12 is a view of a fifth embodiment of distributed amplification device according to the invention, derived from the first embodiment of FIGS. 1 to 8 ; FIG. 13 is a view of a sixth embodiment of a distributed amplification device according to the invention, derived from the first embodiment of FIGS. 1 to 8 with means for balancing or equalizing in gain and phase of distributed amplification paths; Fig. 14 is a view of the adjustment means of an internal distributed amplification channel of the fifth embodiment of Fig. 12; FIGS. 15A, 15B, 15C and 15D are views of the gain and phase dispersions of the distributed amplification paths of a conventional distributed amplifier device on eight active amplifiers (p = 8) with two backup amplifiers (np = 2) respectively corresponding to a first device case devoid of equalization of the electrical lengths of the routing paths and devoid of gain and phase adjustment means, a second device case without equalization of the electrical lengths of the routing paths and provided with gain and phase control means on a predetermined frequency, a third device case with equalization of the electrical lengths of the routing paths within the same configuration and provided with gain and phase adjustment means on a predetermined frequency, and a fourth device case with equalization of the electrical lengths of the routing paths of the same configuration and po urvu of gain control means and phase on a frequency band; FIG. 16 is a view of a seventh embodiment of a distributed amplification device according to the invention derived from the first embodiment of FIGS. 1 to 8 with means for grouping communication channels in frequency bands in FIG. upstream of the distributed amplification reservoir: FIG. 17 is a view of a telecommunication payload, reconfigurable in real time as a function of the traffic in the beams, which uses a distributed amplification device forming a multiport power amplifier (MPA) . According to FIG. 1 and a first embodiment, a distributed amplification device 2, intended for a communications payload of a satellite not shown in FIG. 1, comprises a distributed RF radiofrequency amplification reservoir 4 for amplifying a first plurality of a first integer number p of input radio frequency signals, received by a first input port 6 of input terminals 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22, which are identical to one another a phase close and out of phase with each other according to a predetermined phase law, in a second plurality of p amplified RF signals delivered by a second output port 26 of output terminals 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 . The distributed amplification reservoir 4 comprises an assembly 46 of a second integer number n of amplifiers connected between an input or upstream redundancy ring 48 and an output or downstream redundancy ring 50, the direction of the upstream downstream being the direction of travel of an amplified signal distributed from an input terminal of the input port to an output terminal through an amplifier. The second integer number n amplifiers is generally greater than or equal to 3, and here assumed by way of example equal to 10. The n amplifiers of the set 46, here ten in number, designated respectively by 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72 and 74, are arranged electrically in parallel and define respectively internal channels of amplification 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92 and 94 mutually electromagnetically isolated and respectively numbered by a line index i ranging from 1 to the second integer n from the top to the bottom of 1. The set 46 of the ten amplifiers 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72 and 74 is composed of a first series of p radio frequency amplifiers nominal, formed here by the eight amplifiers 58 , 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, and a second series of backup amplifiers, formed here by the two amplifiers 56, 74. The eight amplifiers 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72 of the first series are provided to operate in a nominal configuration of the tank. The two amplifiers 56, 74 of the second series are designed to operate in backup configurations of the tank 4 in case of failure of at most two amplifiers of all the amplifiers 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72 and 74, the internal amplification channels 76, 94 respectively associated with the two backup amplifiers 56, 74 interleaving interlocking internal amplification channels 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90 , 92, respectively associated with eight nominal amplifiers 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72. The input and output redundancy rings 48, 50 are respectively connected between the first input port 6 and a third input terminal port 96 of the set of amplifiers 46 and between a fourth port 97 of the input terminals. output of the set of amplifiers 46 and the second output port 26. The input redundancy ring 48 is formed by a first network 98 of quadruple rotating switches, here twenty rotary switches 102, 104, 106, 108 , 110, 112, 114, 116, 118, 120, 122, 124, 126, 128, 130, 132, 134, 136, 138, 140. The output redundancy ring 50 is formed by a second switch network 148. quadrupole turners, here ten rotary switches 152, 154, 156, 158, 160, 162, 164, 166, 168, 170. The input and output redundancy rings 48, 60 are respectively connected between the first input port 6 and the third input terminal port 96 of the set 46 of the ten amplifiers and between the fourth terminal port 97 output of the set 46 of the ten amplifiers and the second output port 26, for routing on the one hand the eight input signals supplied to the first port 6 on eight selected input terminals of the third port 96 which define a configuration routing of a family of routing configurations whose implementation is provided, and for routing on the other hand the eight amplified signals, delivered to the eight output terminals of the fourth port 97, associated with the eight selected input terminals of the third port 96, on the eight output terminals 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 of the second port 26 associated with the input terminals of the first port 6. Each planned routing configuration comprises a set of eight independent distributed amplification paths, each amplification path individually including an input terminal of the first port, the output terminal of the second port associated with the input terminal of the first, an active amplifier and its line number, first passive links connected in series and traversing at least three quadrupole rotating switches of the input redundancy ring and connecting the input terminal of the first port to the input terminal of the active amplifier, and second passive links connected in series and passing through at least one quadrupole switch of the output redundancy ring and connecting the output terminal of the active amplifier to the output terminal of the second port. The total number of quadrupole rotary switches traversed by each path is greater than or equal to 5. According to Figure 1, the distributed amplification reservoir 4 is configured in the nominal routing configuration, defined by p (p = 8) paths, here the eight paths 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 192, 194, 196 , 198, represented in dotted lines from top to bottom in FIG. The first path 182 starts from the input terminal 8 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 106, 102, 104, 108, the nominal amplifier 58, the output switch 154, and reaches the terminal of exit 28 of the second harbor. The second path 184 starts from the input terminal 10 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 110, 106, 108, 112, the nominal amplifier 60, the output switch 156, and reaches the terminal of exit 30 of the second port 26. The third path 186 starts from the input terminal 12 of the first port, then passes successively through the input switches 114, 110, 112, 116, the nominal amplifier 62, the output switch 158, and reaches the output terminal 32 of the second port 26. The fourth path 188 leaves from the input terminal 14 of the first port, then passes successively through the input switches 118, 114, 116, 120, the nominal amplifier 64, the output switch 160, and reaches the output terminal 34 of the second port. . The fifth path 190 starts from the input terminal 16 of the first port, then passes successively through the input switches 122, 126, 128, 124, the nominal amplifier 66, the output switch 162, and reaches the output terminal 36 of the second port . The sixth path 192 goes from the input terminal 18 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 126, 130, 132, 128, the nominal amplifier 68, the output switch 164, and reaches the terminal of exit 38 of the second port 26. The seventh path 194 leaves the input terminal 20 of the first port, then passes successively through the input switches 130, 134, 136, 132, the nominal amplifier 70, the output switch 166, and reaches the output terminal 40 of the second port 26. The eighth path 196 leaves the input terminal 22 of the first port, then passes successively through the input switches 134, 138, 140, 136, the nominal amplifier 72, the output switch 168, and reaches the output terminal 42 of the second port. It should be noted that when two different paths of the same configuration pass through the same quadrupole rotary switch, the two selected internal commutation paths of the rotary switch connect two pairs of different poles, are separated and electromagnetically isolated. The input and output redundancy rings share the same technology. The same technology shared by the input and output redundancy rings 48, 50 is included in the set formed by coaxial technology, waveguide technology. This avoids, for example, the problem of broadband equalization of the routing paths realized by the combination of a coaxial technology input ring and a guide output ring. Indeed, the electrical lengths in the guide having no equivalent electrical iso-longuxeur in coaxial technology in a continuous band of frequency (one can not equalize an electric length in guide with a coaxial electrical length at a single frequency) , the use of the same routing technology on both rings solves this problem. In power applications where the use of a guide exit ring is required, this will involve using the same waveguide technology for the input ring while the power requirements will incite the use of a lighter and less cumbersome technology. Thus, in the case where the amplifiers are traveling wave tubes (TWTs) and the output section is in the guide, the input redundancy ring also becomes a guide. In general, the input and output redundancy rings use technologies, possibly different, implementing similar propagation conditions. According to FIGS. 2A, 2B, 2C, three switching configurations of a generic quadrupole rotating switch 202, used during implementation by the redundancy rings 48, 50 of the intended routing configurations of the amplification tank, are illustrated. The generic quadrupole rotary switch 202, sometimes referred to in the literature as "T switch", comprises four fixed poles or connection terminals 204, 206, 208, 210, hereinafter referred to respectively as the first pole, the second pole, the third pole and the fourth pole. . According to a first switching configuration of the rotary switch 202 shown in FIG. 2A and following the sending of a first internal configuration command to the switch 202, the first pole 204 and the third pole 208 are interconnected by a first internal link passive conductive 212 while the second and fourth poles are electrically isolated within the switch being devoid of any connection to an internal conductive connection. According to a second switching configuration of the rotary switch 202 shown in FIG. 2B and following the sending of a second internal configuration command to the rotary switch 202, the first pole 204 and the fourth pole 210 are interconnected by a second link passive internal conductor 214 while the second and third poles are interconnected by a third conductive passive internal link 216. According to a third switching configuration of the rotary switch 202 shown in Fig. 2C and following the sending of a third internal configuration command to the rotary switch 202, the first pole 204 and the third pole 206 are interconnected by a fourth link passive internal conductor 218 while the third and fourth poles are interconnected by a fifth conductive passive internal link 220. This set of rotary switch configurations can be used for cold and / or hot redundancy schemes of the amplifiers. It should be noted that a variant of the first switching configuration of the rotary switch shown in FIG. 2A exists in the case of a cold redundancy diagram of the amplifiers in which the absence of connection between the second pole and the fourth pole is replaced by a separate electrical and electro-magnetically isolated connection of first electrical connection 212. The input and output redundancy rings are topo-logically and geometrically configured and the nominal configuration is chosen so that the electrical lengths of all paths in this nominal routing configuration are equal. The electrical length of a path is here defined as the difference of the accumulated phases at the input and at the output of a portion of transmission line, between the input terminal and the output terminal of the path, representative of the series of passive links between these two terminals, crossed by a radio signal at a predetermined frequency within the useful transmission band, for example at the central frequency. The effect of the active amplifier is not taken into account as an active component, assuming that all the amplifiers in the tank are identical or equalized in amplitude and phase. Independently of all the paths of the chosen nominal configuration, the rotary switches of the same path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches traversed by the same path and the numerical distribution of the switching configurations of the switches. turning turned on in this way. Indeed, for each path 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 92, 194, 196, the number of rotary switches is equal to 5 and the switching configurations of the switches are distributed at a rate of a first configuration, two second , two third rotary switch configurations. According to Figure 3, a first backup routing configuration 222 of the distributed amplification device 2 of Figure 1 overcomes a single failure of the rank 2 amplifier 58. The paths of the first backup routing configuration are identical to those of the nominal configuration 172 with the exception of the first nominal path 182 which is replaced by a first emergency path 224 specific to the first emergency configuration 222. The first backup path 224 leaves the input terminal 8 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 106, 102, 104, the standby amplifier 58, the output switches 152, 154 and reaches the terminal of exit 28 of the second port 26. The electrical lengths of all the paths of this first backup routing configuration 222 are equal to each other. They are even equal to the electrical length of the paths of the nominal configuration 172. Likewise, independently of all the paths of the first selected backup configuration 222, the rotary switches of the same path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches traversed in the same path, here five switches, and the numerical distribution of the switching configurations of the activated rotary switches in the path which remains here that of a first configuration (Figure 2A), two second (Figure 2B), two third configurations (Figures 2C) of a generic rotary switch 202. According to FIG. 4, a second backup routing configuration 232 of the distributed amplification device 2 of FIG. 1 overcomes a single failure of the rank 9 nominal amplifier 72. The paths of the second backup routing configuration 232 are identical to those of the nominal routing configuration 172 with the exception of the eighth nominal path 196 which is replaced by an eighth spare path 234 specific to the second emergency configuration 232. The eighth spare path 234 leaves the input terminal 22 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 134, 138, 140, the amplifier 74, the output switches 170, 168 and reaches the terminal of exit 42 of the second port 26. The electrical lengths of all the paths of this second emergency routing configuration 232 are equal to each other and even equal to the common electrical length of the paths of the nominal configuration 172. Likewise, independently of all the paths of the second backup configuration chosen 232, the rotary switches of the same path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches traversed in the same path, here five switches, and the numerical distribution of the switching configurations of the activated rotary switches in this path which remains here like the nominal routing configuration 172 of the tank 2 that of a first configuration, two second, two third configurations of a switch Generic turn 202. According to FIG. 5, a third backup routing configuration 242 of the distributed amplification device of FIG. 1 remedies a single failure of the nominal 66 rank 6 amplifier. The paths of the third backup routing configuration 242 are identical to those of the nominal routing configuration 172 with the exception of the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth nominal paths 190,192, 194, 196 which are replaced by the fifth, sixth, and fourth, respectively. , seventh, eighth emergency paths 244, 246, 248, 250 specific to the third emergency configuration 242. The fifth emergency path 244 leaves the input terminal 16 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 122, 126, 128, the nominal amplifier 68, the output switches 164, 162 and reaches the terminal output 36 of the second port 26. The sixth emergency path 246 leaves the input terminal 18 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 126, 130, 132, the nominal amplifier 70, the output switches 166, 164 and reaches the terminal 38 of the second port 26. The seventh escape route 248 leaves the input terminal 20 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 130, 134, 136, the nominal amplifier 72, the output switches 168, 166 and reaches the terminal 40 of the second port 26. The eighth spare path 248 leaves the input terminal 22 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 134, 138, 140, the backup amplifier 74, the output switches 170, 168 and reaches the terminal 42 of the second port 26. The electrical lengths of all the paths of this third routing configuration 242 are equal to each other and even equal to the common electrical length of the paths of the nominal configuration 172. Likewise, independently of all the paths of the third selected backup configuration 242, the rotary switches of the same path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches traversed in the same path, here five switches, and the numerical distribution of the switching configurations of the activated rotary switches in this path which remains here that of a first configuration, two second, two third configurations of a generic rotary switch 202. According to FIG. 6, a fourth backup routing configuration 252 of the distributed amplification device of FIG. 1 remedies a double fault, that of the nominal amplifier 58 of rank 2 and that of nominal amplifier 72 of rank 9 . The paths of the fourth backup routing configuration 252 are identical to those of the nominal routing configuration 172 with the exception of the first and eighth nominal paths 182, 196 which are replaced by the first and eighth spare paths 254 and 256, respectively. , suitable for the fourth emergency configuration 252. The first emergency path 254 leaves the input terminal 8 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 106, 102, 104, the backup amplifier 56, the output switches 152, 154 and reaches the output terminal 28 of the second port 26. The eighth emergency path 256 starts from the input terminal 22 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 134, 138, 140, the backup amplifier 74, the output switches 170, 168 and reaches the output terminal 42 of the second port 26. The electrical lengths of all the paths of this fourth emergency routing configuration 252 are equal to each other and even equal to the common electrical length of the paths of the nominal configuration 172. Likewise, regardless of all the paths of the fifth selected backup routing configuration 252, the rotary switches of the same path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches traversed in the same path, here five switches, and the digital distribution of the switching configurations of the activated rotary switches in this path which remains here that of a first configuration, two second, two third configurations of a generic rotary switch 202. According to FIG. 7, a fifth emergency routing configuration 262 of the distributed amplification device of FIG. 1 remedies a double failure, that of the nominal amplifier 66 of rank 6 and that of the nominal amplifier 72 of rank 9 . The paths of the fifth backup routing configuration 262 are identical to those of the nominal routing configuration 172 with the exception of the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, and eighth nominal paths 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 196 which are replaced respectively by the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and eighth emergency paths 264, 266, 268, 270, 272 and 274 specific to the fifth emergency configuration 262. The first emergency path 264 starts from the input terminal 8 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 106, 102, 104, the backup amplifier 56, the output switches 152, 154 and reaches the output terminal 28 of the second port 26. The second emergency path 266 leaves the input terminal 10 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 110, 106, 108, the amplifier 58, the output switches 154, 156 and reaches the terminal of exit 30 of the second port 26. The third emergency path 268 starts from the input terminal 12 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 114, 110, 112, the nominal amplifier 60, the output switches 156, 158 and reaches the terminal 32 of the second port 26. The fourth emergency path 270 starts from the input terminal 14 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 118, 114, 116, the nominal amplifier 62, the output switches 158, 160 and reaches the terminal 34 of the second port 26. The fifth emergency path 272 leaves the input terminal 16 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 122, 118, 120, the nominal amplifier 64, the output switches 160, 162 and reaches the terminal output 36 of the second port 26. The eighth spare path 274 leaves the input terminal 22 of the first port 6, then passes successively through the input switches 134, 138, 140, the backup amplifier 74, the output switches 170, 168 and reaches the output terminal 42 of the second port 26. The electrical lengths of all the paths of this fifth emergency routing configuration 262 are equal to each other and are equal to the common electrical length of the paths of the nominal configuration 192. According to the architecture of the distributed amplification reservoir common to that described in FIGS. 1 to 7, there is thus, in the case of one or two failures of any amplifiers taken among the ten amplifiers of the tank 2, a routing, implemented implemented by the redundancy rings, which allows an amplification distributed over eight active amplifiers, and for which the electrical lengths of the amplification paths are equal. This architecture even allows to have a routing family to use the tank at full power with at most two failures on one or two amplifiers of any tank and the preservation of the same length of amplification paths independent configurations routing the family of selected routing configurations. The input and output redundancy rings 48, 50, used in the first embodiment of the distributed amplification device 2, are configured to compensate in a complementary manner for the electrical length variations of the modified active amplification paths at the same time. a tank routing reconfiguration by covering a set of selected routing configurations, partially described in Figures 1 to 7, which ensure that all nominal and redundant paths have equal electrical lengths regardless of the frequency within a range. same configuration or all the chosen routing configurations. In general, a distributed amplification device for a satellite communications payload comprises a distributed amplification tank for amplifying a first plurality of a first integer p greater than or equal to 2 of radio signals. RF input to be amplified, received by a first input terminal input port, identical to each other at one phase and out of phase with each other according to a predetermined phase law, in a second plurality of p amplified RF signals provided by a second output terminal output port, respectively associated with the input terminals of the first port in the same order. The distributed amplification reservoir further comprises: an assembly of a second integer n, greater than p and less than or equal to 2p + 1, of amplifiers arranged electrically in parallel and respectively defining internal amplification channels, mutually electromagnetically isolated and respectively numbered by a line index ranging from 1 to the second integer n, the set of n amplifiers being composed of a first series of p radiofrequency amplifiers nominal and a second series of np backup amplifiers , and an input redundancy ring, formed by a first quadrupole rotating switch array, and an output redundancy ring, formed by a second quadrupole rotating switch array, the input and output redundancy rings being connected respectively between the first input port and a third input terminal port of the set of n amplifiers and between a fourth output terminal port of all n amplifiers and the second output port, for routing on the one hand the p input signals supplied to the first port on p input terminals selected from the third port which define a routing configuration from a family of routing configurations whose implementation is provided, and to route further the p amplified signals, delivered to the p output terminals of the fourth port associated with the p terminals selected input of the third port on the p output terminals of the port of the second port associated with the input terminals of the first port. The input and output redundancy rings share the same technology. The internal amplification channels associated with the n-p backup amplifiers internally surround the amplification internal channels associated with the nominal amplifiers. Each planned routing configuration comprises a set of p independent distributed amplification paths, each amplification path including individually an input terminal of the first port, the output terminal of the second port associated with the input terminal of the first, an active amplifier and its line number, first passive links connected in series and traversing at least three rotary switches of the input redundancy ring and connecting the input terminal of the first port to the input terminal of the input active amplifier, and second passive links connected in series and passing through at least one switch of the output redundancy ring and connecting the output terminal of the active amplifier to the output terminal of the second port. Each amplification path traverses a total number of rotary switches greater than or equal to five. The input and output redundancy rings are topo-logically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations is chosen so that the electrical lengths of all the paths of the same routing configuration of the family are equal. In particular, the input and output redundancy rings are topo-logically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations is chosen so that the electrical lengths of all the paths of the entire family are equal. According to Figure 8, a matrix representation 302 of the input and output redundancy rings 48, 50 of the first distributed amplifier embodiment of the invention of Figure 1 is illustrated. The first network of interconnected switches of the input redundancy ring 48 is arranged in a first matrix 304 whose elements are the quadrupole input rotary switches and form first nodes 306, 308, arranged here according to two columns 310, 312 and ten lines, the ten lines corresponding to the lines of the internal amplification channels 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92, 94 of Figure 1. Eight first upstream end nominal nodes, taken among the first nodes 306 of the first column 310 forming a first upstream end column, are connected to the input terminals 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 of the first port 6 and numbered according to a line index ranging from 2 to 9. The first ten nodes 308 of the second column 312 forming a first downstream end column, taken as first downstream end nodes, are respectively connected one by one to the input terminals of the ten amplifiers and are numbered according to the index of line it varies from 1 to 10. The second network of interconnected switches of the output redundancy ring 50 is arranged in a second matrix 314 whose elements are the quadrupole output rotary switches and form second nodes 318, arranged in a single output column 320 with ten lines. , the ten lines corresponding to the lines of the internal amplification channels with the same numbering according to the line index varying from 1 to 10. Eight second downstream end nominal nodes, taken from the second nodes 318 of the output column 320 forming a second downstream end column, are connected downstream to the output terminals 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 of the second port 50 and are numbered by the index of lines ranging from 2 to 9. The ten second nodes 318 of the output column 320, forming an upstream end column, are connected upstream to the output terminals of the amplifiers. This representation may be generalized, for example according to FIGS. 9 and 10, to distributed amplification devices having different values of n and p and whose number of columns of the input redundancy ring is greater than or equal to 3 and / or the number of columns of the output redundancy ring is greater than or equal to 2. In general, the first network of the interconnected switches of the input redundancy ring is arranged in a first matrix whose elements are the quadrupole input rotary switches and form first nodes arranged along at least two columns and n lines. , the lines corresponding to the lines of the internal amplification channels. p first upstream end nodes of a first upstream end column are connected to the input terminals of the first port, and n first downstream end nodes of a first downstream end column are respectively connected one to one at the input terminals of the n amplifiers. The second network of interconnected switches of the output redundancy ring is arranged in a second matrix whose elements are the output rotary switches and form second nodes arranged along at least one column and n lines, the n lines corresponding to the lines. internal amplification channels with the same numbering, When the second matrix comprises at least two second columns, the second downstream end nominal nodes of a second downstream end column are connected to the output terminals of the second port and n are second upstream end nodes of a second column. upstream end terminals are respectively connected upstream to the output terminals of the amplifiers according to the same rank of line i. When the second matrix comprises a single second column, p second downstream and upstream end nodes of a single second end column connected downstream to the output terminals of the second port and connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the nominal amplifiers in the same rank i, and r second upstream end-upstream second nodes respectively connected to the output terminals of the amplifiers. Different configurations of redundancy rings can be proposed and represented according to the matrix representation above according to the redundancy scheme that is desired for the device, for example the 11: 8 schemas; 12: 8; and 6: 4. 9, a matrix representation 332 of the input and output redundancy rings 334, 336 of a second embodiment of a distributed amplification device 338 of 5: 2 redundancy is illustrated. The distributed amplification device 338 includes a distributed amplification tank 340 comprising a set of five amplifiers 342 including three emergency amplifiers, two first-port input terminals 344, 346 and two second-port output terminals 348, 350 . A first matrix 352 for representing the input redundancy ring 334 is a matrix of first five-line nodes 354, identified by a line index 11 ranging from 1 to 5 from top to bottom in FIG. 9, and three columns, identified by a column index j1 ranging from 1 to 3. The first upstream end nodes of the second (i1 = 2) and fourth (i1 = 4) lines are respectively connected to a single and different input terminal 344, 346. The first downstream end nodes of the second (i1 = 2) and fourth (i1 = 4) lines are respectively connected to the input terminal of a single and different nominal amplifier. A second matrix 362 for representing the output redundancy ring is a matrix of second five-line nodes 364, identified by a line index i2 ranging from 1 to 5 from top to bottom in FIG. 9, and a single column , identified by a column index j2 equal to 1. The second end nodes of the second (i2 = 2) and fourth (i2 = 4) lines are respectively connected downstream to a single and different output terminal 348, 350. The second end nodes of the second (i2 = 2) ) and fourth (i2 = 4) lines are respectively connected to the output terminal of the nominal amplifier having the same line index. The architecture proposed in the second embodiment 338 makes it possible to have balanced routing configurations over the entire frequency band and on all the paths in all possible failure scenarios ranging from a single failure to a triple failure. According to Figure 10, a matrix representation 382 of the input and output redundancy rings 384, 386 of a third embodiment of a distributed redundancy amplifier device 388 7: 3 is illustrated. The distributed amplification device 388 includes the distributed amplification tank 390 which comprises a set of seven amplifiers 392 including four emergency amplifiers (.R.), Three input terminals 394, 396, 398 of the first port and three terminals. output port 400, 402, 404. A first matrix 412 representing the input redundancy ring is a matrix of first seven-line nodes 414, identified by a line index i1 ranging from 1 to 7 from top to bottom in FIG. 10, and three columns. , identified by a column index j1 ranging from 1 to 3. The first upstream end nodes of the second (i1 = 2), fourth (il = 4), and sixth (il = 6) lines are respectively connected to a single and different input terminal 394, 396, 398. The first Downstream end nodes of the second (i1 = 2), fourth (il = 4), sixth (il = 6) lines are respectively connected to the input terminal of a single and different nominal amplifier (N). A second matrix 422 for representing the output redundancy ring 386 is a matrix of second seven-line nodes 424, identified by a line index i2 varying from 1 to 7 from top to bottom in FIG. 10, and two columns, identified by a column index j2 varying from 1 to 2 from left to right in Figure 10. The second downstream end nodes of the second downstream end column (second column of the rightmost output redundancy ring in Figure 10) of the second (i2 = 2), fourth (i2 = 4), sixth (ii2 = 6) lines are respectively connected downstream to a single and different output terminal 400, 402, 404. The second end nodes of the second (i2 = 2), fourth (i2 = 4), sixth (i2 = 6) lines of the second upstream end column (first column of the leftmost output redundancy ring in Figure 10) are respectively connected to the output terminal of the nominal amplifier having the same index of line. The architecture proposed in the third embodiment 388 makes it possible to have balanced routing configurations over the entire frequency band and over all the paths in all possible failure scenarios ranging from a single failure to a quadruple failure. It should be noted that even if the invention can be applied to any number of amplifiers forming the reservoir and to any redundancy ratio (n / (np)), an increase in the number np too strong leads certainly to correct a many failures but with a number of switches increasingly high, and a complexity, a mass or even prohibitive radio losses. When n is equal to 2p + 1, the inflation of the number of columns of the redundancy rings takes place as shown in Figures 9 and 10. On the other hand, when n is less than or equal to 2p, the inflation of the number of columns ceases and it will be preferable for reservoir architectures using two or three columns for the input redundancy ring and a single column for the output ring . According to Figure 11, a matrix representation 432 of the input and output redundancy rings 434, 436 of a fourth embodiment of a 4: 3 distributed redundancy amplifying device 438 is illustrated. The distributed amplification device 438 includes the distributed amplification tank 440 which comprises a set of four amplifiers 442 including an emergency amplifier (R), three input terminals 444, 445, 446 of the first port and three output terminals 447, 448, 449 second port. A first matrix 450 of representation of the input redundancy ring is a uni-column matrix of first four-line nodes, identified by a line index II ranging from 1 to 4 from top to bottom in FIG. 11. The first nodes of the first (i1 = 1), second (i1 = 2), third (i1 = 3) lines are respectively connected upstream to a single and different first port input terminal, the first node of the fourth line. (il = 4) not directly connected to any input terminal of the first port. The first nodes of the first (i1 = 1), second (i1 = 2), third (i1 = 3) lines are respectively connected downstream to the input terminal of a single and different nominal amplifier (N). A second representation matrix 451 of the output redundancy ring is a uni-column matrix of second four-line nodes, identified by a line index i2 varying from 1 to 4 from top to bottom in FIG. 11. The second nodes of the second (i2 = 2), third (i2 = 3), fourth (i2 = 4) lines are respectively connected downstream to an output terminal of the second port, the second node of the first line (i2 = 1 ) not connected directly to any output terminal of the second port. The second nodes of the second (i2 = 2), third (i2 = 3) lines are respectively connected to the output terminal of the nominal amplifier having the same line index while the second node of the fourth (i2 = 4) line is connected to the output of the booster amplifier. This configuration can be generalized to any number of amplifiers p to provide a distributed redundancy amplification device p + 1: p. According to Figure 12, a fifth embodiment of a distributed amplification device 452 is derived from the distributed amplification device 2 of Figures 1, 2 to 7 and differs in that the four "corner" switches 102, 152, 138, 140 are replaced by passive electrical connections 454, 456, 458, 460 respectively having the same electrical length as that of the corresponding switch. Thus, the passive link 454 and the passive link 458 respectively have the electrical length of the link interconnecting the fourth pole and the third pole and the electrical length of the link interconnecting the first pole and the second pole of a generic quadrupole rotary switch 202 when in the third switching configuration depicted in Figure 2C. As regards passive link 456 and passive link 460, they respectively have the electrical length of the link interconnecting the first pole and the fourth pole and the electrical length of the link interconnecting the second and third pole of a quadrupole rotary switch. generic 202 when in the second switching configuration depicted in Figure 2B. In general, at least one of the switches of the first upstream end of the input redundancy ring and the switches of the second upstream end of the output redundancy ring are replaced by a connection of the same electrical length. According to Figure 13, a sixth embodiment of a distributed amplification device 502 is derived from the distributed amplification device 2 of Figures 1, 2 to 7 and differs from it by the distributed amplification reservoir 504. The distributed amplification tank 504 has the same structure as that of the distributed amplification tank 4 of FIG. 1 and differs by the addition of amplitude and phase adjustment means 512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522 , 524, 526, 528, 530 over a wide band, respectively arranged upstream of the power amplifiers 56, 58, 60 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, I74 and downstream of the redundancy ring of input 48 on the internal amplification channels 76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92 and 94. In general, amplitude and phase adjustment means are arranged upstream and / or downstream of each amplifier between the input and output redundancy rings, preferably upstream when the amplifiers are power amplifiers and preferably downstream when the amplifiers are low noise amplifiers. In accordance with Figure 13, the amplitude and phase control means 512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522, 524, 526, 528, 530 are configured to balance all internal distributed amplification paths of the expected operating configurations of the reservoir in a broad band of frequencies by including the disparities of propagation on all the band of the amplifiers which are not here a priori balanced between them. According to FIGS. 13 and 14, the amplitude and phase adjustment means of each distributed internal amplification path, for example the amplitude and phase adjustment means 512, generically comprise an amplitude attenuator 542, a first phase-shifter 552 and a second phase shifter 562, each of these three elements being separately adjustable. The first phase shifter 552 is a phase shifter of the "electrical length" type included in the assembly formed by the "phase trimmers" for which the phase shift varies as a function of frequency. These are generally mechanical phase shifters that are widely used in coaxial or waveguide technologies. The second phase shifter 562 is a "constant" phase shifter with constant phase shift over the entire wide band of frequencies included in the diodes for low power uses and ferrites for high power uses. The settings of the first phase shifter 552 and / or the second phase shifter 562 can be fixed once and for all or reconfigurable by remote control. According to FIG. 14 and in general, the amplitude attenuators 542, the first phase shifters 552 and the second phase shifters 562 of the amplitude and phase adjustment means 512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522, 524, 526, 528 , 530 are respectively configured through their settings to balance the gain of the amplifiers over the wide frequency band, to approximate the phase variations as a function of the frequency over a wide frequency band of all the internal distributed amplification paths, the amplifiers including, anticipated operating configurations of the reservoir, and compensating for dispersions of constant phase offsets introduced by the active amplifiers into all distributed internal amplification paths of the intended operating configurations of the reservoir. It should be noted that the combination of a first phase shifter and a second phase shifter on each of the internal channels is necessary to balance the internal channels in wide frequency bands. According to FIG. 15A, the gain and phase dispersions of the distributed amplification paths of a conventional distributed amplification device over eight active amplifiers, i.e. p equal to 8, with two backup amplifiers, that is to say np equal 2. The conventional distributed amplification device uses a conventional architecture of redundancy rings input and output, that is to say devoid of compensation in terms of electrical length between the input ring and the ring of output on the amplification paths of a configuration of the routing within the tank and devoid of gain control means and phase on a predetermined frequency. The maximum acceptable dispersion in gain and / or phase in the band between the paths used at each frequency is fixed and designated by ÜAmax, and the maximum useful frequency transmission band for which the gain and / or phase dispersion for each frequency in the band is less than or equal to Da is denoted Bu1. It appears that the maximum useful transmission band Bu1 corresponding to a conventional architecture of redundant device without compensation within complementary rings and adjustment means at a predetermined frequency is smaller narrow than the broadband Bt that is desired get. According to Figure 15B, the broadband wideband gain and phase dispersions of the distributed amplification paths of a conventional distributed amplification device are illustrated as a function of the broadband Bt frequency in which the amplification responses of the Amplification paths were equalized only using gain and phase adjustment means on a predetermined frequency. The maximum acceptable dispersion in gain and / or phase between the paths used at each frequency is set to the same value D / vmax as that of Figure 15A and the maximum useful frequency transmission band for which the dispersion in gain and / or phase is less than or equal to DAmax is denoted Bu2. Despite an enlargement of the band Bu2 with respect to the band Bu1 because of the use of gain and phase control means on a predetermined frequency, the band Bu2 is nevertheless narrower than the broadband Bt that the band we want to get. According to FIG. 15C are illustrated as a function of the frequency over a broad band Bt set the dispersions in gain and / or phase over a wide band of distributed amplification paths of a distributed amplification device according to the invention of FIG. 1 in which there is a compensation in terms of electrical length between the input ring and the output ring on the modified amplification paths within each configuration of the routing within the reservoir, and there are means of gain control and broadband phase for each amplification path. The acceptable dispersion in gain and / or phase between the paths used at each frequency is set at the same value DAmax as that of Figure 15A and the maximum useful frequency transmission band for which the dispersion in gain and / or phase is lower. or equal to DAmax is denoted Bu3. It appears that the band Bu3 is as wide as the broadband Bt and that the first embodiment of the distributed amplification device is compatible with broadband operation as desired. According to FIG. 15D, the amplitude and wide-band dispersions over the whole band of the distributed amplification paths of a distributed amplification device according to the fourth embodiment are illustrated as a function of the frequency over a wide band greater than the broadband Bt. embodiment of FIG. 12 in which, in addition to the internal compensation of the input and output redundancy rings, an additional equalization of the routing path amplification responses is performed by means of gain and phase adjustment means over a frequency band . The acceptable gain and / or phase dispersion between the paths used at each frequency in the band is set to the same DAmax value as that of Figure 15A and the maximum useful frequency transmission band for which the dispersion in gain and / or phase is less than or equal to DAmax is noted Bu4. It appears that the band Bu4 is wider than broadband Bu3 and that the fourth embodiment of the distributed amplification device is compatible with broadband operation as desired, and even improves that obtained with the first embodiment. . Thus, the architectures of the various embodiments of the invention illustrated in FIGS. 1, 3 to 13 allow compatible operation of a wide band used. In particular, the various embodiments will make it possible to cover the entire Ku band, that is to say a wide band of 2 GHz with a center frequency substantially equal to 11.7 GHz, and to offer total flexibility of the frequency plan allocated to covers using distributed amplification. According to Figure 16 and a seventh embodiment of a distributed amplification device 602 according to the invention derived from the first embodiment 2 of Figures 1 to 7 and the distributed amplification device with combination of signals on four bands of frequency, described in the patent application WO 2008/017699 A1, the distributed amplification device 602 comprises the distributed amplification reservoir 4 of FIG. 1 and means for grouping communication channels 604 in frequency bands, said grouping means 604 being arranged upstream of the distributed amplification tank 4. The frequency band combining means comprises s inputs 606 for receiving s communication channels and q outputs 608 for respectively providing channels grouped within q frequency bands at q frequency band signals. Here, q is for example equal to four and the communication channels are grouped together in four adjacent frequency bands, designated B1, B2, B3, B4 and forming a wide band of frequencies juxtaposed in four band signals. of frequencies. The distributed amplification device 602 also comprises a set of dividers 612 for power splitting the q band signals (q = 4) on the p inputs (p = 8) of the input port 6 of the distributed amplification tank 4 , and gain and phase adjusting means 614 corresponding to the p (p = 8) amplifiers on the q (q = 4) frequency bands, and summing means 616 over a wide band of p * q signals, divided in bands and powers, in split-power broadband signals. The gain and phase control means 614 comprise p times q phase shifters and attenuators arranged within the set of dividers are here broadband type of adjustment means as those described in Figure 14. In a variant, the gain and phase adjustment means are adjustment means on a single frequency per frequency band. According to Figure 17, a telecommunication payload 702, reconfigurable in real time as a function of the traffic in the beams, uses a distributed amplification device 712 forming a multiport power amplifier (MPA). The distributed amplification device 712 forming MPA comprises the distributed amplification tank 504, described in FIG. 12, with the additional feature that the amplifiers of the tank 504 are power amplifiers included in the assembly formed by the amplifiers using the amplifiers. traveling wave tubes (TWTAs) and solid state amplifiers (SSPAs). The distributed amplification device 712 forming MPA further comprises a division network 714 of the input power of the signals supplied by a set of spots or reception beams on the input terminals 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 of the input port 6, and a combination network 716 of the output powers also distributed on the signals delivered at the output terminals 28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 of the port output 26 of the tank 504 into input power signals distributed over a set of transmit spots according to the traffic demand. In one variant, the amplifiers of the distributed amplification tank are low-noise solid state amplifiers and the distributed amplification device forms the reception stage of an active receiving antenna. In general, the amplifiers of a reservoir as described above in FIGS. 1 to 13 are power amplifiers included in the assembly formed by amplifiers using traveling wave tubes (TWTAs) and state amplifiers. solid (SSPAs). In particular, at least one tank amplifier may be an assembly of at least two parallel associated traveling wave tubes (TWTAs) or at least two parallel associated solid state amplifiers (SSPAs).
权利要求:
Claims (5) [1] CLAIMS .1 Distributed amplification device for a satellite communications payload comprising a distributed amplification tank (4; 504) for amplifying a first plurality of a first integer p greater than or equal to 2 of input radio signals (RF) to be amplified, received by a first input port (6) of input terminals (8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22), which are identical to one another a phase close to and out of phase with each other according to a predetermined phase law, into a second plurality of p amplified RF signals provided by a second output terminal output port (26) (28, 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42), respectively associated with the input terminals (8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22) of the first port (6) in the same order, the distributed amplification tank (4; ) having a set of a second integer n, greater than p and less than or equal to 2p + 1, of amplifiers (56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72, 74) arranged electrically in parallel and respectively defining internal amplification channels (76, 78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90 , 92, 94), mutually electromagnetically isolated and respectively numbered by a line index ranging from 1 to the second integer n, the set of n amplifiers (56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70 , 72, 74) being composed of a first series of p radio frequency amplifiers nominal (58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72) and a second series of np backup amplifiers (56, 74) an input redundancy ring (48) formed by a first array (98) of four-pole rotary switches (102, 104, 106, 108, 110, 112, 114, 116, 118, 120, 122, 124, 126 , 128, 130, 132, 134, 136, 138, 140), and an output redundancy ring (50) formed by a second network (148) of four-pole rotary switches (152, 154, 156, 158, 160, 162, 164, 166, 168, 170), has them input and output redundancy beams (48, 50) being respectively connected between the first input port (6) and a third input terminal port (96) of the set (46) of the n amplifiers and between a fourth output terminal port (97) of the set of n amplifiers and the second output port (26) for routing according to a routing configuration among a family of routing configurations (172, 222, 232, 242 , 252, 262) whose implementation is provided on the one hand the p input signals supplied to the first port on p selected input terminals of the third port, and on the other hand the p amplified signals, delivered to the p output terminals of the fourth port associated with the selected p input terminals of the third port on the p output terminals of the port of the second port associated with the input terminals of the first port; the distributed amplification device (4) being characterized in that: the input and output redundancy rings (48, 50) use similar propagation conditions; and the internal amplification channels (76, 94) associated with the np backup amplifiers interleave the internal amplification channels (78, 80, 82, 84, 86, 88, 90, 92) associated with the p nominal amplifiers. ; and each expected routing pattern (172, 222, 232, 242, 252, 262) comprises a set of p independent distributed amplification paths, each amplification path including individually an input terminal of the first port, the terminal of output of the second port associated with the input terminal of the first, an active amplifier and its line number, first passive links connected in series and traversing at least three rotary switches of the input redundancy ring (48) and connecting the input terminal of the first port to the input terminal of the active amplifier, and second passive links connected in series and traversing at least one switch of the output redundancy ring (50) and connecting the terminal outputting the active amplifier to the output terminal of the second port; and the input and output redundancy rings (48, 50) are topo-logically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations (172, 222, 232, 242, 252, 262) is chosen such that the lengths all paths of the same routing configuration of the family are equal. .2 distributed amplification device according to claim 1, wherein the input and output redundancy rings (48, 50) are topologically and geometrically configured and the family of routing configurations (172, 222, 232, 242, 252, 262) is chosen so that the electrical lengths of all the paths of the whole family are equal. .3 distributed amplification device according to claim 1, wherein, during a reconfiguration of a first routing configuration of the family (172) into a second routing configuration of the family (222, 232, 242, 252, 262), the differences in electrical lengths from the reconfiguration of the input ring (48) are compensated by reconfiguring the output redundancy ring (50) for each distributed amplification path amended. .4 distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the same technology is shared by the input and output redundancy rings (48, 50), and is included in the formed set. by coaxial technology, waveguide technology. The distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein independently of all the paths of all the intended routing configurations of the tank (4), the rotary switches of the same amplification path are traversed globally in the same way in terms of the number of rotary switches traversed in the same path and the numerical distribution of the switching configurations of the rotary switches activated in this path. A distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 5, wherein the family of routing configurations comprises a nominal routing configuration (172) that uses the first series of nominal amplifiers as active amplifiers, and one or more backup routing configurations (222, 232, 242, 252, 262), each of which uses at least one of the np backup amplifiers (56, 74) among the active p amplifiers selected from the set of n amplifiers ( 56, 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 72). A distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the family of routing configurations comprises a nominal routing configuration which uses the first series of nominal amplifiers as active amplifiers, and one or more backup routing configurations that each use at least one of the n backup amplifiers among the p active amplifiers selected from the set of n amplifiers; the one or more emergency routing configurations being determined to maintain a maximum capacity of amplification of the tank in all cases of failures of at most p amplifiers among the set of n amplifiers when p is less than or equal to n, and d at most p + 1 amplifiers out of the set of n amplifiers when n is equal to 2p + 1. A distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein the first network (98) of the interconnected switches of the input redundancy ring (48) is arranged in a first array (304). whose elements are the input quadrupole rotary switches and form first nodes (306, 308) arranged along at least two columns and n lines, the lines corresponding to the lines of the internal amplification channels, p first upstream end nodes a first upstream end column being connected to the input terminals of the first port and p + r first downstream end nodes of a first downstream end column, respectively being connected one by one to the input terminals p + r amplifiers; and the second network (148) of the interconnected switches of the output redundancy ring is arranged in a second matrix (314) whose elements are the output rotary switches and form second nodes (318) arranged in at least one column and n lines, the n lines corresponding to the lines of the internal amplification channels with the same numbering, p second nominal downstream end nodes of a second downstream end column being connected to the output terminals of the second port and p + r second upstream end nodes of a second upstream end column, being connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the amplifiers in a same rank i, when the second matrix comprises at least two second columns; or p second downstream and upstream end nodes of a single second end column connected downstream to the output terminals of the second port and connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the nominal amplifiers in the same rank i, and r second remaining upstream end nodes connected upstream respectively to the output terminals of the amplifiers when the second matrix comprises a single second column. [9] An amplification device according to claim 8, wherein at least one switch (102, 152, 170, 138) among the switches of the first upstream end column and the second upstream end column is replaced by a link (454, 456, 458, 460) of the same electrical length. Amplification device according to any one of claims 8 to 9 wherein the first matrix (304) comprises two or three columns and the second matrix (314) comprises a single column. Amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 10 wherein the distributed amplification tank (504) comprises amplitude and phase adjustment means (512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522, 524 , 526, 528, 530), arranged upstream and / or downstream of each amplifier between the input and output redundancy rings, preferably upstream when the amplifiers are power amplifiers and preferably downstream when the amplifiers are amplifiers are low noise amplifiers; and the amplitude and phase adjustment means (512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522, 524, 526, 528, 530) are configured to balance all distributed internal amplification paths of the intended reservoir operating configurations in a wide band of frequencies. An amplification apparatus according to claim 11 wherein the amplitude and phase control means (512, 514, 516, 518, 520, 522, 524, 526, 528, 530) of each internal distributed amplification path comprise an amplitude attenuator (542), a first phase shifter (552) and a second phase shifter (562), the first phase shifter (552) being a phase shifter of the "electrical length" type included in the assembly formed by the "trimmers phase" , and the second phase-shifter (562) being a phase-shifter constant over the entire wide band of frequencies; and the amplitude attenuators, the first phase shifters and the second phase shifters (542, 552, 562) are respectively configured to balance the gains of the amplifiers over the wide frequency band, to bring phase variations as a function of frequency over a wide range of times. frequency band of all internal distributed amplification paths of the expected operating configurations of the tank, compensating the dispersions of constant phase offsets introduced by the active amplifiers of all the distributed amplification internal paths of the expected operating configurations of the tank. [13] The distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 12, wherein the amplifiers of the reservoir (504) are power amplifiers included in the assembly formed by the amplifiers using traveling wave tubes (TWTAs). and the solid state amplifiers (SSPAs), and the distributed amplification device is a multiport power amplifier further comprising an input power distribution network (714) on the input terminals the input port (6; and .- an output power distribution network (716). [14] The distributed amplification device according to claim 13, wherein the input power distribution network (714) is a beamforming input network and the output power distribution network (716) is a network. exit training. [15] 15. Distributed amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 12 wherein the amplifiers of the distributed amplification tank are low noise solid state amplifiers and the receiving stage of an active receiving antenna. An amplification device according to any one of claims 1 to 10, further comprising: frequency band combining means (604) having n inputs for receiving n transmission channels and q outputs for respectively providing channels grouped within q frequency bands in q frequency band signals; a set of dividers (612) for power splitting the q band signals on the p inputs of the input port of the amplification tank; and gain and phase adjusting means (614) corresponding to the p amplifiers on the frequency bands. Amplification device according to claim 15, wherein the gain and phase control means (614) comprise p times q phase shifters and attenuators arranged within the set of dividers.
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日 US10027296B2|2018-07-17| ES2848354T3|2021-08-06| EP3154192A1|2017-04-12| CA2944754A1|2017-04-09| FR3042358B1|2018-08-10| EP3154192B1|2020-11-25| US20170104463A1|2017-04-13|
引用文献:
公开号 | 申请日 | 公开日 | 申请人 | 专利标题 US4644301A|1985-10-31|1987-02-17|Rca Corporation|Redundancy system and switching network| US20090243719A1|2006-08-10|2009-10-01|Thales|Broadband Amplifying Device| EP2763314A1|2011-09-30|2014-08-06|NEC TOSHIBA Space Systems, Ltd.|Redundant amplifier and switching method thereof| US4198611A|1977-08-01|1980-04-15|Rca Corporation|Redundancy system with eight devices for five channels| JPH0244409B2|1984-09-25|1990-10-03|Nippon Telegraph & Telephone| US5610556A|1995-10-31|1997-03-11|Space Systems/Loral, Inc.|Multi-port amplifiers with switchless redundancy| US7088173B1|2004-05-07|2006-08-08|Lockheed Martin Corporation|Adjustable multiport power/phase method and system with minimum phase error| FR2951885B1|2009-10-27|2011-11-25|Thales Sa|MULTI-PORTION AMPLIFICATION DEVICE COMPENSATED IN THE PRESENCE OF TRAFFIC| US8570103B2|2011-06-16|2013-10-29|Donald C. D. Chang|Flexible multi-channel amplifiers via wavefront muxing techniques|US10109441B1|2015-07-14|2018-10-23|Space Systems/Loral, Llc|Non-blockings switch matrix| US10382320B2|2016-10-07|2019-08-13|The Boeing Company|Cascaded redundancy architectures for communication systems| US10979135B2|2016-10-07|2021-04-13|Honeywell International Inc.|Systems and methods for increasing capacity in a redundancy network| CN108683446B|2018-03-29|2021-04-13|西安空间无线电技术研究所|Dual-band power amplifier backup ring of communication satellite transponder and switching method|
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2016-09-28| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 2 | 2017-04-14| PLSC| Publication of the preliminary search report|Effective date: 20170414 | 2017-09-29| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 | 2018-09-28| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 4 | 2019-09-27| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 5 | 2020-10-13| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 6 | 2021-09-30| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 7 |
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申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题 FR1502128A|FR3042358B1|2015-10-09|2015-10-09|ARCHITECTURE OF A BROADBAND DISTRIBUTED AMPLIFICATION DEVICE|FR1502128A| FR3042358B1|2015-10-09|2015-10-09|ARCHITECTURE OF A BROADBAND DISTRIBUTED AMPLIFICATION DEVICE| US15/287,598| US10027296B2|2015-10-09|2016-10-06|Architecture of a wideband distributed amplification device| EP16192738.9A| EP3154192B1|2015-10-09|2016-10-07|Architecture of a broadband distributed amplification device| ES16192738T| ES2848354T3|2015-10-09|2016-10-07|Architecture of a broadband distributed amplification device| CA2944754A| CA2944754A1|2015-10-09|2016-10-07|Architecture of a wideband distributed amplification device| 相关专利
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