The first structure for guiding waves was proposed by
J. J. Thomson in 1893, and was first experimentally tested by
Oliver Lodge in 1894. The first mathematical analysis of electromagnetic waves in a metal cylinder was performed by
Lord Rayleigh in 1897. For sound waves, Lord Rayleigh published a full mathematical analysis of
propagation modes in his seminal work, "The Theory of Sound".
Jagadish Chandra Bose researched
millimeter wavelengths using waveguides, and in 1897 described to the Royal Institution in London his research carried out in Kolkata. The study of dielectric waveguides (such as optical fibers, see below) began as early as the 1920s, by several people, most famous of which are Rayleigh,
Sommerfeld and
Debye. Optical fiber began to receive special attention in the 1960s due to its importance to the communications industry. The development of radio communication initially occurred at the lower frequencies because these could be more easily propagated over large distances. The long wavelengths made these frequencies unsuitable for use in hollow metal waveguides because of the impractically large diameter tubes required. Consequently, research into hollow metal waveguides stalled and the work of Lord Rayleigh was forgotten for a time and had to be rediscovered by others. Practical investigations resumed in the 1930s by
George C. Southworth at
Bell Labs and
Wilmer L. Barrow at
MIT. Southworth at first took the theory from papers on waves in dielectric rods because the work of Lord Rayleigh was unknown to him. This misled him somewhat; some of his experiments failed because he was not aware of the phenomenon of
waveguide cutoff frequency already found in Lord Rayleigh's work. Serious theoretical work was taken up by
John R. Carson and
Sallie P. Mead. This work led to the discovery that for the TE01 mode in circular waveguide losses go down with frequency and at one time this was a serious contender for the format for long-distance telecommunications. The importance of
radar in
World War II gave a great impetus to waveguide research, at least on the
Allied side. The
magnetron, developed in 1940 by
John Randall and
Harry Boot at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom, provided a good power source and made microwave radar feasible. The most important centre of US research was at the
Radiation Laboratory (Rad Lab) at
MIT but many others took part in the US, and in the UK such as the
Telecommunications Research Establishment. The head of the Fundamental Development Group at Rad Lab was
Edward Mills Purcell. His researchers included
Julian Schwinger,
Nathan Marcuvitz, Carol Gray Montgomery, and
Robert H. Dicke. Much of the Rad Lab work concentrated on finding
lumped element models of waveguide structures so that components in waveguide could be analysed with standard circuit theory.
Hans Bethe was also briefly at Rad Lab, but while there he produced his small aperture theory which proved important for
waveguide cavity filters, first developed at Rad Lab. The German side, on the other hand, largely ignored the potential of waveguides in radar until very late in the war. So much so that when radar parts from a downed British plane were sent to
Siemens & Halske for analysis, even though they were recognised as microwave components, their purpose could not be identified. German academics were even allowed to continue publicly publishing their research in this field because it was not felt to be important. Immediately after World War II waveguide was the technology of choice in the microwave field. However, it has some problems; it is bulky, expensive to produce, and the cutoff frequency effect makes it difficult to produce wideband devices. Ridged waveguide can increase bandwidth beyond an octave, but a better solution is to use a technology working in
TEM mode (that is, non-waveguide) such as
coaxial conductors since TEM does not have a cutoff frequency. A shielded rectangular conductor can also be used and this has certain manufacturing advantages over coax and can be seen as the forerunner of the planar technologies (
stripline and
microstrip). However, planar technologies really started to take off when printed circuits were introduced. These methods are significantly cheaper than waveguide and have largely taken its place in most bands. However, waveguide is still favoured in the higher microwave bands from around
Ku band upwards. == Properties ==