I am still inexperienced with Microwave Engineering and therefore have a few questions regarding the Wilkinson power divider. As mentioned in the title I would like to design a 4 way Wilkinson power divider to split power to 4 antennas with the Wilkinson power divider.
First I want to simulate it with the software ADS and then build it. Now I am not sure how the general structure of a 4 way Wilkinson is. Do I have to split 2 ways first and then split 2 ways again in both ways so that I have 4 as shown in the 1st picture or can I directly split all 4 lines (see drawing in the 2nd picture). There is a lot of literature about the 2:1 power divider but I can't find much about the 4:1. And do I have to use such a circle or is it also possible to use straighter lines?
In case of doubt, I'd refer to the cascaded topology of picture 1. Picture 2 is missing resistor symmetry. 4 resistors with a common star point should work, but that's difficult to implement as a planar structure.
Your design is not correct. Typical N-Way Wilkinson Dividers is as follows. There are some other academic purpose wideband/high isolation approximations but this is generic one.
Ok, do you know how to implement it in ADS? I started defining my MSUB with all the material constants. But now I'm not sure how to do the design. I have 100 Ohm for the first part when they split and after this I have 50 Ohms. Do I need two different MSUB for 100 and 50 Ohm? And where do I have to place them?
I agree with FvM. Attached is a photo of a cascaded Wilkinson project from the 1990s, freq range 900MHz - 2100MHz. Two stages for each Wilkinson divider used here for wider bandwidth.
That is correct. One substrate material means one MSUB block. The line width for different line impedance is set in the MLIN elements. To calculate width, you can use the LineCalc tool in ADS, this is available from the Tools menu in schematic window.
Ok, yes I calculated it with LineCalc. I think that should be correct. I started arranging the components in the schematic. Can I send you my schematic if I have any qustions?
That's possible if you expect no reflections from the output ports or don't need to hinder it from propagating to the other outputs. Without the resistors as shown in post #6 it's not strictly a Wilkinson divider.