Size broadwall and sidewall values, estimate bandwidth, and inspect safety margins. Review key mode behavior. Design efficient guides with clear outputs and visual checks.
Large screens use three columns, smaller screens use two, and mobile uses one.
| Case | Band (GHz) | εr | a/b | Conductivity (MS/m) | Peak E-field (kV/cm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X-band air guide | 8.2 to 12.4 | 1.0 | 2.0 | 58.0 | 30 |
| Filled test guide | 6.5 to 9.0 | 2.1 | 2.2 | 37.0 | 18 |
| Compact high-loss guide | 12.0 to 15.0 | 1.6 | 1.8 | 14.5 | 12 |
For a rectangular guide, the cutoff frequency of mode m,n is:
fcmn = c / (2√εr) × √[(m/a)2 + (n/b)2]
The dominant TE10 mode uses fc10 = c / (2a√εr). The calculator sizes a from the stricter of two limits: enough separation above the lower band edge and enough spacing below the next mode cutoff. It then sets b = a / (a/b).
At the reference frequency, it also evaluates:
TE10 has the lowest cutoff frequency in a standard rectangular guide. That makes it the first mode to propagate and the usual target for practical single-mode microwave transmission.
The ratio between broad and narrow walls changes higher-order mode spacing and mechanical proportions. A common choice is near 2, but other ratios may suit compact or dielectric-filled designs.
It sets how far the lower operating edge stays above TE10 cutoff. A larger margin improves propagation stability, but it also pushes dimensions smaller for the same band.
It forces the next higher cutoff to remain above the chosen upper operating frequency by a safety ratio. This helps maintain cleaner single-mode performance across the full band.
No. It is a practical TE10 conductor-loss estimate using conductivity, geometry, and frequency. Surface finish, plating quality, dielectric loss, joints, and bends can raise real attenuation.
Waveguides constrain fields with boundary conditions, so propagation depends on both frequency and cutoff. Near cutoff, guide wavelength increases significantly beyond the ordinary wavelength in the filling medium.
Yes. Enter the relative permittivity for the filling material. Higher permittivity lowers cutoff frequencies and usually reduces required dimensions for the same operating band.
Increase next-mode separation, reduce the upper band edge, adjust aspect ratio, or redesign around a narrower operating band. Those changes help move higher-order modes farther from use.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.