High frequency transmission lines: Difference between revisions

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==


== Teoriaa: Systeemi ==


[[File:Dipole antennas.svg|thumb|Dipole antennas and transmission coefficient. See the svg file]]
Antenna system.  
 
Antenn system.  


Lähetin, johto, antenni, jne. https://www.antenna-theory.com/tutorial/txline/transmissionline.php
Lähetin, johto, antenni, jne. https://www.antenna-theory.com/tutorial/txline/transmissionline.php
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Dipole differential transmissionline.png|The system is analyzed as being differential short pieces. The conductance <math>G</math> is the conductance between the two wires, which exists because of the high frequency.  
Dipole differential transmissionline.png|The system is analyzed as being differential short pieces. The conductance <math>G</math> is the conductance between the two wires, which exists because of the high frequency.  
</gallery>
</gallery>
=== General case ===


If a transmission line has a length greater than about 10% of a wavelength, then the line length will noticeably affect the circuit's impedance.  The equation in the above image can be written as
If a transmission line has a length greater than about 10% of a wavelength, then the line length will noticeably affect the circuit's impedance.  The equation in the above image can be written as
Line 35: Line 34:
</math>
</math>


and similar equation to ''i''. Lets solve those.
and similar equation to ''i''. Those are damped, dispersive hyperbolic partial differential equations each involving only one unknown.  Lets solve those. ([https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegrapher's_equations Telegrapher's equations])
 
=== Lossless transmission ===
 
If wire resistance and insulation conductance can be neglected (R=G=0), the model depends only on ''L'' and ''C'' elements. Thus, we have two similar wave equations for ''v'' and ''i'' (only for ''v'' is shown)
 
<math>
\frac{\partial^2 v}{\partial^2 t^2} - \hat v^2 \frac{\partial v}{\partial x^2} = 0
</math>
 
where <math> \hat v = (LC)^{-1/2}</math>. These reduce to one-dimensional Helmholtz equations, or eigenmodes, and the result if an eigenmode is
 
<math>
\begin{align}
v_\omega(x) &= v^+ e^{-\imath (kx+\omega t)} + v^- e^{+\imath (kx-\omega t)} \\
i_\omega(x) &= \frac{v^+}{Z_0} e^{-\imath (kx + \omega t)} + \frac{v^-}{Z_0} e^{+\imath (kx-\omega t)}
\end{align}
</math>
 
where k is the wave number <math>k=\omega\sqrt{LC}</math> and <math>Z_0</math> is the characteristic impedance, which for the lossles transmission line is
 
<math>
Z_0 = \sqrt{ \frac LZ }
</math>
 
The full solution can be decomposed into an eigenmode expansion <math>u(x,t) = \int_{-\infty}^\infty s(\omega) v_\omega(x,t) d \omega</math>
 
=== Lossy transmission line ===
 
=== Frequency Domain ===
 
<math>
\begin{align}
\frac{dv_\omega}{d x} &= - (\imath \omega L_\omega + R_\omega) i_\omega(x) \\
%
\frac{di_\omega}{d x} &= - (\imath \omega C_\omega + G_\omega) v_\omega(x) \\
\end{align}
</math>
 
and by combining these we get


=== ===
<math>
\frac{d^2 v_\omega}{d x^2} = \gamma^2 v_\omega
</math>


and similar for $i$, with <math>\gamma = \alpha + \imath b
= \sqrt{(R_\omega + \imath \omega L_\omega)(G_\omega + \imath \omega C_\omega)}</math>


=== ===
=== S ===


The solutions to the above equations is the sum of forward and backward traveling (reflected) waves:
The solutions to the above equations is the sum of forward and backward traveling (reflected) waves:

Latest revision as of 19:22, 23 August 2025

Introduction

Antenna system.

Lähetin, johto, antenni, jne. https://www.antenna-theory.com/tutorial/txline/transmissionline.php

https://www.worldradiohistory.com/BOOKSHELF-ARH/Technology/Rider-Books/R-F%20Transmission%20Lines%20-%20Alexander%20Schure.pdf

Transmission line, general case

General case

If a transmission line has a length greater than about 10% of a wavelength, then the line length will noticeably affect the circuit's impedance. The equation in the above image can be written as

and these two is easy to combine, and it gives the second degree dy

and similar equation to i. Those are damped, dispersive hyperbolic partial differential equations each involving only one unknown. Lets solve those. (Telegrapher's equations)

Lossless transmission

If wire resistance and insulation conductance can be neglected (R=G=0), the model depends only on L and C elements. Thus, we have two similar wave equations for v and i (only for v is shown)

where . These reduce to one-dimensional Helmholtz equations, or eigenmodes, and the result if an eigenmode is

where k is the wave number and is the characteristic impedance, which for the lossles transmission line is

The full solution can be decomposed into an eigenmode expansion

Lossy transmission line

Frequency Domain

and by combining these we get

and similar for $i$, with

S

The solutions to the above equations is the sum of forward and backward traveling (reflected) waves: and if we assume that we have the telegraphers equations https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telegrapher's_equations

and a similar for . If we replace $i$ by Ohm law, we get

The fraction is called reflection coefficient

which gives



The characteristic impedance is

Thus we have and similar for the current. The constant .

For lossless line and for distortionless line . The voltage reflection coefficient

where is the characteristic impedance of transient line, and is the impedance of load (antenna). If , then the line is perfectly matched, and there is no mismatch loss and all power is transferred to the load (antenna).

  • An open circuit: and .
  • A short circuit: and , and a phase reversal of the reflected voltage wave.
  • A matched load: , and and no reflections.

The voltage standing wave ratio or VSWR


Siirtolinja (transmission line). Impedanssi. Koaksaalikaapelin impedanssi muodostuu sen kapasitiivisestä rakenteesta. Ei juuri resistiivistä häviötä (impedanssia) https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/543100/derivation-of-resistance-of-coaxial-cable. Koaksaalikaapelin εr

  • 76.7 Ω
  • 30 Ω
  • The impedance of a centre-fed dipole antenna in free space is 73 Ω, so 75 Ω coax is commonly used for connecting shortwave antennas to receivers.
  • Sometimes 300 Ω folded dipole antenna => 4:1 balun transformer is used.

twin-lead transmission lines: the characteristic impedance of is roughly 300 Ω.

Feeding length.

Some transmission lines are

  • Coaxial cable
  • Two-wire cable
  • Microstrip line
  • . . .

Skin Effect

The skin effect . The higher the frequency, the more the currents are confined to the surface.

Balun

Velocity factor

Caption text
Velocity factor Line type
0.95 Ladder line
0.82 Twin-lead
0.79 coaxial cable (foam dielectric)
0.75 RG-6 and RG-8 coaxial (thick)
0.66 RG-58 and RG-59 coaxial (thin)

Something else

References