(electricity) A system of conductors, such as wires, waveguides, or coaxial cables, suitable for conducting electric power or signals efficiently between two or more terminals.
| Sci-Tech Dictionary: transmission line |
(electricity) A system of conductors, such as wires, waveguides, or coaxial cables, suitable for conducting electric power or signals efficiently between two or more terminals.
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| Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Transmission lines |
A system of conductors suitable for conducting electric power or signals between two or more termini. Transmission lines take many forms in practice and have application in many disciplines. For example, they traverse the countryside, carrying telephone signals and electric power. The same transmission lines, with similar functions, may be hidden above false ceilings in urban buildings. With the need to reliably and securely transmit ever larger amounts of data, the required frequency of operation has increased from the high-frequency microwave range to the still higher frequency of light. Optical fibers are installed in data-intensive buildings and form a nationwide network. Increasing demand also requires that transmission lines handle greater values of electric power.
Transmission lines can, in some cases, be analyzed by using a fairly simple model that consists of distributed linear electrical components. Models of this type, with some permutations, can also be used to describe wave propagation in integrated circuits and along nerve fibers in animals. The study of hollow metal waveguides or optical fibers is usually based upon an analysis starting from Maxwell's equations rather than employing transmission-line models. Fundamentals and definitions that can initially be obtained from a circuit model of a transmission line carry over to waveguides, where the analysis is more complicated. See also Optical fibers; Waveguide.
Coaxial cables and strip lines
Two particular types of transmission lines for communication that have received considerable attention are the coaxial cable and the strip line. The coaxial cable is a flexible transmission line and typically is used to connect two electronic instruments together. In the coaxial cable, a dielectric separates a center conducting wire from a concentric conducting sleeve. The strip line is used in integrated circuits to connect, say, two transistor circuits together. A strip line also has a dielectric that separates the top conducting element from the base, which may be an electrical ground plane in the circuit. See also Coaxial cable; Integrated circuits.
Circuit model
These transmission lines can be most easily analyzed in terms of electrical circuit elements consisting of distributed linear inductors and capacitors. The values of these elements are in terms of the physical dimensions of the coaxial cable and the strip line, and the permittivity of the dielectric. Each of the elements is interpreted to be measured in terms of a unit length of the element. An equivalent circuit represents either the coaxial cable or the strip line as well as other transmission lines such as two parallel wires. See also Capacitance; Capacitor; Inductance; Inductor;
Losses are incorporated into the transmission-line model with the addition of a distributed resistance in series with the inductor and a distributed conductance in parallel with the capacitor. Additional distributed circuit elements can be incorporated into the model in order to describe additional effects. For example, the linear capacitors could be replaced with reverse-biased varactor diodes and the propagation of nonlinear solitons could be studied. See also Conductance; Electrical resistance; Soliton; Varactor.
Power transmission lines
Electric power generating stations and load consumption centers are connected by a network of power transmission lines, mostly overhead lines. Power transmitted is generally in the form of three-phase alternating current (ac) at 60 or 50 Hz. In a few instances, where a clear technical or economic advantage exists, direct-current (dc) systems may be used. As the distances over which the power must be transmitted become great and as the amount of power transmitted increases, the power lost in the transmission lines becomes an important component of the production cost of electricity, and it becomes advantageous to increase the transmission voltage. This basic consideration has led to electric power networks which use higher voltages for long-distance bulk power transfers, with several layers of underlying regional networks at progressively lower voltages which extend over shorter distances. The most common transmission voltages in use are 765, 500, 400, 220 kV, and so forth. Voltages below 69 kV are termed subtransmission or distribution voltages, and at these and lower voltages the networks may have fewer alternative supply paths (loops) or may be entirely radial in structure. See also Alternating current; Direct current; Direct-current transmission; Electric distribution systems; Electric power transmission.
| Electronics Dictionary: transmission line |
Conducting line used to transmit signal energy between two points.
| WordNet: transmission line |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a conductor for transmitting electrical or optical signals or electric power
Synonyms: cable, line
| Wikipedia: Transmission line |
A transmission line is the material medium or structure that forms all or part of a path from one place to another for directing the transmission of energy, such as electromagnetic waves or acoustic waves, as well as electric power transmission. Types of transmission line include wires, coaxial cables, dielectric slabs, striplines, optical fibers, electric power lines, and waveguides.[1]
Contents |
Mathematical analysis of the behaviour of electrical transmission lines grew out of the work of James Clerk Maxwell, Lord Kelvin and Oliver Heaviside. In 1855 Lord Kelvin formulated a diffusion model of the current in a submarine cable. The model correctly predicted the poor performance of the 1858 trans-Atlantic submarine telegraph cable. In 1885 Heaviside published the first papers that described his analysis of propagation in cables and the modern form of the telegrapher's equations. [2]
In many electric circuits, the length of the wires connecting the components can for the most part be ignored. That is, the voltage on the wire at a given time can be assumed to be the same at all points. However, when the voltage changes in a time interval comparable to the time it takes for the signal to travel down the wire, the length becomes important and the wire must be treated as a transmission line. Stated another way, the length of the wire is important when the signal includes frequency components with corresponding wavelengths comparable to or less than the length of the wire.
A common rule of thumb is that the cable or wire should be treated as a transmission line if the length is greater than 1/10 of the wavelength. At this length the phase delay and the interference of any reflections on the line become important and can lead to unpredictable behavior in systems which have not been carefully designed using transmission line theory.
For the purposes of analysis, an electrical transmission line can be modelled as a two-port network (also called a quadrupole network), as follows:
In the simplest case, the network is assumed to be linear (i.e. the complex voltage across either port is proportional to the complex current flowing into it when there are no reflections), and the two ports are assumed to be interchangeable. If the transmission line is uniform along its length, then its behaviour is largely described by a single parameter called the characteristic impedance, symbol Z0. This is the ratio of the complex voltage of a given wave to the complex current of the same wave at any point on the line. Typical values of Z0 are 50 or 75 ohms for a coaxial cable, about 100 ohms for a twisted pair of wires, and about 300 ohms for a common type of untwisted pair used in radio transmission.
When sending power down a transmission line, it is usually desirable that as much power as possible will be absorbed by the load and as little as possible will be reflected back to the source. This can be ensured by making the load impedance equal to Z0, in which case the transmission line is said to be matched. Ensuring the source impedance matches Z0 will maximize power transfer from the source to the transmission line, but has no other effect on the behavior of the line.
Some of the power that is fed into a transmission line is lost because of its resistance. This effect is called ohmic or resistive loss (see ohmic heating). At high frequencies, another effect called dielectric loss becomes significant, adding to the losses caused by resistance. Dielectric loss is caused when the insulating material inside the transmission line absorbs energy from the alternating electric field and converts it to heat (see dielectric heating).
The total loss of power in a transmission line is often specified in decibels per metre (dB/m), and usually depends on the frequency of the signal. The manufacturer often supplies a chart showing the loss in dB/m at a range of frequencies. A loss of 3 dB corresponds approximately to a halving of the power.
High-frequency transmission lines can be defined as those designed to carry electromagnetic waves whose wavelengths are shorter than or comparable to the length of the line. Under these conditions, the approximations useful for calculations at lower frequencies are no longer accurate. This often occurs with radio, microwave and optical signals, and with the signals found in high-speed digital circuits.
The Telegrapher's Equations (or just Telegraph Equations) are a pair of linear differential equations which describe the voltage and current on an electrical transmission line with distance and time. They were developed by Oliver Heaviside who created the transmission line model, and are based on Maxwell's Equations.
The transmission line model represents the transmission line as an infinite series of two-port elementary components, each representing an infinitesimally short segment of the transmission line:
The model consists of an infinite series of the elements shown in the figure, and that the values of the components are specified per unit length so the picture of the component can be misleading. R, L, C, and G may also be functions of frequency. An alternative notation is to use R', L', C' and G' to emphasize that the values are derivatives with respect to length. These quantities can also be known as the primary line constants to distinguish from the secondary line constants derived from them, these being the propagation constant, attenuation constant and phase constant.
The line voltage V(x) and the current I(x) can be expressed in the frequency domain as


When the elements R and G are negligibly small the transmission line is considered as a lossless structure. In this hypothetical case, the model depends only on the L and C elements which greatly simplifies the analysis. For a lossless transmission line, the second order steady-state Telegrapher's equations are:


These are wave equations which have plane waves with equal propagation speed in the forward and reverse directions as solutions. The physical significance of this is that electromagnetic waves propagate down transmission lines and in general, there is a reflected component that interferes with the original signal. These equations are fundamental to transmission line theory.
If R and G are not neglected, the Telegrapher's equations become:


where

and the characteristic impedance is:

The solutions for V(x) and I(x) are:


The constants
and
must be determined from boundary conditions. For a voltage pulse
, starting at x = 0 and moving in the positive x-direction, then the transmitted pulse
at position x can be obtained by computing the Fourier Transform,
, of
, attenuating each frequency component by
, advancing its phase by
, and taking the inverse Fourier Transform. The real and imaginary parts of Γ can be computed as


where atan2 is the two-parameter arctangent, and
![a \equiv \omega^2 LC \left[ \left( \frac{R}{\omega L} \right) \left( \frac{G}{\omega C} \right) - 1 \right]](http://wpcontent.answers.com/math/c/e/c/cec205a5fcb0848c9a9ec4c8ad45fc63.png)

For small losses and high frequencies, to first order in R / ωL and G / ωC one obtains


Noting that an advance in phase by − ωδ is equivalent to a time delay by δ, Vout(t) can be simply computed as

The characteristic impedance Z0 of a transmission line is the ratio of the amplitude of a single voltage wave to its current wave. Since most transmission lines also have a reflected wave, the characteristic impedance is generally not the impedance that is measured on the line.
For a lossless transmission line, it can be shown that the impedance measured at a given position l from the load impedance ZL is

where
is the wavenumber.
In calculating β, the wavelength is generally different inside the transmission line to what it would be in free-space and the velocity constant of the material the transmission line is made of needs to be taken into account when doing such a calculation.
For the special case where βl = nπ where n is an integer (meaning that the length of the line is a multiple of half a wavelength), the expression reduces to the load impedance so that

for all n. This includes the case when n = 0, meaning that the length of the transmission line is negligibly small compared to the wavelength. The physical significance of this is that the transmission line can be ignored (i.e. treated as a wire) in either case.
For the case where the length of the line is one quarter wavelength long, or an odd multiple of a quarter wavelength long, the input impedance becomes

Another special case is when the load impedance is equal to the characteristic impedance of the line (i.e. the line is matched), in which case the impedance reduces to the characteristic impedance of the line so that

for all l and all λ.
For the case of a shorted load (i.e. ZL = 0), the input impedance is purely imaginary and a periodic function of position and wavelength (frequency)

For the case of an open load (i.e.
), the input impedance is once again imaginary and periodic

Coaxial lines confine the electromagnetic wave to the area inside the cable, between the center conductor and the shield. The transmission of energy in the line occurs totally through the dielectric inside the cable between the conductors. Coaxial lines can therefore be bent and twisted (subject to limits) without negative effects, and they can be strapped to conductive supports without inducing unwanted currents in them. In radio-frequency applications up to a few gigahertz, the wave propagates in the transverse electric and magnetic mode (TEM) only, which means that the electric and magnetic fields are both perpendicular to the direction of propagation (the electric field is radial, and the magnetic field is circumferential). However at frequencies, for which the wavelength (in the dielectric) is significantly shorter than the circumference of the cable, transverse electric (TE) and transverse magnetic (TM) waveguide modes can also propagate. When more than one mode can exist, bends and other irregularities in the cable geometry can cause power to be transferred from one mode to another.
The most common use for coaxial cables is for television and other signals with bandwidth of multiple megahertz. In the middle 20th century they carried long distance telephone connections.
A microstrip circuit uses a thin flat conductor which is parallel to a ground plane. Microstrip can be made by having a strip of copper on one side of a printed circuit board (PCB) or ceramic substrate while the other side is a continuous ground plane. The width of the strip, the thickness of the insulating layer (PCB or ceramic) and the dielectric constant of the insulating layer determine the characteristic impedance. Microstrip is an open structure whereas coaxial cable is a closed structure.
A stripline circuit uses a flat strip of metal which is sandwiched between two parallel ground planes. The insulating material of the substrate forms a dielectric. The width of the strip, the thickness of the substrate and the relative permittivity of the substrate determine the characteristic impedance of the strip which is a transmission line.
A balanced line is a transmission line consisting of two conductors of the same type, and equal impedance to ground and other circuits. This includes twisted pairs which are commonly used for terrestrial telephone communications.
Twin-lead consists of a pair of conductors held apart by a continuous insulator.
Lecher lines are a form of parallel conductor that can be used at UHF for creating resonant circuits. They are used at frequencies between HF/VHF where lumped components are used, and UHF/SHF where resonant cavities are more practical.
Electrical transmission lines are very widely used to transmit high frequency signals over long or short distances with minimum power loss. One familiar example is the down lead from a TV or radio aerial to the receiver.
Transmission lines are also used as pulse generators. By charging the transmission line and then discharging it into a resistive load, a rectangular pulse equal in length to twice the electrical length of the line can be obtained, although with half the voltage. A Blumlein transmission line is a related pulse forming device that overcomes this limitation. These are sometimes used as the pulsed energy sources for radar transmitters and other devices.
If a short-circuited or open-circuited transmission line is wired in parallel with a line used to transfer signals from point A to point B, then it will function as a filter. The method for making stubs is similar to the method for using Lecher lines for crude frequency measurement, but it is 'working backwards'. One method recommended in the RSGB's radiocommunication handbook is to take an open-circuited length of transmission line wired in parallel with the feeder delivering signals from an aerial. By cutting the free end of the transmission line, a minimum in the strength of the signal observed at a receiver can be found. At this stage the stub filter will reject this frequency and the odd harmonics, but if the free end of the stub is shorted then the stub will become a filter rejecting the even harmonics.
Part of this article was derived from Federal Standard 1037C.
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