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Telegrapher's equations

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Telegrapher's equations
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. The equations come from Oliver
Heaviside who in the 1880s developed the transmission line model which is described in this article. The model
demonstrates that the electromagnetic waves can be reflected on the wire, and that wave patterns can appear along
the line. The theory applies to transmission lines of all frequencies including high-frequency transmission lines (such
as telegraph wires and radio frequency conductors), audio frequency (such as telephone lines), low frequency (such
as power lines) and direct current.
The equations
Schematic representation of the elementary
components of a transmission line.
The telegrapher's equations, like all other equations describing
electrical phenomena, can be held to result from Maxwell's equations.
In a more practical approach, one assumes that the conductors are
composed of an infinite series of two-port elementary components,
each representing an infinitesimally short segment of the transmission
line:
The distributed resistance of the conductors is represented by a
series resistor (expressed in ohms per unit length).
The distributed inductance (due to the magnetic field around the
wires, self-inductance, etc.) is represented by a series inductor
(henries per unit length).
The capacitance between the two conductors is represented by a shunt capacitor C (farads per unit length).
The conductance of the dielectric material separating the two conductors is represented by a shunt resistor
between the signal wire and the return wire (siemens per unit length). This resistor in the model has a resistance
of ohms.
It should be repeated for clarity that the model consists of an infinite series of the infinitesimal 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. An alternative notation is to use , , and 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 characteristic impedance, the propagation constant, attenuation
constant and phase constant. All these constants are constant with respect to time, voltage and current. They may be
non-constant functions of frequency.
The Telegrapher's Equations are developed in similar forms in the following references: Kraus
[1]
, Hayt
[2]
,
Marshall
[3]
, Sadiku
[4]
, Harrington
[5]
, Karakash
[6]
, Metzger
[7]
,
Values of Primary Parameters for Telephone Cable
Representative parameter data for 24 gauge PIC telephone cable at 70F
Telegrapher's equations
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Frequency R L G C
Hz /kft mH/kft uS/kft nF/kft
1 52.50 0.1868 0.000 15.72
1k 52.51 0.1867 0.022 15.72
10k 52.64 0.1859 0.162 15.72
100k 58.41 0.1770 1.197 15.72
1M 141.30 0.1543 8.873 15.72
2M 196.03 0.1482 16.217 15.72
5M 304.62 0.1425 35.989 15.72
More extensive tables and tables for other gauges, temperatures and types are available in Reeve
[8]
. Chen
[9]
gives
the same data in a parameterized form that he states is usable up to 50MHz.
The variation of R and L is mainly due to skin effect and proximity effect.
The constancy of the capacitance is a consequence of intentional design.
The variation of G can be inferred from Terman
[10]
"The power factor ... tends to be independent of frequency, since
the fraction of energy lost during each cycle ... is substantially independent of the number of cycles per second, over
wide frequency ranges." A function of the form with ge close to 1.0 would fit the statement
from Terman. Chen
[9]
gives an equation of similar form.
G in this table can be modeled well with
= 1MHz
= 8.873 \mu S/kft
ge = 0.87
Usually the resistive losses grow proportionately to and dielectric losses grow proportionately to with ge
> 0.5 so at a high enough frequency, dielectric losses will exceed resistive losses. In practice, before that point is
reached, a transmission line with a better dielectric is used. The dielectric can be reduced down to air with an
occasional plastic spacer.
Lossless transmission
When the elements R and G are very small, their effects can be neglected, and the transmission line is considered as
an idealized, lossless, structure. In this case, the model depends only on the L and C elements, and we obtain a pair
of first-order partial differential equations, one function describing the voltage V along the line and the other the
current I, both function of position x and time t:
These equations may be combined to form either of two exact wave equations:
In the steady-state case (assuming a sinusoidal wave , these reduce to
Telegrapher's equations
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where is the frequency of the steady-state wave
If the line has infinite length or when it is terminated with its characteristic impedance, these equations indicate the
presence of a wave, travelling with a speed .
(Note that this propagation speed applies to the wave phenomenon on the line and has nothing to do with the electron
drift velocity. In other words, the electrical impulse travels very close to the speed of light, although the electrons
themselves travel only a few centimeters per second.) For a coaxial transmission line, made of perfect conductors
with vacuum between them, it can be shown that this speed is equal to the speed of light.
The Lossless line and Distortionless line are discussed in Sadiku
[11]
, and Marshall
[12]
,
Lossy transmission line
When the loss elements R and G are not negligible, the original differential equations describing the elementary
segment of line become
By differentiating the first equation with respect to x and the second with respect to t, and some algebraic
manipulation, we obtain a pair of hyperbolic partial differential equations each involving only one unknown:
Note that these equations resemble the homogeneous wave equation with extra terms in V and I and their first
derivatives. These extra terms cause the signal to decay and spread out with time and distance. If the transmission
line is only slightly lossy (small R and G = 0), signal strength will decay over distance as e
-x
, where = R/2Z
0
Direction of signal propagations
The wave equations above indicate that there are two solutions for the travelling wave: one forward and one reverse.
Assuming a simplification of being lossless (requiring both R=0 and G=0) the solution can be represented as:
where:
is called the wavenumber and has units of radians per meter,
is the angular frequency (in radians per second),
and can be any functions whatsoever, and
is the waveform's propagation speed (also known as phase velocity).
Telegrapher's equations
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f
1
represents a wave traveling from left to right in a positive x direction whilst f
2
represents a wave traveling from
right to left. It can be seen that the instantaneous voltage at any point x on the line is the sum of the voltages due to
both waves.
Since the current I is related to the voltage V by the telegrapher's equations, we can write
where is the characteristic impedance of the transmission line, which, for a lossless line is given by
Signal pattern examples
Changes of the signal level distribution along the single dimensional transmission media.
Depending on the parameters of the telegraph equation, this equation can reproduce all four
patterns.
Depending on the parameters of the telegraph equation, the changes of the signal level distribution along the length
of the single-dimensional transmission media may take the shape of the simple wave, wave with decrement, or the
diffusion-like pattern of the telegraph equation. The shape of the diffusion-like pattern is caused by the effect of the
shunt capacity.
Telegrapher's equations
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Solutions of the Telegrapher's Equations as Circuit Components
Equivalent circuit of a transmission line described by the Telegrapher's equations.
The solutions of the telegrapher's
equations can be inserted into a circuit
as components of an equivalent
sub-circuit as shown the figure. As
drawn, all voltages are with respect to
ground and all amplifiers have
unshown connections to ground. An
example of a transmission line
modeled by this circuit would be an
unbalanced transmission line such as a
strip line on a circuit board. The
impedance Z(s), the voltage doubler
(the triangle with the number "2") and
the difference amplifier (the triangle
with the number "1") account for the interaction of the transmission line with the rest of the circuit. The T(s) blocks
account for delay, attenuation, dispersion and whatever happens to the signal in transit. One of the T(s) blocks carries
the "forward wave" and the other carries the "backward wave". The circuit, as depicted, is fully symmetric, although
it is not drawn that way. The circuit depicted is equivalent to a transmission line connected from V1 to V2 in the
sense that V1, V2, I1 and I2 would be same whether this circuit or an actual transmission line was connected
between V1 and V2. There is no implication that there are actually amplifiers inside the transmission line.
This is not the only possible equivalent circuit. Voltage amplifiers and sensors can be replaced with current,
transimpedance or transconductance amplifiers. Series impedances can be replaced with shunt admittances. The
circuit can be augmented to account for different "grounds" at each end. The circuit can be made fully differential.
External links
SPICE Simulation of Transmission Lines
[13]
Notes
[1] Kraus (1989, p.380-419)
[2] Hayt (1989, p.382-392)
[3] Marshall (1987, p.359-378)
[4] Sadiku (1989, p.497-505)
[5] Harrington (1961, p.61-65)
[6] Karakash (1950, p.5-14)
[7] Metzger (1969, p.1-10)
[8] Reeve (1995, p.558)
[9] Chen (2004, p.26)
[10] Terman (1943, p.112)
[11] Sadiku (1989, p.501-503)
[12] Marshall (198y, p.369-372)
[13] http:/ / www.eetimes. com/ design/ microwave-rf-design/ 4200760/
SPICE-Simulation-of-Transmission-Lines-by-the-Telegrapher-s-Method-Part-1-of-3-?Ecosystem=microwave-rf-design
Telegrapher's equations
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References
Chen, Walter Y. (2004), Home Networking Basics, Prentice Hall, ISBN0130165115
Harrington, Roger F. (1961), Time-Harmonic Electromagnetic Fields, McGraw-Hill
Hayt, William (1989), Engineering Electromagnetics (5th ed.), McGraw-Hill, ISBN0070274061
Karakash, John J. (1950), Transmission Lines and Filter Networks (1st ed.), Macmillan
Kraus, John D. (1984), Electromagnetics (3rd ed.), McGraw-Hill, ISBN0070354235
Marshall, Stanley V. (1987), Electromagnetic Concepts & Applications (1st ed.), Prentice-Hall,
ISBN0132490048
Metzger, Georges; Vabre, Jean-Paul (1969), Transmission Lines with Pulse Excitation, Academic Press
Reeve, Whitman D. (1995), Subscriber Loop Signaling and Transmission Handbook, IEEE Press,
ISBN0780304403
Sadiku, Matthew N. O. (1989), Elements of Electromagnetics (1st ed.), Saunders College Publishing,
ISBN993013846
Terman, Frederick Emmons (1943), Radio Engineers' Handbook (1st ed.), McGraw-Hill
Article Sources and Contributors
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Article Sources and Contributors
Telegrapher's equations Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=407985302 Contributors: AlexandriNo, Audriusa, Casey56, CecilWard, Charles Matthews, Constant314,
CosineKitty, Engineergod, Enochlau, Ethanminot, Gene Nygaard, Headbomb, Ignat99, Kevin B12, Loadmaster, MuthuKutty, Nanog, Oleg Alexandrov, Omegatron, Pb30, PerceptualChaos,
Pstudier, Punitxsmart, Rbj, Spinningspark, Xb2u7Zjzc32, 19 anonymous edits
Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors
Image:Transmission line element.svg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Transmission_line_element.svg License: unknown Contributors: User:Omegatron
Image:SignalTransmission.png Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:SignalTransmission.png License: GNU Free Documentation License Contributors: Audriusa, 1
anonymous edits
Image:Unbalanced Transmission Line Equivalent Sub Circuit.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Unbalanced_Transmission_Line_Equivalent_Sub_Circuit.jpg
License: Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 3.0 Contributors: User:Constant314
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