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Characteristic impedance

The characteristic impedance or surge impedance (usually written Z0) of a uniform transmission line is the ratio of the amplitudes of voltage and current of a single wave propagating along the line; that is, a wave travelling in one direction in the absence of reflections in the other direction. Alternatively, and equivalently, it can be defined as the input impedance of a transmission line when its length is infinite. Characteristic impedance is determined by the geometry and materials of the transmission line and, for a uniform line, is not dependent on its length. The SI unit of characteristic impedance is the ohm.

A transmission line drawn as two black wires. At a distance x into the line, there is current phasor I(x) traveling through each wire, and there is a voltage difference phasor V(x) between the wires (bottom voltage minus top voltage). If is the characteristic impedance of the line, then for a wave moving rightward, or for a wave moving leftward.
Schematic representation of a circuit where a source is coupled to a load with a transmission line having characteristic impedance .

The characteristic impedance of a lossless transmission line is purely real, with no reactive component. Energy supplied by a source at one end of such a line is transmitted through the line without being dissipated in the line itself. A transmission line of finite length (lossless or lossy) that is terminated at one end with an impedance equal to the characteristic impedance appears to the source like an infinitely long transmission line and produces no reflections.

Transmission line model

The characteristic impedance   of an infinite transmission line at a given angular frequency   is the ratio of the voltage and current of a pure sinusoidal wave of the same frequency travelling along the line. This relation is also the case for finite transmission lines until the wave reaches the end of the line. Generally, a wave is reflected back along the line in the opposite direction. When the reflected wave reaches the source, it is reflected yet again, adding to the transmitted wave and changing the ratio of the voltage and current at the input, causing the voltage-current ratio to no longer equal the characteristic impedance. This new ratio including the reflected energy is called the input impedance.

The input impedance of an infinite line is equal to the characteristic impedance since the transmitted wave is never reflected back from the end. Equivalently: The characteristic impedance of a line is that impedance which, when terminating an arbitrary length of line at its output, produces an input impedance of equal value. This is so because there is no reflection on a line terminated in its own characteristic impedance.

 
Schematic of Heaviside's model of an infinitesimal segment of transmission line.

Applying the transmission line model based on the telegrapher's equations as derived below,[1][2] the general expression for the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is:

 

where

  is the resistance per unit length, considering the two conductors to be in series,
  is the inductance per unit length,
  is the conductance of the dielectric per unit length,
  is the capacitance per unit length,
  is the imaginary unit, and
  is the angular frequency.

This expression extends to DC by letting   tend to 0.

A surge of energy on a finite transmission line will see an impedance of   prior to any reflections returning; hence surge impedance is an alternative name for characteristic impedance. Although an infinite line is assumed, since all quantities are per unit length, the “per length” parts of all the units cancel, and the characteristic impedance is independent of the length of the transmission line.

The voltage and current phasors on the line are related by the characteristic impedance as:

 

where the subscripts (+) and (−) mark the separate constants for the waves traveling forward (+) and backward (−).

Derivation

Using telegrapher's equation

 
Consider one section of the transmission line for the derivation of the characteristic impedance. The voltage on the left would be V and on the right side would be V + dV . This figure is to be used for both the derivation methods.

The differential equations describing the dependence of the voltage and current on time and space are linear, so that a linear combination of solutions is again a solution. This means that we can consider solutions with a time dependence   – doing so is functionally equivalent of solving for the Fourier coefficients for voltage and current amplitudes at some fixed angular frequency   Doing so causes the time dependence to factor out, leaving an ordinary differential equation for the coefficients, which will be phasors, dependent on position (space) only. Moreover, the parameters can be generalized to be frequency-dependent.[1]

Let

 

and

 

Take the positive direction for   and   in the loop to be clockwise.

We find that

 

and

 

or

  and  

where

  and  

These two first-order equations are easily uncoupled by a second differentiation, with the results:

 

and

 

Notice that both   and   satisfy the same equation.

Since   is independent of   and  , it can be represented by a single constant   (The minus sign is included for later convenience.) That is:

 

so

 

We can write the above equation as

 

which is correct for any transmission line in general. And for typical transmission lines, that are carefully built from wire with low loss resistance   and small insulation leakage conductance  ; further, used for high frequencies, the inductive reactance   and the capacitive admittance   will both be large, so the constant   is very close to being a real number:

 

With this definition of   the position- or  -dependent part will appear as   in the exponential solutions of the equation, similar to the time-dependent part   so the solution reads

 

where   and   are the constants of integration for the forward moving (+) and backward moving (−) waves, as in the prior section. When we recombine the time-dependent part we obtain the full solution:

 

Since the equation for   is the same form, it has a solution of the same form:

 

where   and   are again constants of integration.

The above equations are the wave solution for   and  . In order to be compatible, they must still satisfy the original differential equations, one of which is

 

Substituting the solutions for   and   into the above equation, we get

 

or

 

Isolating distinct powers of   and combining identical powers, we see that in order for the above equation to hold for all possible values of   we must have:

For the co-efficients of  
For the co-efficients of  

Since  

 
 

hence, for valid solutions require

 

It can be seen that the constant  , defined in the above equations has the dimensions of impedance (ratio of voltage to current) and is a function of primary constants of the line and operating frequency. It is called the “characteristic impedance” of the transmission line, and conventionally denoted by  .[2]

 

which holds generally, for any transmission line. For well-functioning transmission lines, with either   and   both very small, or with   very high, or all of the above, we get

 

hence the characteristic impedance is typically very close to being a real number. Manufacturers make commercial cables to approximate this condition very closely over a wide range of frequencies.

Alternative approach

We follow an approach posted by Tim Healy.[3] The line is modeled by a series of differential segments with differential series   and shunt   elements (as shown in the figure above). The characteristic impedance is defined as the ratio of the input voltage to the input current of a semi-infinite length of line. We call this impedance   That is, the impedance looking into the line on the left is   But, of course, if we go down the line one differential length   the impedance into the line is still   Hence we can say that the impedance looking into the line on the far left is equal to   in parallel with   and   all of which is in series with   and   Hence:

 
 
 

The added   terms cancel, leaving

 

The first-power   terms are the highest remaining order. Dividing out the common factor of   and dividing through by the factor   we get

 

In comparison to the factors whose   divided out, the last term, which still carries a remaining factor   is infinitesimal relative to the other, now finite terms, so we can drop it. That leads to

 

Reversing the sign ± applied to the square root has the effect of reversing the direction of the flow of current.

Lossless line

The analysis of lossless lines provides an accurate approximation for real transmission lines that simplifies the mathematics considered in modeling transmission lines. A lossless line is defined as a transmission line that has no line resistance and no dielectric loss. This would imply that the conductors act like perfect conductors and the dielectric acts like a perfect dielectric. For a lossless line, R and G are both zero, so the equation for characteristic impedance derived above reduces to:

 

In particular,   does not depend any more upon the frequency. The above expression is wholly real, since the imaginary term j has canceled out, implying that   is purely resistive. For a lossless line terminated in  , there is no loss of current across the line, and so the voltage remains the same along the line. The lossless line model is a useful approximation for many practical cases, such as low-loss transmission lines and transmission lines with high frequency. For both of these cases, R and G are much smaller than ωL and ωC, respectively, and can thus be ignored.

The solutions to the long line transmission equations include incident and reflected portions of the voltage and current:

 
 
When the line is terminated with its characteristic impedance, the reflected portions of these equations are reduced to 0 and the solutions to the voltage and current along the transmission line are wholly incident. Without a reflection of the wave, the load that is being supplied by the line effectively blends into the line making it appear to be an infinite line. In a lossless line this implies that the voltage and current remain the same everywhere along the transmission line. Their magnitudes remain constant along the length of the line and are only rotated by a phase angle.

Surge impedance loading

In electric power transmission, the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is expressed in terms of the surge impedance loading (SIL), or natural loading, being the power loading at which reactive power is neither produced nor absorbed:

 

in which   is the RMS line-to-line voltage in volts.

Loaded below its SIL, the voltage at the load will be greater than the system voltage. Above it, the load voltage is depressed. The Ferranti effect describes the voltage gain towards the remote end of a very lightly loaded (or open ended) transmission line. Underground cables normally have a very low characteristic impedance, resulting in an SIL that is typically in excess of the thermal limit of the cable.

Practical examples

Standard Impedance
(Ω)
Tolerance
Ethernet Cat.5 100  ±5Ω[4]
USB  90 ±15%[5]
HDMI  95 ±15%[6]
IEEE 1394 108  +3%
−2%
[7]
VGA  75  ±5%[8]
DisplayPort 100 ±20%[6]
DVI  95 ±15%[6]
PCIe  85 ±15%[6]
Overhead power line  400 Typical[9]
Underground power line  40 Typical[9]

The characteristic impedance of coaxial cables (coax) is commonly chosen to be 50 Ω for RF and microwave applications. Coax for video applications is usually 75 Ω for its lower loss.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "The Telegrapher's Equation". mysite.du.edu. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b . GATE ECE 2018. 16 April 2016. Archived from the original on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  3. ^ "Characteristic Impedance". www.ee.scu.edu. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  4. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-16.
  5. ^ "Chapter 2 – Hardware". USB in a NutShell. Beyond Logic.org. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
  6. ^ a b c d "AN10798 DisplayPort PCB layout guidelines" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2019-12-29.
  7. ^ "Evaluation" (PDF). materias.fi.uba.ar. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2019-12-29.
  8. ^ (PDF). pro video data sheets. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-02. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
  9. ^ a b Singh 2008, p. 212.

Sources

  • Ulaby, F.T. (2004). Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics (media ed.). Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-185089-X.
  • Singh, S. N. (23 June 2008). Electric Power Generation: Transmission and Distribution (2 ed.). PHI Learning Pvt. Ltd. p. 212. ISBN 9788120335608. OCLC 1223330325.

External links

  This article incorporates public domain material from . General Services Administration. Archived from the original on 2022-01-22.

characteristic, impedance, this, article, about, impedance, electrical, circuits, impedance, electromagnetic, waves, wave, impedance, characteristic, acoustic, impedance, acoustic, impedance, characteristic, impedance, surge, impedance, usually, written, unifo. This article is about impedance in electrical circuits For impedance of electromagnetic waves see Wave impedance For characteristic acoustic impedance see Acoustic impedance The characteristic impedance or surge impedance usually written Z0 of a uniform transmission line is the ratio of the amplitudes of voltage and current of a single wave propagating along the line that is a wave travelling in one direction in the absence of reflections in the other direction Alternatively and equivalently it can be defined as the input impedance of a transmission line when its length is infinite Characteristic impedance is determined by the geometry and materials of the transmission line and for a uniform line is not dependent on its length The SI unit of characteristic impedance is the ohm A transmission line drawn as two black wires At a distance x into the line there is current phasor I x traveling through each wire and there is a voltage difference phasor V x between the wires bottom voltage minus top voltage If Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 is the characteristic impedance of the line then V x I x Z 0 displaystyle V x I x Z 0 for a wave moving rightward or V x I x Z 0 displaystyle V x I x Z 0 for a wave moving leftward Schematic representation of a circuit where a source is coupled to a load with a transmission line having characteristic impedance Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 The characteristic impedance of a lossless transmission line is purely real with no reactive component Energy supplied by a source at one end of such a line is transmitted through the line without being dissipated in the line itself A transmission line of finite length lossless or lossy that is terminated at one end with an impedance equal to the characteristic impedance appears to the source like an infinitely long transmission line and produces no reflections Contents 1 Transmission line model 2 Derivation 2 1 Using telegrapher s equation 2 2 Alternative approach 3 Lossless line 4 Surge impedance loading 5 Practical examples 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksTransmission line model EditThe characteristic impedance Z w displaystyle Z omega of an infinite transmission line at a given angular frequency w displaystyle omega is the ratio of the voltage and current of a pure sinusoidal wave of the same frequency travelling along the line This relation is also the case for finite transmission lines until the wave reaches the end of the line Generally a wave is reflected back along the line in the opposite direction When the reflected wave reaches the source it is reflected yet again adding to the transmitted wave and changing the ratio of the voltage and current at the input causing the voltage current ratio to no longer equal the characteristic impedance This new ratio including the reflected energy is called the input impedance The input impedance of an infinite line is equal to the characteristic impedance since the transmitted wave is never reflected back from the end Equivalently The characteristic impedance of a line is that impedance which when terminating an arbitrary length of line at its output produces an input impedance of equal value This is so because there is no reflection on a line terminated in its own characteristic impedance Schematic of Heaviside s model of an infinitesimal segment of transmission line Applying the transmission line model based on the telegrapher s equations as derived below 1 2 the general expression for the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is Z o R j w L G j w C displaystyle Z text o sqrt frac R j omega L G j omega C where R displaystyle R is the resistance per unit length considering the two conductors to be in series L displaystyle L is the inductance per unit length G displaystyle G is the conductance of the dielectric per unit length C displaystyle C is the capacitance per unit length j displaystyle j is the imaginary unit and w displaystyle omega is the angular frequency This expression extends to DC by letting w displaystyle omega tend to 0 A surge of energy on a finite transmission line will see an impedance of Z o displaystyle Z text o prior to any reflections returning hence surge impedance is an alternative name for characteristic impedance Although an infinite line is assumed since all quantities are per unit length the per length parts of all the units cancel and the characteristic impedance is independent of the length of the transmission line The voltage and current phasors on the line are related by the characteristic impedance as V I Z o V I displaystyle frac V I Z text o frac V I where the subscripts and mark the separate constants for the waves traveling forward and backward Derivation EditUsing telegrapher s equation Edit Consider one section of the transmission line for the derivation of the characteristic impedance The voltage on the left would be V and on the right side would be V dV This figure is to be used for both the derivation methods The differential equations describing the dependence of the voltage and current on time and space are linear so that a linear combination of solutions is again a solution This means that we can consider solutions with a time dependence e j w t displaystyle e j omega t doing so is functionally equivalent of solving for the Fourier coefficients for voltage and current amplitudes at some fixed angular frequency w displaystyle omega Doing so causes the time dependence to factor out leaving an ordinary differential equation for the coefficients which will be phasors dependent on position space only Moreover the parameters can be generalized to be frequency dependent 1 Let V x t V x e j w t displaystyle V x t equiv V x e j omega t and I x t I x e j w t displaystyle I x t equiv I x e j omega t Take the positive direction for V displaystyle V and I displaystyle I in the loop to be clockwise We find that d V R j w L I d x Z I d x displaystyle mathrm d V R j omega L I mathrm d x Z I mathrm d x and d I G j w C V d x Y V d x displaystyle mathrm d I G j omega C V mathrm d x Y V mathrm d x or d V d x Z I displaystyle frac mathrm d V mathrm d x Z I qquad and d I d x Y V displaystyle qquad frac mathrm d I mathrm d x Y V where Z R j w L displaystyle Z equiv R j omega L qquad and Y G j w C displaystyle qquad Y equiv G j omega C These two first order equations are easily uncoupled by a second differentiation with the results d 2 V d x 2 Z Y V displaystyle frac mathrm d 2 V mathrm d x 2 Z Y V and d 2 I d x 2 Z Y I displaystyle frac mathrm d 2 I mathrm d x 2 Z Y I Notice that both V displaystyle V and I displaystyle I satisfy the same equation Since Z Y displaystyle Z Y is independent of x displaystyle x and t displaystyle t it can be represented by a single constant k 2 displaystyle k 2 The minus sign is included for later convenience That is k 2 Z Y displaystyle k 2 equiv Z Y so j k Z Y displaystyle j k pm sqrt Z Y We can write the above equation as k w L j R w C j G w w L C 1 j R w L 1 j G w C displaystyle k pm omega sqrt left L jR omega right left C jG omega right pm omega sqrt L C sqrt left 1 j frac R omega L right left 1 j frac G omega C right which is correct for any transmission line in general And for typical transmission lines that are carefully built from wire with low loss resistance R displaystyle R and small insulation leakage conductance G displaystyle G further used for high frequencies the inductive reactance w L displaystyle omega L and the capacitive admittance w C displaystyle omega C will both be large so the constant k displaystyle k is very close to being a real number k w L C displaystyle k approx pm omega sqrt LC With this definition of k displaystyle k the position or x displaystyle x dependent part will appear as j k x displaystyle pm j k x in the exponential solutions of the equation similar to the time dependent part j w t displaystyle j omega t so the solution reads V x v e j k x v e j k x displaystyle V x v e jkx v e jkx where v displaystyle v and v displaystyle v are the constants of integration for the forward moving and backward moving waves as in the prior section When we recombine the time dependent part we obtain the full solution V x t V x e j w t v e j k x j w t v e j k x j w t displaystyle V x t V x e j omega t v e jkx j omega t v e jkx j omega t Since the equation for I displaystyle I is the same form it has a solution of the same form I x i e j k x i e j k x displaystyle I x i e jkx i e jkx where i displaystyle i and i displaystyle i are again constants of integration The above equations are the wave solution for V displaystyle V and I displaystyle I In order to be compatible they must still satisfy the original differential equations one of which is d V d x Z I displaystyle frac mathrm d V mathrm d x Z I Substituting the solutions for V displaystyle V and I displaystyle I into the above equation we get d d x v e j k x v e j k x R j w L i e j k x i e j k x displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d x left v e jkx v e jkx right R j omega L left i e jkx i e jkx right or j k v e j k x j k v e j k x R j w L i e j k x R j w L i e j k x displaystyle jk v e jkx jk v e jkx R j omega L i e jkx R j omega L i e jkx Isolating distinct powers of e displaystyle e and combining identical powers we see that in order for the above equation to hold for all possible values of x displaystyle x we must have For the co efficients of e j k x j k v R j w L i displaystyle e jkx quad text quad j k v R j omega L i For the co efficients of e j k x j k v R j w L i displaystyle e jkx quad text quad j k v R j omega L i Since j k R j w L G j w C displaystyle jk sqrt R j omega L G j omega C v i R j w L j k R j w L G j w C Z o displaystyle frac v i frac R j omega L jk sqrt frac R j omega L G j omega C equiv Z text o v i R j w L j k R j w L G j w C Z o displaystyle frac v i frac R j omega L jk sqrt frac R j omega L G j omega C equiv Z text o hence for valid solutions require v Z o i and v Z o i displaystyle v Z text o i quad text and quad v Z text o i It can be seen that the constant Z o displaystyle Z text o defined in the above equations has the dimensions of impedance ratio of voltage to current and is a function of primary constants of the line and operating frequency It is called the characteristic impedance of the transmission line and conventionally denoted by Z o displaystyle Z text o 2 Z o R j w L G j w C L C 1 j R w L 1 j G w C displaystyle Z text o quad quad sqrt frac R j omega L G j omega C quad quad sqrt frac L C sqrt frac 1 j left frac R omega L right 1 j left frac G omega C right which holds generally for any transmission line For well functioning transmission lines with either R displaystyle R and G displaystyle G both very small or with w displaystyle omega very high or all of the above we get Z o L C displaystyle Z text o approx sqrt frac L C hence the characteristic impedance is typically very close to being a real number Manufacturers make commercial cables to approximate this condition very closely over a wide range of frequencies Alternative approach Edit We follow an approach posted by Tim Healy 3 The line is modeled by a series of differential segments with differential series R d x L d x displaystyle left R mathrm d x L mathrm d x right and shunt C d x G d x displaystyle left C mathrm d x G mathrm d x right elements as shown in the figure above The characteristic impedance is defined as the ratio of the input voltage to the input current of a semi infinite length of line We call this impedance Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o That is the impedance looking into the line on the left is Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o But of course if we go down the line one differential length d x displaystyle mathrm d x the impedance into the line is still Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o Hence we can say that the impedance looking into the line on the far left is equal to Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o in parallel with C d x displaystyle C mathrm d x and G d x displaystyle G mathrm d x all of which is in series with R d x displaystyle R mathrm d x and L d x displaystyle L mathrm d x Hence Z o R j w L d x 1 G j w C d x 1 Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o R j omega L mathrm d x frac 1 G j omega C mathrm d x frac 1 Z mathrm o Z o R j w L d x Z o Z o G j w C d x 1 displaystyle Z mathrm o R j omega L mathrm d x frac Z mathrm o Z mathrm o G j omega C mathrm d x 1 Z o Z o 2 G j w C d x R j w L d x Z o G j w C d x R j w L d x Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o Z mathrm o 2 G j omega C mathrm d x R j omega L mathrm d x Z mathrm o G j omega C mathrm d x R j omega L mathrm d x Z mathrm o The added Z o displaystyle Z mathrm o terms cancel leaving Z o 2 G j w C d x R j w L d x Z o G j w C R j w L d x 2 displaystyle Z mathrm o 2 G j omega C mathrm d x R j omega L mathrm d x Z mathrm o G j omega C R j omega L mathrm d x 2 The first power d x displaystyle mathrm d x terms are the highest remaining order Dividing out the common factor of d x displaystyle mathrm d x and dividing through by the factor G j w C displaystyle G j omega C we get Z o 2 R j w L G j w C Z o R j w L d x displaystyle Z mathrm o 2 frac R j omega L G j omega C Z mathrm o R j omega L mathrm d x In comparison to the factors whose d x displaystyle mathrm d x divided out the last term which still carries a remaining factor d x displaystyle mathrm d x is infinitesimal relative to the other now finite terms so we can drop it That leads to Z o R j w L G j w C displaystyle Z mathrm o pm sqrt frac R j omega L G j omega C Reversing the sign applied to the square root has the effect of reversing the direction of the flow of current Lossless line EditThe analysis of lossless lines provides an accurate approximation for real transmission lines that simplifies the mathematics considered in modeling transmission lines A lossless line is defined as a transmission line that has no line resistance and no dielectric loss This would imply that the conductors act like perfect conductors and the dielectric acts like a perfect dielectric For a lossless line R and G are both zero so the equation for characteristic impedance derived above reduces to Z o L C displaystyle Z text o sqrt frac L C In particular Z o displaystyle Z text o does not depend any more upon the frequency The above expression is wholly real since the imaginary term j has canceled out implying that Z o displaystyle Z text o is purely resistive For a lossless line terminated in Z o displaystyle Z text o there is no loss of current across the line and so the voltage remains the same along the line The lossless line model is a useful approximation for many practical cases such as low loss transmission lines and transmission lines with high frequency For both of these cases R and G are much smaller than wL and wC respectively and can thus be ignored The solutions to the long line transmission equations include incident and reflected portions of the voltage and current V V r I r Z c 2 e g x V r I r Z c 2 e g x displaystyle V frac V r I r Z c 2 e gamma x frac V r I r Z c 2 e gamma x I V r Z c I r 2 e g x V r Z c I r 2 e g x displaystyle I frac V r Z c I r 2 e gamma x frac V r Z c I r 2 e gamma x When the line is terminated with its characteristic impedance the reflected portions of these equations are reduced to 0 and the solutions to the voltage and current along the transmission line are wholly incident Without a reflection of the wave the load that is being supplied by the line effectively blends into the line making it appear to be an infinite line In a lossless line this implies that the voltage and current remain the same everywhere along the transmission line Their magnitudes remain constant along the length of the line and are only rotated by a phase angle Surge impedance loading EditIn electric power transmission the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is expressed in terms of the surge impedance loading SIL or natural loading being the power loading at which reactive power is neither produced nor absorbed S I L V L L 2 Z 0 displaystyle mathit SIL frac V mathrm LL 2 Z 0 in which V L L displaystyle V mathrm LL is the RMS line to line voltage in volts Loaded below its SIL the voltage at the load will be greater than the system voltage Above it the load voltage is depressed The Ferranti effect describes the voltage gain towards the remote end of a very lightly loaded or open ended transmission line Underground cables normally have a very low characteristic impedance resulting in an SIL that is typically in excess of the thermal limit of the cable Practical examples EditStandard Impedance W ToleranceEthernet Cat 5 100 5W 4 USB 90 15 5 HDMI 95 15 6 IEEE 1394 108 3 2 7 VGA 75 5 8 DisplayPort 100 20 6 DVI 95 15 6 PCIe 85 15 6 Overhead power line 400 Typical 9 Underground power line 40 Typical 9 The characteristic impedance of coaxial cables coax is commonly chosen to be 50 W for RF and microwave applications Coax for video applications is usually 75 W for its lower loss See also Nominal impedance 50 W and 75 WSee also EditAmpere s circuital law Concept in classical electromagnetism Characteristic acoustic impedance Opposition that a system presents to an acoustic pressurePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Iterative impedance characteristic impedance is a limiting case of this Maxwell s equations Equations describing classical electromagnetism Wave impedance constant related to electromagnetic wave propagation in a mediumPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Space cloth Hypothetical plane with resistivity of 376 7 ohms per square References Edit a b The Telegrapher s Equation mysite du edu Retrieved 9 September 2018 a b Derivation of Characteristic Impedance of Transmission line GATE ECE 2018 16 April 2016 Archived from the original on 9 September 2018 Retrieved 9 September 2018 Characteristic Impedance www ee scu edu Retrieved 2018 09 09 SuperCat OUTDOOR CAT 5e U UTP PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 16 Chapter 2 Hardware USB in a NutShell Beyond Logic org Retrieved 2007 08 25 a b c d AN10798 DisplayPort PCB layout guidelines PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 2019 12 29 Evaluation PDF materias fi uba ar Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 2019 12 29 VMM5FL PDF pro video data sheets Archived from the original PDF on 2016 04 02 Retrieved 2016 03 21 a b Singh 2008 p 212 Sources Edit Guile A E 1977 Electrical Power Systems ISBN 0 08 021729 X Pozar D M February 2004 Microwave Engineering 3rd ed ISBN 0 471 44878 8 Ulaby F T 2004 Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics media ed Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 185089 X Singh S N 23 June 2008 Electric Power Generation Transmission and Distribution 2 ed PHI Learning Pvt Ltd p 212 ISBN 9788120335608 OCLC 1223330325 External links Edit This article incorporates public domain material from Federal Standard 1037C General Services Administration Archived from the original on 2022 01 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Characteristic impedance amp oldid 1135117667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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