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Reflections of signals on conducting lines

A signal travelling along an electrical transmission line will be partly, or wholly, reflected back in the opposite direction when the travelling signal encounters a discontinuity in the characteristic impedance of the line, or if the far end of the line is not terminated in its characteristic impedance. This can happen, for instance, if two lengths of dissimilar transmission lines are joined.

A time-domain reflectometer; an instrument used to locate the position of faults on lines from the time taken for a reflected wave to return from the discontinuity.

This article is about signal reflections on electrically conducting lines. Such lines are loosely referred to as copper lines, and indeed, in telecommunications are generally made from copper, but other metals are used, notably aluminium in power lines. Although this article is limited to describing reflections on conducting lines, this is essentially the same phenomenon as optical reflections in fibre-optic lines and microwave reflections in waveguides.

Reflections cause several undesirable effects, including modifying frequency responses, causing overload power in transmitters and overvoltages on power lines. However, the reflection phenomenon can also be made use of in such devices as stubs and impedance transformers. The special cases of open circuit and short circuit lines are of particular relevance to stubs.

Reflections cause standing waves to be set up on the line. Conversely, standing waves are an indication that reflections are present. There is a relationship between the measures of reflection coefficient and standing wave ratio.

Specific cases edit

There are several approaches to understanding reflections, but the relationship of reflections to the conservation laws is particularly enlightening. A simple example is a step voltage,   (where   is the height of the step and   is the unit step function with time  ), applied to one end of a lossless line, and consider what happens when the line is terminated in various ways. The step will be propagated down the line according to the telegrapher's equation at some velocity   and the incident voltage,  , at some point   on the line is given by[1]

 

The incident current,  , can be found by dividing by the characteristic impedance,  

 

Open circuit line edit

 
Fig. 1. Step voltage disturbance V u(t) is injected into the input of the line, vi travels down the line and is reflected back at the far end as vr.

The incident wave travelling down the line is not affected in any way by the open circuit at the end of the line. It cannot have any effect until the step actually reaches that point. The signal cannot have any foreknowledge of what is at the end of the line and is only affected by the local characteristics of the line. However, if the line is of length   the step will arrive at the open circuit at time  , at which point the current in the line is zero (by the definition of an open circuit). Since charge continues to arrive at the end of the line through the incident current, but no current is leaving the line, then conservation of electric charge requires that there must be an equal and opposite current into the end of the line. Essentially, this is Kirchhoff's current law in operation. This equal and opposite current is the reflected current,  , and since

 

there must also be a reflected voltage,  , to drive the reflected current down the line. This reflected voltage must exist by reason of conservation of energy. The source is supplying energy to the line at a rate of  . None of this energy is dissipated in the line or its termination and it must go somewhere. The only available direction is back up the line. Since the reflected current is equal in magnitude to the incident current, it must also be so that

 

These two voltages will add to each other so that after the step has been reflected, twice the incident voltage appears across the output terminals of the line. As the reflection proceeds back up the line the reflected voltage continues to add to the incident voltage and the reflected current continues to subtract from the incident current. After a further interval of   the reflected step arrives at the generator end and the condition of double voltage and zero current will pertain there also as well as all along the length of the line. If the generator is matched to the line with an impedance of   the step transient will be absorbed in the generator internal impedance and there will be no further reflections.[2]

 
Fig. 2. Equivalent circuit of generator feeding a line.

This counter-intuitive doubling of voltage may become clearer if the circuit voltages are considered when the line is so short that it can be ignored for the purposes of analysis. The equivalent circuit of a generator matched to a load   to which it is delivering a voltage   can be represented as in figure 2. That is, the generator can be represented as an ideal voltage generator of twice the voltage it is to deliver and an internal impedance of  .[2]

 
Fig. 3. Open circuit generator

However, if the generator is left open circuit, a voltage of   appears at the generator output terminals as in figure 3. The same situation pertains if a very short transmission line is inserted between the generator and the open circuit. If, however, a longer line with a characteristic impedance of   and noticeable end-to-end delay is inserted, the generator – being initially matched to the impedance of the line – will have   at the output. But after an interval, a reflected transient will return from the end of the line with the "information" that the line is actually unterminated, and the voltage will become   as before. [2]

Short circuit line edit

The reflection from a short-circuited line can be described in similar terms to that from an open-circuited line. Just as in the open circuit case where the current must be zero at the end of the line, in the short circuit case the voltage must be zero since there can be no volts across a short circuit. Again, all of the energy must be reflected back up the line and the reflected voltage must be equal and opposite to the incident voltage by Kirchhoff's voltage law:

 

and

 

As the reflection travels back up the line, the two voltages subtract and cancel, while the currents will add (the reflection is double negative - a negative current traveling in the reverse direction), the dual situation to the open circuit case.[2]

Arbitrary impedance edit

 
Fig. 4. Equivalent circuit of an incident wave on a transmission line arriving at an arbitrary load impedance.

For the general case of a line terminated in some arbitrary impedance it is usual to describe the signal as a wave traveling down the line and analyse it in the frequency domain. The impedance is consequently represented as a frequency dependant complex function.

For a line terminated in its own characteristic impedance there is no reflection. By definition, terminating in the characteristic impedance has the same effect as an infinitely long line. Any other impedance will result in a reflection. The magnitude of the reflection will be smaller than the magnitude of the incident wave if the terminating impedance is wholly or partly resistive since some of the energy of the incident wave will be absorbed in the resistance. The voltage ( ) across the terminating impedance ( ), may be calculated by replacing the output of the line with an equivalent generator (figure 4) and is given by[3]

 

The reflection,   must be the exact amount required to make  ,

 

The reflection coefficient,  , is defined as

 

and substituting in the expression for  ,

 

In general   is a complex function but the above expression shows that the magnitude is limited to

  when  

The physical interpretation of this is that the reflection cannot be greater than the incident wave when only passive elements are involved (but see negative resistance amplifier for an example where this condition does not hold).[4] For the special cases described above,

Termination   relation
Open circuit  
Short circuit  
 
 
 
 

When both   and   are purely resistive then   must be purely real. In the general case when   is complex, this is to be interpreted as a shift in phase of the reflected wave relative to the incident wave.[5]

Reactive termination edit

Another special case occurs when   is purely real ( ) and   is purely imaginary ( ), that is, it is a reactance. In this case,

 

Since

 

then

 

showing that all the incident wave is reflected, and none of it is absorbed in the termination, as is to be expected from a pure reactance. There is, however, a change of phase,  , in the reflection given by

 

Discontinuity along line edit

 
Fig. 5. Mismatch of transmission line characteristic impedances causes a discontinuity (marked with a star) in the line parameters and results in a reflected wave.

A discontinuity, or mismatch, somewhere along the length of the line results in part of the incident wave being reflected and part being transmitted onward in the second section of line as shown in figure 5. The reflection coefficient in this case is given by

 

In a similar manner, a transmission coefficient,  , can be defined to describe the portion of the wave,  , that it is transmitted in the forward direction:

 
 
Fig. 6. Lumped components or networks connected to the line also cause a discontinuity (marked with a star).

Another kind of discontinuity is caused when both sections of line have an identical characteristic impedance but there is a lumped element,  , at the discontinuity. For the example shown (figure 6) of a shunt lumped element,

  
  

Similar expressions can be developed for a series element, or any electrical network for that matter.[6]

Networks edit

Reflections in more complex scenarios, such as found on a network of cables, can result in very complicated and long lasting waveforms on the cable. Even a simple overvoltage pulse entering a cable system as uncomplicated as the power wiring found in a typical private home can result in an oscillatory disturbance as the pulse is reflected to and from multiple circuit ends. These ring waves as they are known[7] persist for far longer than the original pulse and their waveforms bears little obvious resemblance to the original disturbance, containing high frequency components in the tens of MHz range.[8]

Standing waves edit

 
Standing waves on a transmission line with an open-circuit load (top), and a short-circuit load (bottom). Black dots represent electrons, and the arrows show the electric field.

For a transmission line carrying sinusoidal waves, the phase of the reflected wave is continually changing with distance, with respect to the incident wave, as it proceeds back down the line. Because of this continuous change there are certain points on the line that the reflection will be in phase with the incident wave and the amplitude of the two waves will add. There will be other points where the two waves are in anti-phase and will consequently subtract. At these latter points the amplitude is at a minimum and they are known as nodes. If the incident wave has been totally reflected and the line is lossless, there will be complete cancellation at the nodes with zero signal present there despite the ongoing transmission of waves in both directions. The points where the waves are in phase are anti-nodes and represent a peak in amplitude. Nodes and anti-nodes alternate along the line and the combined wave amplitude varies continuously between them. The combined (incident plus reflected) wave appears to be standing still on the line and is called a standing wave.[9]

The incident wave can be characterised in terms of the line's propagation constant  , source voltage  , and distance from the source  , by

 

However, it is often more convenient to work in terms of distance from the load ( ) and the incident voltage that has arrived there ( ).

 

The negative sign is absent because   is measured in the reverse direction back up the line and the voltage is increasing closer to the source. Likewise the reflected voltage is given by

 

The total voltage on the line is given by

 

It is often convenient to express this in terms of hyperbolic functions

 

Similarly, the total current on the line is

 

The voltage nodes (current nodes are not at the same locations) and anti-nodes occur when

 

Because of the absolute value bars, the general case analytical solution is tiresomely complicated, but in the case of lossless lines (or lines that are short enough that the losses can be neglected)   can be replaced by   where   is the phase change constant. The voltage equation then reduces to trigonometric functions

 

and the partial differential of the magnitude of this yields the condition,

 

Expressing   in terms of wavelength,  , allows   to be solved in terms of  :

 

  is purely real when the termination is short circuit or open circuit, or when both   and   are purely resistive. In those cases the nodes and anti-nodes are given by

 

which solves for   at

 

For   the first point is a node, for   the first point is an anti-node and thereafter they will alternate. For terminations that are not purely resistive the spacing and alternation remain the same but the whole pattern is shifted along the line by a constant amount related to the phase of  .[10]

Voltage standing wave ratio edit

The ratio of   at anti-nodes and nodes is called the voltage standing wave ratio (VSWR) and is related to the reflection coefficient by

 

for a lossless line; the expression for the current standing wave ratio (ISWR) is identical in this case. For a lossy line the expression is only valid adjacent to the termination; VSWR asymptotically approaches unity with distance from the termination or discontinuity.

VSWR and the positions of the nodes are parameters that can be directly measured with an instrument called a slotted line. This instrument makes use of the reflection phenomenon to make many different measurements at microwave frequencies. One use is that VSWR and node position can be used to calculate the impedance of a test component terminating the slotted line. This is a useful method because measuring impedances by directly measuring voltages and currents is difficult at these frequencies.[11][12]

VSWR is the conventional means of expressing the match of a radio transmitter to its antenna. It is an important parameter because power reflected back into a high power transmitter can damage its output circuitry.[13]

Input impedance edit

The input impedance looking into a transmission line which is not terminated with its characteristic impedance at the far end will be something other than   and will be a function of the length of the line. The value of this impedance can be found by dividing the expression for total voltage by the expression for total current given above:[14]

 

Substituting  , the length of the line and dividing through by   reduces this to

 

As before, when considering just short pieces of transmission line,   can be replaced by   and the expression reduces to trigonometric functions

 

Applications edit

There are two structures that are of particular importance which use reflected waves to modify impedance. One is the stub which is a short length of line terminated in a short circuit (or it can be an open circuit). This produces a purely imaginary impedance at its input, that is, a reactance

 

By suitable choice of length, the stub can be used in place of a capacitor, an inductor or a resonant circuit.[15]

The other structure is the quarter wave impedance transformer. As its name suggests, this is a line exactly   in length. Since   this will produce the inverse of its terminating impedance[16]

 

Both of these structures are widely used in distributed element filters and impedance matching networks.

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Carr, pages 70–71
  2. ^ a b c d Pai & Zhang, pages 89–96
  3. ^ Matthaei et al., pages 34
  4. ^ Matthaei et al., pages 8–10
  5. ^ Connor, pages 30–31
  6. ^ Matthaei et al., pages 34–35
  7. ^ Term originally defined in IEEE Standard 587 Applicability to Adjustable Frequency Control (Surge Voltages)
  8. ^ Standler, pages 74–76
  9. ^ Connor, pages 28–31
  10. ^ Connor, page 29
  11. ^ Connor, pages 31–32
  12. ^ Engen, pages 73–76
  13. ^ Bowick et al., page 182
  14. ^ Connor, pages 13–14
  15. ^ Connor, pp. 32–35, Matthaei et al., pages 595–605
  16. ^ Matthaei et al., pages 434–435

References edit

  • Bowick, Christopher; Ajluni, Cheryl; Blyler, John, RF Circuit Design, Newnes, 2011 ISBN 0-08-055342-7.
  • Carr, Joseph J., Practical antenna handbook, McGraw-Hill Professional, 2001 ISBN 0-07-137435-3.
  • Connor, F.R., Wave Transmission, Edward Arnold Ltd., 1972 ISBN 0-7131-3278-7.
  • Engen, Glenn F., Microwave circuit theory and foundations of microwave metrology, IET, 1992 ISBN 0-86341-287-4.
  • Matthaei, G.; Young, L.; Jones, E. M. T., Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks, and Coupling Structures McGraw-Hill 1964.
  • Pai, S. T.; Zhang, Qi, Introduction to high power pulse technology, World Scientific, 1995 ISBN 981-02-1714-5.
  • Standler, Ronald B., Protection of Electronic Circuits from Overvoltages, Courier Dover Publications, 2002 ISBN 0-486-42552-5.

reflections, signals, conducting, lines, also, signal, reflection, signal, travelling, along, electrical, transmission, line, will, partly, wholly, reflected, back, opposite, direction, when, travelling, signal, encounters, discontinuity, characteristic, imped. See also signal reflection A signal travelling along an electrical transmission line will be partly or wholly reflected back in the opposite direction when the travelling signal encounters a discontinuity in the characteristic impedance of the line or if the far end of the line is not terminated in its characteristic impedance This can happen for instance if two lengths of dissimilar transmission lines are joined A time domain reflectometer an instrument used to locate the position of faults on lines from the time taken for a reflected wave to return from the discontinuity This article is about signal reflections on electrically conducting lines Such lines are loosely referred to as copper lines and indeed in telecommunications are generally made from copper but other metals are used notably aluminium in power lines Although this article is limited to describing reflections on conducting lines this is essentially the same phenomenon as optical reflections in fibre optic lines and microwave reflections in waveguides Reflections cause several undesirable effects including modifying frequency responses causing overload power in transmitters and overvoltages on power lines However the reflection phenomenon can also be made use of in such devices as stubs and impedance transformers The special cases of open circuit and short circuit lines are of particular relevance to stubs Reflections cause standing waves to be set up on the line Conversely standing waves are an indication that reflections are present There is a relationship between the measures of reflection coefficient and standing wave ratio Contents 1 Specific cases 1 1 Open circuit line 1 2 Short circuit line 1 3 Arbitrary impedance 1 4 Reactive termination 1 5 Discontinuity along line 1 6 Networks 2 Standing waves 2 1 Voltage standing wave ratio 3 Input impedance 3 1 Applications 4 See also 5 Citations 6 ReferencesSpecific cases editThere are several approaches to understanding reflections but the relationship of reflections to the conservation laws is particularly enlightening A simple example is a step voltage V u t displaystyle V u t nbsp where V displaystyle V nbsp is the height of the step and u t displaystyle u t nbsp is the unit step function with time t displaystyle t nbsp applied to one end of a lossless line and consider what happens when the line is terminated in various ways The step will be propagated down the line according to the telegrapher s equation at some velocity k displaystyle kappa nbsp and the incident voltage v i displaystyle v mathrm i nbsp at some point x displaystyle x nbsp on the line is given by 1 v i V u k t x displaystyle v mathrm i V u kappa t x nbsp The incident current i i displaystyle i mathrm i nbsp can be found by dividing by the characteristic impedance Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp i i v i Z 0 I u k t x displaystyle i mathrm i frac v mathrm i Z 0 I u kappa t x nbsp Open circuit line edit nbsp Fig 1 Step voltage disturbance V u t is injected into the input of the line vi travels down the line and is reflected back at the far end as vr The incident wave travelling down the line is not affected in any way by the open circuit at the end of the line It cannot have any effect until the step actually reaches that point The signal cannot have any foreknowledge of what is at the end of the line and is only affected by the local characteristics of the line However if the line is of length ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp the step will arrive at the open circuit at time t ℓ k displaystyle t ell kappa nbsp at which point the current in the line is zero by the definition of an open circuit Since charge continues to arrive at the end of the line through the incident current but no current is leaving the line then conservation of electric charge requires that there must be an equal and opposite current into the end of the line Essentially this is Kirchhoff s current law in operation This equal and opposite current is the reflected current i r displaystyle i mathrm r nbsp and since i r v r Z 0 displaystyle i mathrm r frac v mathrm r Z 0 nbsp there must also be a reflected voltage v r displaystyle v mathrm r nbsp to drive the reflected current down the line This reflected voltage must exist by reason of conservation of energy The source is supplying energy to the line at a rate of v i i i displaystyle v mathrm i i mathrm i nbsp None of this energy is dissipated in the line or its termination and it must go somewhere The only available direction is back up the line Since the reflected current is equal in magnitude to the incident current it must also be so that v r v i displaystyle v mathrm r v mathrm i nbsp These two voltages will add to each other so that after the step has been reflected twice the incident voltage appears across the output terminals of the line As the reflection proceeds back up the line the reflected voltage continues to add to the incident voltage and the reflected current continues to subtract from the incident current After a further interval of t ℓ k displaystyle t ell kappa nbsp the reflected step arrives at the generator end and the condition of double voltage and zero current will pertain there also as well as all along the length of the line If the generator is matched to the line with an impedance of Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp the step transient will be absorbed in the generator internal impedance and there will be no further reflections 2 nbsp Fig 2 Equivalent circuit of generator feeding a line This counter intuitive doubling of voltage may become clearer if the circuit voltages are considered when the line is so short that it can be ignored for the purposes of analysis The equivalent circuit of a generator matched to a load Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp to which it is delivering a voltage V displaystyle V nbsp can be represented as in figure 2 That is the generator can be represented as an ideal voltage generator of twice the voltage it is to deliver and an internal impedance of Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp 2 nbsp Fig 3 Open circuit generatorHowever if the generator is left open circuit a voltage of 2 V displaystyle 2 V nbsp appears at the generator output terminals as in figure 3 The same situation pertains if a very short transmission line is inserted between the generator and the open circuit If however a longer line with a characteristic impedance of Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp and noticeable end to end delay is inserted the generator being initially matched to the impedance of the line will have V displaystyle V nbsp at the output But after an interval a reflected transient will return from the end of the line with the information that the line is actually unterminated and the voltage will become 2 V displaystyle 2 V nbsp as before 2 Short circuit line edit The reflection from a short circuited line can be described in similar terms to that from an open circuited line Just as in the open circuit case where the current must be zero at the end of the line in the short circuit case the voltage must be zero since there can be no volts across a short circuit Again all of the energy must be reflected back up the line and the reflected voltage must be equal and opposite to the incident voltage by Kirchhoff s voltage law v r v i displaystyle v mathrm r v mathrm i nbsp and i r i i displaystyle i mathrm r i mathrm i nbsp As the reflection travels back up the line the two voltages subtract and cancel while the currents will add the reflection is double negative a negative current traveling in the reverse direction the dual situation to the open circuit case 2 Arbitrary impedance edit nbsp Fig 4 Equivalent circuit of an incident wave on a transmission line arriving at an arbitrary load impedance For the general case of a line terminated in some arbitrary impedance it is usual to describe the signal as a wave traveling down the line and analyse it in the frequency domain The impedance is consequently represented as a frequency dependant complex function For a line terminated in its own characteristic impedance there is no reflection By definition terminating in the characteristic impedance has the same effect as an infinitely long line Any other impedance will result in a reflection The magnitude of the reflection will be smaller than the magnitude of the incident wave if the terminating impedance is wholly or partly resistive since some of the energy of the incident wave will be absorbed in the resistance The voltage V o displaystyle V mathrm o nbsp across the terminating impedance Z L displaystyle Z mathrm L nbsp may be calculated by replacing the output of the line with an equivalent generator figure 4 and is given by 3 V o 2 V i Z L Z 0 Z L displaystyle V mathrm o 2 V mathrm i frac Z mathrm L Z mathrm 0 Z mathrm L nbsp The reflection V r displaystyle V mathrm r nbsp must be the exact amount required to make V i V r V o displaystyle V mathrm i V mathrm r V mathrm o nbsp V r V o V i 2 V i Z L Z 0 Z L V i V i Z L Z 0 Z L Z 0 displaystyle V mathrm r V mathrm o V mathrm i 2 V mathrm i frac Z mathrm L Z mathrm 0 Z mathrm L V mathrm i V mathrm i frac Z mathrm L Z mathrm 0 Z mathrm L Z mathrm 0 nbsp The reflection coefficient G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp is defined as G V r V i displaystyle mathit Gamma frac V mathrm r V mathrm i nbsp and substituting in the expression for V r displaystyle V mathrm r nbsp G V r V i I r I i Z L Z 0 Z L Z 0 displaystyle mathit Gamma frac V mathrm r V mathrm i frac I mathrm r I mathrm i frac Z mathrm L Z mathrm 0 Z mathrm L Z mathrm 0 nbsp In general G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp is a complex function but the above expression shows that the magnitude is limited to G 1 displaystyle left mathit Gamma right leq 1 nbsp when Re Z L Re Z 0 gt 0 displaystyle operatorname Re Z mathrm L operatorname Re Z 0 gt 0 nbsp The physical interpretation of this is that the reflection cannot be greater than the incident wave when only passive elements are involved but see negative resistance amplifier for an example where this condition does not hold 4 For the special cases described above Termination G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp relationOpen circuit G 1 displaystyle mathit Gamma 1 nbsp Short circuit G 1 displaystyle mathit Gamma 1 nbsp Z L R L displaystyle Z mathrm L R mathrm L nbsp Z 0 R 0 displaystyle Z 0 R 0 nbsp Re G lt 1 displaystyle operatorname Re mathit Gamma lt 1 nbsp Im G 0 displaystyle operatorname Im mathit Gamma 0 nbsp When both Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp and Z L displaystyle Z mathrm L nbsp are purely resistive then G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp must be purely real In the general case when G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp is complex this is to be interpreted as a shift in phase of the reflected wave relative to the incident wave 5 See also Reflection phase change Reactive termination edit Another special case occurs when Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp is purely real R 0 displaystyle R 0 nbsp and Z L displaystyle Z mathrm L nbsp is purely imaginary j X L displaystyle j X mathrm L nbsp that is it is a reactance In this case G j X L R 0 j X L R 0 displaystyle mathit Gamma frac j X mathrm L R mathrm 0 j X mathrm L R mathrm 0 nbsp Since j X L R 0 j X L R 0 displaystyle jX mathrm L R mathrm 0 jX mathrm L R mathrm 0 nbsp then G 1 displaystyle mathit Gamma 1 nbsp showing that all the incident wave is reflected and none of it is absorbed in the termination as is to be expected from a pure reactance There is however a change of phase 8 displaystyle theta nbsp in the reflection given by 8 p 2 arctan X L R 0 if X L gt 0 p 2 arctan X L R 0 if X L lt 0 displaystyle theta begin cases pi 2 arctan frac X mathrm L R mathrm 0 amp mbox if X mathrm L gt 0 pi 2 arctan frac X mathrm L R mathrm 0 amp mbox if X mathrm L lt 0 end cases nbsp Discontinuity along line edit nbsp Fig 5 Mismatch of transmission line characteristic impedances causes a discontinuity marked with a star in the line parameters and results in a reflected wave A discontinuity or mismatch somewhere along the length of the line results in part of the incident wave being reflected and part being transmitted onward in the second section of line as shown in figure 5 The reflection coefficient in this case is given by G Z 02 Z 01 Z 02 Z 01 displaystyle mathit Gamma frac Z 02 Z 01 Z 02 Z 01 nbsp In a similar manner a transmission coefficient T displaystyle T nbsp can be defined to describe the portion of the wave V t displaystyle V mathrm t nbsp that it is transmitted in the forward direction T V t V i 2 Z 02 Z 02 Z 01 displaystyle T frac V mathrm t V mathrm i frac 2 Z 02 Z 02 Z 01 nbsp nbsp Fig 6 Lumped components or networks connected to the line also cause a discontinuity marked with a star Another kind of discontinuity is caused when both sections of line have an identical characteristic impedance but there is a lumped element Z L displaystyle Z mathrm L nbsp at the discontinuity For the example shown figure 6 of a shunt lumped element G Z 0 Z 0 2 Z L displaystyle mathit Gamma frac Z 0 Z 0 2 Z mathrm L nbsp T 2 Z L Z 0 2 Z L displaystyle T frac 2 Z mathrm L Z 0 2 Z mathrm L nbsp Similar expressions can be developed for a series element or any electrical network for that matter 6 Networks edit Reflections in more complex scenarios such as found on a network of cables can result in very complicated and long lasting waveforms on the cable Even a simple overvoltage pulse entering a cable system as uncomplicated as the power wiring found in a typical private home can result in an oscillatory disturbance as the pulse is reflected to and from multiple circuit ends These ring waves as they are known 7 persist for far longer than the original pulse and their waveforms bears little obvious resemblance to the original disturbance containing high frequency components in the tens of MHz range 8 Standing waves edit nbsp Standing waves on a transmission line with an open circuit load top and a short circuit load bottom Black dots represent electrons and the arrows show the electric field For a transmission line carrying sinusoidal waves the phase of the reflected wave is continually changing with distance with respect to the incident wave as it proceeds back down the line Because of this continuous change there are certain points on the line that the reflection will be in phase with the incident wave and the amplitude of the two waves will add There will be other points where the two waves are in anti phase and will consequently subtract At these latter points the amplitude is at a minimum and they are known as nodes If the incident wave has been totally reflected and the line is lossless there will be complete cancellation at the nodes with zero signal present there despite the ongoing transmission of waves in both directions The points where the waves are in phase are anti nodes and represent a peak in amplitude Nodes and anti nodes alternate along the line and the combined wave amplitude varies continuously between them The combined incident plus reflected wave appears to be standing still on the line and is called a standing wave 9 The incident wave can be characterised in terms of the line s propagation constant g displaystyle gamma nbsp source voltage V displaystyle V nbsp and distance from the source x displaystyle x nbsp by V i V e g x displaystyle V mathrm i V e gamma x nbsp However it is often more convenient to work in terms of distance from the load x ℓ x displaystyle x ell x nbsp and the incident voltage that has arrived there V i L displaystyle V mathsf iL nbsp V i V i L e g x displaystyle V mathrm i V mathsf iL e gamma x nbsp The negative sign is absent because x displaystyle x nbsp is measured in the reverse direction back up the line and the voltage is increasing closer to the source Likewise the reflected voltage is given by V r G V i L e g x displaystyle V mathsf r mathit Gamma V mathsf iL e gamma x nbsp The total voltage on the line is given by V T V i V r V i L e g x G e g x displaystyle V mathsf T V mathsf i V mathsf r V mathsf iL left e gamma x mathit Gamma e gamma x right nbsp It is often convenient to express this in terms of hyperbolic functions V T V i L 1 G cosh g x 1 G sinh g x displaystyle V mathsf T V mathsf iL left left 1 mathit Gamma right cosh gamma x left 1 mathit Gamma right sinh gamma x right nbsp Similarly the total current on the line is I T I i L 1 G cosh g x 1 G sinh g x displaystyle I mathsf T I mathsf iL left 1 mathit Gamma cosh gamma x 1 mathit Gamma sinh gamma x right nbsp The voltage nodes current nodes are not at the same locations and anti nodes occur when V T x 0 displaystyle frac partial left V mathsf T right partial x 0 nbsp Because of the absolute value bars the general case analytical solution is tiresomely complicated but in the case of lossless lines or lines that are short enough that the losses can be neglected g displaystyle gamma nbsp can be replaced by j b displaystyle j beta nbsp where b displaystyle beta nbsp is the phase change constant The voltage equation then reduces to trigonometric functions V T V i L 1 G cos b x j 1 G sin b x displaystyle V mathsf T V mathsf iL left 1 mathit Gamma cos beta x j left 1 mathit Gamma right sin beta x right nbsp and the partial differential of the magnitude of this yields the condition 2 I m G tan 2 b x displaystyle 2 operatorname mathcal I m mathit Gamma tan 2 beta x nbsp Expressing b displaystyle beta nbsp in terms of wavelength l displaystyle lambda nbsp allows x displaystyle x nbsp to be solved in terms of l displaystyle lambda nbsp 2 I m G tan 4 p l x displaystyle 2 operatorname mathcal I m mathit Gamma tan left frac 4 pi lambda x right nbsp G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp is purely real when the termination is short circuit or open circuit or when both Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp and Z L displaystyle Z mathrm L nbsp are purely resistive In those cases the nodes and anti nodes are given by tan 4 p l x 0 displaystyle tan left frac 4 pi lambda x right 0 nbsp which solves for x displaystyle x nbsp at x 0 1 4 l 1 2 l 3 4 l displaystyle x 0 tfrac 1 4 lambda tfrac 1 2 lambda tfrac 3 4 lambda dots nbsp For R L lt R 0 displaystyle R mathrm L lt R 0 nbsp the first point is a node for R L gt R 0 displaystyle R mathrm L gt R 0 nbsp the first point is an anti node and thereafter they will alternate For terminations that are not purely resistive the spacing and alternation remain the same but the whole pattern is shifted along the line by a constant amount related to the phase of G displaystyle mathit Gamma nbsp 10 Voltage standing wave ratio edit The ratio of V T displaystyle V mathsf T nbsp at anti nodes and nodes is called the voltage standing wave ratio VSWR and is related to the reflection coefficient by V S W R 1 G 1 G displaystyle mathsf VSWR frac 1 left mathit Gamma right 1 left mathit Gamma right nbsp for a lossless line the expression for the current standing wave ratio ISWR is identical in this case For a lossy line the expression is only valid adjacent to the termination VSWR asymptotically approaches unity with distance from the termination or discontinuity VSWR and the positions of the nodes are parameters that can be directly measured with an instrument called a slotted line This instrument makes use of the reflection phenomenon to make many different measurements at microwave frequencies One use is that VSWR and node position can be used to calculate the impedance of a test component terminating the slotted line This is a useful method because measuring impedances by directly measuring voltages and currents is difficult at these frequencies 11 12 VSWR is the conventional means of expressing the match of a radio transmitter to its antenna It is an important parameter because power reflected back into a high power transmitter can damage its output circuitry 13 Input impedance editThe input impedance looking into a transmission line which is not terminated with its characteristic impedance at the far end will be something other than Z 0 displaystyle Z 0 nbsp and will be a function of the length of the line The value of this impedance can be found by dividing the expression for total voltage by the expression for total current given above 14 Z i n V T I T Z 0 1 G cosh g x 1 G sinh g x 1 G cosh g x 1 G sinh g x displaystyle Z mathrm in frac V mathrm T I mathrm T Z 0 frac 1 mathit Gamma cosh gamma x 1 mathit Gamma sinh gamma x 1 mathit Gamma cosh gamma x 1 mathit Gamma sinh gamma x nbsp Substituting x ℓ displaystyle x ell nbsp the length of the line and dividing through by 1 G cosh g x displaystyle 1 mathit Gamma cosh gamma x nbsp reduces this to Z i n Z 0 Z L Z 0 tanh g ℓ Z 0 Z L tanh g ℓ displaystyle Z mathrm in Z 0 frac Z mathrm L Z 0 tanh gamma ell Z 0 Z mathrm L tanh gamma ell nbsp As before when considering just short pieces of transmission line g displaystyle gamma nbsp can be replaced by j b displaystyle j beta nbsp and the expression reduces to trigonometric functions Z i n Z 0 Z L j Z 0 tan b ℓ Z 0 j Z L tan b ℓ displaystyle Z mathrm in Z 0 frac Z mathrm L j Z 0 tan beta ell Z 0 j Z mathrm L tan beta ell nbsp Applications edit There are two structures that are of particular importance which use reflected waves to modify impedance One is the stub which is a short length of line terminated in a short circuit or it can be an open circuit This produces a purely imaginary impedance at its input that is a reactance X i n Z 0 tan b ℓ displaystyle X mathrm in Z 0 tan beta ell nbsp By suitable choice of length the stub can be used in place of a capacitor an inductor or a resonant circuit 15 The other structure is the quarter wave impedance transformer As its name suggests this is a line exactly l 4 displaystyle lambda 4 nbsp in length Since b ℓ p 2 displaystyle beta ell pi 2 nbsp this will produce the inverse of its terminating impedance 16 Z i n Z 0 2 Z L displaystyle Z mathrm in frac Z 0 2 Z mathrm L nbsp Both of these structures are widely used in distributed element filters and impedance matching networks See also editAttenuation distortion Antenna tuner Fresnel reflection Lecher lines Time domain reflectometry Space cloth Smith ChartCitations edit Carr pages 70 71 a b c d Pai amp Zhang pages 89 96 Matthaei et al pages 34 Matthaei et al pages 8 10 Connor pages 30 31 Matthaei et al pages 34 35 Term originally defined in IEEE Standard 587 Applicability to Adjustable Frequency Control Surge Voltages Standler pages 74 76 Connor pages 28 31 Connor page 29 Connor pages 31 32 Engen pages 73 76 Bowick et al page 182 Connor pages 13 14 Connor pp 32 35 Matthaei et al pages 595 605 Matthaei et al pages 434 435References editBowick Christopher Ajluni Cheryl Blyler John RF Circuit Design Newnes 2011 ISBN 0 08 055342 7 Carr Joseph J Practical antenna handbook McGraw Hill Professional 2001 ISBN 0 07 137435 3 Connor F R Wave Transmission Edward Arnold Ltd 1972 ISBN 0 7131 3278 7 Engen Glenn F Microwave circuit theory and foundations of microwave metrology IET 1992 ISBN 0 86341 287 4 Matthaei G Young L Jones E M T Microwave Filters Impedance Matching Networks and Coupling Structures McGraw Hill 1964 Pai S T Zhang Qi Introduction to high power pulse technology World Scientific 1995 ISBN 981 02 1714 5 Standler Ronald B Protection of Electronic Circuits from Overvoltages Courier Dover Publications 2002 ISBN 0 486 42552 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reflections of signals on conducting lines amp oldid 1147528023 Discontinuity along line, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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