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Prof. David R. Jackson Dept. of ECE Fall 2013 Notes 9 ECE 6340 Intermediate EM Waves 1
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Fields of a Guided Wave Assume z Then The “ t ” subscript denotes transverse (to z ) Theorem Guided wave 2
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Fields of a Guided Wave (cont.) Proof (for E y ) or Now solve for H x : so 3
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Substituting this into the equation for E y yields the following result: Next, multiply by Fields of a Guided Wave (cont.) 4
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so The other components may be found similarly. Fields of a Guided Wave (cont.) 5
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Summary of Fields 6
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Types of Guided Waves TEM mode: 7 TM mode: TE mode: Hybrid mode: Transmission line Waveguide Fiber -optic guide
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Wavenumber Property of TEM Wave To avoid having a completely zero field, Assume a TEM wave: We then have Note: The plus sign is chosen to give a decaying wave: 8
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Wavenumber Property (cont.) Wavenumber notation: Note that k z is called the “propagation wavenumber” of the mode. TEM mode: 9 Note: A TEM mode can propagate on a lossless transmission line at any frequency.
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Wavenumber Property (cont.) so Lossless TL: The phase velocity is equal to the speed of light in the dielectric. 10 The field on a lossless transmission line is a TEM mode (proven later).
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Wavenumber Property (cont.) Note: The TEM z assumption requires that R = 0. Otherwise, E z 0 (from Ohm's law). Lossy TL (dielectric but no conductor loss): The mode is still a TEM mode (proven later). Real part: Imaginary part: 11 Dividing these two equations gives us:
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and are 2D static field functions. Static Property of TEM Wave The fields of a TEM mode may be written as: Theorem 12
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Therefore, only a z component of the curl exists. We next prove that this must be zero. Proof Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 13
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Also, Use Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 14
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Hence Therefore, Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 15
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Also, ( No charge density in the time-harmonic steady state, for a homogeneous medium) Therefore, Hence, Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 16
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Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 17
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The potential function is unique (because of the uniqueness theorem of statics), and hence is the same as a static potential function (which also obeys the Laplace equation and the same BCs.). A B Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 18
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The static property shows us why a TEM z wave can exist on a transmission line (two parallel conductors). Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) A B V0V0 A nonzero field can exist at DC. Transmission line 19
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The static property also tells us why a TEM z wave cannot exist inside of a waveguide (hollow conducting pipe). Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) Waveguide (This would violate Faraday's law: at DC the voltage drop around a closed path must be zero.) No field can exist inside at DC. C 20
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so Similarly, C A B Static Property of TEM Wave (cont.) 21
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TEM Mode: Magnetic Field so 22
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TEM Magnetic Field (cont.) Also, so This can be written as 23
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TEM Mode: Charge Density TEM mode x y A E B 24
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TEM Charge Density (cont.) so Hence Note: 25 In general
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TEM Mode: Homogeneous Substrate A TEM z mode requires a homogeneous substrate. Contradiction! x y Assume a TEM mode Coax partially filled with dielectric 26
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Example: Microstrip Line Assume a TEM mode: w h x y (requires a homogeneous space of material) w x y h 27 Homogeneous model
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Example (cont.) Strip in free space (or homogeneous space) with a static charge density (no ground plane): In this result, I 0 is the total current [ Amps] on the strip at z = 0. (This was first derived by Maxwell using conformal mapping.) Hence: This is accurate for a narrow strip (since we ignored the ground plane). 28 w x y
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Example: Coaxial Cable Find E, H a b We first find E t0 and H t0 29
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Example (cont.) Boundary conditions: so Hence Therefore 30
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Example (cont.) Hence 31
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Example (cont.) E This result is valid at any frequency. The three-dimensional fields are then as follows: 32
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Example (cont.) E x y JsJs Find the characteristic impedance 33
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Example (cont.) (assume = 0 ) Result: 34 Find ( L, C) for lossless coax
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Example (cont.) Result: 35 Find ( L, C, G) for lossy coax
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TEM Mode: Telegrapher’s Eqs. x y TEM mode (lossless conductors) 36 A E B i H CvCv A B
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Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) Note: v is path independent in the ( x, y ) plane: 37
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Hence, we have Use Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) Take x and y components: 38
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But so Hence Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) Note: L is the magnetostatic (DC) value (a fixed number). CvCv dx dy 39 (flux per meter)
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Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) If we add R into the equation: This is justifiable if the mode is approximately a TEM mode (small conductor loss). See the derivation on the next slide. 40
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Faraday's law: Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) Include R Assume that current still flows in the z direction only, and R is unique in the time domain. Hence: 41 l = flux/meter
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Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) A B CiCi so Ampere’s law: The contour C i hugs the A conductor. Note: There is no displacement current through the surface, since E z = 0. Now use this path: x y 42
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Now use Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) Take x and y components: 43
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Hence Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) 44
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Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) Note: C and G are the static (DC) values. CiCi dx dy But 45
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Hence or Telegrapher’s Eqs. (cont.) 46
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Telegrapher’s Eqs.: Alternate Derivation Ampere's law: Alternate derivation of second Telegrapher’s equation 47 Hence
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