x
p cos
cP,
y
= p sin cP,
(1-75)
z=z
Thus the expressions (1-74) and (1-75) provide the ingredients for transforming the vector field A(x,y, '<:), given in rectangular coordinate form, to its corresponding circylindrical coordinate I(Jrm. Conversely, if A were given in circular cylindrical coordinate fc)rm and its transformation to rectangular coordinates were desired, the reverse of the foregoing proCE?dure would be needed. The results (1-74a,b,c), as linear algebraie equations, may solved simultaneously to yield
n the
(1-76a) -73b)
(1-76b) (1-76c)
-73e) ms of z' A,
ii'om ( l o r from Figure 1-26(a), the coordinates p, functions of x,)" z, become
·74b) -74e)
The expression fIX
and
z,
expressed as
z
Ii
-74a)
( 1-77)
cP in (1-77) also means equivalently that cos
cP
x
(1-78)
needed in (1-76a, b) to complete the transformation of A to the rectangular coordinate fonn. A compilation of the f(m~going transformations is f(lUnd in Table 1-1. A similar geometrical procedure can be used to transfc)rm some vector field A between the rectangular and spherical coordinate systems. I t is left. to you to prove, with the aid of the geometry suggested by Figure 1-26(h), that the transformations of components AI) A z , A} of the vector A, as well as its coordinate position-variables l u z , u3 ), from rectangular to spherical coordinates or vice versa, will yield the results in Table 1 t.
IXAMPLE 1·19. Transl()rm the given vector lield to circular cylindrical coordinates. (1) and evaluate F at the rectangular coordinate point P( 1, 1, I) in both coordinate systems.
~ TABLE 1·1 Coordinate Transformations
~
RECTANGULAR TO CIRCULAR CYLINDRICAL
rp + Ay sin rp -Ax sin rp + Ay cos rp
Ap = Ax cos A.p =
~
CIRCULAR CYLINDRICAL TO RECTANGULAR
(l-74a)
Ax
=
rp - A.p sin rp sin rp + A.p cos rp
Ap cos
1-74b)
(1-76a) (1-76b)
~
~
tJ>
= Az
(I-He)
A z ='A z in which
(1-76c)
~
tl
in which
t'l
l""'
x = p cos
rp,
y
p sin
rp,
z= z
(1-75)
p= cos
=
Ax sin () cos
Ae = Ax cos () cos
rp + Ay sin () sin rp + rp + Ay cos () sin rp -
sin
rp + Ay cos rp
A z sin
e
rp y = r sin e sin rp z = r cos e
x
sin
rp =-===
(1-78)
( 1-79c)
t'l
~
o a::
~ ~
>-3
rp + Ae cos e cos rp - Aq, sin rp Ar sin () sin rp + Ae cos () sin rp + Aq, cos rp
= Ar cos () - Ae sin
e
o (1-8Ia)
""
t:;; l""'
(1-8Ib)
(I-8le)
S;
Z
"" t'l ~
in which
t'l tJ>
;;
r = ';x 2 +y2 + Z2
in which
x
=
AT sin () cos
=
cos () (1-79a) (1-79b)
A.p
rp
(1-77)
SPHERICAL TO RECTANGULAR
RECTANGULAR TO SPHERICAL
AT
z=z
(")
t'l
r sin () cos
(1-80)
cos
e=
cos
rp
=
sin
x
sinrp
e=
=-===
(1-82)
(1-82)
1-13 UNITS AND DIMENSIONS
With Fx = 3z, l'~ = (1-74a,b,c) yields
F
and
F~ =
49
5x, the use of the component transformations
+ al'~ + aJ:'~ + F~ sin l + a ( - f',; sin + Fy cos + 4) sin ( -3z sin + 4) cos
= ai~ =
ap(Fx cos
obtains the desired result.
Inserting the coordinate transforma tions F(p, , z) = a p (3,: cos
(P + 4p sin 2
+ a( -3z sin q> + 4p sin cos
(2) In cartesian form, (l) yields at the point P( 1, I, 1) F(I, I, I)
3ax
+ 4ay + 5az
The circular cylindrical coordinates at this point, fi'om (
q) =
cos- 1 (1/~'2) = 45'" and
z=
I. These values inserted into
F(J2' 45°,1)
= 4.95a p
(3)
and (1-73), arc p = J2, obtains
+ 0.707a + 5az
As a check, observe that
F=
= 7.07
1·13 UNITS AND DIMENSIONS The mb system of units, introduced by Giorgi in 1901, is now employed almost universally in electromagnetics. In this system, length is expressed in meters, mass in kilograms, and time in seconds. A fi)urth unit, that of either eleetric charge (coulomb) or electric current (coulomb per second, or ampere), is needed in the dimensional description of electromagnetic phenomena. The rationalized mks system, which eliminates a Ll,ctor 4n from the Maxwell equations, has been almost universally adopted, and it is used in this text. The Giorgi mks system is especially noteworthy in that it deals with the primary electromagnetic quantities directly in the practical units in which they arc measured: in coulombs, amperes, volts, watts, and ohms. The choice of the dimension of the fourth unit (charge) adopted for the mks system is seen to depend on the values chosen for the constants Eo and Ito that appear in the Maxwell equations, (I and (1-56). Only one of these constants is arbitrary, though, in view ofthe relationship 125b) {or the speed oflight, developed in Chapter 2 for uniform plane waves in a vacuum c=
= 2.99792
X
10 8 ~ 3
X
10 8
( 1-83)
an experimentally determined value. In the mks system, the unit of eharge is the coulomb, defined by setting the constant 110 equal to 4n x 10- 7 • The value of the constant EO is then obtained from (I 1
Eo = - - 2
1l0 C
( 1-84a)
50
VECTOR ANALYSIS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
tABI
TABLE 1-2 Physical Quantities in the mks System
PHYSICAL QUANTITY
SYMBOL
UNIT
Length Mass Time Charge Current Frequency Force Energy Power Potential, emf Electric flux Capacitance Resistance Conductance Magnetic flux Magnetic flux density Inductance Free-space permeability Free-space permittivity Conductivity
t,
meter kilogram second coulomb ampere hertz newton joule watt volt coulomb farad ohm mho weber tesla henry henry/meter fhrad/meter mho/meter
d, ...
m
t, T q, Q i,l
f F U P «1>, V
t/le C R G
t/lm B L fJo Eo (J
which, if the approximation c ::;::: 3 good approximation
X
ABBREVIATION
J W V C
F (l U Wb T H Him F/m U/m
Clsec sec- 1 kg·m/sec 2 N'm J/sec W/A = N'm/C C/V = A· sec/V VIA A/V V'see Wb/m 2 = V· sec/m 2 V . sec/A Wb/A (l·sec/m U·scc/m
10 8 m/s for the speed oflight is made, yields the
10- 9 Eo::;::: --::;:::
36n
m kg sec C A Hz N
MIJ
IN TERMS OF BASIC UNITS
8.85
X
10- 12 F/m
(1-84b)
This value for Eo substituted into the Coulomb force expression (1-58) then provides the correct scale factor to obtain the force between the charges in newtons, the charges q and q' being given in coulombs and separated a distance r given in meters. One newton of force, that required to accelerate a I-kg mass at the rate one meter per second per second (1 m/sec 2 ), is thus the product of mass (kilogram) and acceleration (meter/second 2 ), making, 1 N = 1 km/sec 2 (= 10 5 dyn). The unit of energy or work is the newton-meter, orjoule (= 10 7 erg). In Table 1-2 are listed units of the mks system by name, unit, and symbol. The symbolisms largely agree with the recommendations of the International Organization f()r Standardization (ISO) .12 The numerical designation of field quantities is facilitated through the use of appropriate powers of ten. Thus 10 6 hertz = 10 6 Hz is written I MHz, in which the 12See IEklo' Spectrum, March 1971, p. 77 for a digest of the recommendations of the IEEE Standards Commillee adopted December 3, 1970.
51
PROBLEMS
tABLE 1·3 Symbols for Multiplying Factors MULTIPLYING FACTOR
PREFIX
SYMBOL
MULTIPLYING FACTOR
PREFIX
SYMBOl
10 12 109 106 10 3 10 2 10 10- 1
tera giga mega kilo hecto deka deci
T
10- 2 10- 3 10- 6 10- 9 10- 12 10- 15 10- 18
centi milli mlCro nano pico femto atto
c m
G M k h da d
}J.
n
P f a
prefix M (mega) denotes the 1.0 6 factor by which the unit is multiplied. Similarly, 3 X 10- 12 F is abbreviated 3 pF, with p (pica) denoting the factor 10- 12 . Other literal prefixes to be used in this way are listed in Table 1-3.
REFERENCES ABRAHAM, M., and R. BECKER. The Classical Theory of Electricity and Magnetism. Glasgow: Blackie, 1943. PLEMENT, P. R., and W. C. JOHNSON. Electrical Engineering Science. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1960. FANO, R. M., L. J. CHU, and R. B. ADLER. Electromagnetic Fields, Energy and Forces. New York: Wiley, 1960. HAYT, W. H. Engineerin,g Electromagnetin, 4th ed. New York: McGraw-Hili, 198!. LORRAIN, P., and D. R. CORSON. Electromagnetic Fields and Waves. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman,
1970 . .PuILLlPS, H. B. Vector Ana(ysis. New York: Wiley, 1944. REITZ, R., and F. J. MILFORD. Foundations of Electromagnetic Theory. Reading, Mass.: AddisonWesley, 1960.
PROBLEMS
SECTION 1-2 1-1.
Use a vector sketch in a plane to show graphically that A - B = - (B - A).
SECTION 1-4 1-2. Given are the vector constants: A = 5a x + 3ay + 4a., B = 2ay + az> C = -6a•. Sketch them at the origin in the rectangular coordinate system and evaluate the following. (a) A (b)
+B +C =D
IAI,IDI
(c) 2A - C =
[Answer: 5a x
+ 5ay -
a z)
[Answer: 7.07, 7.14]
E, lEI
[Answer: lOax
+ 6ay + 14a z ,
18.22]
52
VECTOR ANALYSIS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
1-3. A particular vector electric Held intensity at the point PI 3,6) in rectangular coordinates has the value E = 120ax + 200a y + 100az V 1m. (a) Carefully sketch a labeled vector diagram, as suggested by Figure 1-4((;), showing E and its components E',., E y , E z along with the unit vectors ax, a y , a z at Pl' What is the magnitude ofE? Assuming that E = aEE, express the unit vector a E in rectangular coordinate form, adding it to your diagram. If the same E were given to exist at another point, say P 2 (3, 0, I) in this region, explain why these E vectors are considered equal at these different points. (b) As an exercise in identifying coordinate surfaces, sketch and label, on a diagram as suggested by Figure 1-5 (b), the\rectangular (planar) coordinate surfaces x = 2,y = 3, and z = 6 that define the intersection Pl' Identify the components of E that arc perpendicular to the coordinate surfaces at Pl' [Answer: (a) E = 253.8 Vim, a E = 0.47a x + 0.79a y + 0.39a zl . 1-4. In the circular cylindrical coordinate system, a particular vector B = 30ap + 10a
IGI
(z)
B PI (5, 30°, 6) -+,.f-''W'~J-'--
-~ (xl
~;,v'
/ /
PROBLEM
J~4
4>=30° semi~ir1finite plane //
(y)
(xl
Pl
S 1 If
PROBLEMS
53
(z)
-_ I ---_yl~--.L.(x)
,Y2
-
I
I I
--J..... ..... -
(y)
PROBLEM 1-6
SECTION 1-6 1-6. Shown is the "distance vector," R, a vector directed from the point PdXl,Yl' zd to P Z (x 2 ,)'z, zz) in space, the position vectors of the latter being r 1 and rz. Observing graphically that R = r z - rj, write the expression for Rand IRI in rectangular coordinate {arm. Also write the expression in rectangular coordinates for the unit vector a R directed along R, making use Ahc definition, aR = Rj R.
\.!.:z}'
From the geometry, it is readily seen that the relation among the radial unit vector a r of spherical coordinates and unit vectors of the circular cylindrical coordinate system is a r = a p sin 0 + a z cos O. Use this relation to show that (oa,/iJ
SECTION 1-7 1-8. Sketch two vectors A and B in the same plane, showing from the definition (1-34) and the geometry that A . B means the magnitude A times the length of the "projection of B onto A," dcf1ncd by B cos O. Sketch the two vectors F = 30ax + 40ay and G = 20ay + 50a z at the point 1'(2, 1,3) in the rectangular coordinate system, as suggested by Figure 1-4(c). Use the ddinitionof the dot product to find the projection F cos 0 ofF onto G. Sketch this projection. Find the smaller angle between F and G. [Answer: F cos 1J = 14.8,0 = 72.8°] 1-9. Two constant vectors, C = 30ax + 50ay + 80a z and D = - 20ay + 40aZ' are located at the point P(3, 5, 4) in rectangular coordinates. (a) Sketch these vectors at 1', after the manner suggested by Fif!:ure 1-4. Find their magnitudes, and find the smaller angle between them (in their common plane) by use of (1) their dot product, and (2) their cross product. (b) Find the so-called "direction angles," !Xc, {3e, and ')Ie between the vector C and the unit vectors ax, a y , a z , respectively. Label these angles on your diagram. [Hint: Employ the concept of "projection" from Problem 1-8; e.g., note that the dot product of C with the unit vector ax is C times cos !Xc (the direction cosine).] [Answer: (a) 99.0,44.7,60.2° (b) 72.36°, 59.66°, 36.08°] 1-10. (a) Give the possible conditions that two vectors must satisfy if their dot product, A . B, is zero. (b) Hit is given that A' B A· C, show from the definition of scalar product that this does not necessarily mean that B C. What does it mean? Use a graphical construction to reinforce your remarks.
1-11. Sketch a triangle of arbitrary shape using the vectors A, B, C to denote the sides such that A + B = C, with the angle () between A and B. Prove the law of cosines by use of the dot product C· C = (A + B) . (A + B) for this triangle. [Answer: CZ A2 + B2 2AB cos OJ
54
VECTOR ANALYSIS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
1-12.
Given the vectors A, B, and C of Problem 1-2, find (a) A' B, B' C
[Answer: 10, -6]
(b) IO(A' C)
[Answer: -240]
(c) A x B =
F, IFI
(d) A' (A x B) (A x B) . C
[Answer: -Sax - Say
+
lOaz , 12.25]
[Why is the answer zero expected?] [Answer: -60]
(f) (A x B) x C
[Answer: 30ax
(g) A x (B x C)
[Answer: -48a y + 36azJ
-
30ay ]
1-13. Shown on the figure in spherical coordinates at the point P are the two vectors F = 40a o + 30a.p and G I SOar - 100ao + 250a.p. (a) What are the spherical coordinates (r, 8, 4» of the point P in the figure? (b) Find the vector magnitudes and their dot product F . G. (c) Find the projection G cos IX of G onto F, and determine the angle IX between the vectors in their common plane. (d) Find the expansion for the unit vector a F directed along F. [Answer: (b) 50, 308.22, 3500 (c) IX = 76.87"]
G-"14:
~uld
In the spherical system of Problem 1-13, find the value to which the 4> component of need to be adjusted so as to make F and G exactly perpendicular.
1-15.
(a) Sketch the unit vectors of the rectangular coordinate system at some common point as depicted in Figure 1-4(b) or ] . Applying the definition (1-38) of the cross produ.rt and the right-hand rule of Figure 1-9, show by inspection of the sketch why one expects that ax x a y = a z and that a y x ax = -a z . Silnilarly, show why a y x a z ax, a z x a y -ax, a z x ax a y and ax x a z = -avo Why is ax x ax = O? (Avoid employing the determinant (1-41) in your arguments.) (b) Use the approach suggested in part (a) to verify that, in eylindrical coordinates, a p x a.p = a z , a.p x a p = -a., a.p x a z = a p ' a z x a.p = -ap , a z X a p = a.p and a p X az -a.p.
1-16. A parallelepiped has edges given by ax, 2a p and a z • Sketch this "box." Show that one major diagonal can be denoted by A = ax + 2ay + a z . Label it on the sketch. Another major G= 1503r
-100ao+ 2503"
(z)
,./ /
/
/ / /
I /
I I
/ I
I I I
y-"" -"" ,,;///
'"
....
-
(xl
PROBLEM 1-13
-----(y)
PROBLEMS
55
diagonal is written B = -ax + 2ay + at. Label it also (noting that as a free vector, B can be translated parallel to itself without altering its magnitude and direction). (a) l'iud the lengths of these diagonals, as well as their dot and cross products. (b) Find the smaller angle between the diagonals, first making use of the dot product and then using the cross product. [Answer: (a) 6, 4, 2a y - 4a z (b) 48.19°] 17.. Relative to the pivot point given, find the vector moment (torque) associated with the owing vector force and distance (in meters). (a) F = 20a y N applied at the point 4 m up the zaxis, with the pivot point at the origin. (b) G = :'lOaz N applied at 1\ (-1,3,0) with the pivot point at the origin. (b) G = :'lOaz N applied at PI ( - I, 3,0) with the pivot point at P z( 1,0, I). Sketch the applicable vector diagrams, indicating from the right-hand rule the rotation associated with the moment M. [Answer: (a) -80a x (b) 150ax + lOOa, N ·m]
SECTION 1-8 1-18. A non conservative force field, F a x 12xy2 + ay 15yz + az 9z 2 N, is applied along the straight line t shown, the intersection of the planes y = 3x and z = -fy + 2. Find the work done by F in traversing e from PI(O, 0, 2) to P2 ( 1,3,0) (in meter's). \ Answer: 48 N . m] 1-19.
x2
(a) An elliptical path t J is defined in space as the intersection of the right circular cylinder 1) 2 = I and the tilted plane z = 1/2 shown. Find the value of the line integralofH . dt
+ Cy -
(2)
I \
I \
Plane y= 3x
(xl
PROBLEM 1-13
(z)
I I
1_---_ . . .
/r
x2+(y-l)2=1~"-l
I I I I Pj(O,O,O)
"-
/)
I -----.-" I I I I
I
Plane
I
(xl (y)
PROBLEM 1-19
56
VECTOR ANALYSIS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
,
(z) I
------
(y) (x)
PROBLEM \-20
between the points PI and Pi shown, if H = a y 3(1 x 2 ) + az~v2. (b) Find the line integral between the same points, but over the straight-line path t z defined by the intersection of the x = 0 plane and the tilted plane z = y/2. Is H a conservative field? Explain [Answer: 7.33, 11.33J
1-20. The semicircular path t shown is the inter-section of the right circular cylinder P 3 cos cp and the z = 2 plane. Find the line integral ofE . dt from P l to P 2 ifE = a p l50p cos cp + a.p200 sin cp + a z 100 cos cp. Determine the line integral over the straight-line path from PI to P 2 (intersection of the cp = 0 and z = 2 planes). [Answer: -150, -675]
SECTION 1-9 1-21. Using standard scalar volume-integration methods, make use of the triple integral of p"dv given by (1-47) to find the charge q inside the following volume regions. (Sketch each configuration with dimensions, labeling a volume element at the typical point P inside .. appropriate to the coordinate system used.) (a) The charged volume region is a cube with sides located at x =.0, x = 0.1 m,] = 0,] = 0.1 m, Z = 0, Z = 0.1 m, with the nonuniform charge density inside given by PI' = 20xyz C/m 3 . (b) The volume region is a right circular cylinder bounded by the surfaces p = 0.1 m, z = 0, and Z = 0.1 m, with PI' = 20pz C/m 3 inside. (c) The volume region is a sphere ofO.I-m radius, containing the charge density Pv = 20r cos 2 0 C/m 3 . l Answer: 2.5 pC, 209 pC, 2.09 mC] . 1-22. Employing standard scalar surface-integration methods, make use of the double integral of Ps ds to find the total charge on the following surfaces. (Sketch the dimensional layout, labeling a scalar surface element at the typical point P(Ul, U2, u3) on S, appropriate to the coordinate system required.) (a) The charged surface is square, centered at the origin, bounded by the sides at x = ± 0.1 m,] = ± G.I m, and assumed covered with the nonuniform surface charge density Ps = lOx 2]2 C/m2. (b) The surface is a right circular cylinder (no endcaps) of radius p = a = 0.1 m, extending z = ± 0.1 m and possessing the surface charge density Ps = IOz 2 C/m 2 . (c) The surface is a hemisphere ofr = a = O.I-m radius, extending from 0 = 0 to n/2, with the nonuniform surface charge pf density Ps = 10 cos 2 0 C/m 2 thereon. [Answer: 4.44 pC, 4.19 mC, 209 mC] 1-23. Given is the E-field solution (1-5 7b) for the point charge Qlocated at the origin. Imagine the spherical surface of radius r = a to surround Q. (a) Use the definition (1-48) to evaluate the flux of the vector EoE passing through the surface of the spherical cap bounded by 0 = 8 1 as shown. (Add to the sketch the details of the vector surface element ds suggested by Figure 1-7(b).) (b) Use the result of (a) to find the flux of EoE through the cap S, if8 1 = 30°, 60°, 90°, 120°, 150 0 and 180°. Comment on the (}1 = 1800 case relative to the Maxwell/Gauss law (I-53). [Answer: (a) Q(l cos (1)/2J
PROBLEMS
57
(2)
PROBLE:\!! 1-2:'
(z)
I
1-24. With the same point charge Qat the origin as in Problem 1-23, use the definition (1-48) to evaluate the flux of ~he vector (EoE) emerging from the bandlike surface S of the sphere, 60° and O2 = 120°, what percent of the total flux of extending ii'om 0 1 to O2 as shown, IfO I EoE is passing through the band? [Answer: Q(cos 8 1 - cos fJ2 )/2, 50%]
SECTION 1-10 1-25. The electronic charge q = -e is shot with the initial velocity v
5 = a x lO mlsec into an evacuated region containing the uniform magnetic field B = a)O-4- Wb/m 2 Sketch these vectors (paper in the x:y plane), along with the force F acting on q, Give arguments as to why the electron should take a circular path, Add this dimensioned circle to your sketch, Find what electric field E wiH just overcome the force effect of the magnetic field, to cause the electron to travel in a stra;ght line along the x-axis.
SECTION l-llA 1-26. Show a labeled sketch and give the ddails of the proof of (1-60), the expression for the electricallield inside the static, unif()rmly charged spherical cloud (r < ro). 1-27. Suppose that inside a spherical cloud of static charge is contained the linearly varying charge density, Pv po(rlro) e/m 3 , Po denoting the charge density at the surface r ro of the
58
VECTOR ANALYSIS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
sphere. (a) Use the volume integral (1-47) to determine the total charge within this sphere. (b) With the charge density seen to be symmetric about the center of the cloud, employ Gauss's law (I-53) to determine in detail theE field both inside the sphere (r < ro) and outside it (r > ro). (Sketch a diagram patterned after Figure 1-15(b), showing the labeled Gaussian sur/aces employed.) Show from your solution that the exterior E field (r> ro) is identical with that expected if the total charge in the sphere were concentrated entirely at the origin. (c) If Po = 10- 3 C/m 3 and ro = 10 em, find q in the sphere and sketch E, versus r. [Answer: (a) q npo?o (b) E, = por2/4Eoro for r < ro, E, = por~/4Eor2 for r> TO]
1-28. A spherical shell of charge possesses the constant volume charge density Pv between its inner and outer radii a and b. Use Gauss's law to prove that the E field for r < a is zero; that for a < r < b, Er is pv(r3 - a3)/3Eor2; whereas outside the shell (r > b) it is Pv(b 3 - a3)/3Eor2. (Show an appropriately labeled sketch along with the details of your proof.) 1-29. Let the volume charge density within a spherical region of radius r a be given by Pv = Po(l + kr), in which Po denotes the density at the origin. Determine the k that will make the total charge in the sphere zero. For this k, why is the E field external to the sphere zero? Find E. as a function of r within the sphere, making use of Gauss's law. [Answer: k = -4/3a] 1-30. An infinitely long, cylindrical clond of radius p a in free space contains the static, uniform volume charge density p". With a suitably labeled sketch, make use of the symmetry and Gauss's law (1-53) to obtain the following. (a) The electric field outside the cloud (p> a). (b) The interior electric field (p < a). (c) Show that the exterior E field is the'same as that expected if the same total charge per length t were concentrated as a line charge along the z axis, as in Figure 1-15(c). [Answer: E = appva2/2Eop (b) appvp/2Eo] 1-31. Let an infinitely long, cylindrical charged cloud of radius a contain the static charge density Pv = po(p/a)2, varying parabolically to the density Po at the cloud surface. (a) Make use of (1-17) to determine the total charge q in any length t of this cloud. (b) Sketch a diagram as suggested by Figure 1-15(c), making use of the symmetry and Gauss's law (I-53) to find the E field outside the cloud (p > a), and then inside it (p < a). Label the Gaussian surfaces used. Show from your solution that the field oLltside the cloud is the same as that expected if the total clurge were concentrated along the z-axis. [Answer: (a) p onta 2 /2 (h) poa 2/4E op for p > a, pop 3 /4E oa2 for p < a]
1-32.
Two parallel, planar charges of the kind shown in Figure l-15(d) are located at x = d and - d, possessing the nniform, opposite surface charge densities - Ps and p" respectively. (a) Use the vector superposition (summing) of the fields of these two planar charges, as given by (1-62), to prove that the total E field between the planes ( - d < x < d) is Ps!E V /m, whereas that outside the planes > d) is zero. (Do not usc Gauss's law.) (b) Repeat (a) if both surface charge densities are positive.
(Ixl
SECTION I-llB 1-33. A hollow, circular cylindrical conductor in free space, assumed infinitely long to avoid end efiects, and having the inner and outer radii band c, respectively, carries the direct current 1. (a) Assuming a constant, z-directed current density in the conductor cross sectiou, show that the vector current density at any point therein is J = a z 1/n(c2 - b2 ). (b) Usc Ampere's law to show that the exterior magnetic field is the same as that of the solid conductor of Figure 1-19 carrying the same total current f. Show that B inside the hollow interior (p < b) is zero, whereas that within the conductor (b < p < c) is a",Jlo1(p2 - b2 )/2np(c 2 - b2). (c) Sketch a graph showing how B", varies with p. 1-34. A coaxial pair of circular cylindrical conductors, infinitely long in frec space, have the dimensions shown and carry the equal and opposite total currents f. (a) Show tha.t the current density in the inner conductor is a//na 2 , whereas in the outer conductor it is the negative of that iCJUnd in Problem 1-33 (a). (b) Show that the B fields within the inner conductor (p < a) and betweell the C'Onductors (a < p < b) are identical to those of the isolated wire of Example 1-15. Use Ampere's law, together with an appropriately labeled diagram showing the closed
PROBLEMS
59
s sphere. y Gauss's (r> ro). sur/aces '\lith that n. (c) If ;wee (a)
twecn its ; that for 2. (Show l,riven by fill make ~rc zero?
-4/3a] lC static, fmmetry (p> a). ~ as that ng the <
: chalge 1) Make diagram find the :es used. ~d if the )r p > a, at x = d ectively. as given whereas if both
PROBLEM \-34
assumed, to prove in detail that the B field within the outer conductor (b < p < c) is IIIP/loJ(C 2 p2)/2np(c 2 b2 ) and that it is zero for p > c. (e) Sketch a graph of BIP versus p over the (0, c) range, assuming a = 3 mm, b = 6 mm, c = 3 mm, 1 = 100 A. Find the current in each conductor, expressed in A/Cln 2 • .
1..35. Show that the static B fields of the coaxiallinc of Problem 1-34 arc the superposition of the fields of the hollow conductor of Problem 1-33' and those of the isolated conductor of Example 1-15.
1..36.
Two parallel, indefinitely thin eurrent sheets ofinfinite extent in free space are located at = +d, possessing the unii()rm but oppositely directed surface-current densities ±Jsv respectively. (The currents are assumed charge-compensated, making electric fields absent in this problem.) (a) Employ resulls ofExamplc 1-16 and superposition (not Amp(~rc's law) to show that B between the sheets ( -d
1..37.
,An infinite, planc conducting slab of thickness d in free space has its sides coincident with the x = - d/2 and d/2 plancs. Assume the constant volume current dcnsity J = azJz A/m 2 within In the manner of Example 1-16, use Ampi~rc's law to show that the B field thc conductor. outside the conducting slab > d/2) is ±ay1/loJzd. (h) Make use of Ampere's law to find B inside the slab. [Hint: Choose a rectangular dosed path t with one side parallel to the known field of (a), and its other side aligned with the unknown field.]
(Ixl
o avoid current ow that , law to Irc 1-19 Nhereas I graph ave the current : of that a) and "ample closed
1.38.
Two parallel, round conductors, infinitely long and carrying the currents 1, 1, are 2d m apart. Assume them parallel to the <-axis and centered about the origin on the x-axis. Sketch a top view of the conductors in the x:y plane, with the current in conductor 1 at x = d assumed + z-directed. Show its vector field contribution Bl at the normal distance P1from 1 to the typical location P(x,]), making use of (1-64). Showing Bl decomposed into its Bxl and Byl components, use the geometry to develop the expression lor Bl solely in terms ofx and]. (b) Doing the same for conductor 2, 0xpress the total B at P, due to both conductors, entirely in rectangular coordinate form. (c) Il'l = 10 A and 2d = 5 em, find B at the origin. Find also the vector B at the following (x,.y) locations expressed in centimeters: (1.25,0), (3.75,0), (0,1.25), (1.25,1.25), 1.25), (3.75,1.25), (0,2.5), . [Answer (b):
60
VECTOR ANALYSIS AND ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
PROBLE,\1 1-39
in which i, 'i
1-39. Find, by superposition, the magnetic fields of a pair of coaxial, ideally closely wound toroids of circular cross section as shown, assuming the same number of turns and the identical currents /, Assume the currents first in the same direction; then, in opposing directions.
SECTION 1-12 1-40. Introducing the unit vectoraql at Pon Figure 1-26(a), from the geometry verify (1-73b). Similarly verify (1-73c). 1-41. (a) From the geometry of Figure 1-26(b), verify that the projections of the unit vector a r onto ax, ay' and a z yield aT' ax = sin 0 cos cP, aT' a y = sin 0 sin cP, aT' a z = cos O. (b) Modify Figure 1-26(b) to enable deducing the following projections: ae' ax = cos () cos cP, ae' a, = cos 8 sin cP, ao' a z = -sin 8. Show similarly from the geometry that a",' ax = -sin cP, a",' a,y = cos cP, a", . a z = O. (c) Expressing A in rectangular coordinate form, A = axAx + ayAy + a~z' use the fOl'egoing results and methods discussed in Section 1-12 to deduce the expressions for the spherical coordinate components of A in terms of its rectangular components, that is,
e cos IjJ + Ay sin fJ sin IjJ + A Ax cos e cos 1> + Ay cos () sin IjJ - A z sin e
Ar = a r ' A = Ax sin Ae =
AqI = - Ax sin IjJ
z
cos 0
+ Ay cos IjJ
[I -79a,b,c J
1-42. (a) A sphere of radius a and centered at the origin is expressed in rectangular coordinates by x 2 + y2 + Z2 = a 2 . Use the appropri
1-43. Transform the following veetor fields to the circular cylindrical coordinate system. aplO cos IjJ c- a",10 (a) A = lOax , (b) B = IQyax , (c) D = 3(1 - x 2 )a y + a z1Y2. [Answer: A sin 1jJ, B apIOp sin IjJ cos IjJ - aqllOp sin 2 1jJ, D = a,,3(1 - p2 cos 2 1jJ) sin IjJ + a",3(1 2 2 p2 cos 1jJ) cos IjJ + a z 4p2 5in 1jJ] 1-44. Transform the given vector fields to the spherical coordinate system. (a) A = lOa x , (b) = a},lOOx. [Answer: A = arlO sin cos IjJ + aolO cos eos IjJ aqllO sin 1jJ, E = a,IOOr sin 2 () sin IjJ cos IjJ + ao 1001' sin cos sin ¢ eos ¢ + aql 100r sin cos 2 1jJ]
E
e
e
e
e
e
. ."----------------------------------------CHAPTER2
Vector Differential Relations and Maxwell's Differential Relations in Free Space
lind
leal
.he ~n-
cJ es 1C )IJ
n.
o
In this chapter is considered the development, in generalized orthogonal coordinates, of the gradient, divergence, and curl operators of vector analysis, with forms in the common coordinate systems taken up in detail. The divergence theorem and the theorem of Stokes are used to derive the differential forms of Maxwell's divergence and curl equations in free space fi'om their integral versions postulated in Chapter L The appropriate manipulations of Maxwell's time-varying differential equations are seen to lead to the wavc equations in terms of the Band E fields, and the wavelike nature their solutions is exemplified by considering in detail the field solutions of uniform waves in free space. A pursuit of these ideas requires some background in the differentiation of vector fields, to be discussed in the following section.
2·1 DIFFERENTIATION OF VECTOR FIELDS In many physical problems involving vector fields, a knowledge of their rates of change with respect to space, time, or perhaps some parameter is often of interest. This notion has already been introduced in Section 1-6 in connection with the position vector r. I t is now considered in general for any differentiable vector field. IfF(u) is a vector function ofa single scalar variable u, iL<; ordinary vector derivatiye with respect to u is defined by the limit dF
l)
du
. L1F . F(u lim - = lIm
IlU'~O
L1u
Ilu->O
+ L1u) L1u
F(u)
(2-1)
61
62
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL REI"ATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
}'IGURE 2-1. A vector fimctiol1 F in space, and its variation with respect to some variable u.
l~F
provided that the limit exists (i.e., the limit is single-valued and finite). As in tl stance of the derivatives of the position vector r considered earlier, the vector i ment L\F is not necessarily aligned with the vector F, implying that the direction t vector F may change with the variable u. This circumstance is exemplified in I" 2-1, in which the conventional triangle construction is used to define AF, the diffe between F(u + Au) and F(u). The derivative (IFjdu defines a function, the deriv of which in turn defines a second-order derivative fimction dZF /du 2 , and so on. The derivatives of the sum or product comhinations of scalar and vector I tions are often of interest. For example, iff and F are respectively scalar and VI functions of the variable u, the derivative of their product is, from (2-1) "\
'
dUF)
.
U
+ AI) (F + L\F)
-.IF
- - - = hm - - - - - . - . - - - - - - -
du
Au
au"" 0
= f . dF + F .
du
df du
Note that this result resembles in form a similar rule of the scalar calculus (in wi both fu nction8 are scalars). IfF is a function of more than one variable, say OfUl' U2, u3 , t, its partial del' tive with respect to one of the variables (U1) is defined lim F(u l aUI-O
+ L\u 1 , 112, u3,
t)
F(Ul>
UZ, u 3 ,
t)
(~
AUI
with similar expressions for the partial derivatives with respect to the remain variables. Successive partial differentiations yield functions such as jJ2FIe 2 F/oul eJu z . If F has continuous partial derivatives of at least the second order, i permissible to differentiate it in either order; thus
a
(2·
The partial derivative of the sum or product combinations of scalar 'and vect functions sometimes is useful. In particular, one can use (2-3) to prove tbat t following expansions are valid
)Ns
2-2 GRADIENT OF A SCALAR FUNCTION
63
of + F at at (2-6) o(F x G)
-~-=Fx
at
DG
DF
+~xG
(2-7)
at
if f is any scalar function and F and G are vector functions of several variables, among which t denotes a typical variable.
in the intor increion of the in Figure liffercncc erivative on. tor funcld vector
(2-2) n which
2·2 GRADIENT OF A SCALAR FUNCTION The space rate ofehange ofa sealar fieldf(ull Uz, U3, t) is frequently of physical interest. For example, in the scalar temperature field T(ull Uz, U3, t) depicted in Figure I-I(a), one can surmise from graphical considerations that the maximum space rates of temperature change OCCllr in di rections normal to the constan t temperatu re surfaces shown. Generally, the maximum space rate of change of a scalar function, induding the vector direction in which the rate of change takes place, can be characterized by means of a vector di!li:?rential operator known as the gradient of that scalar function. It is developed here. If, al allY fixed time t, a single-valued, well-behaved scalar field f(u l , U2, U3, t) is set equal to any cons/ant fo so that f(UlJ uz, U3, t) = Jo, a surface in space is described, as depicted by .)1 ill Figurc 2-2. A physical example of such a surface is any of the constant temperature surfaces of Figure l-l(a). Another SllrfaCe, 8 2 , an infinitesimal distance from 81> is described by letting f(u 1 + dUI' Uz + dU2, U3 + dU3) = Jo + df, in which dl is taken to mean a very small, constant, scalar amount. Suppose that two nearby points, P and P', are located a vector distance dt apart on these two surfaces
deriva-
(2-3)
82 (defined
by f =
to + df) 82 (f= (o + dt)
laining 2F/ouI, ~r, it is
(2-4) -1 I
vector at the
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 2-2. Two nearby surfaccs 1=10 and 1 .f~ + dl" rdatiVt" [0 a discussion or grad (a) Points P and P' separated by dt and on snr/aces defincd by 1 =.f~ and 1 = 10 + til Points P and P' on the same slIJ'face 1 = 10' to show that grad 1 and dt are perpendicular.
64
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
as in Figure 2-2(a), recalling from (1-21) that one may express dt = aldt as (2-8)
df is
the amount by which f changes in going from P to P' from the first surface to the second, written as the total differential
(2-9)
curvil
from in S(
The presence of the components of dt in (2-9) permits expressing df as the dot product
in tl Calling the bracketed quantity the gradient of the function f, or simply grad f, as follows
and
or
(2-10)
tha one may write the total differential df of (2-9) in the abbreviated form
df = (grad I) . dt
(2-11 )
Two properties of grad I are deducible from (2-11); 1. That the vector function grad I defined by (2-10) is a vector perpendicular to any I = Io surface is appreciated if the points P and P', separated by a distance dt, are placed on the same surface as in Figure 2-2(b). Then the amount by which I changes in going from P to P' is zero, but from (2-11), (gradf) . dt 0, implying that grad I and dt are perpendicular vee tors. Grad I is therefore a vector everywhere perpendicular to any surface on which I constant. 2. If a displacement dt from the point P is assigned a constant magnitude and a variable direction, then from (2-11) and the definition (1-34) of the dot product it is seen that dI = Igrad dt cos 0, 0 denoting the direction between the grad f and dt. The magnitude of gradf is therefore df/(dt cos 8), but from Figure 2-2(a), dt cos 0 = dn, the shortest (perpendicular) distance from the point P on the surface SI to the adjacent surface S2 on which I Io + dj, whence
hoI Co
Po
Fr be
II
df IgradII = dn
OJ
p: 0'
(2-12)
d (~
2-2 GRADIENT OF A SCALAR FUNCTION
65
The vector grad j therefore denotes both the mag"nitude and direction of the maximal space rate of change of j, at any point in a region. Note that the magnitude ofgradj can also be expressed in terms of its orthogonal lfvilinear components, given in the definition (2-10) by \gradji=
/ OJ)2 - + (or)2 -"- + (OJ - -)2J1 2 [(hi OUI h2 AU h3 OU3
(2-13)
2
The expressions for grad j in a specific orthogonal coordi nate system are obtained rom (2-10) on substituting into it the appropriate symbols {CH" U; and hi as discussed n Section 1-5. Thus, in the rectangular system
grad j = ax III
the circular
oj
oj
ox + a oy + a z - -
(2-14a)
y
system (2-14b)
and in the .>jJherical coordinate system
_ grad)
oj
loj
1
oj
= a,-or + a o -r oe + a.p -'-e r 5111 (3'"' 'V
(2-14c)
An integral property of grail j, of considerable importance in field theory, is that its line integral over any dosed path t in space is zero. Symbolically
~ (gradj)
. dt = 0
(2-15)
holding fell' all well-behaved scalar functions j, and proved in the riJlIowing manner. Consider (2-15) integrated over an open path between the distinct endpoints po(u7, u~) and P(u 1 , 112'
ug,
C'P Jpo
(grad j) . dt
(2-16)
From (2-11) it is seen that (grad j) . dt denotes the lotal differential df, so that (2-16) becomes
fP
Jpo
(gradj) . dt =
fP df = IJP
Jpo
Po
(2-17)
or the difference of the values of the function I at the endpoints P and Po. Thus, any path connecting Po and P will provide the same result, (2-17). Carrying out (2-16) over some path A from Po to the point P and then back to Po once more over a different path B, the contributions of the two integrals would cancel exactly, making (2-15) the result. The integral property (2-15) of any vector field grad f is sometimes
66
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
called the conservative property of that field, from the applications of integrals of that type to problems involving certain kinds of energy, Any field gradf is a conservative field,
2·3 THE OPERATOR V (Del) Recall that the gradient of a scalar field (2-14a)
f
is expressed in rectangular coordinates by
[2-14a] The presence of the common function f in each term permits separating from this expression a vector partial differential operator represented by the symbol V (pronounced del) as follows (2-18) to permit writing gradf in an alternative symbolism, Vf
8f 8f of gradf=Vf=ax-+a - + a z -
ax
Yay
(2-19)
oz
The notations grad f and Vf will henceforth be considered interchangeable, It may be noted that the operator V defined by (2-18) in the rectangular coordinate system can be defined in other coordinate systems as well, including the generalized orthogonal curvilinear system. This is not done here because of its lengthy form and because it serves no particular need in connection with the objectives of this text. You may wish to consult other sources relative to extending (2-18) to other coordinate systems.}
EXAMPLE 2·1. Suppose a scalar, time-independent temperature field in some region of a space is given by
T(x,y) = 200x
+
100y deg
with x andy expressed in meters. Sketch a few isotherms (constant temperature surfaces) of this static thermal field and determine the gradient of T. The isotherms arc obtained by setting T equal to specific constant temperature values. Thn5, letting T = 100° yields 100 = 200x + 1O(!y, the equation of the tilted plane y = 2x + I. Th.is and other isothermie surfaces are shown in the accompanying figure. The temperature gradient of T(x,y) is given by (2-14a)
vT
== grad T
aT + a -aT + a -aT- = ox y oy z a.::;
= ax -
200ax
+
I OOay0 1m
example, sec M.,Javid, and P. M. Brown, Field AnalYsis and Elfictromagnetics. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1963, p.477.
1 For
:I... TI
:r
Ih
-
i
, II!
2-4 DIVERGENCE OF A VECTOR FUNCTION
\
,
67
(y)
(b)
(a)
EXAMPLE 2-1. (a) Graph of T
constant. (b) Side view of (a).
a vector everywhere perpendicular to the isotherms, as noted in (b) of the figure. The x andy components of the temperature gradient denote space rate of change of temperature along these coordinate axes. From (2-13), the magnitude is
denoting the maximal space rate of change of temperature at any pomt. One may observe that heat will flow in the direction of maximal temperature decrease; that is, along lines perpendicular to the isotherms and thus in a dir'cction opposite to that of the vector grad T at any poin t.
1-4 DNERGENCE OF A VECTOR FUNCTION
The flux representation of vector fields was described in Section 1-9. If a vector field r is representable by a continuous system of unbroken flux lines in a volume region as for example, in Figure 2-3(a), the region is said to be sourcefree; or equivalently, field F is said to be divergenceless. (The divergence ofF is zero.) On the other hand,
,
111l1li;;;;
fjl!"! /%
"~ 1/
l;r '- " (a)
Ijffk/"/.,
\-y / / / (b)
(e)
FIGURE 2-3. Concerning the divergence of flux fields. (a) A vector field F in a source-free As many flux lincs enter S as leave it. (b) A vector Geld F in a region containing sources posse,;sirlg net outgoing flux). (c) The meaning of div F: net outward flux per unit volume as -0.
68
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
if the flux plot of F consists of flux lines that are broken or discontinuous, as depicted in Figure 2-3(b), the region contains sources of the field flux; the field F is then said to have a nonzero divergence in that region. The characterization of the divergence of a vector field on a mathematical basis is described here. The divergence of a vectorfield F, abbreviated div F, is defined as the limit of the net outward flux ofF, F • ds, per unit volume, as the volume !lv enclosed by the surface S tends toward zero. Symbolically,
fs
div F
==
F· ds
lim
!lv
fl ux lines/m
3
(2-20)
Av-+ 0
Thus, as the closed surface S is made very small, as depicted in Figure 2-3(c), the limiting, net outward flux pCI' unit volume in the neighborhood of the point P defines the divergence of the vector field F there. The shape of S is immaterial in this limit, as long as the dimensions of !lv tend toward zero together. The definition (2-20) leads to partial diHerential expressions for div F in the various coordinate systems. For example, in generalized orthogonal coordinates, div F is shown to become
FIC the (:on
oPI
ter (2-21 )
The derivation of the differential expression (2-21) for div F in generalized orthogonal coordinates proceeds from the definition (2-20). Express the function F in terms of its generalized components as follows F(Ul' U2, U3,
I) = a1Fdul,
U2, U3,
t)
+ a 2 F 2 (u l , li2,
li 3 ,
t)
+ a 3 F 3 (u l ,
li2, U3,
I) (2-22)
The definition (2-20) requires that the net effiux ofF be found over the closed surface S bounding any limiting volume !lv, which from (1 II) or (1-13) is expressed
It in di 01
(2-23) The net, outward Hux ofF is that emanating from the six sides of !lv, designated by Llsi> !lS'I' and so forth, in Figure 2-4(a). The contribution !It/ll entering element !lSl is just F· Lls i = (alF I )' !lSI' or
T tJ
(2-24) (2-25 ) the negative sign being the consequence ofassuming a positively direeted Fl component the outward !lSI = - al !lt2 Llt3; that is, the flux Llt/ll enters !lSI' In the limit, as the separation Lltl between !lSl and Lls'! becomes sufficiently small, the flux Llt/l'l leaving !ls'! in Figure 2-4(b) differs from !It/ll entering !lSI by an amount given by the second
(
2-4 DIVERGENCE OF A VECTOR FUNCTION
69
FIGURE 2-4. A volume-clement L'iu in the generalized orthogonal coordinate system nsed in the development of the partial diflcrcntial expression for div F. (a) A volume-element !lv and I:omponents ofF in the neighborhood of 1'(u 1 , 112' U3)' (b) Flux contribntions entering and leaving opposite surfaces of !lv. The remaining four sides are similarly treated.
term of the Taylor's expansion of L\I/;~ about the point P; that is, A ./,
lJ.'f'1
=
+ 0(L\1/; tl '" UUl
F'1L\t2L\t3
L\ Ul
+ [~(F'lM2L\t3)]L\Ul OUI
Fl L\t2 L\t 3 +
[a~l (Flh2 h3) ] L\Ul L\uz L\U3
(2-26)
It is permissible to remove L\U2 and L\u3 from the quantity affected by the O/OUI operator in the foregoing because each is independent of Ul, in view of the orthogonal coordinate system being used. The net outgoing flux emerging from the sides As[ and L\S'l of Figure 2-4(b) is thus the sum of (2-24) and (2-26) (2-27a) The two remaining pairs of surface elements tribute outgoing flux in the amounts
L\s~, As~,
and L\S3',
As~
similarly con-
(2-27b)
(2-27c) seen to be obtainable from the symmetry and the cyclic permutation of the subscripts of (2-27a). Finally, putting (2-27a, b, c) into the numerator of (2-20) obtains the result
70
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENT1AL RELATIONS
anticipated in (2-21)
whence
I n rectangular coordinates, div F is found from (2-28) by setting hI and
U1
=
X, U 2
= y,
U3
=
hz
h3
=
1
Z
.
oFx
oFy
i3F
z ox + -oy + --
dlV F = - -
Rectangular
(2-29a)
whereas in the circular cylindrical and the spherical coordinate systems, the expressions become
. (hv F
div F
I
=-
a
P i3p
, + 1 -of,,, + -p i3
(pF )
Circular cylindrical
(2-2% )
Spherical
(2-29c)
P
13 2 (r p".) Or
1
+. r 8m 8
a (Flj sin 8)
138
1
+ r SIn . 8
"",
U
The form (2-29a) ofdiv F in the rectangular system is the basis for another notation using the del operator (V) defined by (2-18). On taking the dot product of V with F in the rectangular system of coordinates, one finds
(2-30)
or precisely (2-29a). This is the basis for the equivalent symbolisms divF
== V' F
(2-31 )
The notations div F and V' F will be considered interchangeable regardless of whiCh coordinate system is used, even though the symbol V has for our purposes been defined only in the rectangular system.
2-4 DIVERGENCE OF A VECTOR FUNCTION
(6)
(aJ
71
( c)
L=
(d)
ap
K
p
(eJ
EXAMPLE 2-2
IXAMPLE 2·2. Sketch nux plots [or each o[the following vector fields, and find the divergence of each: (a) F = axh', G axKy, H axKx; (b) J = apK, L ap(Kjp). (II) Applying (2-29a) to the fimctions F, G, and H in the rectangular system obtains
div F =
ox
=
0
divG
ox
=0
divH
ox
K
Their llnx plots an: shown in (a) through (c). Tnspection reveals a zero value or divergence is obtained for the fields F and G; a tcst closed surface placed anywhere in the region will have zero net flux emanating from it. The nonzero div H, on the other hand, is evident from its flux plot because of the discontinuous flux lines, here required to possess an increasing density with x, yielding a net nonzero outgoing flux emerging from the typical dosed surf~1Ce S shown. (b) From (2-29b)
div J
I i!
K
P P
p
-0 (pK)
divL
1 i! pop
(p~) o p
the flux plots of which are illustrated looking along the z-axis of the circular cylindrical system in (d). The divergencclcss character of L is evidcnt from its lip dependence, which, in this cylindrical system, provides an uninterrupted system of
72
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
outgoing flux lines. The radially directed field J, having a constant flux density of magnitude K, on the other hand, e1early must pick up additional flux lines with an increase in p. It is therefore required to possess a divergence.
EXAMPLE 2·3. Find the diverge nee of the E field produced by the uniformly charged cloud of Figure 1-15(b) at any location both inside and exterior to the cloud. The field E(r) outside the cloud (r> (0) is given by (I-59). Its divergence III spherical eoordinates is
/ /
divE
=
/
(2-32)
Or
/
/
/ /
This null result signifies a flux plot in the region' > ro consisting of unbroken lines, as noted in Figure 1-16(b). All inverse r2 radial ficlds behave this way. Inside the charged cloud (r < r0), the E field (1-60) being proportional to , has the divergence
p" Eo
divE
r
<
TO
(2-33)
a nonzero, eonstant result, proportiollal to the density p" of the e1oud. Note that bringing Eo inside the divergence operator puts (2-33) into the form div (EoE) = Pv C/m
3
,<
;' /
FIG!. them insid, V.
clos'
'0
making the divergence of (EoE) the same as the charge density Pv inside the cloud. It is shown in Section 2-4B that this result is true in general, even for nonuniform charge distributions in free space.
A. Divergence Theorem If F(uj, U Z , U3, t) is well-behaved m some regIOn of space, then the integral identity Sv(divF)du
~sF'ds
(2-34)
is true for the dosed surface S bounding any volume V. Equation (2-34) implies that the volume integral of (div F) dv taken throughout any V equals the net flux of F emerging from the dosed surface S bounding V. A heuristic proof of (2-34) proceeds as follows. Suppose that V is subdivided into a large number n of volume-elements, any of which is designated AUi with each endosed by bounding surfaces ,S; as in Figure 2-5(a). The net flux emanating from AUi is the surface integral ofF· ds over S;, but from (2-20), this is also (div F) Av; for Au; sufficiently small, that is,
~Si F· ds
(div F)
AVi
(2-35)
The fluxes contributed by every Si will sum up to yield the net flux through the exterior surface S bounding the volume V. Thus the left side of (2-35) summed over the
ge
2-4 DIVERGENCE OF A VECTOR FUNCTION
73
,, (b)
(a)
fIGURE 2-5. Geometry of a .typical closed surface S, used in relation to the divergence theorem. (a) A volume V bounded by 8, with a lypical volume-dement t.v, bounded by S, inside. (b) Surfaces 8 2 and S, constructed to eliminate discontinuities or singularities from
V. do~cd
surfaces .1s i inside S yields
i
;= 1
[rh 1s,
F.dsJ = 1srh F.ds
(2-36) to the right side of (2-35) summed over the n volume elements Llv; as the number n tends toward infinity (and as .1vi --+ dv)
rh
Ie;;
F . ds
=
lim
Avc-~O
f
i=l
(div F) dv
=
r
Jv
(div F) do
(2-37)
just (2-34), known as the divergence theorem. If the limiting process yielding (2-37) is to be valid, it is necessary that F, together its first derivatives, be continuous in and on V. IfF and its divergence V . Fare not continuous, then the regions in Vor on S possessing such discontinuities or possible must be excluded by constructing closed surfaces about them, as typified 2-5(b). Note that the volume V of that figure is bounded by the multiple surface S = SI + S2 + S3, with S2 and S3 constructed to exclude discontinuities or singularities inside them. The normal unit vectors an, identified with each vee tor surface element ds = an ds on Sl' S2, and S3, are assumed outward unit vectors pointing away from the interi'or volume V. The following examples illustrate the foregoing remarks concerning the diver. gence theorem.
EXAMPLE 2·4. Supposc the one-dimensional field H(x) = axKx of Examplc 2-2(a) exists in a region. Illustrate the validity of the divergence theorem (2-34) by evaluating its volume and surface integrals inside and on the rcctangular parallelepiped bounded by the coordinate surfaccs x = 1, x = 4, Y = 2, y = - 2, z = 0, and z = 3, for the given H.
ail 74
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
ds = - ax dy dz on 82
2 (y) (x)
EXAMPLE 2-4
Since div H = K, the volume integral of (2-34) becomes (Jl
Evaluating the surface integral requires summing the integrals ofH . ds over the six sides of the parallelepiped. Because H is x-directed, however, H . ds is zero over four of these sides, the surface integral reducing to the same result as (I)
J. H 1s
. ds = ('3
JFO
('2 Jy~
= 48K - 12K = 36K
(2)
EXAMPLE 2·5. Given the p-dependent field: E = R"K/pl I 2, with K a constant, illustrate the validity of the divergence theorem by evaluating both integrals of (2-34) within and on a right circular cylinder of length L, radius R, and centered about the <-axis as shown.
(Detail of thin tube used to exclude singularity)
:~
EXAMPLE 2-5
a p ' I'
_ _111_
75
2-4 DlVERGRNCE OF A VECTOR FUNCTION
Since E has it singularity atp = lJ, a thin, tubular surface S2 of radius a is constructed as shown, to exclude the singularity from the integration region, making S = SI + S2 + S3 + 84 , The divergence orE, by use of (2-29b), is
v.E =
1
a
K
-;-- (p~~) = ~
pup
2p
yiclding the following volume integral
With E P directed, the surface integral of (2-34) reduces to contributions from only 81 and S2 (the end caps yielding zero outward flux), whence
~sE'dS
Sz.
f,L (a Z~O
2nKL(Rl/2
-K-) . (a PRd"'dz) 'I'
p R112
+
S2.
f,L (a Z~O
K ) . (-a adA-.dz) --P 'I'
P a112
a1/ 2 )
(2)
agreeing with the result (I). [Note: Each answer has the limit 2nKLRl/2 as a
->
0.]
The usefulness of the divergence theorem embraces more generally the interchange of volume for closed-surface integrals required for establishing several theorems of electromagnetic theory. An example occurs in Poynting's theorem of electromagnetic power considered later in Chapter 7.
B. Maxwell's Divergence Relations for Electric and Magnetic Fields in Free Space The definition (2-20) of the divergence of a vector field serves as a basis for deriving the dilferential, or point, forms of two of Maxwell's equations from their corresponding integral forms (1-53) and (1-54) for free space
rh fs (EoE) -
• ds
= Jv r Pvdv C
rh B. ds = 0 Wb fs
[1-53] [1-54]
These laws apply to closed surfaces S of arbitrary shape and size. If S is the surface bounding any small volume element Av, dividing (1-53) by Av yields
fs (EoE) • ds Av
= Iv pv dv Av
(2-38)
The Iimil of the left side, as A1I becomes sufficiently small, is div (EoE) from the definition (2-20). The right side denotes the ratio of the free charge Aq inside Av to Av itself; its limit is PV' As A1I -t 0, therefore, (2-38) becomes
div (EoE)
= Pv C/m 3
(2-39)
76
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
the differential form of Maxwell's integral expression (1-53). Note that expressing (2-39) in rectangular coordinates using (2-29a) yields the partial differential equation
aEx+ __ oE y+ aE z ax
~y
oz
Pv Eo
(2-40)
It is evident that the divergence of (EoE) at any point in a region is precisely Pv, the volume density of electric charge there, implying that the flux sources of E fields are electric charges. Equivalently, if electric field lines terminate abruptly, their termini must be electric charges. By a similar procedure applying (1-54), one obtains the following partial differential eq uation in terms of B div B
= 0 Wb/m 3
Pa
FI th
(2-41 )
implying that B fields are always divergenceless and therefore source free. The flux plot of any B field must, therefore, invariably consist of elosed lines; free magnetic charges are thus nonexistent in the physical world. A divergenceless field is also called a solenoidal field; magnetic fidds are always solenoidal.
EXAMPLE 2·6. Suppose that Maxwell's diHcrential equation (2-39), instead of its integral form (I-53), had been postulated. Execute the reverse of the process just described, deriving (1-53) from by the latter over an arbitrary volume Vand applying the divergence theorem. Integrating over an arhitrary volume V yields
01
fi
CI
b
VI
tl fi t f
v
c
Assume that E is well-behaved in the region in question. From a use of (2-34), the left: side can be replaced by the equivalent closed-surface integral ts (EoE) . ds, and (I-53) follows
[ 1-531
2·5 CURL OF A VECTOR FIELD From (2-15) it is established that the line integral of (grad f) • dt around any closed path is always zero. Many vector functions do not exhibit this conservative property; a physical example is the magnetic B field obeying Ampere's circuital law (1-56). For example, in the steady current system of Figure 1-19, the line integral of'B· dt taken about a circular path enclosing all or part of the wire, a nonzero current result is anticipated. Nonconservative fields such as these are said to possess a circulation about closed paths of integration. Whenever thc elosed-line integral of a field is taken about a small (vanishing) closed path and the result is expressed as a ratio to the small area enclosed, that circulation per unit area can be expressed as a vector known as the curl of the field in the neighborhood of a point. It follows that a conservative field has a zero value of curl everywhere; it is also called an irrotational field.
2-5 CURL OF A VECTOR FIELD
B Paddle wheel
77
-(xj
FIGURE 2-6. A vc\ocity field in a'fluid, with an interpretation "fits curllrom the rotation of a small paddle wheel.
Historically, the concept of curl comes from a mathematical model of effects in hydrodynamics. The early work of Helmholtz in the vortex motion of fluid fields led ultimately to the mathematical postulates by Maxwell of Faraday'S conceptiollS of the electric fields induced by time-varyin~ magnetic fields. A connection between curl and fluid phenomena can be established by supposing a small paddle wheel to be immersed in a stream of water, its velocity field being represented by the flux map shown in :Figure 2-6. Let the paddle wheel be oriented as at A in the figure. Th(' eH<';ct of the greater fluid velocity on one side than on the other will cause the wheel to fotate- clockwise, in the example shown. In this example, the velocity field l ' is said to have a vector curl directed into the paper along the axis of the paddle wheel, a s('nse determined by the thumb of (he right hand if the fingers point in the direction of the rotation; the vector curl of v has a negative z direction at A. Similarly, physically rotating the paddle wheel axis at right angles as at B in the figure provides a way 10 determine the x component of the vector curl of v, symbolized [curl v]x. In rectangular coordinates, the total vector curl of v is the vector sum occurrin~
Generally, the curl 2 of a vector field F(ub U2, U3, t), denoted curl F, is expressed as the vector sum of three orthogonal components, as follows (2-42)
Each component is defined as a line integral ofF, dt about a shrinking closed line on a per-unit-area basis with the al component defined (2-43)
The vanishing suriace bounded by the closed line t shown in Figure 2-7 is As l , with the direction of integration around t assumed to be governed by the right-hand rule. 3 2In
f~uropean
texts, curl F is written rot F, and is read rotation of F.
3The integration sense coincides with the direction in which the fingers of the right hand point if the thumb points in the direction of a l '
78
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
sn
tl ec
FIGURE 2-7. A closed line l bouuding the vanishing area As lo used in defining the a l component of curl Fat P.
v
Similar definitions apply to the other two components, so the total value of curl F at a point is expressed
curlF A difierential expression for curl F in generalized coordinates is found from (2-44) by a procedure resembling that used in finding the differential expression for div F in Section 2.4. The shape of each closed line l used in the limits of (2-44) is of no consequence, as long as the dimensions of Lls inside l tend toward zero together. Thus, in finding the a l component of curl F, t is deformed into the curvilinear rectangle of Figure 2-8(b) with edges Lllz and Lll3 . The surface bounded by t is Lls l = a l Lltz Llt3 = alhzlz3 LlU2 LlU3, the only components ofF contributing to the line integral in the numerator of (2-43) being F2 and F 3 . Thus, along the bottom edge Llt z , the contribution to ~t F • dt becomes (2-45) in which LlW2 denotes that contribution. Along the top edge, F2 changes an incremental amount, but in general so does the length increment, Lltz , because of the curvilinear coordinate system. The line-integral contribution along the top edge is found from a Taylor's expansion of ~W2 about P. The first two terms are sufficient if ~U3 is suitably
\ (U3) \
\ \ \
\ I
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 2-8. Relative to curl F in generalized orthogonal coordinates. (a) The components ofF at a typical point P. (6) Construction of a path l rdative to the a l component or curl F.
2-5 CURL OF A VECTOR FIELD
79
small; thus
LlW~(U1' U2, U3 + Llu
3)
[LlW2
=
+ -,---'- LlU 3 ] (2-46)
the negative sign resulting from integrating in the sense of decreasing U 2 along the top edge. Similarly, the contribution along the left edge Llt3 in Figure 2-8(b) is (2-47)
whereas along the right edge, it is I '
LlW3=F3Llt3+
0(F3 M 3)
Lluz
(2-48)
OU2
The substitution of (2-45) through (2-48) into the definition (2-43) obtains for the a 1 component of curl F
ad curl FIt
. t F ' dt
.
=a 1 hm - - =a 1 hm ASI---+O
AS l
AS1---+0
(2-49)
A similar procedure yields the two remaining vector components of curl Fin (2-44); although from symmetry, a simple cydic illterchange of the subscripts in (2-49) leads directly 10 them. The expression /<)r curl F in generalized orthogonal coordinates is thus
(2-50) which is identical to the determinemal form
curlF
a1
a2
a3
h2 h3
h3 hj
h1hz
0
0
0
oU I
OU2
hlF j
h2F2 h3 F3
(2-51 )
80
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S nfFFERENTIAL RI'~LATIONS
a result simplifying in the rectangular coordinate system to ax
curlF
=
(J
iJx Fx
ay
az
a a
(2-52)
ay Fy
On comparing (2-52) with the cross product A x B of (I definition (2-18) f()l' V, one is led to the equivalent
curl F
== V x
and recalling the
F
(2-53)
Although V has been defined only in the rectangular and V x F are customarily considered interchangeable system used. It is seen that I) also leads to the following pvt.t'pq", cylindrical system
symbolisms curl F of the coordinate
curl F in the circular
curlF (2-54)
and in the spherical coordinate system
h tl tl t a
curlF
C (2-55)
EXAMPLE 2·7. Find the curl of G = aJCy, a flux plot of which is sketched in Examplt' 2-2. Because G has only ay-dependcnt x componcnt, from (2-52) one obtains
curlG
ax
ay
az
()
D ily
0
hy
()
0
a z [-
D~)J
-azK
a negative ,c-directed result for K> O. So if G were a fluid velocity field with a paddle wheel immersed in it as in Figure 2-6, a clockwise rotation looking along the negative z direction would result, agreeing with the direction of curl G.
EXAMPLE 2·8. Find the curl of the B fields both inside and outside the long, straight wire carrying the steady current J shown in Figure 1-19.
81
2-5 CURL OF /I. VECTOR FIELD
from
The B fidd is (1-6+), a 4>-directed function of p. The curl ofB, obtained I), inside the wire (p < a) ap
p curl B =
az
aq,
J
8
ill'
84>
0
Ii [fi.OJP
P
8 ilz
J
-~.
2na 2
a
z
~ [p fi.olp2
I' elP
2na
J=
azfi.o
-!na
2
0
a result proportional to the current density ]z = flna 2 in the wire. This special case demollstrates the validity of a Maxwell's diflerential relation to be developed in Section 2-SB. You may fi.nthcr show from (2-5+) that curl B outside the wire is zero, in view of the inverse p dependence of B there.
A. Theorem of Stokes If F(ub u2, U3, t) is well-behaved in some region, then the integral identity
1
(V x F)' ds
rf:
'Yt F
· dt
(2-56)
holds [i)r every closed line t in the region, if S is a surELee bounded by t. This is ealled the theorem (Jf Stokes. J\ heuristic proof follows along lines resembling the proof of the divergence theorem. Suppose the arbitrary S is subdivided into a large number n of surface-elements, typical ofwhieh is ~Si bounded by til as in Figure 2-9(a). The line integral ofF' de around Ii is ini<:rred hom lhe definition (2-43) of the componenl of the curl F in the directioll oC ~Si to be
J, F· de ~ti
=
[curl F] . ~Si
S ~Positive side)
'-,,---
Integration'"'" sense of
ifF>dt
(bl
FIGURE 2-9. Relative to Stokes's theorem. (a) Showing a typical interior surfaceelement ~Sl bounded by t't· (b) Closed lines t'2 and l3 comtructcd to eliminate discontinuities from S.
(2-57)
82
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
for ~Si sufficiently small. If the left side of (2-57) is surnmed over all closed contours t; on the surface S of Figure 2-9(a), the common edges of adjacent elements are traversed twice and in opposite directions to cause the integrations about t; to cancel everywhere on S except on its outer boundary t. Summing the left side of (2-57) over the n interior elements ~s; therefore obtains
f [rf-j{, F . dt]
;=1
=
rfF • dt j{
(2-58)
and equating to the right side of (2-57) summed over the same elements yields the result, as n approaches infinity
rf- F . dt ::Yt
=
lim
f
[(curl F) • ~s;]
As,->O t=1
=
r (curl F) . ds
Js
(2-59)
which is Stokes's theorem (2-56). As with the divergence theorem, It IS necessary in (2-56) that F together with its first derivatives be continuous. Ifnot, the discorHlnuities or singularities are excluded by constructing closed lines about them as in 2-9(b), causing S to be bounded by the closed line t = tl + t2 + t3' The connective strips, of vanishing widths as shown, are however, traversed twice so their integral contributions cancel. The positive sense of ds should as usual agree with the integration sense around t according to the right-hand rule.
w
E EXAMPLE 2·9. Given the vector field (1)
illustrate the validity of Stokes's theorem by evaluating (2-56) over the open surface S defined by the five sides of a cube measuring 1 m on a side and about the closed line t bounding S as shown.
(z)
(z)
Positive side of S
P4
____ Positive integration
s~: x= 0 ds =- axdydz
(x)
(x)
(b)
(a)
EXAMPLE 2-9. (a) l.ine elements on
(y)
t.
(b) Surface elements on S.
2-5 CURL OF A VECTOR FIELD
The line integral is evaluated first. The right side of (2-56) applied to making usc of figure (a)
= 0
+ Jz--o rl_ zdz + Jx-l ro_
5xdx
+ Jz-l ro_ zdz =
t:
83
becomes,
(2)
The surface integral of (2-56) is found next. From (2-52). ax
curl F =
ay
az
a
a a
ox
oy oz yZ yz
=
axz
+ a y5xy -
a z 5xz
(3)
whence the surface integral of (2-56) evaluate over S\, ... , '')5 yields, using figure (b),
r (curl F) • ds Js \
=
rl Jx~o r1
Jy=o
(4)
which agrees with (2).
EXAMPLE 2-10. Given the veetor field
F(ti) = a",K cot ti
(I)
in which K is a constant, illustrate the validity of Stokes's theorem evaluating (2-55) for the hemispherical surface S with a radius a, bounded by the closed jine t: ti = 90°, r = a as shown. There is a singularity in F on Sat () = 0°; it must be excluded to assure the validity of Stokes's theorem on the given surface. To accomplish this, a small circle t:3 at. (1 = til and r = a is constructed as in (b). Ifds is assumed positive outward on S, then the sense of the line integration is as noted, the integrals cancelling along (z and (4 oftlw connective strip
jr----Integration sense (a)
EXAMPLE 2-10. (a) Open hemispheric surface S. (h) Exclusion
(b)
or the singular point.
84
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
as its width vanishes, The line integral around t
r2~ F
J~-o
0
a",r
sin 8 d]
r=a
O~,,/2
= tl + t3
+ J
thus hecomes 0
a",r
sin 8 d]
at
r=a
O~O,
converging to -2naK as {)l --> O. The surface integral is evaluated using
Mal
ae
a4>
r sin
r
ar
a ao
a a
0
0
(r sin 8) K cot ()
curlF
-ar
K K - ao - cot 0 r r
whence
Jsr(curIF)ods=
r2:
l~
unit vect'
r1t~2 (-It'asinOdOd)
J",-o JO-Ol
=
~2naKeos81
(3)
which agrees with (2). You might consider how the results would have compared had one ignored the singularity.
B. Maxwell's Curl Relations for Electric and Magnetic Fields in Free Space In Section 2-4B, the divergence of a vector fUllction was put to use in deriving the differential Maxwell equations (2-39) and (2-41) from their integral versions (1-53) and (1-54). The definition of the curl may similarly be used to obtain the differential forms of the remaining equations (I-55) and (i-56), Because the latter are correct for closed lines of arbitrary shapes and sizes, one may choose t in the form of any small closed path bounding a j Lls 1 in the vicinity of any point, as in Figure 2-7. Taking the ratio of (I-55) to Lls 1 yidds, with the assignment of the vector sense a l to each side, d dt
r
Jl1s, Lls 1
the the Th sib] sati
reI;
It cu
aF fo]
Bods
(2-60)
(2-43), the left side, as AS l -40, becomes a1rcurlEl 1 . The right side denotes time rate of decrease of the ratio of the magnetic flux I1ljJm to I1S1> but this is just compon(~nt Bl at the point P. The limit of (2-60) therefore reduces to
£,
(~
(2-61 )
te
''''UIII: the at component of curl E to the time rate of decrease of the at component tnagneticJlux densilY B at any point. 4 The choice of the direction assigned by
2
al
[curl EJI
differentiation symbol alDt the lild that the field B is a a function of t only, I,)r a fixed
in (2-61) replaces the total differentiation did! in (2-60), of space as well as of time, whereas the volume integral
t.\,
C fl C
2-6 SUMMARY OF MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS: COMPLEX, TIME-HARMONIC FORMS
85
is arbitrary, implying that two similar results aligned with the directions of the unit vectors az and a 3 and independent of (2-61) are also valid. Combining these Ilectorially thus obtains the total curl of E at the point 1.1
Making use of the notation of (2-42) yields the more compact form
aB
VxE=--Vjm
2
at
(2-62)
the differential form of Faraday's law (I-55). Equation (2-62) states that the curl of the field E at any position is precisely the time rate of decrease of the field B there. This implies that the presence of a time-varying magnetic field B in a region is responsible for an induccd time-varying E in that region, such that (2-62) is cverywhere satisfied. A procedure similar to that used to derive (2-62) is applicable to the Maxwell relation (I-56), yielding the differential equation
V
B = Ilo
X -
a(EoE) J +- - A/m z
at
(2-63)
It states that the curl of B/llo at any point in a region is the sum of the electric current density J and the displacement current density a(EoE)/ot at that point. If the electric and magnetic fields in free space are static, the operator Ojat appearing in (2-62) and (2-63) should be set to zero. This restriction provides the following curl relations for time-static fields
VxE=O B V x-=J Ilo
(2-64 ) Curl relations for static E, B fields (2-65)
Equation (2-64) stales that any static E field is irrotational (conservative), whereas (2-65) specifies that the curl of a static B field at every point in space is proportional to the current density J there. 2·6 SUMMARY OF MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS: COMPLEX, TIME·HARMONIC FORMS
One may recall that in Sections 2-4B and 2-5 the differential Maxwell equations for free space were obtained Irom their integral forms, (1-53) through (I-56). These are collected for reference in Table 2-1, columns I and III. The integral Maxwell equations
~
TABLE 2-1 Time-dependent and complex time-harmonic forms of Maxwell's equations in free space
Differential forms
Integral forms TIME-DEPENDENT
~s EOE' ds
j:
~s EoE' ds
p,du
¢. B· ds = 0 v
~sB' ds
S
~
E. dt =
d
dl
v {
A: ~ . dt 'fr flo
i' B· ds
i' J' ds + r!.-, i' EoE' ds
Js
dt Js
J,B . dt ::rc fto
V' (EoE)
vx
Is B' ds
V' (EoE) =
V'B
0
E
cB
v x
fJt
i' j . ds + jw i' EoE' ds
Js
p,
V' B
0
A: E' dt = :Yt
[I
Js
Iv p,d"
IV, COMPLEX, TIME-HARMONIC
TIME-DEPENDENT
COMPLEX, TIME-HARMONIC
Js
V x
a
B
J + _ (EoE)
flo
Vx
ct
P" 0 r2-71]
E -jwB [2-72J ~
13 flo
~
J + jWEoE
[I-56]
,.,
<""'
a .....
c
~.;2. ~
1',
"'l"::h .... "
""Or.I2~::J'"'o
~ ~
;. g.
~
9.., 7~ 9"::; . . ?"" r"';
2-6 SUMMARY OF MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS: COMPLEX, TIME-HARMONIC FORMS
87
were s(~en in Section 1-11 to be well suited for finding the field solutions of static charge or current distributions possessing simple symmetries, though methods relying 011 symmetry are UnflJI'tunately limited to a few isolated problems. The difTerential Maxwell equations usually oH;:,r a much hroader class of solutions; obtaining a number of these solutions will constitute the task of rnueh of the remaining text. Also of importance are the sinusoidal steady state, or time-harmonic solutions of Maxwell's equations. Time-barmonie fields E and B are generated whenever their charge and current sources have densities varying sinusoidally in time. Assuming the sinusoidal sourees to have been active long enough that the transient field components have decayed to negligible levels permits the further assumption that E and B have reached a sinusoidal steady state. Then E and B will vary according to the factors cos (wt + f)e) and cos (0)[ + 0b), in which Oe and Ob denote respective phases and w is the angular frequency. The alternative and equivalent t(wmulation is achieved if the fields are assumed to vary according to the complex exponential factor . This assumption leads to a reduction of the field fimetions of space and time to fimctions of space only, as ohserved in the following. The held quantities in the real-time forms of Maxwell's equations presented in columns I and III of Table 2-1 are symbolized E
E(l1b 112, 11 3, t)
J ~J(111. 112,
113.0
(2-66)
The linearity of the Maxwell relations guarantees that sinusoidal time variations of charge and current sources produce E and B fields that in the steady state are also sinusoidal. Then one may replace the functions of space and time with products of only, multiplied by the as follows
E(111'
U2, 11 3 ,
t) is replaced with E(u[,
B(u J ,
112, 113'
t) is replaced witb B(ul' u2 ,
J(11 1, 112,
Ii},
U2 ,
t) is replaced withj(l1[) 11 2, (2-67)
If the complex vectors E, B, and j are written in terms of the generalized coordinate system as f()llows, that is, (2-68)
then on illserting obtains
into tlte Maxwell equations
o
or column
Ill, Table 2-1, one
(2-69)
The parti'll-derivative oper'ltors V . and V x of (2-69) affect only the space-dependent functions E(l1lo 112, and B(U1' 112, whereas a/at operates only on the tl mt factors
88
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL REI,ATIONS
common to all the fields. Equations (2-69) therefore yield, after cancelling the ~wt factors,
Pv
V- (EoE)
V-B =0
V
X
Vx
E = -jwB B
j + jWEoE
110
C/m 3
(2-70)
Wb/m 3
(2-71 )
V/m
2
(2-72)
A/m
2
(2-73)
These are the desired complex, time-harmonic Maxwell equations for free space. They represent a simplification of the real-time fOIIns in that the tipe variable t has been eliminated. On finding the complex solutions E(u l , U2, U3) and B(ul' U2, U3) that satisfy (2-70) through (2-73), the sinusoidal time;.depen~ence can be restored by multiplying each space-dependent complex solution E and B by eJwt and taking the real part of the result as follows E(Ul'
U2) U3,
t)
= Re [E(ul>
U2,
u3 )eirot ]
B(Ul'
U2, 113,
t)
= Re
U2,
U3)~wt]
[B(Ul'
(2-74)
Considerable use is to be made of (2-70) through (2-74) in subsequent discussions of the time-harmonic solutions. One can show that a similar procedure using the replacements (2-67) leads to a complex, time-harmonic set of the integral forms of Maxwell's equations in free space. A comparison wi th their time-dependent versions is provided in Table 2-1. Applications of the complex time-harmonic forms (2-70) through (2-73) to elementary wave solutions in free space are considered in Section 2-10. A preliminary discussion or the Laplacian operator and a development of the so-called wave equations are desirable prerequisites to finding such solutions. These are discussed next.
2·7 LAPLACIAN AND CURL CURL OPERATORS The gradient of a scalar field was seen in Section 2-2 to yield a vector field. Moreover, the divergence of the vector function grad], denoted symbolically by V - (V]), is by the definition (2-20) a scalar measure of the flux source-per-unit-volurne condition of V] at every point in a region. The expansions (2-10) and (2-28) for V] and its divergence can be combined to obtain V - (Vf) in a desired coordinate system, a result to be found useful for obtaining both time-varying and time-static field solutions. Thus, in generalized coordinates, the gradient of] is expressed by (2-10)
(2-75)
2-7 LAPLACIAN AND CURL OPERATORS
To find the divergence of VI, the components of and F3 of (2-28), obtaining
89
become the elements Fb Fll
(2-76)
This scalar result has a particularly simple form in rectangular coordinates, becoming
V- (Vf)
(2-77)
The definitiolls of the dot product and of V are seen to permit the following operator notations
V-V == ;j2
+
a2 + a2
-=
V2 .
(2-78)
in which the notation V2 , called the Laplacian operator, is equivalent to V - (V ) V- V( ) div (grad ). From (2-76), the Laplacian operator in generalized coordinates is, therefore
V2 == V - V
yielding in the circular
r1J/'lnrlr'}NI/
system
V-VI
(2-80)
while in spherical coordinates
2'
Vj
=
J
1) ara (2iJ ra~ +
(2-81 )
90
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWEl,L'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
The Laplacian operator (2-79) is also applicable to a vector field F(Ul, U z , U3, t), the result of which is shown to be useful in the expansion of curl (curl F), Apply (2-79) to define VZF, the Laplacian of a vector field, as follows
(2-82)
The term-by-term expansion of the latter can be tedious, since in general a l , aZ and a 3 are not constant unit vectors in a region; that is, their directions depend on Uil U z , and U3' In rectangular coordinates, however, (2-82) yields the relatively simple result (since ax, a y , a z are constant unit vectors) l
(2-83) in which the components V 2 F x , and so on, are specified by (2-77). No corresponding simplicity occurs in other coordinate systems because of the spatial dependence of the unit vectors already noted. For example, if the space partial derivatives of the nnit vectors are properly accounted for, as in Example 1-1 of Section 1-6, one can show £l'om (2-82) that V 2 F in the circular I]lindrical system becomes 2 of
pi
01>
a result decidedly not of the form of (2-83) with }<~" F, F z merely taking the places of Fx, Fy , Fz· St ill another vector result, the curl of the vector curl F, designated V X (V X F), is of importance. The function V X F provides the three components given in (2-50); then performing another curl operation yields
(2-85)
I
2-7 LAPLACIAN AND CURL OPERATORS
91
Because of its complexity, this result is examined only in rectangular coordinates, becommg
v
X
(V x F)
= a {~(OFy
oy ox
x
OFx) oy
0
(OFozx_ O}~)} ox
_ OFy) _ ~ (OIi~ _ OFx)} OZ oy oz ox ox oy y {() (OFx_ OFz) _ () (OFz_ OF )}
+ a {~(OFz y
+a z
ox oz
ox
oy
(?Y
(2-86)
OZ
A comparison of the latter with the vector V(V' F) is now made. In rectangular co6rdinates, using (2-10) and (2-28) obtains
V(V' F) (2-87) and adding and subtracting six properly chosen terms puts (2-87) into the following form
On comparing the terms of the latter with (2-83) and (2-86), it is seen that one has precisely V(V' F)
V2F
+V V
X
X
(V
(V
X
X
Fl. This is a vector identity, usually written
F) = V (V . F) - V 2F
Equation (2-88a) provides a useful equivalence for V F is divergenceless (V, F = 0). Then
X
(V
(2-88a)
X
F), especially if the field
if V . F = 0
(2-88b)
92
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
as
TABLE 2-2 Summary of vector identities
v(
Differential (II) V(f+ g) = Vf + Vg (12) V'(F+G)=V'F+V'G
Algebraic
(1) F·G=G·F F x G -G x F
(3) (4) (5) (6)
(13) V x (F + G) = V x F + V x G (14) VUg) =fVg + gVf (15) V'(jF)=F'Vf+f(V'F) (16) V' (F x G) = G· (V x F) - F' (V x G) (17) V x UF) = (Vf) x F + f(V x F) (13) V'Vf=V 2f (19) V' (V x F) = 0 (20) V x (Vf) = 0 (21) V x (V x F) = V (V • F) - V2F' (22) V x UVg) = Vfx Vg
F' (G+H) =F'G+F'H F x (G + H) = F x G + F x H F x (G x H) = G(H' F) - H(F' G) F' (G x H) = G . (H x F) = H • (F x G) Integral
(7)
(3)
Ps F . ds =
Iv V . F dv
rf
Js
';ft
F • dt = f (V x F) • ds
Iv [f V g + (v/) . (Vg)] dv gV!]' ds Iv UV2g gV2/) 2
(9) PJ(Vg) . ds = (10)
Ps rfV,<:
=
Cl
do
Although the proof of (2-88a) was carried out in the rectangular system, such differential'results are independent of the coordinate system, meaning that (2-88a) and (2-88b) are true for any system. It is worth wile to observe that one can more easily expand V 2 F by use of the vector identity (2-88a) than by ddinition 2-82). Thus
V 2F = V (V . F) - V
X
(V
X
F)
(2-89)
is useful f(:>r expanding V 2 F in a coordinate system other than the cartesian .. Several vector identities involving the difterential operators grad, div, and curl are listed in Table 2-2 along with vector algebraic and integral identities. Proo[~ of the algebraic and the diHcrential identities are achieved in the manner used to prove (2-88a), that is, expanding both sides in rectangular coordinates leads to an identity. The integral identities (7) and (8) are recognized as those of diver'gence and Stokes's theorem, respectively. Extensions of the divergence theorem lead 'to Green's integral identities (9) and (10), proved in the next section.
2·8 GREEN'S INTEGRAl THEOREMS: UNIQUENESS One can specialize the divergence theorem (2-34) to a particular class of vector functions and ohtain the integral identities known as Green's theorems. Suppose F to be a scalar fieldJmultiplied by a conservative vector field Vg; let F = JVg. Then (2-34) takes on the special form
~~ UVg)
. ds
=
Iv V· UVg)
dv
(2-90)
Ie ft
s
2-9 WAVE EQUATIONS FOR ELECTRIC AND MAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
93
assuming the functions well-behaved in and on the volume V. The integrand in the volume integral may be expanded by use of (15) in Table 2-2, whence (2-90) becomes Green's first integral identity
~~ (fVg) . ds =
Iv [JV2g + (VJ) • (Vg)] dv
(2-91 )
If one chooses to define a vector function G g VJ instead, the same procedure leads to a result like (2-91) except for the interchange of the roles of the scalar functions I and g
Ps (g VI) . ds = Iv [gV J + (Vg) . CVllJ dv 2
Subtracting the latter from (2-91) obtains Green's second integral identity (2-92)
also knowll as Green's symmetric theorem. Green's theorems (2-91) and (2-92) are important in applications to theorems ofbound,lIy-value problems of field theory, as well as to special theorems concerning integral properties of scalar and vector functions. One such. theorem concerns those dil~ ferential properties of a vector field F that must be specified in a region to make F unique. This theorem, not proved here,5 shows that the specification of both the divergence and the curl of a vector function F in a region V, plus a particular boundary condition on the surface S that bounds V, are sufficient to make F unique. Maxwell's equations (:2-39), (2-4: 1), (2-62), and (2-63) specify the divergence and the curl of both the E and the B fields in a region (in terms of charge and current densities as well as the B or E field), so that these relationships, together with appropriately specified boundary conditions, can similarly be expected to provide unique field solutions. Finding solutions of Maxwell's differential equations is facilitated for some problems hy first manipulating them simultaneously to obtain differential equations in terms of only B or E, as is discussed next.
*2·9 WAVE EQUATIONS FOR ELECTRIC AND MAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE Electromagnetic field solutions Band E in free space must, by the uniqueness discussion of the previous section, satisfy the Maxwell divergence and curl relations (2-39), (2-4:1), (2-62), and (2-63). In a time-varying electromagnetic field problem, one is generally interested in obtaining E and B field solutions of the tour Maxwell relations, a process that can often be facilitated by combining Maxwell's equations such that one of the fields (B or E) is eliminated, yielding a partial differential equation known as the wave equation. This is accomplished as follows. 5For a pro()f~ sec S. Ramo, J. R. Whinnery, and T. Van Duzer. Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd cd. New York: Wiley, 1985, p. 130. *For the purposes of the next section, Section 2-9 may be omitted if desired.
94
VEcrOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
The Maxwell differential equations for free space are
here for conven-
lence.
V· (EoE)
[2-39 J
Pv
V ·B= 0 VxE=
[2-41]
oB ot
[2-62]
B
o(EoE)
Jlo
ot
Vx---=j+
[2-63 J
To eliminate B, taking the curl of both sides of (2-62) obtains
v
X
(V
X
E)
(2-93)
Substituting (2-63) into the right side of (2-93) yields, after transposing terms containing E to the left side
(2-94)
a vector partial differential equation known as the inhomogeneous vector wave equation for free space. A wave equation similar to (2-94) can be obtained in terms of B. Thus, taking the curl of (2-63) arid substituting (2-62) into the result yields the inhomogeneous vector wave equation
V X (V X B)
iJ2B
+ JloEo ot 2
(2-95 )
= Jlo V X j
From (2-41), B is always divergenceless, and with V· E written
= pjE,
(2-94) and (2-95) are
Inhomogeneous vector wave equations for charge-free region
(2-96)
(2-97) A further simplification is possible if the region is empty space; that is, it is both charge free and current free (Pv j = 0). Then the simpler homogeneous vector wave
2-9 WAVE EQUATIONS FOR ELECTRIC AND MAGNETIC FIELDS IN FREE SPACE
95
equations hold
o
(2-98) Homogeneous vector wave equations for empty space (2-99)
If in a problem the rectangular coordinate system is appropriate to the E and B fields
governed by (2-98) and (2-99), making use of (2-83) provides the following scalar wave equations in terms of field components
a Ex 2
V2Ex
JLoE0aT =
V2Ey
JLoEo
V 2 Ez
JloE o
tPEY
ap
a j'.,'z
0
(2-100a)
= 0
(2-100b)
=0
(2-100c)
2
with an analogous trio of equations in Bx, By, and Bz yielded by (2-99). The complex time-harmonic forms of the wave equations may be obtained by replacing Band E with their complex exponential forms, (2-67). If this is done for (2-98) and (2-99), one obtains after cancelling eiwt
2~
VE
+ (t)
2
~
JLoEoE
=0
(2-101)
Homogeneous vector wave equations in complex time-harmonic 2~ 2 ~ i: V B + (t) JLoEoB = 0 lorm, for empty space
aiy aJ;z
(2-102)
aii
Since E = aJix + + and j = a}ix + aliz + z , (2-101) and (2-102) expand to obtain the following homogeneous, scalar wave equations in complex timeharmonic form (2-103) (2-104) (2-105)
96
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
with a similar triplet of equations in Ex, By, and Bz yielded by (2-102). The simplest solutions of these scalar wave equations are uniform plane waves, involving as few as two fIeld components. They are considered in the next section.
(
a t s
*2·10 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN EMPTY SPACE The simplest wave solutions of Maxwell's equations are uniform plane waves, characterized by uniform fIelds over infinite plane surfaces at fixed instants. Simplifying features are that the solutions are amenable to the rectangular coordinate systeln, and the number offIeld components reduces to as few as two. These simplifications provide a background for the more complex wave structures discussed in later chapters. Uniform plane waves have the property that, at any fixed instant, the E and B fields are uniform over plane surfaces. These planes are arbitrarily chosen; for present purposes, assume that they are defined by the surfaces z = constant. This is equivalent to stating that space variations of E and B are zero over Z = constant planes; thus assume 1. The fields have neither x nor y dependence; that is, a/ax = %y = 0 for all field components. It will be shown that waves propagating in the z direction result from this restriction. If the waves propagate in empty space, one requires an additional assumption. 2. Charge and current densities are everywhere zero III the region; that IS,
Pv
=
J
=
O.
The complex time-harmonic forms of the Maxwell differential equations determining the wave solutions are (2-70) through (2-73). With assumption (2) they become (2-106)
o
(2-107)
E = -jwB
(2-108)
V-B v
X
(2-109)
Combining these equations has been shown to produce the wave equations (2-101) and (2-102) 2~
V E
+w
2
~
floEoE
=
0
[2-101]
o
[2-102]
*This section on plane waves, pins Section 3-6 in Chapter 3, may optionally be omitted at this time, if desired, and taken up immediately heR) .. e beginning Chapter 6. Plane wave concepts are included here becanse of their universal relevance to all dynamic field phenomena, and because they are essential to a more complete understanding of conduction and polarization eflects in materials under other than purely static comtitions.
2-10 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN EMPTY SPACE
97
One should bear in mind that no new information is contained in the latter that is not already expressed by the preceding Maxwell's equations. Before atlempting to extract solutions from the wave equations, one may note that the curl relations, (~-l 08) and (2-109), furnish some interesting properties of the solutions, restricted by assumptions (1) and (2). Assuming that all six field components are present, 08) becomes, with a/ax a/ay = 0 of assumption (l),
VxE=
ax
ay az
0
0
a
-jOJ(a)3 x
+ a/3 y + a)jz)
Ex Ey Ez expanding into the triplet of diflerential equations
(2-110a)
of'x
(2-110b)
(2-110c)
Similarly,
109) provides
(2-1 11 a)
(2-111b)
0=
(2-I11c)
From these ditrerential expressions, the following properties apply to the solutions about to be /clUnd
1. No z component of either E or :B is obtained, thus making the field directions entirely transverse to the .~ axis. 2. Two indetJendent pairs offieldl', (Ex> By) and (Ey,~Bx), are yielded under the assumptions. This is seen to be the case on setting Ex 0 in (2-11 Ob), for example, forcing By to vanish while yet leaving the field pair (Ey, Bx) intact, the lall!'!' being governed only by (2-11 Oa) and (2-111 b). When field pairs are of each other, they are said to be uncoupled.
,
2&
98
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
tiuppoJe one desires wave solutions involving only the field pair ('Ex, By). Then put Ey = Ex = 0, reducing the pertinent differential equations tojust (2-1 lOb ) and (2-11Ia)
DEx
(Co
[2-110b]
[2-11lal The field solutions are obtained on combining (2-110b) and (2-11la) to eliminate E:x or By, yielding a scalar wave equation from which solutions can be found. Alterllatively, one can make use of either vect.?r wav~ equation (2-102) or (2-103), subjecting it to the same assumptions. (Only Ex and By are present and olox ~= olDy = 0.) Either approach obtains the following wave equation in terms of Ex:
res
ca In
(2-112) This is a partial differential equation in one variable (z); thus it can be written as the ordinary differential equation (2-113) It~ solution is the familiar 6 superposition of two exponential solutions
(2-114) wherein Dl and (;2 are arbitrary (complex) constants and the coefficient Po, called the constant, is given by Po = W.J/toEo. It is to be shown that the exponential solutions and DzeifJ oz arc representations of constant amplitude waves travelytg in tl;e positive z and negative z directions, respectively. The complex coefficients C't and C2 must have the units of volts per meter, denoting arbitrary complex amplitudes of t;.he positive z neg';!:tive z traveling waves. Employing amplitude symbols E:' and E;;' instead of I and C z puts (2-114) into the form
EAz)
= E,~e-jfloz =
+ E;;'e jfJoz Vim
E; (z) + E:.~ (z)
~+
(2-115)
~
The complex amplitudes Em and E;;' may be represented by points in the complex plane using the Argand diagram of Figure 2-10, so from their polar rqJresentations and
E;;'
(2-116)
4> + and 4> dt'noting arbitrary phase angles. hi! assumed that the reader is familiar with the details of this solution, found in any text on ordinary dill<'rential equations.
l'
q 1
2-10 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN EMPTY SPACE
99
(Complex plane)
FIGURE 2-10. Complex amplitudes represented in the complex plane.
Once a solution of one wave equation has been obtained, the remaining ~field can be l()und by use of Maxwell's equations. Thus, the solution (2-115) for Ex(:::.) inserted into the Maxwell relation (2-11 Ob) yields A
B (,z;)
I DEx
= --;-
}w D<-
Y
130
= --
w
= ;;;;~E~e-j/loz
r
A
n
E~~e-jpoZ
+ E,;;~/loZ] A
- J/toEoE;;,~(Joz Wb/m 2
(2-117)
in which flo once more denotes the space phase factor Po
== w~J1.oEo rad/m
(2-118)
The real-time, sinusoidal steady state expression for the electric field component is found from (2-74). Taking the real part of (2-115) after multiplying by eiwt obtains
Ex\<-, t) =
Re [(E,!ei1>+e- j /l oz +
= E~
cos (wt
Po<-
E,;;~1>-~fJoZ)ejwt]
+ ¢+) + E';;
cos (wt
+ Po<- + ¢-)
(2-119)
Note that E~ and E';; denote the traveling wave real amplitudes, whereas ¢ + and ¢- are arbitrary phase1 relative to the instant t = 0 and the location <- 0 in space. The real-time f()rm of By of (2-117) is similarly found to be
By«., t)
r.JJ1.oEoE,~ J cos (Wi
Po<-
+ ¢ +)
- [~J1.oEoE';;] cos (wt
+ Po<- + ¢ (2-120)
The traveling wave nature of unii()rm plane waves can be grasped fi'om a graphic interpretation of (2-119) and (2-120). Consider only the first terms of each: the positive <- traveling wave. The following symbols are chosen to denote them. (2-121a)
B+ y
(2-121b)
Their positive <- traveling nature may be observed if (2-121) is plotted as a of cosine waves versus <-, at successive instants of time t. (When observing the
100
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
Thu:
will the a co --""
Wave motion, with increasing t (a)
(x)
Bee of a V
/
0
r\
V /
1\
"-
I \
/
\
\
I
\
\
I
\
"-
\
/
z
I \
(or {3 oz)
the
I
I - - " " Motion (b)
t"IGURE 2-11. Electric field sketches ofa positive traveling unil()rm plane wave. Vector plot along at success; vc inst ants, (b) Flux plot of the electric field at t = 0,
time or space variations of a field, it is usually best to hold space or time fixed, while the other is allowed to vary,) At t=O, (2-12Ia) becomes £';(:::,0) = cos ( #0:: + cjJ+) = E,! cos (#0':: cjJ+), shown plotted against the z variable as solid line in Figure 2-1] (a), With the period T defined by
T=
sec
J'
an.
(2-122)
one-eighth period later, fl.)r example, (2-121) becomes E; T/8) = cos (#oz 2n/8 cjJ +), The cosine function is thus shifted in the positive z direction the time lapse of the eighth period as shown, yielding a positive motion of the wave with increasing time. The vector field plot of Figure 2-11 (a) shows only a~;; (z, t) a typical z-axis ill the region. To display the field throughout a cross section any x-z plane, the flux plot of Figure 2-11 (b) is more suitable. The lllotion of the wave with increasing t is related to the phase factor flo = W~Eo appearing in the wave expressions, with #oz having the units of radians (dimensionless), implying that #0 is given in radians per meter. The z distance that the wave must travel such that 2n rad of phase shift (one complete cycle) occurs is called wavelenl',th, designated by the symbol A and defined by
In
ne ra
to
ec
WI
POA
= 2n rad
(2-123)
a'
2-10 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN EMPTY SPACE
rhus, the wavelength in iree space is related to the phase factor
2n
2n
c
Po
I
101
Po by (2-124)
m
An observer moving with the wave such that he experiences no phase change will move at the phase velocity of the wave, denoted by Vp' The equiphase surfaces of the positive z traveling wave are defined by setting the argument of (2-121) equal to a constant; that is, wi Poz + 4> + = constant', whereupon differentiating it to evaluate dz/dt yields the phase velocity
dz vp
= dt =
w
Po m/sec
(2-125a)
Because {jo = wji;~~, and with flo = 4n x 10 7, Eo ~ 1O- 9/36n, the phase velocity of a uniform plane wave in empty space is I
--- = c ~ JfloEo
3
X
10 8 m/sec
(2-125b)
-
the speed of light. 7 ._ A comparison of the complex expressions, (2-115) and (2-ll7), for Ex(z) and By(z) shows that their separate traveling wave terms are paired into ratios producing the sarne constant. Thus, write (2-115) and (2-117) in the forms = E~ e -
j{Joz
+ E;;' ei{loz
E; (z) + E; (z)
(2-126)
and -+
- Eme - j/1oZ B- (Z ) y
C
--
Em
_ilJoz
--I:""
C
(2-127) in which E;(Z), E;(z) and B;(x), fJ;(z) symbolically denote the positive z and negative Z traveling wave terms directly above them. Then the following complex ratios hold at any point in the region
c~ 3
X
10 8 m/sec
(2-128)
to provide j means for finding one of the fields whenever the other is known_ A more common variation of this technique is achieved by modifying the B field in empty 7Experiments have shown that the speed oflight, c, is more nearly 2.99792 x 10 8 m/sec. This value, together with the assumed permeability for free space fJ-o = 4n x 10- 7 H/m, inserted into (2-125b), is seen to a value for Eo that departs slightly from the approximate value 10 - 9/36n given.
DIFFERENTIAL REI"ATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS (x)
t;:
--Z B/
-~
t) ""
Ei' (z, t) = Ei;,
cos (wi - f30z
+ 1>+) Equiphase surface
Motion
cE;:;
cos(wt - f30z
+ .... .,.. +)
(at t = 0) (z)
[nOURE 2-12. Vector plot ofthc fields ofa uniform plane wave along the z axis. Note the typical equiphase surface, depicting fluxes of
E;
and 13;.
through a division by /lo, defining a magnetic intensity field denoted by the symbol lor empty space as follows.
B
= H A/m
For empty space
(2-129)
/lo
Thus, denoting B: (Z)//lo by if: (z), and B; (Z)//lo by if; (z) the following ratios the traveling wave terms are valid for plane waves in empty space
E: (z) =~: (z)
/lo
(z)
fly
(z)
=
/loc
=~= J/loEo
r;;;, == 110 ~ 120n Q
V~
r;;;, == '10 ~ 120n Q
V~
(2-130a)
(2-130b)
2·
J
The real ratio, /lo/Eo the units volts per meter per ampere per meter, or ohms), ill called the intrinsic wave !11l;(JI!llran.ce empty space, and is denoted by the symbol 110' The advantage of (2-130) over ill that the ratio 110 is a usefully smaller number. The real impedal1ce ratio of 30) shows that the electric and magnetic fields of uniform plane waves in are in phase with one another, a condition evident on comparing tht~ the negative Z traveling solutions of (2-126) and (2-127). Each contains argument in the exponential factors, ample evidence of their 2-12 depicts the real-time electric and magnetic fields of in space at t = O.
T dl Ul
m E
li sl 81
p p
IXAMPLE 2·11. Suppose
p
empty space has the electric field (I)
a a
2-11 WAVE POLARIZATION
103
its frequency being 20 MHz. (a) What 1~ it§. direction of travel? Its amplitude? Its vector direction in space? (b) Find the associated B field and the equivalent H field. (e) Express E, :8, and H in real-time form. (d) Find the phase factor Po, the phase velocity, and the wavelength of this electromagnetic wave. (a) A comparison of (1) wit!: (2-115) 2r (2-126) reveals a positive z}raveling wave, whence the symbolism: E(z) = axE; (z). The real amplitude is E~ = 1000 Vim, with the vector field x directed in space. (b) Using either (2-127) or the ratio (2-128)
The use of (2-130a) obtains the magnetic intensity ~+
- Ex-(z) _1000 _ 2 65 -jPoz A/ z) -- e -jPoz . e m H~+( y '10 120n
(c) The real-time fields are obtained from (2-74) by taking the real part after multiplication by Jillt
E; (z, t) = Re [1000e- iPozJwt] =
B;
t) = 3.33
H;
t) = 2.65 cos (wt - Poz) A/m
X
Poz) V/m
1000 cos (wt 2
10- 6 cos (wt - Poz) Wb/m (or T)
(d) Using (2-118), (2-125), (2-124), and (2-122) yields
r--:-
150 =0 OJ,>! f.loEo vp = c = 3 ~
X
2n(20 x 10 6 )
c
3 x 10
.f
8
= 0.42
rad/m
10 8 m/sec 3 x 10 8
2n
Po
OJ
= - =
20
x 106
=15m
2·11 WAVE POLARIZATION
The vector orientation, or polarization, of an electromagnetic wave in space is usually described with reference to its electric field direction. Thus in Figure 2-12, the z traveling uniform plane wave shown with the field components Ex) Hy is said to be polarized in the x direction (or simply x-polarized). Similarly, the plane wave with the components Ey , Hx described in Problem 2-43 is polarized in the y direction. Both these waves are linearly polarized, because the electric field vector in any fixed z plane describes a straight-line path as time passes. Because Maxwell's equations are linear equations, a vector superposition, or summing, of the two linearly polarized uniform plane waves just introduced will also provide a valid field solution. The resultant vector sum will not necessarily be linearly polarized, however, depending on the phase condition between the x- and the ypolarized electric field components. For example, with Ex(::., t) Emx cos (wt Poz) and Ey(z) t) = Emy cos (wt - Poz) propagating in phase and at the same frequency along the z-axis, their sum, E = axEx + ayEy, would appear as depicted in Figure
104
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
l'
(x) I
Locus of E in z=O plane
I
.E)O.
',I
I(y)
I
t
oJ
I
(f,"(O<) --
t
(y)
)
tht In
an It
--
-----
(z)
Motion (a)
(x)
I
I
En Locus of E in z=O plane (x)
~
W
E)O,t~ / I
(y)\
I
t
'-'
1:,,(00 /
--
t
(y)
-
n w 01
.
tl o
--
Locus of tota I E
(z)
fr
Motion
'V"
(b)
FIGURE 2-13. Uniform plane waves shown in space at t = 0 and added to produce difl'ercnt wave polarizations. (a) Cophasa,1 Ex and E y, their sum yielding- a linearly polarized result. (b) Elliptical polarization of E prodn'ced with 90° phasing. (Related H field components arc omitted for clarity.)
St
o 11 1]
c c
2-13(a), c/J = arc may be forming
producing a linearly polarized field E, tilted in any fixed z plane by the angle tan (Emy/Emx) from the x-axis, as shown. The equation of the straight line found by conveniently inserting z = 0 into the Ex and Ey expressions and their ratio to eliminate OJt, yielding (2-131)
This is evidently the equation of the straight line (form:)! = mx) as shown in the inset diagram of Figure 2-13(a), regarding Ex and Ey as the variables in lieu of x andy.
I
REFERENCES
105
On the other hand, if the two component fields were 90° out of phase, such that Ex = Emx cos (OJt - Poz) and Ey = Emy cos (OJt Poz + 90°) as in Figure 2-l3(b), the sum E = axEx + ayEy would produce the spiraling locus of the E vector about the z-axis as noted. In the fixed Z = 0 plane, the component fields are written Ex = Emx cos OJI and Ey = Emy cos (OJI + 90°) = -Emy sin OJt = -Emy -Jl - C05 2 OJI. Inserting the Ex expression into Ey to eliminate OJl yields the locus ofE in the Z = 0 plane. (2-132) the equation of an ellipse with principal axes of half lengths Emx and E my , as seen in Figure 2-13(b). Thus, the tip of the total E vector describes an elliptical locus in any fixed Z plane as the wave moves by, indicating the elliptical polarization of the wave. It is also evident that a circular polarization of the E vector would occur if Emx = Emy in (2-132). You may show that if the 90° phase condition between Ex and Ey were replaced by the general angle 0, making Ey = Emy cos (OJ! + 0) in the z = 0 plane, then the polarization locus would acquire the form of sin 2 0
=0
(2-133)
an ellipse with its major axis tilted, depending on the choice of O. Wave polarization is of practical importance in radio communication transmitreceive links because the power extracted by a receiving antenna from the arriving wave is usually dependent on the orientation of the antenna relative to the polarization of that wave. The common half-wave, thin wire dipole antenna, for example, picks up the maximum power from a linearly polarized oncoming wave when the electric field of the arriving wave is aligned with the antenna wire, while accepting zero power from the wave if the electric field and the wire are at right angles. If the arriving wave were circularly or elliptically polarized, a component of the arriving E-field vector is made available to the receiving dipole regardless of its tilt in the plane ofE, so that the orientation of the receiving antenna, in any fixed z-plane, would have little or no effect on the amount of signal received. This could be of considerable importance in satellite communications, in which the receiving antenna on the satellite is tumbling in space and therefore changing its attitude relative to the oncoming wave. Antennas capable of transmitting circularly polarized waves, such as helical antennas or phased crossed dipoles, are readily constructed to accommodate this need.
REFERENCES ABRAHAM,
M., and
R. BECKER.
The Classical Theory of Electricity and Magnetism. Glasgow: Blackie,
1943.
R. M., L. T. CIlD, and R. P. ADLER. Electromagnetic Fields, Energy and Forces. New York: Wiley, 1960. KRAUS, J. D. Electromagnetics, 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1984. PHILLIPS, H. B. Vector Analysis. New York: Wiley, 1944.
FANO,
S., J. R. WHINNERY, and T. Electronics. New York: Wiley, 1984.
RAMO,
VAN DUZER,
2nd ed. Held" and Waves in Communication
106
VECTOR DIFfERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
PROBLEMS
SECTION 2-2 2-1.
From the substitution of the appropriate coordinate variables and metric coefficients into the gradient expression (2-10), show that (2-14a,b,c) follow in the three common coordinate systems. Also convert the magnitude expression (2-13) to correct forms in those systems.
2-2.
Express as a vector function the gradient (maximum directional derivative) of the following scalar fields (a) f(x) = 20x 2 ; (b) g(x,y, z) = 20x 2 + 30xy2 + 40xyz; (c) F(r) = 100!T; (d) G(p, , z) = 5p sin - 6p 2 Z cos ; (e) h(T, . [Answer: (b) a x (40x + 30y2 + 40yz) + a y (60xy + 40xz) + a z 40xy (d) a p (5 sin - 12pz cos (5 cos 1> + 6pz sin 1» - az 6p2 cos 1>]
e,
2-3.
Prove, by expression in rectangular coordinates, that V(f + g) tity (11) in Table 2-2).
= Vf
+ Vg (vector iden-
With f and g given to be scalar, differentiable fields, by expansion in rectangular coordinates prove the identity (14) in Table 2-2, that V(fg) = fVg + gVJ.
2-4.
2-5.
In Problem 1-6 is depicted the "distance-vector," R, defined as the difference r 2 r 1 of the position vectors to the endpoints ofR. Relabel the point P2 now as P(x,y, z) with arbitrary coordinates (taken to be differentiation variables), so that now R = r rl' (a) Write the expression for R as well as its magnitude R in rectangular coordinates. (b) Show that V R is also the unit vector in the direction of R.
SECTION 2-4 2-6.
Carry out a direct proof resembling that leading to the expression (2-28) fi)r div F, but carried out in the rectangular coordinate system. Begin with (2-22), expressed in rectangular coordinates with reference to a diagram like Figure 2-4 but adapted to the rectangular system.
2-7.
By the substitution of the appropriate coordinate variables and metric coefficients into (2-28), show that the expressions (2-29a,b,c) follow, in the three common coordinate systems.
2-8.
Determine for each of the following vector fields whether or not it has Hux sources; that is, find its divergence. (a) A = 3ax + 4ay (constant vee tor field in a region) (b) F(x,y, z) = 3xzax + 4xya y + (5x 2 + y)a z (c) G(x,y, z) = 3yax + 4zay + (5x 2 + y)a z (d) H(x,y, z) = 6xa x + 6ya y + 6za z = 6a,r (determine it 111 both rectangular and spherical eoordinates) (e) J (p, , z) = a p 5pz sin + a4>lOpz cos (f) K(r, 1» = a,100/r 2 + a820/r + a4>10r cos 1> [Answer: div F = 3z + 4x, fields A, G, and J are sourceless]
e,
2-9. Prove, by expansion in rectangular coordinates, that V . (F identity (12) in Table 2-2.
+ G) =
V • F + V . G, the
2-10. By expansion in the rectangular coordinate system, prove the identity (15) in Table 2-2, V' (fF) =F·Vf+f(V·F).
2-11. Show that the following fields are, divergen~eless (source-free). (a) The p-directed, inverse-p dcpendent field F = a,,/p, for p > 0; and (b) the r-directed, inverse-r 2 dependent field, G = aJ r2, for r > O. (By comparison with results found in Example 1-13, with what kinds of static-charge sources are these field-types identified?) (a) Given the class of electric fields E(p) = apK/ pn with K a constant and n a parameter, find div E. What choice of n yields a divergenceless (charge-free) field everywhere (excluding p = OJ? Comment on this conclusion relative to (1-61), applicable to the uniform line charge. (b) Given the class of electric fields E = a,K/rn , find div E for r > O. Which choice of the parameter n provides a divergenceless field? Comment on this conclusion with respect to (1-5 7b), the electric field of the point charge.
2-12.
PROBLEMS
107
SECTION 2-4A 2-13. Assuming the same six-sided closed surface S to bound the box-shaped interior volume as in Example 2-4, assume the field G(x,y, z) = a z lOxy 2 z3 exists in the region. Illustrate the validity of the divergence theorem (2-34) by evaluating its volume and surface integrals in and on the given parallelepiped. [Answer: 10,800] 2-14. Assuming the same right circular cylindrical region of radius p = a and length t as for Example 2-5, illustrate the correctness of the divergence theorem for this region, given the electric field E = appop3/4Eoa2, that corresponds to the nonuniform charge density of Problem 1-43. [Note for this case that no singularity exists within the given V or on S, thereby obviating any need for the exclusion surface S2 used in Example 2-5.} [Answer: nLpoa 2/2E o] 2-15. The first octant of a sphere centered at the origin is bounded by the four coordinate surfaces: r = a, 4> = 0, 4> = n/2, and on the bottom by the plane = n/2. Sketch it. Given that the field F(r, 4» arlO - a.,,30r sin () cos 4> exists in this region, illustrate the truth of the divergence theorem (2-34) by evaluating the volume and surface integrals within and on the defined region for the given field. [Answer: lOa 2 (a + n/2)]
e
e,
SECTION 2-48 2-16. In Problem 1-28, the electric field within the uniformly charged spherical shell (a < r < b) was found to consist of only thl! component Er = pv(r3 - a3 ) /3Eor2. Show that inserting this field into the Maxwell divergence relation (2-39) yields the charge density originally assumed. 2-17. It was found by use of Gauss's law in Problem 1-29 that the choice of the nonuniform charge density Pv = Po(l - 4r/3a) within a sphere of radius a yields the electric field therein given by Po EO
(r3
r2) 3a
Show that div (EoE) for this field yields the charge density originally assumed, thereby satisfying Maxwell's equation (2-39).
2-18. (a) In Problem 1-30(b) it was found, using Gauss's law, that the static electric field within the uniformly charged cylindrical cloud is E = a p pvp/2E o ' Determine div (EoE), to prove that Maxwell's divergence relation (2-39) is satisfied. (b) Show similarly, from the E-field solution of Problem 1-31 (b), that E inside the nonuniformly charged cylindrical cloud of that problem satisfies the Maxwell divergence relation (2-39). 2-19. By the application of (2-28) in the appropriate coordinate system, show that the Maxwell relation (2-41), div B = 0, is satisfied for each of the B fields given by (1-64) for the long, straight wire, by (1-65) for the current sheet, and by (1-66) and (1-67) lor the toroid and solenoid. What is the physical interpretation of the zero value of the divergence expected of each and every B field?
SECTION 2-5 2-20. With reference to a diagram resembling Figure 2-8 but adapted to the rectangular coordinate system, give the details of a proof of the curl expression (2-50) carried out in rectangular coordinate form. 2-21. (a) By the substitution of the appropriate coordinate variables and metric coefficients into the determinant (2-51) for the curl of a vector field, show to what result it expands in the rectangular coordinate system. (b) Similarly show that (2-54) and (2-55) are the results of expanding (2-51) in the circular cylindrical and the spherical coordinate systems. 2-22. Find the curl of each of the vector fields given in Problem 2-8. Which of those fields are irrotational (conservative)? [Answer: (c) -3ax - IOxa y - 3a., (e) -aplOp cos 4> + a.,,5p sin 4> + a z l5Z cos 4>]
108
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
2-23.
Find in detail the curl of the vcctors Vg, VG, and Vh generated in Problem 2-2, [These results exemplify the validity of the vector identity (20) in Table 2-2.]
2-24.
By use of expansions in rectangular coordinates, prove the vcctor identity (17) in Table 2-2, that V x (iF) = (Vf) x F + f(V x F).
2-25. Given the vector field F(x,y, z) 2xz + 5YZ 2, find the following.
=
3xy 3 ax
+ 4y 2 z 2 ay
and the scalar field f(x,y, z) =
(a) Vf (b) V' F (c) V x F (d) V· (iF) (e) V' (Vj) =- V 2f (f) V x (V x F) (g) V· (V X F) (h) V X (Vf) [Answcr: (a) 2zax + 5z 2 a y + + lOyz)a z (c) -3y 2zax - 9xy 2 a z (e) lOy (g) 0: also by identity (19) in Table 2-2]
2-26. Given are the fields G(p, , z) = aq,5p sin - a z 6p 2 z 2 and g(p, , z) = 3pz sin . Find the functions (a) Vg (b) V· G (c) V x G (d) V· (gG) (el V· (Vg) =- V 2 g (f) V X (V x G) (g) V(V·G) [Answer: (b) 5 cos 12p2z, (e) zero (f) ap(lOp-I cos - 24pz) + a z 24zZ]
2-27.
Given functions (a) Vh (b) (d) V· (Vil) [ Answer: (a) (f) 0]
thc fields H(r, 0) = arlOr cos 0
+ aq,20r 2
and
her,
0, , find thc
V· H (c) V x H V 2h (e) V x (V x H) (1') V· (V x H) a r 8 sin 0 cos + a o3 cos 0 cos - aq,8 sin (c) a r 20r cot 11 - a o60r + aq, 10 sin 0
SECTION 2-5A Illustrate the validity of Stokes's theorem using the same closed line t and vector ficld of Example 2-9, but this time employ the surface S, consisting simply of the square located at y I. (What is the required expression for ds on S, ifit is to contorm to the line integration sense chosen about t?)
2-28.
Given is the vector field E(p, , z) = a p 5p,c - aq,8z 2 + a z I OZ2 sin . (a) Find curl E. Is E conservative? (b) Evaluate thc line integral of E . dt about the closed path t = tl + t z + 1'3 + t4 on the portion of the circular eylinder of radius 2 and height 3 located in the first octant as shown. (c) Obtain the answer to (b) by usc of an appropriate surface integral via Stokes's theorem. (One such surface S is shown.) [Answer: (b) 316.2]
2-29.
2-30.
A G-directed field is defined by F(r, 0, in a region of space. (a) Find curl F at any point. (b) Evaluate the integral of (curl F) . ds over the surface S of a sphere of radius r = R appearing within the first octant as shown, bounded by the closed line t = ta + tb + tco (c) Find the answer to (b) another way by usc of Stokes's theorem, from the line integral of F . dt taken in the correct: sense about t. [Answer: (b) 5R2]
PROBLEM 2-29
PROBLEMS
109
I (z) ) r=R
fa :1<1> = 0
I
r=R
tC:=7f/2
(x)
tb
(y)
.\r= R '10 =
7f/2
PROBLEM 2-30
SECTION 2-5B 2-31.
(a) In Problem 1-37 it was shown that the field within the conducting slab carrying the constant current density J = a;:;}z is B = ayJ.lo}zx. Show that this B field satisfies the time-static Maxwell curl relation (2-65). (b) In Problem 1-33 was derived the expression for the B field within the hollow conductor, B = a",J.loI(p2 - b2 )/2np(c 2 - b2 ). Show that this magnetic field satisfies (2-65).
2-32.
Show that the B fields, found for the coaxial conductor pair of Problem 1-34, all satisfy the Maxwell curl equation (2-65) in the three regions p < a, a < p < band b < P < c.
SECTION 2-7 2-33. From the substitution of the appropriate coordinate variables and metric coefficients into (2-76), show that the Laplacian operator ofa scalar field, v, (VI) == V21, becomes (2-77), (2-80), and (2-81) in the rectangular, cylindrical, and spherical systems, respectively.
2-34.
Substituting the correct coordinate variables and metric coefficients, show that the definition (2-82) of the Laplacian operator of a vector field becomes (2-83) in rectangular coordinates. 2-35. Repeat Problem 2-34, except this time show that the definition (2-82), in the cylindrical coordinate system, yields (2-84). [Hint: Make use of (1-33) in accounting (elr the space derivatives of the unit vectors a p and a",.] 2-36. Show that the use of the vector identity (2-89) expanded in the cylindrical coordinate system yields the result (2-84).
SECTION 2-9 2-37. In a manner similar to that employed in obtaining the wave equation (2-94) in terms ofE, derive the vector wave eqnation (2-95) in terms ofB. Show how it may be reduced to (2-99) for empty space. 2-38. Using the replacements (2-67) for real-time with complex time-harmonic fields, convert the vector, inhomogenous wave equations (2-94) and (2-95) to their corresponding complex time-harmonic forms. With the proper assumptions, show how these reduce to (2-10 I) and (2-102), appropriate to source-free empty space.
SECTION 2-10 2-39. (a) Show that combining the time-harmonic Maxwell differential equations (2-ll0b) and (2-111a) yields the scalar wave equation (2-112). (b) The wave equation (2-ll2) is to be
110
VECTOR DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS AND MAXWELL'S DIFFERENTIAL RELATIONS
obtained via a different rout~: Beginning wi~h the wave equation I) and the electric field component Ex (along with By) to exist, show that it reduces to (2-112).
2-40. Suppose that you are told that the complex wave fLlIlction Ex(;;:.) = E:' ejw"/;'o
IS
a
2-41. A particular ~niiorm plane wave in empty space has the electric field given, in timeharmonic form, by E:(z) = 1885e- j /i oz Vim, at the frequency f 100 MHz. (a) Describe this electric field wave: What is its amplitude? Its direction of travel? Its vector direction in space (polarization)? (b) Express it in its real-time form, (z, I). What is the value of the ftee-space phase factor {Jo'? What is the waveleng~h A? (c) Find the associated magnetic field (z) well as the equivalent magnetic field (z)) in time-harmonic form. Express the H field in its real-time form, H;(z, t). (d) Sketch a labeled wave diagram in the manner of Figure 2-12, showing the real time fields E-; and H; at t = O.
E-;
B;
H;
2-42. The unit.orm plane wave electric field, E(,:) aJ;,~,(z) = axl50S,!lIoz Vim, is given in some region of space. Let the frequency of the source producing this wave be f = 150 MHz. Answer the questions asked in Problem 2-4·1 concerning this given traveling wave. 2-43. Begin with the other indepepdellt pair of Maxwell dillcrential equations (2-110a) and (2-111 b), involving the field-pair E y , Bx. Defining this plane wave to be '>-po/arized" in view of they-direction of its electric field, obtain the following. (a) Manipulate these equatiops to obtain a wave equation resembling (2-112) but in terms of the component E y • Express the solution of this wave equation in the mauner of (2-115). (b) Show that the corresponding magnetic-field traveling-wave solution can be expressed
Using 129), determine the equivalent expression lor Hx(z). (e) Use the results of (a) and (b) to establish the wave impedance ratios il'~ IH: and Ey- Ifr;. Compare them with the ratios applicable to the x-polarized case. (d) Sketch a labeled wave diagram suggested by Figure 2-12, showing only the forward-traveling real-time sinusoidal waves (Z, I) and H~ I) at the instant t O. Compare the results with the x-polarized case depicted in Figure 2-12, looking for similarities. (e) Sketch a wave diagram, this time showing only the real-time (Z, t) and H; t) at t = O.
E;
E;
SECTION 2-11 2-44. (a) Prove (2-131) for the linear polarization trace formed by cophasal Ex and Ey plane-wave components. (b) Prove (2-132) for the elliptical polarization trace of Figure 2-13(b). Show that it becomes circular polarization when the component amplitudes are equal. (c) Repeat (b), but let Ey lag Ex in time by 90°. Use a polarization diagram in the z 0 plane as suggested by Figure 2-13(b) to prove which or these two polarization cases has the electric field vector rotating cloekwise in time, and which counterclockwise (looking in the positivc-z direction. ) 2-45. Prove (2-133) for the polarization ellipse obtained whcnver Ex and Ey differ in phase by the general angl<' fl. Sketch a labcled polarization diagram in the Z = 0 plane fc)r this case as suggested by Figure 2-13(b). Comment on the analogy between this diagram and thc "Lissajou figures" observable with an oscilloscope on exciting its vertical and horizontal amplifiers with sinusoidal signals differing in phase. (As an added option, modify the three-dimt'llsional diagram in Figure 2-13 to illustrate the details of this polarization problem.)
2-46. A uniform plane wave has the time-harmouic electric field: E(z) = 500e - jiJoZ(a x jay) V 1m. (a) Write the real-time exprt'ssions in thez 0 plane. What kind of polarization exists here? Is it clock,:vise or counterclockwise (looking along + (b) Find the expression for the accompanying H(z) field.
_--------------------CHAPTER 3
Maxwell's Equations and Boundary Conditions for Material Regions at Rest
Materials in nature are invariably composed of atoms or arrangements of atoms into ions or molecules, each made up of positively and negatively charged particles having various configurations in empty space and varying states ofrelative motion. An electric or magnetic field impressed on a material exerts Lorentz forces on the particles, which undergo displacements or rearrangements to modify the impressed fields accordingly. The Maxwell equations that describe the electric and magnetic field behavior in a material are thus expected to require modifications from their free-space versions to account for whatever additional fields the material particles produce. It is the task in this chapter to diseuss these extensions of the free-space Maxwell equations. The topic of conduction is discussed from the viewpoint of a collision model. The chapter continues with a consideration orthe added effects of electric polarization within a material, providing a Maxwell divergence relation valid for materials as well as free space. Next is treated the added effect of magnetic polarization, yielding a suitably altered Maxwell curl expression lor the magnetic field. The field vectors D and H are thereby defined. Boundary conditions prevailing at interfaces separating difterently polarized regions are developed fi'om the integral forms of the Maxwell equations, to compare the normal components ofD and the tangential components ofH at adjacent points in the regions. The discussion continues with related treatments of the Maxwell div B and curl E equations for material regions, their integral forms, and corresponding boundary conditions. The chapter concludes with a discussion of uniform plane waves in a material possessing the parameters (J, E, and j1, exemplifYing the use of the Maxwell equations for a linear, homogeneous, and isotropic material. 3·1 ELECTRICAL CONDUCTMTY OF METALS
The electric and magnetic field behavior of material regions, solid, liquid, or gaseous, may he characterized in terms of threc effects.
111
112
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
Applied E ~
\'
\
Direction of acceleration
\
e
e
(Start) ~
(~
FIGURE 3-1. A representation of the production of a drift component of the velocity of free electrons in a metal. (a) A typical sequence of electron free paths resulting from collisions with the ion lattice. (b) Exaggerated view of the effect of drift in the direction of the acceleration due to an applied E field.
1. Electric charge conduction
2. Electric polarization 3. Magnetic polarization For large classes of materials, these effects are often adequately described through use of three parameters: (7, the electric conductivity; E, the electric permittivity; and /.1, the magnetic permeability of the materiaL These parameters will be defined in the course of the ensuing discussions. In terms of their charge-conduction property, materials may for some purposes be classified as insulators (dielectrics), which possess essentially no free electrons to provide currents under an impressed electric field; and conductors, in which free, outer orbit electrons are readily available to produce a conduction current when an electric field is impressed. An electrically conductive solid, commonly known as a conductor, is visualized in the submicroscopic world as a latticework of positive ions in which outerorbit electrons are free to wander as free electrons1-negative charges not attached to any particular atoms. On this structure are superposed thermal agitations associated with the temperature of the conductor --the light, agile conduction electrons moving about the more massive ion lattice, imparting some of their momentum to that lattice in exchange for new random directions of flight until more interactioIls occur. This circumstance is depicted in Figure 3-1 (a) for a typical conduction electroIl. The velocities of the free electrons are randomly distributed so that a mean velocity, averaged at any instant over a large number N of particles in the volume element,2 is given by Vd
I = -
N
N
I
Vi
m/sec
(3-1)
i=l
This quantity, called the drift velocity of the electrons, averages to zero in the absence of any externally applied electric field. lIn the atomic view, the free (condnction) electrons are those associated with the unfilled outer orbit, or valence band, of particular elements known as metals. 2 The volume-element used in characterizing the average velocity (3-1) is chosen sufficiently large that it contains enough ions and associated conduction electrons to yield a meaningful average, and yet it is taken small enough that the averaged velocity may be characterized at a point in the region. That a very large number of particles are present in a small volume increment is appreciated on noting that a typical conductor, sodium, possesses about 2.5 x 10 19 atoms/mm 3 at room temperature.
3-1 ELECTRICAL CONDUCTIVITY OF METALS
113
A mean free time, represented by the symbol To denotes the average interval between collisions in a volume element. When free electrons collide (interact) with the ion lattice, they give up, on the average, a momentum rrtvd in the mean free time Tc between collisions, ifm is the electron mass. Thus the averaged rate of momentum transfer to the ion lattice, per electron, is rrttfd/Te N of force. On equating this to the Lorentz electric field force applied within the conductor, one obtains (3-2) and solving tor
Vd
yields the steady drift velocity (3-3)
The expression (3-3), linearly relating the drift velocity to the applied E field, is of the form (3-4)
in which the proportionality constant Pe' taken to be a positive number, is termed the electron mobility, which from (3-3) is evidently eTc
2
m m 'IV-sec .
(3-5)
A high value of electron mobility is thus associated with a long mean free time T e • Making use of (1-50a) and multiplying Vd by the volume density Pv = -ne of the conduction electrons obtains the volume current density
J
(3-6)
with n denoting the free electron densi ty in electrons/m 3 . Eq uation (3-6) is an expression exhibiting a linear dependence ofJ on the applied E field in the conductor. Experiments show that this is an exceedingly accurate model for a wide selection of physical conductors. Equation (3-6) has the form of
J = O"E
(3-7)
sometimes given the name point fornl of Ohm's in which the factor 0" is called the conductivity of the region, having the units ampere per meter squared per volt per meter, or mho per meter. For the present model to which (3-6) applies, the conductivity is expressible as the positive number (3-8)
114
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
It is thus seen that both the electron mobility and the conductivity are proportional to the mean free time,
(3-9)
EXAMPLE 3·1. Find the mean free time and the electron mobility for sodium, having the measured dc conductivity 2.1 x 107 Dim at room temperature. Sodium has an atomic density of 2.3 x 10 28 atom/m 3 at room temperature, and with one outer-orbit electron available, n has the same value. Thus from (3-8), the mean free time becomes rna
1:
= -ne2 = c
(9.1 x 10- 31 ) (2.1 x 10 7 ) (2.3 x 10 28 )(1.6 x 10 19)2
=
33
X
.
10- 14 sec
Its electron mobility is found from either of the relations 2.1
X
10 7
---~~----~
=
5.7
X
10- 3 m 2 fV -sec
This implies from (3-4) the very slow drift velocity Vd = 5.7 mm/sec for an applied field of I V /m, emphasizing the sluggish, viscous nature of electron drift in a conductor.
The foregoing picture of direct current in a conductor is readily extended to the time-varying case, assuming that E varies slowly in comparison" to the mean free time,
(3-10) This differential equation has the complementary solution, assuming the initial condition Vd = VdO at t = 0, as follows: (3-11)
a transient solution denoting a decay or relaxation in the drift velocity on suddenly turning offthe applied field E. Thus the mean free time, <0 introduced into force relation (3-2), has acquired the interpretation of a relaxation time in the event of applying or removing an electric field from a conductor. The relaxation phenomenon furthermore occurs in an exceedingly short time for typical good conductors; thus, from Example 3-1 it was shown to be of the order of 10- 14 sec for a metal having a conductivity of about 10 7 O/m. The current density (3-7) is proportional to the drift velocity Vd, implying from (3-11) that current decays with time at the same rate on removing the E field. The differential equation (3-10) can be simplified ifE is assumed sinusoidal. Replacing E and Vd with the time-harmonic forms Eeirot and Vdeirot obtains, after cancelling the factor eiillt , the complex algebraic relation
3-1 ELECTRlCAL CONDUCTIVITY OF METALS
yielding the time-harmonic solution for
vd e
~
E
The complex current density due to this drift velocity is therefore, from
j
115
=_m __
EA/m2
J = Pvvd
(3-13)
The coefficient of E denotes the conductivity of the metal as in the de result (3-7), though now a complex quantity is obtained
8= __ m_V/m 1
.
(3-14 )
- + Jill Tc
However, for typical good conductors having a mean free time, To of the order of 10- 14 sec (Example 3-1), (3-14) reduces to the real, dc conductance result (3-8) [3-8] provided the angular frequency ill of the electromagnetic field is of the order of 1013 rad/sec or less (below the optical frequencies). Additional confidence is gained for this rather heuristic model of metallic conduction by experimental measurements made in the microwave range of frequencies, showing that the E and J fields in good conductors are in phase, implying that (f is real in the relationship J = (fE, even up to very high frequencies. The model of electrical conductivity just described is essentially that proposed by Karl Drude in 1900. The advent of quantum mechanics since that time has provided comprehensive techniques for describing, among other things, why the conductivities of various materials behave differently with temperature and how the vast range of conductivities of physical materials comes about-· -of the order of 10 8 V/m for the best conductors at room temperature to 10- 16 V/m for the best insulators-a range of some 24 orders of magnitude. The so-called band theory of solids, an outgrowth of quantum mechanics, is useful for describing the intrinsic differences among the conductors, semiconductors, and insulators. 3 3See T. S., Hutchison, and D. C. Baird. The Physics ~f Engineering Solids. New York: Wiley, 1968, for details.
116
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
3-2 ELECTRIC POLARIZATION AND DIY D FOR MATERIALS Insulators, or so-called dielectrics, incapable of carrying appreciable conduction currents under impressed electric fields of moderate magnitudes, are the subject of this discussion. The mechanism of the dielectric polarization effects resulting from applied electric fields may be explained in terms of the microscopic displacements of the bound positive and negative charge constituents from their average equilibrium positions, produced by the Lorentz electric field forces on the charges. Such displacements are usually only a fraction of a molecular diametcr in the material, but the sheer numbers of particles involved may cause a significant change in the electric field from its value in the absence of the dielectric substance. Dielectric polarization may arise from the following causes. 1. Electronic poLarization, in which the bound, negative electron cloud, subject to an impressed E field, is displaced from the equilibrium position relative to the positive nucleus. 2. Ionic polarization, in which the positive and negative ions of a molecule are displaced in the presence of an applied E field. 3. Orientational polarization, occurring .in materials possessing permanent electric dipoles randomly oriented in the absence of an external field, but undergoing an orientation toward the applied electric field vector by amounts depending on the strength of E. The tendency for the so-called polar molecules of such a material to align parallel with the applied field is opposed by the thermal agitation effects and the mutual interaction forces among the particles. Water is a common example of a substance exhibiting orientational polarization effects,
In each type of dielectric polarization, particle displacements are inhibited by powerful restoring forces between the positive and negative charge centers. In Figure 3-2 is illustrated the polarization mechanism in a material involving two species of charge. One should imagine thermal agitations superimposed on the average positions of the particles shown. If an external field E is impressed on the material, Lorentz forces EE = qE will be exerted on the positively charged nucleus and the negative electron cloud to produce displacements of both systems of particles. Displacement equilibrium is attained when the applied forces are balanced by the internal attractive Coulomb forces of the couplets. The moment Pi of the ith displaced charge pair in a collection of polarized dipoles as in Figure 3-2(a) is defined by Pi = qd i C'm
15 )
in which q denotes the positive charge of the couplet (q, q), and d i the vector separation of the couplet, directed from the negative to the positive charge, The average electric dipole morneHt per unit volume, called the electric polarization field and denoted by P, is defined by
(3-16) for a volume element ~v containing N electric dipoles. If no E field were applied to the material, no dipoles would be induced in the case of electronic or ionic polarization; even if the material were polar (containing permanent dipoles), their orientations
3-2 ELECTRIC POLARIZATION AND
6
~/
(8) ~/
(0, 6) (0'1 '-.:"" (0 to) (0) (0) "'''''
"'''''
(0) '-.-/
(0) '-0:/
{)l (0'1 (",,/, 'C:::/
'-0/
'-C/
(0) 'C'l
(OJ
'C/
(
,,~
'C"
(~0
(0)
()\ I
(0' "
No E field applied
D FOR MATERlALS
117
(0 (0 CD (0 E0 (0 (0 (0 CO
"''l
'-0"
mv
(~B
I
CD CD (0 (0 E field applied
Electron 'r;-.. Positive cloud I--,:!;; nucleus
-q
CO CD CD
'-Ud, +q (a)
\
\
p ,/
I
I
/ p . --.,..
/-:...
/'
~ /_~ \,
/" Random orientations of a small sample of electric dipoles, no E field applied
"'"
__ lPj = Pdv
Orientations influenced by applied E field, to produce P
(b)
FIGURE 3-2. Electric polarization eflects in simple models of nonpolar and polar dielectric materials. (a) A nonpolar substance. (b) A polar substance (H 2 0).
would under usual circumstances be random as illustrated in Figure 3-2(b), in which case the numerator of (3-16) would sum to zero to make P = O. IfE were applied in the x direction as shown, a net component ofP would be induced. If p + and p _ denote the densities of the positive and the negative charges that constitute the dielectric material, (3-16) can be written N
.2:
P
[=1
N
Pi
.2:
[=1
N
qidi
Nq.2: d i ,=1
--=---=---=p+
I1v
I1v
I1v
N
d
(3-17)
in which p + = Nq/l1v is the density of only the positive charges comprising the dipolefilled region, and d denotes ('LdiljN, the dipole displacement averaged over the N dipoles in Av. An examination orthe polarization field P = p+d of (3-17), characterized as the vector in Figure 3-3(a), reveals the establishment of a bound charge excess within I1v, giving rise to a so-called polarization charge density, wherever P has a divergence. Since, from (3-17), P is the positive charge density times the vector displacement d of the positive charge cloud with respect to the negative charge cloud, the definition (2-20) reveals that the divergence of P amounts to the limit of a net, positive charge
118
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
Py
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 3-3. Relative to (3-21), {Iv --div P. (a) Polarization field P at a volume-element in a dielectric. (iI) Efkcl of nonnniformity of Px , leaving an excess of negative polarization charge within Av.
out of the volume ~ V, divided by ~ V. In other words, div P becomes a negative, polarization-created, effective charge density, given the symbol pp. A formal proof of the observation that div P = - PP' relative to Figure 3-3, follows. Consider a typical volume element ~v = ~x ~y ~z in a region containing, in general, a nonuniform polarization field P as shown in Figure 3-3.(b). The x component, 1\ p accounts for a net, positive bound charge passing through the left-hand face 8 1 into ~v, amounting to
(3-18a) while through the opposite side S'1> the positive bound charge commg out of expressed
~v
is
(3-18b) A net, negative, polarization bound charge therefore remains inside the difference of (3-18a) and 18b), or
~v,
amounting to
19)
With similar contributions over the other two pairs of sides, one obtains the total, negative hound charge remaining inside ~v (3-20) a measure of the net, bound charge excess Pp~v within ~v, if.p p denotes the volume
ELECTRIC POLARIZATION AND IllV ]) FOR MATERIALS
density of the polarization view of (2-29a)
excess. Equating
119
to Pp liZ! thus obtains, in
(3-21 )
Pp is thus a "negative, effective charge density" created by the dielectric polarization process, whenever the polarization density field P has a divergence. Thc divergence of EoE, inIree space, has been given by (2-39) to express the density Pv of fi'ee charge. By (3-21), the polarization-charge-excess developed in a material, by the nonuniformity ofthe polarization density field P, is seen from its divergence property (3-21) to contribute the added, negative, effective charge density Pi' = div P, a bound-charge excess over whatcver free charge of density Pv may exist in the polarized material. The divergence of EoE in a material in general, then, becomes (3-21) with the effective polarization charge density Pp added in, whence div (EoE) Pv + Pp = Pv div P, to yield
v . (EoE + P)
=
(3-22)
p"
a divergence expression t()[ E in a material region. A more compact version is obtained using the abbreviation D· for (EoE + P) as follows
to permit writing (3-22) in the preferred form
V'D
= Pv C/m 3
(3-24)
Experiments reveal that many dielectric substances are essentially linear, meaning that P is proportional to the E field applied. For such materials 4
PocE (3-25) in which the parameter Xc is called the electric Eo is retained in (3-25) to make Xe dimensionless. Then
V' [(1 Comparing
+ Xe)EOE] = Pv
becomes (3-26)
with (3-24) shows that the bracketed quantity denotes D, that is,
4S trictly speaking, the expressions arc static (or forms. These results are more usefully written in phasor {()nns, with field quantities replaced with the phasors P, E. XC' Pv, D, and E,. Thus. with E complex in (3-30c), {t)r cxampk, D = EE shows D and E are in general out of phase.
120
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
I t is usual to denote I
+ Xe
by the dimensionless symbol (3-28)
Er is called the relative permittivity of the region. Finally, choosing the symbol E, called the permittivity of the material, to denote (1 + XelEo as follows (3-29a) (3-29b) permits writing (3-27) in the following successively more compact forms
D = (1
+
(3-30a)
XelEoE
(3-30b) (3-30c) In free space, Xe = 0, to reduce (3-30) properly to D in the form
= EoE.
E \
Also, expressing (3-29b)
(3-31 )
\
emphasizes that Er denotes a material permittivity relative to that of empty space. To summarize, note that Maxwell's relation (3-22) or (3-24 1 is expressible in any of the equivalent forms
V· [(1
+ XelEoE]
Pv
(3-32a) (3-32bl
V· (EEl
=
Pv
V· D = Pv Cjm 3
(3-32c) (3-32d)
No dielectric material is strictly linear in its electric polarization behavior, though many are very nearly so over wide ranges of applied E fields. If E is made strong enough, a material may experience polarization displacements that result in permanent dislocations of the molecular structure, or a dielectric breakdown, for which case (3-25) does not hold. In a nonlinear material the magnitude of D is not proportional to the applied E field, (though the E and the P vectors may have the same directions). Then (3-25) is written more generally (3-33) in which the dependence of Xe on E is noted.
3-2 ELECTRIC POLARIZATION AND DlV D FOR MATERIALS
121
A. Dielectric Polarization Current Density If the electric field giving rise to dielectric polarization effects is time-varying, the resulting polarization field is also time-varying. Then the displacements of the positive charge constituents in one direction, together with the negative charges moving oppositely, give rise to charge displacements through cross sections of the material identifiable as currents through those cross sections. Applying a time-derivative operator to the Pi terms of (3-16) thus yields a current density interpretation as follows
I ;=1
api
at
(3-34)
The resulting time derivative of the polarization field, current density, is given the symbol jp as follows
j
aplat, having the units of volume
ap
p
=-A/m2
at
(3-35 )
and is called the electric polarization current density. The field jp, along with the polarization charge density field Pp described by (3-21), acts as an additional source of electric and rnagnetic fields. In particular, the special role played by jp in relation to magnetic fields in a material region is discussed later in Section 3-4.
B. Integral Form of Gauss's Law of Materials The dielectric polarization effects attributed to material regions have been seen to lead to the divergence expressions (3-21) and (3-24-), relating the field quantities p and D to the polarization charge and free charge sources. The divergence theorem can be used to transform these differential equations into corresponding integral forms. The most important of these is (3-24) for the D field; that is, V . D = Pv' Multiplying both sides of by dv and integrating throughout an arbitrary volume region V yields
fv V • D dv = fv Pv dv
(3-36)
By the divergence theorem (2-34), the left side can be replaced by a closed-surface integral to yield
~s D . ds =
fv P dv C v
(3-37)
in which S bounds V. Equation (3-37) is the integral form of Maxwell's equation (3-24) for a material region, sometimes called Gauss's law for material regions. It states that the net outward flux of D over any closed surface is a measure of the total free charge contained by the volume V bounded by S, at any instant of time. As expected, it becomes the free-space Gauss's law (1-53) if Xe = 0, reducing D to EoE.
122
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
Pp of (3-21), has the equivalent integral
Another divergence relation, V . P = form
(3-38) obtained by the method analogous to that used in converting (3-24) to Gauss's integral (3-37). Equation (3-38) states that the net outward flux ofP emanating from the surface of V is a measure of the net polarization charge summed throughout V.
C. Spatial Boundary Conditions for Normal D and P In many electromagnetic field problems ofphysical interest, it becomes necessary to discuss how the fields behave as one traverses the boundary surfaces, or interfaces, separating the various material regions that comprise the system. In such problems, a matching or fitting of the field solutions is required so that the boundary conditions at the interfaces may be satisfied. The proper boundary conditions for the fields are determined, as will be shown, from the integral forms of Maxwell's equations for material regions. The Maxwell integral relation (3-37), D· ds = pvdv, can be used, through an appropriately constructed closed surface, for comparing the normal components ofD that appear just to either side of an interface separating two materials of different permittivities. Denoting the materials as region 1 and region 2 with permittivities E1 and E 2 , define a pillbox-shaped closed surface of small height (5h and end areas 1\s so that both regions to either side of the interface are penetrated as in Figure 3-4. Calling the fields Dl and D2 at points just inside regions 1 and 2, respectively, the application of the left-hand integral of (3-37) to the closed pillbox yields the net outward flux from the top and bottom surfaces 1\s. At the same time, the right side is the charge enclosed by tQe pillbox; this is Pv1\s(5h, so (3-37) becomes
fs
Iv
(3-39) The right side of (3-39) vanishes as (5h - 0, assuming Pv denotes a volume free charge density in the region. If, however, a surface charge density denoted by Ps and defined by the limit
P.
=
lim PvJh
(3-40)
~h-+O
Region 1: (tt) As
Region 2: (€2)
D2 (a)
(b)
FIGURE 3-4. Gaussian pillbox surface constrncted for deriviug the boundary condition on the normal component ofD. (a) Pillbox-shaped closed surface showing total fields at points adjacent to interface. (b) Edge view of (a), showing fields resolved into components.
3-2 ELECTRIC POLARIZATION AND DIV D FOR MATERIALS
123
is present on the interface, (3-39) reduces to the general boundary condition
(3-41 )
Equation (3-41) means that the normal component oj D is discontinuous to the extent oj the jree surface charge density present on the interface. Since Dnl = n . Dl and Do2 = n· D z , with n denoting a normal unit vector directed from region 2 toward region 1 as in Figure 3-4(b), (3-41) is written optionally in vector notation as follows.
(3-42)
The boundary condition (3-41) is true in general, but for some physical problems a free surface charge densi ty Ps may be absent. Two special cases of (3-41) of physical interest are mentioned in the following, while a more general result is left for discussion in Section 3-11.
A. Both regions perfect dielectrics. A perfect dielectric, for which the conductivity (J is zero, cannot furnish free charges, so that if no excess charge is supplied to the interlace by an external agent (rubbing it with eat's fur, for example), then Ps = a on the interface. Then (3-41) reduces to
CASE
(3-43)
The normal component oj D is continuous at an interface separating two perfect dielectrics, as illustrated in Figure 3-5(a).
Region 1: (0-1
= 0; fl)
Region 1: (El)
Region 2: (0-2 = 0; <2) (a)
(b)
FIGURE 3-5. Two cases of the boundalY condition lor normal components of D. (a) Continuous D. at an interface separating perfect dielectrics. (b) r;quality of normal D. to a surface charge dcnsi ty on a perlect conductor.
124 CASE
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
B.
One region is a perfect dielectric; the other is a perfect conductor.
Electric currents are limited to finite densities in the physical world. Thus from (3-7), J = O"E, the assumption of a pe~lect conductor in region 2 of Figure 3-4 (0" z -4 CIJ), implies that E z in that region must be zero if the current densities are to have, at most, finite values. Moreover, with electromagnetic fields satisfying (2-108), V x :E = -jroB, one can see that if E z is zero in region 2, then :8 2 must be zero there also. Thus for time-varying fields, implies
E=B=O
(3-44)
in a perfect conductor. The boundary condition (3-41) or (3-42) then must reduce to Dnl = p" or in vector form
n' D = Ps C/m 2
(3-45)
The su~lace charge density residing on a pe~fect conductor equals the normal component of D there, as illustrated in Figure 3-5(b). In a static field problem involving only fixed electric charges and no static currents, the boundary condition (3-45) holds true even though region 2 may be only finitely conducting, for the assumption of no static currents in the finitely conducting region 2 implies from (3-7) that E z = 0 there, making D2 = 0 as well. Thus (3-42) reduces to (3-4,5). A boundary condition similar to (3-41) can be derived comparing the normal components of the dielectric polarization vector P. Noting the similarity of Maxwell's integral law (3-37) and the polarization field integral (3-38) and using another pillbox construction, one can show that Pn1 - P n2 = Psp' or in vector form
(3-46) !
in wKich Ps p denotes the net surface bound charge density lying within the pillbox. The net density includes the eHect of both species of surface polarization charge (positive and negative) accumulated just to either side of the interface. A simpler picture is obtained if'region 1 is free space, for which Xe1 0 (or E 1 = Eo). Then P 1 = 0, reducing to the special case (3-47) The sUijace polarization charge density residing at a free-space-to-dielectric interface equals the normal component of the P field there. EXAMPLE 3-2. Two parallel conducting plates of great extent and d m apart are statically charged with ±q C on every area A of the lower and upper plates, respectively, as noted in (a), The conductors are separated by air except for a homogeneous dielectric slab of thickness c and permittivity E, spaced a distance b from the lower plate. (a) Use Gauss's law to establish D in the three regions. Sketch the flux ofD. (b) Find E and P in the three regions and show their flux plots. (c) Determine Ps on the conductor surfaces, Pp in the dielectric, and Pps at y band y b + c.
3-2 ELECTRIC POLARIZATION AND DIV D FOR MATERIALS
125
(y)t
I I
I
I
d
L___~h'
~ ~charged Negatively surface
Conductor
I
I I
(-q/A)
b+Cr--r I c b~-
_L~~~________~~+-
Dielectric slab
__~~__~~
~~
I
I
charged surface
I
(+q/A)
--oi---\!1~~~~:t;--c;=~~=;=:;-=-=!~l-------(:) I
I (a)
Dt Dt t+-+-+-f-+-+-1r-rt-+-t-t-h11 II
E t'r-'-r""""".,---,-rr.,---,'-r-r--r'
pt ltttft~~+t!
Et
yt + + + + + + + + + + -+
\
-P'P
+t!m~77:~~~~~?i7m
(d)
(c)
EXAMPLE 3-2. (a) Charged parallel conductor system. (b) Flux of D. (c) Flux of EoE. (d) Flux ofP.
(a) E exists only between the conductors and by symmetry is independent of x and
z.
A Gaussian closed-surface S in the form of a reetangular box is placed as in Figure 1-15(d), to contain the free charge q. With static E inside the conductor zero, aD flux of a constant density emanates from the top ofS, making the left side of Gauss's law (3-37) become
Dy
r
JS(top)
ds
DyA
I:':quating to the right side of (3-37), the free charge q = DyA, whence
D=aD =aY J.. y Y A
(I)
a result correct for all three regions between the conductofs because no free charge exists in Of on the dielectric. The flux plot of D is shown in (b). (b) E is obtained using (3-30c), so in the dielectric slab,
D E=-=a E
YEA
b
(2)
126
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
whereas in the air regions it is
D
q
E=~=a Eo Y EOA
o <)! <
b+ c
band
(3)
Since E > Eo for a typical dielectric, E in the air regions exceeds the value in the dielectric, as shown in (c). P in the dielectric is found by use of
P
D
q(~)
a Y
A
Er
(4)
For Er > 1, P in the slab is positive.y directed, as shown in (d). In air, P is zero. From (3-35), no polarization current density JP is established in the dielectric because the fields are time-static. The free charge densities on the conductors are obtained from (3-45), yielding Ps = ±q/A. The polarization charge density Pp from (3-21) is zero because P is a constant vector throughout the slab. The surface polarization charge density Ps p is tound by inserting (4) into (3-47), yielding (5)
These surface densities are noted in (b) and (d) of the figtire.
3-3 DIY B FOR MATERIALS: ITS INTEGRAL FORM AND A BOUNDARY CONDITION FOR NORMAL B In Section 3-2 the Maxwell relation for V • D in a material was developed by adding the effect of the electric polarization charge density Pp to the free-space Maxwell relation. Thc form of the expression for V • B ill a material can be developed analogously. N0iadditive term is required in this casc, however, because no free magnetic charges cxist physically in any known material. Thus B remains divergenceless in materials; that is,
V' B = 0 Wb/m 3
(3-48)
Equation (3-48) is converted to its integral form using a technique analogous to that employed in obtaining (3-37). Multiplying both sides of (3-48) by dv, integrating it throughout an arbitrary V, and applying the divergence theorem
#SB'
ds = OWb
(3-49)
1 c ]
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
127
the form of (3-49) states that the net outgoing Hux orB over ally closed surface is always zero, implying that B flux always forIns dosed lines. A boundary condition concerned with the normal components ofB and analogous to (3-42) can be j()Und by applying (3-49) to a vanishing Gaussian pillbox like that of Figure 3-4. The resulting boundary condition is
(3-50) that is, the normal comt)onent or the B .field is continuous at an interface separating two adjacent
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
The magnetic properties of a material are attributed to the tendency for the bound (un-mis, circulating on an atomic scale within the substanee, to align with an applied B field. Three types of bound currents are associated with atomic structure: those attributed to orbiting electrons, and those associated with electron spin and with nuclear spin. Each of these phenomena, represented in Figure 3-6(a), is equivalent to the circulation of a current 1 about a small closed path bounding an area ds, the positive sense of which is related by the right-hand rule to the direction of 1 as in Figure 3-6( b). The product Ids defines the magnetic moment tn contributed by those bound currents of the atomic or molecular configuration. J t is shown that applying an external magnetic fIeld B to the typical moment tn = I ds yields a torque exerted on tn, lending to align tn with the applied B field. One can in this manner explain the magnetic behavior of a malerial as though it were a collection, in empty space, of many magnetic moments tn per unit volume. The tendency to align with the applied B fidd is shown to provide an equivalent magnetization current of density Jm, serving to modify the magnetic field in a certain way. A desuiption of this process, beginning with it discussion of the torque produced by the B field on a current element, follows. A current loop of microscopic size has an external magnetic field behavior independent of its shape in a plane, so a square loop is assumed in lieu of the circular conflguration of Figure 3-6(h). It is shown in Figure 3-7 (a) in the z 0 plane, immersed in the applied field B = axBx + ayBy + azB z . The Lorentz force acting on each of the four edges of the square current loop is obtained from (I-52)
dF E
= dqv x B N
(3-51 )
Orbital motion vector ...
Electron spin
m= Ids
NU~I:~;o~Pin
vect? ( ;I 'J bor, Electron
----:ti - e
orbital motion
'
~~
Nucleus
(a)
I
LdS
~ (b)
FIGURE 3-6. The clements of bound currents that exist in atomic structure. (a) Constituents of circulating currents associated with particles of a simpk atom. (b) Magnetic moment III of a current I circulating about an area ds.
128
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS :(Y)
.
r<,-:-; -~ _1- ------,1
I
....
-
1
,:
(
dq.,=Idf ,
By:
1-;:)
~
dY',II.;
v
:'
.'
ds
I! II 'I
II j'
C
'.
I..:--..:::.--~_~-J:
dx -"
ds = azdxdy (a)
(b)
(c)
FIGURE 3-7. Development of torque expression for a current loop immersed in a B field. (a) Current loop immersed in arbitrary B field. (b) A moving charge element, dqv, of the loop. (c) Development of torque dT produced on edge dl, .
if the charge dq moves with a velocity v along the edges dx and dy. One may cast (3-51) into the following forms, noting that dq = p"dv p"dt ds from Figure 3-7(b), and usi ng (1-50a)
[J dt ds] x B
I dt x B
(3-52)
with the direction denoted by assigning a vector property to each edge length dt. The origin of the torque arm R is for convenience taken at the center of the loop. Along t l , the differential torque dT 1 is given by Rl x dF B (Example 1-4), yielding
ax
1B dxdy y
2
with the same result obtained for edge t 3, while that acting on t z and t4 becomes + dT 4 ayIBxdxdy. Thus the torque on the complete loop becomes
dT 2
dT
(a z x B)Jds
l(a z ds) x BIds
X
B
and with 1 ds denoting the magnetic moment (3-53) one may abbreviate the result dT=tnxBN·m
(3-54)
It is clear from (3-54) that only the components of the applied B field in the plane of the current element act to produce a torque on it. Htn and B were parallel, dT would become zero; thus the torque dT is such that it tends to align the current element with the applied B field.
A very large number of current loops like those of the atomic model in Figure 3-2 comprise a magnetic material, susceptible to such magnetic alignment eHects. In the absence of an applied B field, they possess random orientations accompanied by thermal
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERlALS
129
~ N
j
::::Em;: Mdv i=l
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 3-8. Current loop constituency or a magnetizable material, alTected by an applied B field. (a) Random magnetic moments, in the absence o[ B. (b) Partial alignment of magnetic moments, B applied.
agitation effects, as depicted in Figure 3-8(a), if one may avoid the su~ject of permanent magnetism occurring in some materials. Impressing a B field develops a torque on each current loop, as specified by (3-54), such that the loops tend to align more or less in the direction ofB as depicted in Figure 3-8(b). The magnetization density M is defined in essentially the way the dielectric polarization field P is defined by (3-16), that is, by summing the magnetic moments In within a volume-element Av and expressing the sum on the per-unit-volume basis N
LIn;
M=~A/m
Av
(3-55 )
This becomes a smooth functional result if the number N of current elements within Av is quite large, while Au is yet small enough to be considered suitable for manipulation in differential or integral expressions. Thus M furnishes a characterization of the circulating atomic currents within matter from a smoothed-out, macroscopic point of VIew.
An important derivative fi.mction of the magnetization field M is its curl, shown in the following to yield a volume density 1m of uncanceled bound currents within a
130
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
rnagnetic material according to
(3-56)
A formal derivation of (3-56) proceeds with the aid of Figure 3-9. The examination of an incremental volume-clement of a material, depicted in Figure 3-9(a), reveals the presence of surface current contributions on bov as in (b) of that figure, assuming for the present that only the effects of the z component of M are considered. If two such volume increments are considered side by side as in Figure 3-9(c), then the bound surface currents along their common sides, with densities designated by ]sm,y, cancel partially to produce a net upward flow of current in the region given by
This current passing through the cross-sectional area box boZ is depicted by the bold arrow in the figure. They component of the bound current density 1m through box boz
(y)
(y)
Jsm,x=-M z
(z)
(z)
(x)
M
J::. trI ,y= -Mz
(b)
(a)
ll.velements (separated to show J sm , y and J;m,y)
(x)
(c)
(d)
FIGURE 3-9. Relative to Jm = V x M. (a) Bound current clements producing surface currents on 8v. (h) Bound surface currents smoothed into rectangular components, assuming M z only. (c) Net volume current All through 8x Az: the difference of bound surface current densities. (d) The other contribution to the Jm" component.
131
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
is thcn AldAx Az oMz/ox. Anothcr contribution, shown in Figure 3-9(d) is obtained from the x component ofM in the vicinity ofthc point; it contributes the density oMx/oz through Ax Az. The totaly component ofJm therefore becomes Jm,y = 8Mx/8zoMz/ox, which from (2-52) is evidently they component of curl M. A similar development yields the other components Jm,x and Jm,z of Jm, obtaining (3-56)
Jm
ax
ay
az
0 = ox Mx
8 oy My
0 =V xM oz Mz
[3-56]
The significance of (3-56) in revealing the presence of "olume currents inside a material whenever its interior is nonuniformly magnetized is des@1Jed inanexample to follow. A side effect is the pr~se~nceotsUrface currentdensities Jsm established by M on the surface of the material.
EXAMPLE 3-3. Suppose a B field is applied to a cube of magnetic material, h m on a side, such that M is z-direeted and. varies linearly with x according to M = a z lOx A/m, as shown in (a). Find the magnetization current density Jm in the material, as well as the surface magnetization current density. Sketch the bound current fields in and on the cube. The magnetization current density Jm is obtained from (3-56)
Jm = V X M =
ax 0
ay 0
az iJ
0
0
lOx
2 ox oy oz = -aylO A/m
(I)
negative y-directed and of constant density as in (b). The uncanceled segments of the bound currents at the surface of the block constitute a surface density of magnetization currents denoted by Jsm (A/m). On the end x = b, Jsm is y-directed and has a magnitude equal to that of M there; that is, (2)
Surface bound current flux
( z)
(x)
J m = 'i7xM
= - aylO (a)
(b)
(c)
EXAMPLE 3-3. (a) Material sample magnetized linearly with increasing x. (b) Volume magnetization currents produced by transverse variations or M. (c) Surface currents produced by uncanceled segments of bound currents,
132
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
while on the top and bottom of the block -a x
J sm] y=O
This is to mat!
M]
p=M
:z y=b
axMz]y=o
=
a,JOx A/rn
(4)
No bound currents exist on the end at x = 0, since M = 0 there. These surface effects are shown as flux plots in (c).
The modeling of the bound currents in Figure 3-9 reveals that, on any sampling cube ,1v, the surface bound-current densities J8m are oriented perpendicularly with respect to the local M field. It is therefore evident that J8m on any surface element of ,1v can bc found from the cross product of that M with the normal unit veCtor emerging from the surface. Thus,
Jsm =
(3-57)
-n X M
In Example 3-3, on the surface y = b of the magnetized block, with n = ax and M = azlOb there, one obtainsJsm = - 0 X M = -ax X a)Ob = aylOb, which agrees with thc result (2) obtained in that example. The curl of B/flo in free space has been expressed by (2-63) as the sum of a convection or a conduction current density J plus a displacement current density a(EoE)/at at any point. Two additional types of current densities occur generally in materials: J P = ap/at of (3-35) and Jm = V x M of (3-56), arising from dielectric and magnetic polarization effects, respectively. Adding these together accounts for the total current density at any point, yielding a revision of (2-63) for a material region.
V
a(E E)
ap
at
at
J+_o_+
X (:)
+VxM
Grouping the curl terms and the time-derivative terms together obtains
VX
(.! - M) = J + _o(_Eo_E..,...+_P_l at flo
Recalling from (3-23) that EoE + P defines D, and further abbreviating B/flo (3-57) by use of the symbol H, sOrhetimes called the magnetic intensity field
H
B
-MAjm
(3-58a) Min
(3-58b)
flo permits writing (3-58a) in the compact form
(3-59)
I Mpro gouS 1 prove! H as I
in wI (3-6(
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
133
This is the desired Maxwell curl expression for the field H defined by (3-58b), applicable to material regions. Note that it properly reduces to its free-space form (2-73) on setting P;::M;::O. In a linear region possessing a magnetization M, one might be inclined to express M proportional to the B field in the material (i.e., M IX B) to provide a result analogous to (3-25) for a linear dielectric (P IX E). Historically, however, this has not proved to be the assumption used; instead, it is customary to set M proportional to H as follows: MIXH (3-60) in which the dimensionless Xm is called the magnetic susceptibility of a material. Inserting (3-60) into (3-58b) therefore yields
B
H = - - M flo
B
=- flo
XmH
which, on solving for B, obtains (3-61 ) The quantity (1
+ Xm),
abbreviated fl" flr;:: I
+ Xm
(3-62)
is called the relative permeability of the material. Further choosing the symbol fl, called the permeabili~y, to denote the product (3-63a)
Ii;:: flrlio HIm
(3-63b)
permits writing (3-61) in the compact form for linear materials (3-64a) (3-64b) B
= ,uHWbjm2
(3-64c)
One should note the analogy of the steps yielding (3-64c) to those leading to (3-30), connecting D and E for linear, electrically polarized materials. It is seen from (3-64b) that the relative permeability expresses the permeability of a material relative to that of free space, ,uo, if one writes (3-65) This is evidently analogous to
(~31),
the expression for the relative permittivity Er .
134
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
A. Integral Form of Ampere's Law for Materials Maxwell's curl relation (3-59), V X H = J + (aD/at) can be transformed into an integral relationship by using Stokes's theorem. Forming the dot product of (3-59) with ds and integrating over any surface S bounded by the closed line t yields
f Js
Js J' ds
(V x H) 'ds = f
+!!..-dt Jsf D • ds
From Stokes's theorem (2-56), the left side can be expressed as an integral of H • dt over the closed line t bounding S, assuming H suitably well-behaved; thus
1
~
H' dE
=
1J . + !£l ds
s
dt s
D . ds A
(3-66)
the desired integralform of Maxwell's differential equation (3-59). Equation (3-66) is also known as Ampere's circuital law for materials. I t states that the net circulation ofH about any closed path t is a measure of the sum of the conduction (or convection) current plus the displacement current through the surface S bounded by t. Another curl relation, (3-56), Jm = V X M connecting the magnetization field M with a volume magnetization current density, was treated in the last section. It has an integral form analogously obtainable by use of Stokes's theorem, becoming,
(3-67) This means that the circulation of the M field about a closed path t is a measure of the net magnetization current through it. For example, a surface integration of Jm over a cross section in the x-z plane of the magnetized cube in Example 3-3 is seen to yield a bound magnetization current 10b 2 A flowing vertically through the specimen, also obtainable from a line integral of M • dt around a horizontal perimeter of the cube.
B. Boundary Conditions for TangenHal Hand M In a manner resembling the derivation of the boundary condition (3-41), one can compare the tangential components of H adjace'nt to an interface separating two materials, by applying Maxwell's integral law (3-66) to the small, rectangular closed line t shown in Figure 3-10. With the magnetic fields in the adjacent media labeled HI and H2 and resolved into normal and tangential components as in Figure 3-10, integrating the left side of (3-66) clockwise around t yields Htl L'1t - Ht2 L'1t, if the height bh is taken so small that the ends do not contribute to the line integral. The right side of (3-66) involves integrations ofJ and D over the vanishing surface S bounded by t, obtaining
(3-68) if In and Dn denote the components normal to L'1s. The last term of (3-68) vanishes as (jh -+ 0; similarly, the contribution of the In term would also vanish if J were a volume
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
135
Region 2 (J.Lzl FIGURE 3-10. Rectangular closed line I: constructed to compare Ht! and H,z using Ampere's law.
current density. In some physical problems, however, one can assume a free surface current flowing solely on the interface with a density Js defined by
Js =
lim
J oh
(3-69)
3h~O
(It develops that 1. is of interest only if one of the regions is a perfect conductor, a case to be discussed shortly.) Thus, the general boundary condition resulting from the substitution of (3-69) into (3-68) becomes
(3-70a)
in which the subscript (n) denotes a surface current flowing normally through the side of the rectangle, as noted in Figure 3-10. Equation (3-70a) states that the tangential component of the H field is discontinuous at an interface to the extent of the surface current density that may be present. Using n to denote a normal unit vector directed from region 2 toward region 1 as in Figure 3-11, a vector form of (3-70a) is written
(3-70b)
to include direction as well as magnitude information. The boundary condition (3-70) is true in general, though in its application to a boundary-value problem, it becomes two cases.
136
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 3-11. The two cases of the boundary condition (3-70b) on tangential H,. (a) Continuous H, at interface separating regions of finite conductivities. (b) Equality of the H, and surface current density on a perfect conductor.
A. Both regions have finite conductivities. In this case, free surface currents cannot exist on the interface, reducing (3-70a) to
CASE
(3-71 )
Thus, the tangential component ofH is continuous at an interface separating two materials halling, at most, finite conductivities. This boundary condition as illustrated in Figure 3-11 (a).
B. One region is a perfect conductor. From (3-44) it has been noted, under time-varying conditions, that no electric or magnetic field can exist inside a perfect conductor. ]f region 2 were a perfect conductor, then H2 = 0 reducing (3-70a) to Htl = Js(n); or in vector form, (3-70b) becomes
CASE
n X HI =
JsA/m
(3-72)
the boundary condition depicted in Figure 3-11 (b). At the interface separating a region from a perfect conductor, the surface current densify Js ~as a magnitude equal to that of the tangential H there, and a direction specified by the right-hand rule. It is shown later that no normal component of H or B may exist at the surface of a perfect conductor, implying that the tangential magnetic field is also the total magnetic field there. A similarity in form is noted between Ampere's circuital law (3-66) and the relationship (3-67) for M. Thus, by analogy with the boundary condition (3-70a), derived by applying (3-66) to the closed rectangle as in Figure 3-10, one may establish from (3-67) the boundary condition Mtl -
Mt2
= Jsm(n) A/m
(3-73a)
This result expresses the continuity of the tangential component of M as one traverses an interface between two adjacent, magnetized regions. The subscript (n) denotes a
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
137
surface magnetization current density normal to the tangential M components at the boundary. The vector sense of the surface magnetization current density J8m is included in the boundary condition (3-73a) by expressing it n X
(Ml
M 2)
a result analogous with (3-70b). Ifregion I is nonmagnetic, then Ml
= J8m A/m
(3-73b)
= 0, reducing (3-73b) to (3-57) (3-74)
An illustration of the latter has already been noted in parts (b) and (c) of the figure accompanying Example 3-3.
EXAMPlE 3·4. Suppose a very long solenoid like that of Figure 1-21(b) eontains a coaxial magnetic rod of radius a, as in figure (a), the rod having a constant permeability /1. The winding is closely spaced with n turns in every d m of axial length, carrying a steady
(a) 000 000 000 0
0
® ® 0 ® 0 ® 0 0 0 ® 0
o
0 0 0
o0
000 0 0 0
0 0
0 0
(b)
(c)
000 0
o
0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0
(d)
J,m=-n x M
=a
Flux of J sm (e)
EXAMPLE 3-4. (a) Solenoid with magnetic core. (b) H field flux. (e) B field flux. (d) M field flux. le) The J,m field on the iron.
138
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
current /. Determine Hand B in the air and iron regions, making use of Ampere's law (3-66) and symmetry. (b) Find M in the rod, and determine whether any volume magnetization current density 1m exists in it, as well as magnetization current densities on its surface. (e) Sketch the flux ofH, B, and M in the air and iron regions. (a) With dc in the wire producing time-static fields, (3-66) becomes ~tH' dt Ss 1 . ds. From the axial symmetry and the implications of Ampere's law in relation to the current sense, H is positive <: directed within the winding and essentially
zero outside it. Constructing the rectangular closed path t shown, H . dt integrated between PI and P 2 yields
nl
;tH'dt in which Hz is constant over the path PI to P z , yielding
nl
H=d
(I)
Z
This result is correct in both the air and iron regions because nl is the current enclosed by t regardless of whether P 1 and P 2 fall within the air or the iron. The turns per meter in the winding are denoted by n/d. The corresponding B field is obtained from (3-64c)
0< p < a
B
B = J1.oH = a z
J1.on/ d
-
Iron
a < p < bAil'
(b) The volume magnetization field M is zero in air; in the ferromagnetic region it is given by (3-60)
M
(3)
M is constant in the iron rod for this example, yielding 1m = 0 from (3-56). The surface magnetization current density, however, is determined from (3-74), calling the iron region 2. With n = a p on the interface
nl a
(4)
(c) Sketches of the H, B, and M flux-fields are shown in (b), (c), and (d) of the accompanying figure. It is seen from (b) that H is the same in the air as in the iron for this example; thus the boundary condition (3-71) is satisfied. The consequence is that B is IIr times as strong in the iron as in the adjacent air region. Finally, 15m has a uniform surface flux density on the iron rod as shown in (e).
EXAMPLE 3-5. Obtain a refractive law for the B field at an interface separating two isotropic materials of permeabilities J1.1 and J1.2; that is, find the relation between the angular deviations from the normal made by BI and B2 at points just to either side of the interface. Assume the total B fields tilted from the normal by the angles ()I and O2 as in (a). The boundary conditions relating the tangential and the normal magnetic field compo-
7
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
139
Region 2: (1l2) (a)
Air: III
= IlO
Air: fJ.1 = fJ.o
-L/h Small I
74.6° ~
(b)
I
(Iron: 112 »> fJ.o)
EXAMI)LE 3-5. (a) B flux refraction. (b) Refraction at air-to-magnctic-region interfaces.
nents are (3-50) and (3-71); Bnl = Bn2 and Hll = H'2' The latter can be written (3-75) From the geometry of the figure, the tilt-angles obey tan 01 = Btl/Bnl and tan O2 = B'2/Bu2' which combine with (3-75) to yield J1.2 B
,I
Inserting the expression for tan 0 1 obtains (3-76)
140
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
As a numerical example, compare the tilt of the B lines at an interface separating two regions with /11 = /10 and /t2 = I O/to. Assume at some point on the interface that B in region I is tilted by 8 1 = 45°. From (3-76),8 2 = arc tan (10 tan 45°) = 84.3°. Similarly, if8 1 = 20°, then 8 2 = 74.6°, and so on. In the event of an air-to-iron interface (/12» Jltl, one may show from (3-76) that for nearly all f)2, the corresponding 8 1 values are ve~y small angles (essentially 0°); that is, the flux leaves the iron nearly perpendicularly from its surface. These examples are noted in (b).
c.
The Nature of Magnetic Materials
The classical macroscopic theory of the field phenomena associated with magnetizahle suhstances, introduced in Section 3-4, attributes their magnetic properties to the magnetic moment n:l provided by the orbiting electrons, electron spins, and nuclear spins. Moreover M denotes from (3-55) the averaged volume contributions of the magnetic moments n:l in the vicinity of any point inside the substance. The net magnetic effects are altered significantly by the temperature-the random thermal agitations that inhibit the alignment of the magnetic moments. Although noteworthy advances in the understanding of magnetic processes on the microscopic scale have been provided by applying quantum mechanics and electromagnetic theory to models of the magnetic elements, there is yet much speculation in the deduction of the magnetic properties of the many complex alloys and compounds. Magnetic effects in materials have been classified as diamagnetic, paramagnetic, ferromagnetic, antiferromagnetic, and ferrimagnetic. The following discussion is intended to provide a glimpse of some of the classical models of magnetism to help explain the origins of these magnetic properties. 5 In a diamagnetic material, the net magnetic moment n:l of each atom or molecule is zero in the ahsence of an applied magnetic field. In this state', the classical picture of the electron speeding at an angular velocity w about a positive nucleus is accompanied by a balance of the centrifugal and the attractive Coulomb forces between those opposite charges. The application of a mag~etic field provides a Lorentz force, - ev x B, on the orbiting electron snch that if a fixed orbit is to be maintained, an increase or decrease ± L'lw in the electron angular velocity must occur, depending on the direction of the applied B field relative to the orbital plane. This amounts to a change in the electronic orbital current, thereby generating a small magnetic field, the direction of which is such as to oppose the applied field. The net, opposing magnetization field M thus created in any typical volume-element L'lv of the material leads to a slightly negative susceptibility Xm for such a material. Diamagnetism is presumed to exist in all materials, though in some it may be masked by other magnetic effects to be discussed. Typical small, negative values of Xm for diamagnetic solids at room temperature are - 1.66 x 10 5 for bismuth, -0.95 x 10 5 for copper, and 0.8 x 10- 5 for germanium. It is to be expected that the less dense gases have even smaller diamagnetic susceptibilities, which is borne out by both calculation and experiment. Another weak form of magnetism is known as paramag"netism. In a paramagnetic material, the atoms or molecules possess permanent magnetic moments due primarily to electron-spin dipole moments, randomly oriented so that the net magnetization M of (3-55) is zero in the absence of an applied magnetic field. The application of a B field to gaseous, paramagnetic nitrogen, for example, produces a tendency for the moments n:l to align with the field, a process inhibited by the collisions or interactions among the particles. In a paramagnetic solid, thermal vibrations within the molecular 5 An
excellent digest of the theories of magnetic phenomena, including ample references, is found in Chapter 7 of R. S. Elliott, Electromagnetics. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966. .
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
141
Transition region
m
+++ +++ + ++++ ++++++ + ++++ + +++ + ++ t + ++ (b)
(a)
No applied field
Weak applied field
Moderate Saturation field field
- -
.....B
(e)
B
B
(d)
FIGURE 3-12. Alignment of magnetic moments in a ferromagnetic material: domain phenomena. (a) Magnetic moment alignments in a ferromagnetic material. (b) A perfect single crystal, showing domains and domain walls. (c) A transition region between adjacent domains. (d) Domain changes in a crystal with increase in the applied B field.
lattice tend to lessen the alignment effect., of an applied magnetic field. The room temperature susceptibilities of typical paramagnetic salts such as FeS04, NiS0 4 , Fe203, and CrCl 3 are of the order of 10 - 3 and inversely temperature-dependent, according to a law discovered by Pierre Curie in 1895. The importantjerromagnetic materials are characterized by their strong, permanent magnetic moments, even in the absence of an applied B field. They include iron, cobalt, nickel, the rare earths gadolinium and dysprosium, plus a number of their alloys and even some compounds not containing ferromagnetic elements. It was originally postulated by Weiss in 1907, and much later confirmed experimentally in photomicrographs by Bitter,6 that a ferromagnetic material in an overall unmagnetized state in reality consists of many small, essentially totally magnetized domains, randomly oriented to cancel out the net magnetic field. Domain sizes have been found to range from a few microns to perhaps a millimeter across for many ferromagnetic materials. Weiss further postulated that strong intrinsic coupling or interaction forces exist between adjacent atoms to provide the fully magnetized state within a given domain. It was not until 1928 that Heisenberg of Germany and Frenkel of the U.S.S.R. independently verified, using quantum theory, that the extraordinarily strong forces holding the domain atoms in parallel alignment is attributable to the coupling forces between the net electron spins of the adjacent atoms. 7 The parallel orientation of the spin moments in a ferromagnetic domain is depicted in Figure 3-12 (a). An idealized, perfect crystal might have a domain structure, in the absence of an applied B field, like that shown in Figure 3-l2(b), although flaws such as lattice imperfections and impurities would modify this idealized picture somewhat. The walls between the domains (Bloch walls), having the appearance suggested by Figure 3-l2(c), are transition regions between the spin alignments of the adjacent domains, and they are of the order of 100 atoms 6F. Bitter, "A gencralization of thc theory of ferromagnetism," PIl)'s. Rev., 54, 79, 1938. 7W. Heisenberg, "On the theory of ferromagnetism,"
Zeit. I
Phys., 49, 619,1928.
142
MAXWELL'S EQUATlONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
Magnetization
M
B Irreversible magnetization rotation region
T-
I I
I I I I
j
I
I I
Irreversible wall motion region
I I
______ 1
-c-l"'-t--/--Ll'
"ilIi I I I I
Reversible wall motion region
o
i Applied
I I I
Applied
I
I
I
I I I Bias I I
i
I
I I I
Ho-dJ : J> :
value
(a)
Itt
:
; - - - - -_ _ 1
Sinusoidal applied If field
I
I
rt (b)
FIGURE 3-13. Magnetization effects due to an external magnetic field applied to a fcrromagnetic matniaL (a) Magnetization proe,"ss (solid line) ill a virgin ferromagnetic region. Irreversible behavior shown dashed. (b) B If hysteresis loops for a ferromagnetic materiaL
thick. The domain division by such wall structures occurs in such a way that a minimal external magnetic field is supported by the structure, to minimize the work done in forming (he structure. As all external B field is increasingly applied to a ferromagnetic crystal containing domains, as denoted in Figure 3-12(d), tht'B!och walls first move to hwor the growth of those domains having magnetic moment\ aligned with the applied field, a reversible condition on removing the field ifB is not too large. For higher applied fields, domainwall motion occurs, which is not reversible, as noted in the third sketch of Figure 3-12(d). For a sufficiently large applied field, the domain magnetic moments rotate until an essentially total parallel alignment with the applied field occurs, a condition called saturation. The averaged effect of such changes on the bulk magnetization M, in a sample volume element containing a sufficient number of domains, is shown in Figure 3-13 (al. The arrows denote the direction ofincreasing or decreasing the applied H field. 8 One may note, on decreasing the applied H field to zero fi:'om the values P2 or P 3 , that a permanent magnetization Mr! (or M r2 ) is retained in the ferromagnetic sample, signifying an irreversible and distinctly nonlinear, multivalued behavior. These My values are termed the remanent (remaining) magnetizations of the specimen. The applied field must be further decreased to the reverse value He! (or ffel) as shown, before BIt has become cllslOmary to denote the applied magnetic field in the material than B.
the H fidcl, rather
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
143
the permanent is removed from the material. The value He is rather loosely called the coercive free, the field required to reduce the magnetization to zero within a specimen. If the M-H plot of Figure 3-l3(a) is replotted in terms of the B field in the ferromagnetic material, the B-H curve of Figure 3-13(b) results, recalling from (3-58) that these quantities are related to B = !lotH + M). In (b) is depicted a complete cycle of the events of (a), such as might occur if the applied field were varied sinusoidally as noted below the B-H curve. After the virgin magnetization excursion from 0 to P 3 , obtained over the first quarter cycle of the sinusoidal H field, the subsequent decrease in H provides the sequence of values passing through the remanent value Bn the coercive force He> and thence to the maximum negative flux density in the material at P4' With the applied H field going positive once more, a reversed image of the prior events takes place. The multi valued curve obtained in this cyclic fashion is called the hysteresis (meaning lagging) loop of the ferromagnetic region. Note that for smaller amplitudes of the applied H field, correspondingly smaller hysteresis loops are obtained, whether centered about origin 0 as just described, or appearing about Po as the consequence of a bias field Ho. The incremental permeability of a ferromagnetic material is defined as the slope of the B-H curve. The slope at the origin 0 of the virgin curve is called the initial incremental permeability. If the material is used such that it possesses a fixed (dc) magnetization Ho with a small sinusoidal variation about this value as noted at the point Po in Figure 3-13(b), the minor hysteresis loop formed there has an average slope defining the incremental permeability there. These events take place in the ferromagnetic core of an inductor or trans/ormer coil carrying an alternating current superimposed on a direct current, lor example. Energy must be expended in supplying the losses incurred in the hysttTesis effects accompanying the sinusoidal variations of an applied field. For this reason, ferromagnetic materials with low coercive forces (having a thin B-H loop) arc desirable for transformer and inductor designs. On the other hand, a ferromagnetic material used for permanent magnets should have a high coercive force He and a high remanent, or residual, flux density Br (corresponding to a fat B-H loop). 'Table 3-1 lists a few representative ferromagnetic alloys along with some of their magnetic properties. An additional and usually undesirable side effect, occurring in the magnetic core of devices such as transformers, is that of the free-electron conduction currents circulating within the core material due to an electric field E generated inside it by a time-varying magnetic field. The densities of these currents are limited by the conductivity (J of the core material through (3-7), that is, J = (JE, and are given the name tJddy currents because of their vortexlike nature within the conductive core, resulting from their relationship to the time-varying B field through (2-62)
VxE
8B
[2-62]
In the next section (2-62) is shown to be valid for a material region as well as for free space. Thus, with a conductive, ferromagnetic core in the solenoid as shown in Figure 3-11·( a), a sinusoidally time-varying current in the winding produces a sinusoidal B field in the core material to generate an E field, and from (3-7) also an eddy current field therein. Its sense is thus normal to the time-varying B field. The losses may be reduced substantially by subdividing the conductive core into a fibrous or laminar structure, as suggested by Figure 3-14(b), in which the subdivided conductors are insulated from one another. Small, spherical magnetizable particles serve the same purpose.
t"'"
TABLE 3·1 Magnetic Properties of Ferromagnetic Alloys
(A) Transfortner alloys Pertneabilities MATERIAL
PERCENT COMPOSITION
INITIAL
MAXIMUM
SATURATlON B (lNb/m2)
COERCIVE FORCE He (Aim)
CONDUCTlVllY (x 10 7 U/m)
Silicon iron
4 Si, 96 Fe 3.5 Si, 96.5 Fe 78 Ni, 0.6 Mn, 21.4 Fe 79 Ni;SMo, 16 Fe
400 1,500 9,000 100,000
7,000 35,000 100,000 800,000
2 2 1.07 0.7
40 16 4 0.16 to 4.0
0.16 0.2 0.12 0.15
H ypersil (grain oriented) 78 Permalloy Supermalloy
(B) Pertnanent tnagnet tnaterials MATERIAL
Carbon steel . Alnico V
PERCENT COMPOSITION
1 Mn, 0.9 C, 98;1 Fe 8 AI, 14 Ni, 24 Co, 3 Cu, 53 Fe
COERCIVE FORCE (Aim)
REMANENT B,0Nb/m2)
4,000 44,000
1.25
3-4 MAGNETIC POLARIZATION AND CURL H FOR MATERIALS
145
@
aB
Solenoid winding
~-O::::O::::'O::::O::::~0::::~~"Z>' ~"IOSinwt,mJo B = a Z --
L
Conductive, magnetic core (g,o)
at
sin wt
aB
at
--,
E and J flux ) (induced eddy currents)
aB
at (6)
(a)
FIGURE :1-14. Eddy current, in con
(a) Eddy enrFibrous and laminar
constrains the eddy curren ts to much smaller volumes, limiting their densities lIubstantially if the cellular substructures are made sufficiently small or thin. In the previous discussions it was seen that paramagnetism is a characteristic materials possessing permanent magnetic spin moments that arc randomly oriented, condition depicted in Figure 3-15(a). Ferromagnetic materials, due to the effects of Ihort-range couplings between adjacent atoms, possess parallel-oriented atomic magwithin given domain boundaries that comprise the material as suggested in Figure If such a material is heated until the thermal energies exceed the coupling energies, the material becomes disorganized into a paramagnet, though on cooling it reve~ts to a ferromagnet once more. The critical temperature at which this occurs is .known as the Curie temperature. Variations of the coupling phenomena responsible for ferromagnetic materials can even produce anti parallel alignments of electron spins in materials known as anti,,,·yrtlrYJIHTri'PJ· , as depicted by Figure . In this state, an antiferromagnet is characby a zero magnetic field. Manganese fluoride, for example, is paramagnetic at
m
t t t t 1t t t (a)
( c)
(b)
t
tttttttt (d)
'XGURE 3-15. Orientations of the spin moments of various magnetic ma(a) Paramagnetic. Ferromagnetic. (c) Antifcrromagnetic. (d) Ferrietic mat~rials, or
146
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
room temperature, but on cooling it to 206°C: (called its Neel temperature, after the French physicist), it becomes antiferromagnetic; below this temperature it exhibits no magnetic effect. An important variation of this phenomenon is ferrimagnetism, associated with noncanceling antiparallel arrangements of the coupled spin moments as suggested by Figure 3-15(d). Thus, in magnetite, the magnetic iron oxide FeO' Fe203, two of the three adjacent spins are reversed such that a somewhat weaker form of ferromagnetism is produced. Magnetite is an example of the group of ferrimagnetic oxides XO . Fe203, in which the symbol X denotes a divalent metallic ion Cd, Co, Cu, Mg, Mn, Ni, Zn, or divalent iron. When synthesized in the laboratory, these brittle, ceramiclike compounds are particularly useful for magnetic cores in highfrequency transformers and special applications ranging into the microwave frequencies because of their low conductivities comparable to those of the semiconductors, usually from 10 - 1 to 10 - 4 U/m. They are thus desirable because they limit eddy current losses in such applications. These conductivities may be compared with the much higher values of the typical alloys for lower-frequency applications as listed in Table 3-1, in which the values of the order of 10 6 U/m appear. A general account of the theory of ferro- and ferrimagnetism, together with a number of microwave applications of the latter, is found in the book by Lax and Button. 9
3·5 MAXWELL'S CURL E RELATION: ITS INTEGRAL FORM AND BOUNDARY CONDITION FOR TANGENTIAL E In Section 3-3, the Maxwell relation (3-59) for curl H in a material region was developed by adding in those current densities contributed by the electric and magnetic polarization fields. The form of the curl E relationship for materials is obtained by analogy, but retaining its form (2-62) for free space .
VxE=
oB
at
(3-77)
That the free-space Faraday's law (2-62) remains correct for a material region is evident on observing that an additive magnetic-current-densiry term, analogous to the electric-current-density term J of (3-7), is physically impossible iffi'ee magnetic charges cannot exist. Thus (3-77) correctly applies to both materials and free space. Equation (3-77) is readily converted to ,an integral form. The scalar multiplication of (3-77) with ds, integrating the result ~ver any surface S bounded by a closed line t, and applying Stokes's theorem yields \
~E 'ft
. dt =
-~ dt
f B . ds V s
(3-78)
again unchanged from the free-space version (1-55). The determination of (3-77) and (3-78) completes the development of Maxwell's differential and integral relations applicable to material regions, and they are summarized in the first two columns of Table 3-2. 'B, Lax, and K.J. Button. Microwave Ferrites and Ferrimagnetics. New York:'McGraw-Hill, 1962.
TABLE 3-2 Summary Maxwell's Equations and the Corresponding
Spatial Boundary Conditions at an interface DIFFERENTIAL FORM
V·D
INTEGRAL FORM
[3-24]
Pv
~s D
. ds =
CORRESPONDING BOUNDARY CONDITION
Iv Pv dv
[3-37]
Dn2 =
Dnl -
Ps
or
Case A: a 1, a 2 zero Dnl
V·B=O Vx H =
[3-48]
J+
3D
[3-59]
~B'ds =
0
J, H . dt
f J . ds + dtd f D . ds
'ft
=
[3-49]
S
S
[3-66]
Bn1
H'1
=
H,2 =
]s(n)
Case A: aI' a 2 finite H'l = H,2 Vx E
aB
3t
..:a.
J
J, E . dt = -~ 'ft dt
f B' ds s
[3-78]
Et1
E'2
or
[3-45]
[3-50]
n' (B1 - B 2 ) = 0
or
[3-71]
-> CfJ
Dnl =
or
Bn2
D 2 ) = Ps
Case B: a2 Ps
[3-42]
Dn2
n' (Dl
n X (HI - H 2)
Case B: a 2 -> n x HI = Js n X (El - E2l = 0
Js CfJ
[3-72] [3-79]
148
MAXWELVS EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
A boundary condition, comparing the tangential components of the E fields to either side of an interface, may he obtained from Faraday's integral law (3-78). The details of the derivation may be avoided if one recalls that Ampere's line-integral law (3-66) leads to the boundary condition (3-70a), lIt! - 1It2 = }s(n)' The boundary condition comparing the tangential components ofE can be analogously found by applying (3-78) to a similar thin rectangle, yielding the analog of (3-70a)
(3-79)
Thus the tangential component of the E field is alwOeYs continuous at an inte~face. The right side of (3-79) is evidently zero because no magnetic currents are physically possible. A summary of the four boundary conditions derived from Maxwell's integral laws for material regions in Sections 3-2C, 3-4B, and in the present section, is given in Table 3-2.
EXAMPLE 3·6. (a) Derive a refractive law for E at an interface separating two noneonductive regions. (b) Deduce from boundary conditions the direction ofE just outside a perfect conductor. (a) The boundary conditions for the tangential and the normal eomponents of E at an inter1i:lce separating nonconductive regions are (3-43) and (3-79); that is, EIEni = E2En2 and E'l = E'2' From the latter and the geometry of (a), one obtains
(3-80) a result analogous with (3-76) of Example 3-5 concerned with the refraction of B lines. (b) From (3-44), a perfectly conductive region 2 implies null fields inside it. Then (3-79), Etl in the adjacent region I must vanish also. The remaining normal component in region 1 is given by (3-45). ])n1 p" yielding Ps E lE"1 as shown in (b).
Region 1:
Cl.q. € 1. <11
= 0)
Region 1: (I.t), tl, (11) E! = nE n !
n +
+
+
4
+
Region 2: (<12 ---+ 00) (b)
EXAMPLE 3-6. (a) E flux refraction at an interface separating nonconductivc regions. (b) E is everywhere normal to the surface of a perfect conductor.
149
3-5 MAXWELL'S CURL E RELATION: ITS INTEGRAL FORM
Region 2:
(0"2 -,>-00)
Wave motion
---(z)
(b)
(a)
EXAMPLE 3-7. (a) Parallel-plate system supporting a uniform plane wave field. (h) Charge and wrrent distributiou on conductor inner surfaces.
EXAMPLE 3·7. A uniform plane wave is described by the electric and magnetic fields
and propagates in air between two perfectly conducting, parallel plates of great extent, as in (a). The inner surfaces of the plates are located at x = 0 and x = a. Obtain expressions for (a) the surface charge field and (h) the surface currents on the two conductors.
(a) The given E is everywhere normal to the plates at x = 0 and x = a, satisfying the boundary condition of (b) in Example 3-6. The surface charge distributions thus become
x=o P" =n'·D 1
x
a
implying that E lines emerge from positive charges and terminate on negative ones. (b) The given H, to satisfy (3-72), must be everywhere tangential to the perfect conductors at x = 0 and x = a, yielding there
x=o -a z
E~
cos (wt
Poz)
x
a
110
It is seen that, in any fixed Z plane, current flows in opposite two conductors.
z directions
in the
150
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AKD BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
3·6 CONSERVATION OF ELECTRIC CHARGE A relationship between eharge and current densities is obtainable from Maxwell's equations, assuming that electric charge can neither be created nor destroyed. Let a charge density Pv(u 1 , Uz, U3, t) occupy some volume region V. Then the net charge in Vat any instant is
Note that even though p" is in general a function of both space and time, the net q enclosed is a function of t only, because the definite limits on the integral dispose of the space variables. For brevity, the latter is written with the function notation understood as follows. (3-81a) The time rate of change of q within V is a measure of the current flowing into the closed surface S bounding V; hence
aq = lap" ' at v -at- dv C/sec or A
-
(3-8Ib)
With ds directed normally outward from S, the current flowing out of S becomes
aq at
1
(3-82a)
implying that the net positive charge q inside V is decreasing in time. The postulate that electric charge is neither created nor destroyed permits equating the negative (3-81b) to (3-32a), yielding
~s J
0
ds = -
ap" l v -at- dv
(3-32b)
This means that the net outflow of current from any volume region is a measure of the time rate of decrease of electric charge inside the volume. Equation (3-32h) is thus the expression of the conservation f.!f electric charge. The relation (3-82b) has an equivalent differential, or point form
ap" ,3 VoJ= --Aim at
(3-32c)
a result obtained by applying (3-82b) to any limiting volume-element and using the definition (2-20) of divergence. While (3-82e) is true for any volume-element of a current-carrying region, it is also applicable to the surface currents and charges at the interface between a perfect conductor and a perfect insulator, as in the system of the forthcoming Example 3-8. With currents and charges confined to the interface so that J -+ Js and p" -+ Pso the
3-6 CONSERVATION OF ELECTRIC CHARGE
151
becomes 10
charge-conservation relation
V1"Js=
ops Am / 2 -Tt
(3-82d)
if Vl' ' Js is taken to mean a tangential (two-dimensional) surface divergence ofJs. For example, if the interface coincides with the y-z plane, implying Js a;]" + az.Jsz' the two-dimensional divergence of Js is written
v
l'
'J = oJs y + oJsz s
oy
oz
I n a time-static field problem, steady current densities are divergenceless, so (3-82c) reduces in that case to
VoJ
=
0
(3-82e)
Direct currents are therefore always characterized by uninterrupted, closed current flux lines. EXAMPLE 3·8, Show that the surface current and surface charge fields at the conductor dielectric interfaces of Example 3-7 satisfy the two-dimensional charge-conservation relation (3-82d). At the lower interface (at x 0), the left side of (3-82d) yields
'10
E:' sin (w[
+ wEoE:'
(Jot)
sin (wt
(Jot)
r--'
i
on substituting {Jo = Wy ftoEo and 110 = V flO/EO' With a surface charge density Ps = + EoE:' cos (w! (Joz) on the lower conductor,
oPs = + WEoE'+m SIn . (w! ot whence (3-82d) is satisfied.
EXAMPLE 3·9. Determine the relaxation expression for the time deeay of a charge distribntion in a conductor, if the initial distribution at t = 0 is Pvo(u l , U2, U3, 0). The desired result is obtained by combining (3-82c) with the expression [or div D. Replacing J with O"E for the conductive region obtains, from (3-82c)
V· (O"E)
+
opv =
at
0
(1 )
The region being homogeneous makes E and 0" constants, so (3-24) is written V . E = pJE, and snbstituting it into the first term of (I) yields
0Pv
0"
-+ ot E
Pv =0
(2)
IOlt should be noted that the relationship C:J-32c), connecting current density and charge density at any point in a region, is consistent with the Maxwell curl expression (3-59). This is evident from taking the divergence of thc latter, which promptly yields (3-32c) on making nse of the identity (/9) in Table 2-2.
152
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
Integrating yields the desired result
(3-83a) assuming the initial charge distribution at tOto be PvO(ub U2, U3, 0). This implies that if the internal, free electric charge in a conducting region is zero, it will remain zero for all subsequent time. One may conclude that in a material having a nonzero conductivity (J, there can be no permanent volume distribution of free charge. Thus, the static state of a free charge supplied to a conducting body is that it must ultimately reside on the surface of the conducting body through the mutually repulsive (Coulomb) forces among the free charges.
The time constant 3-9 is given by
T
of the free charge density decay process (3-83a) in Example
E T = -
sec
(3-83b)
(J
a quantity called the relaxation time of the conductor. Good conductors, for which (J may be of the order of 10 7 Vim, have relaxation times around 10- 18 sec, assuming a permittivity essentially that offree space. In poor conductors, T may be of the order of microseconds, though a good insulator may have a relaxation time of hours or even days. *3-7 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN AN UNBOUNDED CONDUCTIVE REGION The topic of uniform plane waves propagating in empty space was discussed in Section 2-10, in which the influence of the free-space parameters Po and Eo on the various wave characteristics was observed. The study of a plane wave propagating in a material having the parameters E, p, and (J is considered in this section. It is shown that the important new effects produced by the conductivity (J is to provide wave decay in the direction of propagation, as well as a phase shift between E and H. The assumptions made for the problem of wave propagation in an unbounded, linear, conductive region are
1. The components of E and H have neither x nor y dependence; that is, a/ax = D/iJy 0 for all field components. 2. Free-charge densities Pv in the conductive region are in general nonzero if the charge-continuity relation (3-82c) is to be satisfied; while the current density J in the conductor 11 is related to the E field therein by (3-7), J = (JE. 3. The parameters of the region, assumed linear, homogeneous, and isotropic, are p, E, and (J. ~
J=
The problem will employ time-harmonic forms of the fields. With Pv = 0 and Maxwell's equations for the region are obtained from (3-24), (3-48), (3-59),
(JE,
*As an option, this section may be omitted for now, to be taken up (along with Section 2-10) bef()re beginning Chapter 6, if desired. However, its relevance to an improved understanding of the material parameters over the broad frequency spectrum makes it desirable for study in this chapter. 11 Although this assumption refers explicitly to waves in a conductive region, the extension to wave propagation in a lossy dielectric through the use of a loss tangent, E" IE', is described .in Section 3-8.
3-7 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN AN UNBOUNDED CONDUCTIVE REGION
153
and (3-77), becoming
= Pv
(3-84a)
V'B=O
(3-84b)
V' (EE)
v X E= V
X
(3-84c)
-jwB = -jwflH
H = j + jwD =
6E
+ jWEE
(3-84d)
in which B = flH and D = EE of (3-30) and (3-64) are applicable. These equations need not in fact be solved, since this has already been done analogously in Section 2.10 for plane waves in empty space. To obtain the solution by analogy, compare (3-84a) through (3-84d) with (2-106) through (2-109) applicable to the empty-space case V'(EoE)=O
[2-106]
V'B=O
[2-107] [2-108J [2-109]
in which B = floH and D = EoE apply. A comparison of the two cllri expressions in these two groups of Maxwell's equations reveals that the two V X E expressions are precise analogs of each other, with (3-84c) obtainable From (2-108) on simply replacing 110 in (2-108) with fl. Comparing (l-84d) with (2-109), however, reveal an additional conduction-current-density term O'E in (3-84d). On collecting terms of the right side of (3-84d) as follows V
X
H
0' E
+ jWEE =
(0'
+ jWE) E
= jw ( E
j;;)
E
(3-85 )
the analogy of the latter with (2-109) is evident on replacing EO of (2-109) with the complex permittivity, E - j6lw. Thus, each of the Maxwell's equations (2-108) and (2-109) is seen to become (3-84c) and (3-84d) on replacing in the former flo with fl
and
(3-86)
These replacements applied to the wave solutions of lOS) and (2-109) are therefore expected to yield the solutions of (3-S4c) and (3-S4d) in an unbounded conductive region. Recalling the solution (2-115) for empty space
+
E; (z) [2-115]
154
MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS
the replacements (3-86) in the latter yield analogous plane wave solutions for an unbounded conductive region
E;; (z)
+
E;(Z)
(3-87)
In (3-87), the pure phase factor jWJlloEo of (2-115) becomes a complex factor abbreviated with the symbol y, called the propagation constant (3-88) and y can be separated into real and imaginary parts
y=ot+jpm- 1
(3-89)
in which ot, the real part of y, is called the attenuation constant, and P is termed the phase constant of the uniform plane waves (3-87). Explicit expressions for ot and P are found by replacing y of (3-88) with ot + jp, squaring both sides to remove the radical, and equating the real and imaginary parts of the result. The following positive, real solutions for ot and P are obtained.
[J ((J)2 J2 w~ J2 [J ((J )2
w~ ot=--
1 12
J
1+-
Np/m
(3-90a)
+ 1J1 2rad/m
(3-90b)
1
WE
P=
I
+
WE
/
The dimension of ot and P is (m) -1, though the artificial dimensionless terms neper and radian are usually mentioned to emphasize their attenuative and phase meanings in the wave expressions. With the substitution of (3-88) into the exponent of the wave solution (3-87), one may express it
E;(z)
E:'e- YZ
+ +
E;(z)
(3-91a) (3-91b) (3-91c)
in which the complex amplitudes in (2-116)
E;; of the traveling wave terms are denoted again as (3-92)
A comparison of the conductive region wave solution (3-91) with the empty-space wavc solution (2-115) reveals the presence of two real factors, e-a.z and efl.Z, accounting for wave decay as the positive z and the negative Z traveling waves proceed in their corresponding directions of flight with increasing time. An additional view ofthc decay (attenuation) property of the waves is gained by converting (3-91) to its real-time form,
3-7 UNIFORM PLANE WAVES IN AN UNBOUNDED CONDUCTIVE REGION
155
obtained as usual by use of (2-74)
EAz, t) = Re [EAz)i/rot]
= Re
E~e-az cos (wt
fh
[E~ i/
If
EA
(d - x)
(b) Usc (4-154a) to infer the total voltage V between the conductors, hom whieh verify the capacitance of this parallel-plate system. Make use of (4-52) to convert to the alternative j()rm expressed in terms of V:
V
x)
(4-1 54 b)
Use (4-154b) to derivc a corresponding expressioll I()r E(x) between the plates. (d) The voltage applied across a particular parallel-plate capacitor is 100 V. The plates arc square, 1 m on a side, and separated by use ofa l-ll1ln thick polyethylene sheet. What is the capacitance? Show that 54b) here becomes
4-18. A parallel-plate capacitor used in a microcircuit is made of a I mil (=0.001 in. = 25.4 tim) thick sheet of polyethylene (Er sandwiched between two square conducting plates 3 mm ou a side. Find the capacitance.
, lot
248
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC ELECTRIC FIELDS
4-19.
(a) Usc Gauss's law and symmetry to derive the expression for D(r) of the spherical capacitor of Figure 4-7(b), showing that the E field denoted on the figure is correct. Use line integral (4-38a) to express the potential (»(r) at any location between the conductors, using the negative conductor (r = b) as the potential reference; that is, prove that (»(r) = - q 41tE
(1 i) - - -
b
r
(4-155a)
(b) Infer from (4-155a) the total voltage V between the conducting spheres, whence verify the capacitance (4-53) of this system. (cl Use (4-53) to rc-exprcss (4-155a) in the alternative form (»(r)
~(! 1 J r a
(4-155b)
b
(d) Assume V = 100 V aeross a spherical capacitor with a = 5 em, b = 10 em, and Er = 2.26 for the dielectric. What is its capacitance? Show lor this example that (4-155b) is written (»(r) = I OOO(r - 1 - b - 1) if distance r is expressed in cm. Graph the potential (» versus r between the conductors (in D.5-cm steps). Plot Er versus r on the same graph, noting the location and value of Emax. What is the potential at the exact midpoint between the conductors?
4-20.
(a) With the coaxial line E field given by (4-49), make use of its capacitance (4-51) to obtain the relationship between E and the voltage V impressed between the conductors.
V E=a - P b p tn
(4-156b)
a
At which p location between the coaxial conductors docs the E field have its maximum value? (b) Given that the maximum allowable static E tleld in polyethylene should not exceed 1200 V imil ( = 1.20 MVlin. = 472 k V jcm) if dielectric breakdown is not to occur, calculate the maximum dc voltage permitted between the conductors of the RG-2l3/U coaxial line ofProblem 4-16.
SECTION 4-6 4-21.
(a) Make use of (4-58e) to find the expression for the energy stored in the electrostatic field of the parallel-plate capacitor of Figure 4-7 (a). (b) Make use of the energy result of (a) to determine the capacitance C of the parallel-plate system.
4-22.
Repeat Problem 4-21, this time for the spherical capacitor of Figure 4-7 (b).
• 4-23.
A long circular coaxial line uses two concentric dielectric layers as illustrated for Problem 4-9. With Q, -Qresiding on each length t of the conductor surfaces a, c, respectively, the Dp field between the conductors has been found to be Q/2npt. (a) Find, by usc of the line integral (4-46), the voltage difference V between the conductors, assuming the zero potential reference at p c. (Explain why a sum of two integrals is required.) Use the V result to find the capacitance C of any length t of the system. Identify the answer as the series combination of the capacitance contributions associated with the two dielectric regions between the conductors. (b) Use (4-58e) to determine the electrostatic energy of a length t of the system. (Explain why the sum of two integrals is needed.) Use the U e result to obtain the capacitance C of the system.
SECTION 4-7
J
The parallel-plate capacitor of Figure 4-7 has the upper plate (x = d) at zero potential while that of the lower plate is at the potential V. Ignoring fringing, solve Laplace's equation (4-68) for (»(x) subject to the proper boundary conditions. Find E from (4-31).
4-24.
PROBLEMS
,
249
4-25. For the spherical capacitor of Figure 4-7, assume <1>(a) V and <1>(b) O. Integrate Laplace's equation (4-68) for <1>(r) , subject to the given boundary conditions. Find E using (4-31). 4-26. A pair of conducting cones, ideally of infinite extent, are located at (il and (iz as shown, separated by a charge-Irec dielectric of permittivity E. A voltage difference V is impressed at the infinitestimal gap between their apices at the origin to provide the potentials <1> 0 and Von the conductors as indicated. (a) Argue from the points of view of symmetry and the boundary conditions for <1> as to why the Laplace's equation (4-68) must here reduce to
d ( d<1» I ~ sin ( i - = 0 sin 0 dO df) (b) Solve the cones
(4-157)
157) by means of two integrations, obtaining the solution [or the potential between
in which C1 , Cz are arbitrary COllstants. (cl Apply the given boundary conditions at 0 and O2 to evaluate the arbitrary constants, showing that
01
tan (0/2)
t71-'-'-'~
<1>(0) = V
tan (0 2 /2) tan (Od2)
(4-158)
tn---tan (0 2 /2)
(d) Find the electrostatic field between the cones, obtaining
V
E
(4-159)
4-27. For a particular biconical conductor system as analyzed in Problem 4-26, let 01 = 30°, O2 = 150 0 , E = Eo, V = 100 V. (a) Sketch this system. Show from (4-158) that on its symmetry
(z)
~~-----r----
____'/
/
/
P(r.H)
'['=0 0
PROBLEM 4-26
291
250
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC ELECTRIC FIELDS
7r - -
--
=0
PROBLEM 4-28
plane 0
= 90°,
o=
2 are tan
tan ((11/2»)IV 02J -----tan [( tan (0 /2) 2 2
(4-160)
Use this to graph 11 versus
• 4-28.
The circular coaxial line shown here in sectional view uses two dieleetrics of perm itt ivities E1 and E2 extending over the 4> intervals (0, n) and (n, 2n), respectively. Assume the conductors statically charged with q, - If on the inner and outer conductors to make
= 0 and 4> = n?) What are thus thc solutions for the fields 0 1 and O 2 in the regions? (b) Use the boundary condition (3-45) at p a to dctcrmine the expression for the total charge q on any length t of the inner conductor. Obtain the capacitance by usc of (4-48), showing that
C = nt(El
+ (2)
tn
(4-161 )
b a
Identify the answer as cquivalent to the parallel combination of thc capacitances contributed by the top and bottom halves of this coaxial systcm. Furthcr show that the eapacitance of this two-dielectric system is the same as that of a coaxial capacitor with a single dielectric having an E that is the average OfEl and E2 • (e) If this system consisted of half polyethylene and half air with a = 2 mm and b = 7 mm, find its Cit.
4-29.
In the two-dielectric coaxial system of Problem 4-23, make use of (4-53e) to determine the electrostatic energy of any length t. Use the result to deduce its capacitance .
.. 4-30.
The coaxial line illustrated is similar to that of Problem 4-28 except that the first region (E1) extends over the arbitrary angular interval (0,4>1) as shown. (a) Confirm by the methods of Example 4-12 that the 4> and E solutions in the two regions are unchanged. Determined 0 1 and O 2 in the two rcgions. (b) Make use of the boundary condition (3-45) on the inner conductor (p = a) to determine the total surface charge If on any length t. By use of (4-43), find the capacitance C, obtaining C = t[El4>l
+ E2(2n tn
b a
4>1)]
(4-162)
PROBLEMS
251
29]
PROBLEM 4-30
(c) With a = 2 mm, b = 7 mm, region 1 a polyethylene wedge 5° wide and region 2 air, find
CIt for this system. Sketch it. Compare its Cjt with that obtained for a completely air dielectric.
SECTION 4-9 4-31. Employ the definitions of the hyperbolic functions to show that the solution (4-88a) of the two-dimensional LapJace equatiolJ (4-82) can be expressed equivalently as (4-163a) in which C1 , C2 , C~, C~ are arbitrary constants. The equivalent form of the alternative solution (4-88b) is seen to be (4-l63b)
4-32. The very long rectangular conducting channel, with interior dimensions a, b as shown, is insulated at its top corners [rom a conducting cover plate that is at = Va V. Use an appropriate solution of thc two-dimensional Laplace equation, subject to the appropriate boundary
iL -==b
1
Vo
\" <1>=0
(x)
a
PROBLEM 4-32
y(
252
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC EI,ECTR1C FIELDS
conditions, to obtain the potential (x,y) at any interior point, showing that
(x,y) = 2 Vo n
f: _1_-_(,--_1,-- sinh nny sin nnx n= 1
1mb a
.
n smh
l
sinh ny 4 Vo a nx - - - - - - sin n nb a sin
a
a
+
I 3
a
3ny sinha sinh
3nx sin 3nb a
+ ...
j
164)
a
[Hint: Noting that both terms lxY and e -kxY of solution (4-BBa) arc needed to satisfy the boundary condition (x, 0) = 0, it is more convenient to usc the equivalent hyperbolic solution developed in Problem 4-31. Observe that sinh u -> 0 and cosh u -> 1 as u -> 0.]
4-33.
For the long, covered conducting channel of Problem 4-32, assume V = 100 V and a = b (square cross section) and usc (4-164) to calculate the potential (x,y) in the cross section at the nine points detemdned by the intersections ofx = a/2, a/2 and 3a/4 withy = a/4, a/2, and 3a/4. Sketeh the cross section, labeling the potentials found at the indicated points. Usc the sketch as a basis for estimating the shapes of the = 25 V and 50 V equipotential contours in the cross sections.
4-34.
(al Make use of 164) to find the series expression for the E field at any P(x,y) in the conductive channel described in Problem 4-32. (b) Assmning V = 100 V and a = b I m, evaluate E(x,y) at the following points: (0, , (a/2, and (a, a/2). (c) Assuming air dielectric, use results of (b) to determine the surface charge density at the conductor locations (0, and a/2).
SECTION 4-10 4-35.
The very long rectangular conducting channel viewed sectionally in the figure has dimensions as indicated by the square-grid overlay. Thl' cover plate is at 100 V with the remaining sides at 0 V. Write the expression (4-9Id) for the potential at the three indicated interior points, taking advantage of the symmetry about the plane A. Solve the simultaneous linear equations for the potentials. Show a labeled sketch denoting the potential values obtained.
4-36.
Use the exact Fourier expression (4-164) to verify the potentials in the last column of the table at the end of Example 4-15; also calculate the values of <1>1, <1>2'
4-37.
Repeat Problem 4·35 for the square conducting channel shown, making use of the symmetry about the plane B. Find the six potentials at the indicated points (a) by matrix methods; A
B Insulated corners
II
(1)= 100V
q,= 100V \ I
I I
I
,.._1+_+_ I
2'
I
I
I
--..1-- .. - I
31 --.,.-
1-:
\
<1'-0
I
I
I
I
I I
21
I
61
31
I
:
i
I
4' f--t 51
1+- 1--
--t--.,.--~
,.....-+---t-- -+-I
(!)=O
I I
I
PROBLEM 4-35
I
PROBLEM 4-37
PROBLEM 4-33
PROBLEMS
253 29]
C I
I I
I
I
-.--+ "--+---1 21 4 I 51 61 --+-.-.I 11 31 -+-+I
-+I +I
I
I
I
I
I
-+- +-+ I
+--1- -1I
I
I
4>=0
PROBLEM 4-40
(b) by iteration. (c) Use the Fourier expression (4-164) to check for the correct potential at point 2, the center of the channel.
.. 4-38. The very long conducting channel, of triangular cross section as shown, has dimensions given by the square-grid overlay. The upper cover is at 100 V relative to the other two sides. Solve for the six unknown potentials by (a) matrix methods and (b) iteration. 4-39. Double the linear grid density of the potential points in both directions in Problem 4-38 to provide 28 unknowns, making use of symmetry). Solve for the unknown potentials by iteration (use of a computer is advised). Showing labeled potential values on a reasonably sized reproduction of this system (using gridded papcr), sketch in equipotential contours at
.. 4-40. Inside a square, hollow conductor is coaxially placed a square conductor canted by 45° with respect to it, as shown in the figure. Relative dimensions are suggested by the square grid overlay, and the inner conductor is at the potential of 100 V relative to the outer one. Noting the symmetries about planes Band C, 'write the expression (4-9Id) f()r the potentials at the six indicated points. Solve for the unknown potentials using (a) matrix methods; (b) iteration. On a sketch of the system, label the potentials obtained.
tI
SECTION 4-11 • 4-41. Begin with the expression (4-96) for the potential at P(x,.Y) of the two-line charge system to derive, by completing any omitted details, the equation (4-100) for the equipotential circles defined by the parameter K. Show the details leading to determining (4-104), the expression for K as a function of hjR, as a quadratic solution from (4-101) and (4-102). ClarifY the meanings of the ± sign~ (4-104). Finally, assume two conductors, spaced 2h center-to-center and of radius R each, to fill in two corresponding equipotential cylinders as depicted in Figure 4-13. Sketch this system of Figure 4-14( b) in a sectional view. Establish the conductor potentials, given now by (4-96), as being q h+d <1>0 = - - t n - -
2nd
respectively, with d tance (4-107).
R
and
-
2nd
tn
h-d R
From this information deduce the parallel-wire line capaci-
Iltll
254
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC ELECTRIC FIELDS
4-42.
(a) For the parallel-wire line of Fii.(ure 4-H(b), convert its potential field (x,]) , i.(iven by (4-96), to a form dependent on the vol tai.(e V between the conductors by use of the capaci tanee result (4-107), showini.( that (x,y)
V
R2
=----tnIi + d RI 2 tiN
(4-165)
R
in which R J and R2 arc defined by (4-97), and the quantity (h other equivalent ti:lrms, for example,
h+d ~~--
=
R
d+h-R --~"---"~
d
=
h+R
+ d)jR
can be shown to have
h+R+d h+R
(4-166)
d
JizZ -
provided that d Ri. (h) As a check, show that (4-165) reduces to the expected potential values at the f()llowing conductor-surface points: PI (Iz - R, 0), P2(h + R, 0) on the positive conductor; also a\ P 3 ( -Iz - R, 0), P 4 ( Iz + R, 0). Sketch the cross-sectional view of the line, laheling the point locations. (c) Apply (4-:)1) to 65) to t1nd the E-field expression at any P(x,y), showing that
v
E(x,y) = 2 tn~
{(x d x+ d) (] aX-if - R~ + ay l~
(4-167)
R in which RI and R2 are defined by (4-97).
4-43. A parallel-wire line consists of two conductors, each of 5-cm radius, separated in air by 20 em center-to-eenter. (a) Sketch this system (cross-sectional view), labeling R, It, and d. Show a few representative E-flux lines connecting the virtual image charges at d, -d. Use physical reasoning to explain why you expect the maximum E field of this system to be at the points on the x-axis whCl'e the conductors are nearest to each other. (b) Assuming 1000 V between the conductors, make use of (4-167) in Problem 4-42 to calculate the electric field at the surface point P(11 - R, 0) on the positive conductor. Show this V(:ctO[ on your sketch. (c) Use the appropriate boundary condition to determine the surfzlce charge density at P(h R,O). (el) What must the voltage between the conductors be, to produce the E-field magnitude of 1 MV!m at P(h - R, OJ?
4-44.
Repeat Problem 4-43, except assume the wire radii to be R
2 mm.
4-45. (a) A parallel-wire telephone line uses 165-mil (OA19-cm) diameter bare copper conductors with 12-in. (30.5-cm) center-to-eenler spacing. Find the capacit,ince between the conductors in pF/m; in J1FJmile. (b) Repeat (a), assuming il-in. spacing.
SECTION 4-12 '"" 4-46.
(a) Use superposition combined with the method of images to derive an approximate expression for the capacitance between two long, parallel wires of radii al and a 2 , each spaced Iz above an infinite conducting ground plane as in Figure 4-16( b), assuming the center-lo-center separation D. Sketch this labeled system. Show that
c t (b) Show, in the limit as It result (4-110).
-> 00
2nE
(4-168)
(the ground plane is removed), that (4-168) becomes the
PROBLEMS
255
291
PROBLEM 4-50
4-47. A parallel-wire line in air, with conductors of unequal radii and located above a ground plane as in Figure 4-16(b), has the dimensions at 3 mm, a 2 = 1 mm, D = 20 em, and It[ = h z = It = 10 em. (a) Sketch the system, and find its distributed capacitance by usc of (4-168). (b) Obtain the capacitance of this system with the ground plane removed, finding it by usc of (4-110). 4-48. Repeat Problem 4-47, this time assuming the parallel-wire system spacings It[ and hz above the ground plane, as shown in Figure 4-16(b).
to
have different
SECTION 4-13 4-49. For each of the three Hux plots given in Figure 4-21, find the Cit, assuming air dielectric. In (e) of that figure, find the value of Cit corresponding to the width between tooth-centers. 4-50. Shown is the sectional view ora conducting elliptic cylinder within a round conducting pipe, dimensioned as noted. (a) Use Iield-mapping techniques to lind the capacitance per unit length (Cjt) of this system. Assume air dielectric. (Employ at least one equipotential surface, at I]) = V12, sketched between the conductors, using curvilinear squares as a basis as exernplilied in Figure 4-21. Take advantage of symmetries to reduce the amount of sketching needed, observing that straight flux lines coincide with the symmetry planes.) (b) Denote the location(s) in the system where the maximum electric field is to be found, explaining your reasoning. (c) If the dielectric permittivity were 4E o , what new value of Cjt would be obtained·? 4-51. Repeat Proqlem 'i-50, in this case for the round cylindrical conductor eccentrically located within the rotind pipe as shown. Compare this Cit result with that obtained on moving
PROBLEM 4-51
lIat r oj
tht
01
256
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC ELECTRIC FIELDS
PROBLEM 4-52
the inner conductor to its coaxial location, obtaining the latter answer analytically. Comment on this comparison.
4-52.
Repeat Problem 4-50, this time for the square conducting bar located inside the round pipe as shown. (Note that symmetry planes can be drawn through opposite corners of the square conductor.)
4-53.
Repeat Problem 4-50, in this instance lor the round cylindrical rod above the infinite ground plane shown. Compare your graphical solution with that obtained using the exact expression (4-106), assuming air dielectric.
4-54.
Repeat Problem 4-50, here for the infinitely wide, equispaced gridded system of rods as shown. The grid-rods are assumed electrically neutral ("floating"), with no net charge on each. Compare the Cit result obtained, for every width 4a as shown, with that obtained in the absence of the grid rods, assuming air dielectric.
Tl d=2"
«()=o
W////X1//////-//ffi///7//mM PROBLEM 4-53
-l-
f8-
o o =V
-j---jL--j---
(1)='''
_ t-;_% _ _ :/;;:/~/~_%/;:;:/~/~~~:0~;:'ij~~~:;;:;?:~~~:?2~~~~~~%/CP:7;_/~=;:;;o~~:/~/,?// PROBLEM 4-54
PROBLEMS
SECTION 4-14 4-55. Let the system of Figure 4-21 (a) employ a lossy dielectric with
Er =
4 and
257 (J
29]
=
10-- 6 mho/m. Find the capacitance and the conductance per meter depth. What resistance is
seen by de voltage source connected between the conductors of a 5 m long sample of this twoeonductor system? (a) A coaxial line with a = 1.5 m, b = 4.8 mm has a dielectric with Er = 2.60 and loss tangent E" /E' = 10 - 4 at the frequency I = 10 6 Hz. Find its capacitance and conductance per meter. (b) If a 4-em-long section of this coaxial cable is used as a capacitor at 10 6 Hz, find its equivalent parallel RC circuit, and its Q. How arc its Q ancl loss tangent related?
4-56.
4-57.
Two circular conductive rods 2.5 em in diameter are driven into wet earth 15 em between centers, to a depth of 1 m. 1000-1-1z bridge measurements between the conductors show the system to be equivalent to a 67.3 pF capacitor in parallel with a 985.9 Q resistor. Determine the Er and (J of this soil, neglecting field fringing at the bottom of the rods. [Answer: Er = 6.0, (J = 0.0008 mho/m]
4-58. A rectangular box has the inside dimensions 12 x 8 x 2.5 cm, the opposite 12 x 8 em sides being conducting plates. A sample of the wet earth of Problem 4-57 is packed inside. Using the answers to that problem, deduce the resistance and capacitance values expected to be measured between the plates. Which of these two measuring schemes is the more precise? Explain. 4-59.
Deposited conductive films, like conductive paper, can be used in the modeling of two dimensional systems in Figure 4-25), or in the evaporation or beam deposition of thin resistive dements on a suitable Honconductive surface. (a) Determine, by use of (4-131), the resistance R between the ends of a thin conductive film of uniform thickness. If the film is subdivided into a number of curvilinear cells, with rls in series between the constant-potential ends and rip in parallel in the transverse direction, show that (4-1,11) can be wri tten in the f(Jl'm (where R = C- 1) (1)
in which Rsq = l/ad, called the "resistance per (curvilinear) square" of the film. (Note that the symbol d replaces t in (4-131) to denote the film thickness.) (b) Find the resistance per square of a metal film 0.15 Jim thick, if the metal conductivity is (J = 104 mho/m. If (J = 107 mho/m. (c) A film of aluminum (a 3.6 x 10 7 mho/m) is deposited 0.1 Jim thick on an SiO z substrate. What is its per-square resistance? This film is deposited as rectangular stripe of width w = I mil = 25.4 Jim and length t = 12 mil (an interconnection on a VLSI layout). Use (1) to determine quickly the resistance between the ends of the stripe. [Answer: (b) 667 Q pcr squarel
4-60. Using a resistive paper model as suggested by Figure 4-25(a), the toothed structure of Figure 4-21 (c) is modek,d by applying silver paint electrodes of the shapes shown onto resistive paper measuring 1000 Q per square. From the curvilinear square field sketch of Figure 4-21(c), what G and R values would be measured between the electrodes?
SECTION 4-15 4-61. A variable air capacitor, using a rotating, multiplate rotor, provides a linear capacitance variation from 30 to 500 pF as the rotor rotates from 0 to 260 0 • Determine the electrostatic torque on this rotor at any arbitrary angle setting, when 5000 V are applied.
tl
CHAPTER5 ______________________________________________
Static and Quasi-Static Magnetic Fields
The static magnetic fields of steady currents and the electromagn~tic fields of relatively slowly time-varying currents are considered in this chapter. Ampere's law is applied to symmetrical current configurations and to magnetic circuits containing high permeability cores, for the purpose of obtaining their magnetic fields. The static magnetic potential, a vector function, is inferred, and from this, the Biot-Savart law. Faraday's law then leads into the concepts of self· and mutual inductance and the energy and forces of the magnetic field.
5-1 MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND BOUNDARY CONDITIONS FOR STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS In Section 4-1 it was pointed out that static magnetic fields are required to satisfy only the Maxwell equations (4-3) and (4-4)
v
V·B=O
(5-1)
H=J
(5-2)
X
The divergenceless property (5-1) specifies that B flux lines are always closed, whereas (5-2) states that the sources of static magnetic fields are steady currents of density J. The divergenceless property of any direct current distribution in space is moreover assured by (3-82c)
VoJ=O
258
(5-3)
:;-2 AMPERE'S CIRCUITAL LAW
259
291
although this property of direct current is not independent of Maxwell's equations, in view of the fact that (5-3) is a consequence of taking the divergence of (5-2). The three foregoing differential equations have integral counterparts given by the static versions of (3-49), (3-66), and (3-82b) as follows.
~sB' ds = 0
(5-4)
i
(5-5)
H ' dt
~sJ'ds=O
(5-6)
whereas the constitutive relationship between Band H at any point, for the linear, homogeneous, and isotropic materials considered in this chapter, is given by (3-64c)
B= tlH
(5-7)
The boundary conditions for magnetic fields have already been derived in Chapter 3 under the general assumption of time variations for the fields, though they remain unaltered under static conditions. These are given by (3-50), (3-71), and (3-132) as follows. (5-8) (5-9)
Jnt - Jn2 = 0
(5-10)
assuring the continuity of the normal components of the static Band J fields at any interface, as well as the tangential components of H. The presence of a current in a finitely conductive region implies the presence of an E field, in view of relation (3-7) that J = O"E, yielding the possibility of coupling the static magnetic field with an electrostatic field. 5-2 AMPERE'S CIRCUITAL LAW
Ampere's circuitalbJ:w for the static magnetic field in free space was initially discussed in Section 1-11. The presence of a magnetic material with a permeability Jl in the region of interest was taken into account by the definition (3-58) of the field H, the law in this event becoming (5-5)
rna
[5-5] Figure 5-1 illustrates (5-5) relative to a conductor compelled to carry a steady current 1. Thus, the line integral ofH, around the dosed path tl shown, yields the value zero because the current i enclosed by that particular choice of path is zero. On the other hand, the current piercing S2 is precisely the current I carried by the conductor, whereas i = 0 for the assumed path t3 because the current I flows both into and out of 8 3 to provide canceling contributions to i.
tot
260
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
ds
Positive integration sense
~ ~-----"'-m-:~--=----r-;l
ds FIGURE 5-1. Showing typical closed paths t" t z , and the interpretation of the current i.
t3
chosen to illustrate Ampere's law and
Two important interpretations of Ampere's circuital law are the following 1. Sleady current sources possess magnetic flux line distributions that, at positions in space near the sources, are directed in accordance with the right-hand rule. 2. Ampere's circuital law may be used as the basis for finding the H field (and thus B) of a steady current if the physical symmetry of the problem permits extricating the desired field from the integral. Applications of2 to finding the static magnetic fields of systems exhibiting simple symmetries have been given in Examples 1-13, 1-15, and 3-4. Additional examples involving conductors wound about symmetrically shaped magnetic materials are given here.
EXAMPLE 5·1. Two long, coaxial, circular conductors carry the steady current I as shown in Figure 5-2. Assume constant current densities over each conductor cross section. The region a < p < b is filled with a magnetic material of constant permeability /1; the region b < p < c is air. Find Band H in the two regions. Sketch their graphs versus p, assuming /1 = 100/10' From symmetry and the application of the right-hand rule, the magnetic field is everywhere
and because
f dt = 2np, solving for H", obtains (5-11 )
5-2 AMPERE'S CIRCUITAL LAW
261 291
Magnetic sleeve (region 1)
\
Air (region 2)
o'--a.1..--==,"-c--_" -- P b (b)
(a)
FIGURE 5-2. Coaxial line partly filled with magnetic materiaL (a) Cutaway view of the line. (b) Fields produced by I.
This result is independent of Jl, which mcans that it applies to both thc magnetic region 1 and the air region 2. Thus the B field in each region is found by inserting (5-11) into (5-7) B=a.p-
JlI 2np
a
Jlol a.p2np
b
B
(5-12)
fll lOr ;
These results show that if region I had a permeability Jl 100110, B.p just inside the magnetic region (at p = b -) would be 100 times as dense as on the air side. This is illustrated by the solid curve of Figure 5-2(b). Thus nearly all of the flux of B resides within the magnetic material, if Jl » Jlo·
EXAMPLE 5·2. Suppose an n turn, closely wound toroidal coil with a rectangular cross section is filled with a magnetic material of constant permeability Jl from a to b as in Figure 5-3(a). With a current Fin-the coil, find Band H in the two regions; sketch their relative magnitudes if 11 = 100Jlo for the magnetic materiaL Compare the total magnetic flux t/lm in the core ifit is all air with that obtained ifit is all magnetic material, assuming Jl = lOOllo. From the symmetry it is evident that Ampere's law is useful for finding Hi choose t as a circle with the radius p shown in Figure 5-3. From the symmetry and the righthand rule, H must be 11 directed and of constant magnitude on t. Equation (5-5) then yields
Ct
:d led
urH
m;
11th tol
1-5 whence
H -
nI
.p - 2np
(5-13)
262
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
Magnetic material (iJ.)
~'fa <,<
Air (iJ.o)
:
I
I I
I I
"'
I
:
: ''1
b)
: . . . '-i . . ..Hcp I
Bcp =
o
0:
I I
Bcp (b
< p < c)
abc
-?<-p
(b)
(a)
FIGURE 5-3. A toroid of rectangular cross sectiou, partially filled with a magnetic materiaL (a) Dimensions of toroid. (b) Interior fields.
Using (5-7), B in the magnetic and air regions of the core becomes
a",
/1 n1 2np
/10 111 B = aq)5", = a", 2np
a
b
The graphs of thcsc quantities are shown in Figure 5-3(b). If the core is all air, the total B flux in it becomes
r
JS(core)
B· ds
f. iC d
z=O
p=a
/10 711 ·--dpdz
2np
/1onJd
2n
tn
c
a
For a completely magnetic core, /1 = 100/10 would appear in the foregoing answer in lieu of /10, demonstrating the considerable increase in magnetic flux possible if an iron core is used.
5-3 MAGNETIC CIRCUITS It has been noted that a magnetic material oflarge permeability can aid in producing large magnetic flux densities compared to what would exist without its use. From (5-1) it is evident that physical magnetic fields must always consist of dosed flux lines. By constraining the B flux to occupy the interior of closed (or nearly closed) paths of magnetic material, one may speak of magnetic circuits with reference to those closed paths. Figure 5-4(a) shows an idealized magnetic circuit: a closely spaced toroidal winding establishing a magnetic field within it, with essentially no magnetic flux outside the core, whether or not the core material is magnetic. If the winding is localized on the core as in (b), the effect of a high-permeability core material (fl »flo) is such that the magnetic flux t/lm generated by the current I in the coil still appears almost wholly within the boundaries of the core. The magnetic flux must consist of closed
5-3 MAGNETIC CIRCUITS
263
291
Median line
I Magnetic
flux
(b)
(a)
\
(c)
FIGlJRE 5-4, Development of magnetic circuit concepts, Toroidal core with closely (e) A generalized magspaced winding. (h) With a localized winding, showing leakage netic circuit: leakage Hnx neglected,
lines as required by the divergence property (5-1), and because of the constraint supplied by the refractive law (3-76) (requiring that B flux leave the surface of the highpermeability magnetic core very nearly perpendicularly), one concludes that very little can appear outside the core as leakageJlux if the permeability of the core is sufficiently large. In f(~rromagnetic cores having relative permeabilities of 10 2 to 104 or more, the leakage flux developed external to a core may thereic)fe ordinarily be neglected. The analytical determination of the leakage flux usually requires a rigorous solution of the boundary-value problem of the magnetic system; in general, this is a difficult process. For present purposes concerned with magnetic circuits as in Figure 5-4, the magnetic core is assumed linear, homogeneous, and isotropic; furthermore, the leakage flux is ignored, implying a constant flux t}! m through any cross section of a single-mesh core. This flux is (5-15a)
. fh Jr (
til
d
cd if S is any cross section. The need for knowing B at each point in the cross section i S T C I obviated if t/lm is expressed in terms of an average flux density Bav over S; that is, 1m ./
(5-15b)
cm assuming Bav lies tangent to a median line t, as in Figure 5-4(c). Even for a toroid of constant cross section, the median line will not lie precisely at the core center, for one may recall from the solutions obtained in Example 5-2 the inverse p dependence of B 1> in the core, In the following, the Bav is assumed at the center of the core cross section; that is, the median line t is taken as the core center line. Then (5-15b) becomes a good approximation if the core is thin. To find the flux t/I m developed by the current I in the core of the single magnetic circuit of Figure 5-4(c), apply Ampere's law to the median path t; that is,
J. jt H' dt =
rtl A
(5-16)
tot i-5
)-5 Yc
264
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
=
in which dt = atdt, and H
RIp,
=
atBav/p,. Making use of (5-15b)
In the generalized case, the cross-sectional core area A can be a variable depending on the location along the median path t, and it is designated A(t). The core flux tf1m through any cross section along t is constant if the leakage flux is neglected, obtaining tf1m =
nI dt
~t p,A(t)
(5-17a)
Wb
= VIR and applicable to the thin, de circuit of Figure 4-26, reproduced here in Figure 5-5 (b). Thus (5-17a) can be written in the analogous form
It is seen that (5-17a) is the analog of Ohm's law (4-136), of the form I
(5-17b) in which ;g; = nI is called the applied magnetomotive force (mmf), the analog of the applied voltage V (or emf; electromotive force) in the analogous electric circuit of Figure 5-5(b). The denominator q{ of (5-17b) is called the reluctance of this series magnetic circuit, defined by q{=
~ --A/Wb p,A(t) dt
t
or
(5-18)
which from Figure 5-5 is seen to be the analog of the resistance R, given by (4-137)
Median line {
Median line {
if/m
(
(JL) (a)
= 0)
(0-) (b)
FIGURE 5-5. Dc magnetic and electric circuit analogs. Leakage flux is neglected in the magnetic circuit. (a) Magnetic circuit. Magnetic flux is generated by the source ni. (b) Electric circuit. Current flux is generated by the source V.
5-3 MAGNETIC CIRCUITS
265
291
for the electric circuit of Figure 5-5 (b). Its reciprocal (analogous to conductance) is called the permeance of the magnetic circuit. If the magnetic core has a constant cross-section A and a constant permeability j1, the reluctance (5-18) reduces to.o/I = t/j1A, whence (5-17) yields the special result for the core flux
./, __ nI __ ~ 'I'm
~
t
Single-mesh; constant A, j1
(5-19)
This result applies to the magnetic circuit of Figure 5-4(b) neglecting leakage flux and assuming a reasonably thin core. More general magnetic circuits might consist of series arrangements of magnetic materials as in Figure 5-6. A narrow air gap (oflength t g ) can also be included, of interest in the design of relays and in the linearization of iron core inductors, or a gap might be a mechanical necessity as in a motor or generator. For the series system of Figure 5-6(a), applying the reluctance integral (5-18) to the successive portions tb t 2 , t3 and t 9 over which the permeabilities and cross sections are constants, obtains (5-20a) analogous to the resistance of the series electric circuit shown. The field-fringing effects near the edges of a small gap are neglected in Ihe air gap reluctance term ~g. Substituting the total, series reluctance ~ given by (5-20a) into 7) obtains (5-20b)
t\a or 0 th,
t
1se 0
eel i-
v
~d
~ -R,+R.+R3+Rg
led rren
V~R2
urm
ar
Ra
-1 r-
(
fg (air gap) ,f,
nf
,/'f'm=
9i'J+i!l2
Ai
rna thin tot:
-- t2
5-5: (a)
(b)
FIGURE 5-6. Examples of series magnetic circuits and their electric circuit analogs. (a) A series magnetic circuit and its electric circuit analog. (b) A rectangnlar configuration of high permeability materials.
Yo
266
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
which is analogous to the Kirchhoff voltage expression R1i + R2i + R3i + Rgi = Vfor the analogous, four-resistor electric circuit of Figure 5-6(a). Thus, the similarity of the "voltage drop" terms Ri in the latter to the analogous terms of (5-20b) suggests that the source-term nI should be called an "mmf rise," and the fJtt/lm terms be viewed as "mmf drops" (also called "nI-drops" or "ampere-turn drops") in this characteristic magnetic-circuit expression. Extending (5-20b) to the general case of any number n of magnetic reluctances connected in a series magnetic circuit, you have (5-20c) The series magnetic circuit result (5-20b) can alternatively be expressed in terms of the Hav fields appearing within the series reluctance elements. Applying Ampere's law to the series magnetic circuit of Figure 5-6(a), for example, yields (5-20d) which has the general form n
L
k=l
Hav,kt k
= nI
(5-20e)
for the n-element series magnetic circuit. A comparison of (5-20e) with (5-20c) shows that these governing relations for magnetic circuits are identical term-for-term; that is, the "mmf drop" associated with any reluctance element of a series magnetic circuit can be expressed either as the product fJtt/lm or as Havt. The identity (5-20f) is evident from the definitions of the quantities.
EXAMPLE 5·3. A toroidal iron core of square cross section, with a 2-mm air gap and wound with 100 turns, has the dimensions shown. Assume the iron has the constant p. = 1000p.o. Find (a) the reluctances of the iron path and the air gap and (b) the total flux in the circuit if I = 100 mA. (c) Find Bav and Hav in the iron core and in the air gap. (el) Show, irom an integration ofR' dt about the median path, that Ampere's law (5-16) is satisfied. (a) The reluctance of the iron path, having a median length tl ~ 2n(0.05) and cross-sectional area A 1 = 4 x 10 - 4 In 2 , is
tl
:J£l~--= - IllAl
0.314-0.002 6 4=0.621 x 10 H 103(4n x 10 7)4 x 10
The air gap reluctance, assuming no fringing, becomes
:J£ = ~ = 9
p.oAl
0.002 4n x 10-
1
= 0.314 m
5-3 MAGNETIC CIRCUITS
267
291
--l2cm~ EXAMPLE 5-3
(b) The magnetic flux is given by (5-17), that is, the magnetomotive force nl of the coil divided by the reluctance of the series circuit
10 2 (0.1 ) 4.6 x 106
2.18
X
10- 6 Wb
With the air gap absent, V! mis limited only by the reluctance 9f I of the iron path, becoming V!m = 15.97 X 10- 6 Wb. (c) Since only the total magnetic flux in the iron and air-gap cross section is available, no detailed p-dependence of the corresponding o/-directed Band H fields is obtainable; only average values can be found. With the same V!m in both the iron core and air-gap cross section, the same Bau is expected in each, becoming
V!m
Bau = Al
=
, 2.18 X 10- 6 = 5.45 ml 4 x
th use ( e ce
It
The continuity of this Bau at the iron-air interface satisfies the boundary condition Bnt = B.2 of (3-50), while producing an abrupt discontinuity in the average H fields there. Thus, in the iron,
5.45
X
4.34 A/m
unr
les (
while in the air gap
1m
Bav Havy = = 4340 A/m , lio
d.til tot
just Ii, = 1000 times as large as HaD,Fe' (d) With the substitution of Hau,Fe and Hau.g into the line integral (5-16) Hav,Fetl
:~d
lied Irn:1
10- 3
--,;----;;- =
~l H· dt =
e f1a lOr (
+ Hau,gty
4.34(0.312)
which agrees with the right side of (5-16), i = nl
+ 4340(0.002)
=
10.0 A
10 A. Yo
268
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC .FIELDS
In (5-20a) the air-gap permeability ~o ordinarily is much smaller than ~1' ~2' and of the magnetic materials in a bonafide magnetic circuit. This means that for even a small air gap, the gap reluctance term can often be orders of magnitude larger than the reluctance of the rest of the circuit. A good approximation in such cases is that the core flux is determined essentially by the air-gap reluctance only; that is, ~ ~ ~g. For practical reasons concerned with fabrication problems, magnetic cores of rectangular shape, like that of Figure 5-6(b), are in common use in devices such as relays, inductors, and transformers. The approximations of the magnetic circuit concept become greater in such configurations because of the difficulty in assigning correct median lengths to the various legs of the rectangle, particularly if the cross sections are large compared with the overall core dimensions. An extension of the theory of magnetic circuits to systems having more than one magnetic path is possible again through the use of the electric circuit analogy, as illustrated in Figure 5-7. Because the fluxes divide among the branches of the magnetic circuit in just the way the currents do in a dc electric circuit, it is seen that writing Ampere's law around the two magnetic meshes of Figure 5-7(a), for example, yields the following equations
~3
nI
o=
~lt/tml
+ .oJl Zt/tm2
~3(t/tml - t/tm2)
+ .iJl 2t/tm2
(5-21 )
in which ~1' ~l' ~3 are found from the mcdian paths t l , t l , t3 in Figure 5-7(a). For linear core materials, (5-21) can be solved simultaneously to find the magnetic fluxes t/tml and t/tm2' The accuracy of the analysis of magnetic circuits through reluctance methods is affected not only by the leakage flux problem and the assignment of median paths, but also by the nonlinear B-H curves of ferromagnetic materials. Nonlinearity, as exhibited in Figure 3-13, requires that the permeability be expressed as afunction of the H field in the core, or ~(H). One cannot find H, on the other hand, until a value of ~ has been assigned to the circuit (or values of ~ to its branches). Iterative processes are frequently successful in such problems. Thus, if a trial value of magnetic flux is assumed for the
(Choice of median paths corresponding to Jl'h Jl'2, ~3)
(a)
V-=-
(b)
FIGURE 5-7. Two-mesh magnetic circuits and their electric circuit analogs. (a) A !w{Hnesh magnetic circuit and its electric circuit analog. (b) A variation of (a).
5-4 VECTOR MAGNETIC POTENTIAL
269
:91
circuit, the value of Il may be obtained; this result can then be used to determine a new value of magnetic flux. This process is repeated until the desired accuracy of the answer is obtained.
5·4 VECTOR MAGNETIC POTENTIAL Section 4-5 showed how the irrotational property (4-2) of the static E field permits expressing E as the gradient of some auxiliary scalar potential function
B=VxA
(5-22)
in view of the vector identity (19) in Table 2-2, V' (V x A) O. The function A defined by (5-22) is called the veclor magnetic potential field. The vector magnetic potential A is related to steady current density sources J responsible for the field B as follows. In a static magnetic field problem, the relation (5-2), V x H J, is satisfied by the H field. It is also written
VxB
IlJ
(5-23)
fla r (
(b; th
for a region in which Il is constant; substituting (5-22) for B into (5-23) yields V
x
(V X A)
= IlJ
(5-24)
e(
ce This vector differential equation is simplified by use of the vector identity (2-88a) I
V x (V x A)
2
V(V' A) - V A
(5-25)
To assure the uniqueness of the potential A, both its curl and divergence must be specified. The curl is given by (5-22), and div A appearing in (5-25) has not yet been assigned. Assuming V . A = 0 does not conflict with any prior assumption, permitting V x (V X A) in (5-24) to be replaced with -V2A to yield
~d
,er nn al
tit
(5-26)
This result, sometimes called the vector Poisson equation because of its similarity to (4-67), is an inhomogeneous, linear diflerential equation relating A to its sources J, with Il a constant in the region in question. The virtue of (5-26) lies in the availability of several methods for finding its solutions, among which are the method of separation of variables, and an integration approach described in the next section.
-5
270
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
5·5 AN INTEGRAL SOLUTION FOR A IN FREE SPACE: BIOT-sAVART LAW
An integral solution of (5-26) can be inferred as follows, assuming an unbounded region of free space (It = Ito). In cartesian coordinates, the left side of (5-26) is written, using (2-83),
whence (5-26) becomes the three scalar differential equations ( 5-27) Each of the latter is analogous to the Poisson equation (4-67)
Pv E
the integral solution of which, in unbounded free space (E charge of density Pv, has been shown to be (4-35a)
[4-6 7 1 EO) containing a static
[4-35a]
There/ore, the analogous solutions of the three scalar differential equations (5-27) in free space must he .
Adding these three integrals vectorially yields the desired integral solution of (5-26)
(5-28a)
The meaning of R in (5-28a) is the same as in (4-35a); it denotes the distance from the source point P' to the field point P at which A is to be found. Once the A has been obtained by means of (5-28a), the corresponding B field is ohtained from the curl of A, using (5-22). The geometry of a system with current sources of density J producing the vector magnetic potential A given by (5-28a) is shown in Figure 5-8. Note that the integrand
5-5 AN INTEGRAL SOLUTION FOR A IN FREE SPACE: BIOT-SAVART LAW
291
dA =!1Q~d,:,'
dA
47TR
Field
po~P I
271
=~J$ds'
./
47TR
pr \
\
\R \
\ \ \
\
~
~
FIGURE 5-8. Three types of steady current distributions in space. (a) Volume distribution of elements Jdv'. (b) Surface distribution of elements Jsds'. (e) Line distribution of elements
J dv'
-t
I dt".
or (5-28a) is a differential dA given by
tI-om which it is seen that the current source J dv' at the typical source point P' (U'l' u~, u~) produces, at any fixed field point P, a vector contribution dA parallel to the element J dv'. Moreover, the magnitude of its influence at P is inversely proportional to the distance R. These relationships are depicted in Figure 5-8(a). In case of either a surface current (a current sheet) or a line current,! as noted in Figures 5-8(b) and (el, (5-28a) reduces to the following surface and line integral
A(u
u 1,
2,
u) 3
-
r floJs( U'l' u~, 113) ds' 4nR
Js'
r flol dt' Jt
4nR
(5-28b)
Hal r 0'
(b) tht
eo cel rg) b) d
(5-28c)
I n practice, steady surface and line currents are approximated by physical currents flowing in thin sheet conductors or thin wires. The vector magnetic potential results (5-28a,b,c) deserve comparison with the analogous results (4-35a,b,c) for the scalar electric potential fields of static charge distributions. a: Ita
EXAMPLE 5·4. Find the vector magnetic potential in the plane bisecting a straight piece ofthin wire of tinite length 2L in free space, assuming a direct current J as in Figure 5-9. Find B from A. lThe line element of current is shown in Fignre 5-8( c), enlarged into the volume element J dll' atJ dC' tis' (] ds') (at dt') , which becomes just I dt' if the product] ds' denotes the finite current I in the line source.
)0
272
STATIC AND QUASi-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS : (z') z' =L
I
~Idt' =:
azldz'
Source point P'(O.O.z')
(p)
I z'=: -L,
, I
FIGURE 5-9. Geometry of a thin wire carrying a steady current I.
The fixed field point is on the plane z = 0 at pep, 0, 0). The typical current source element at 0, z') is I dt' = azI dz', and R from P' to Pis R = ~ p2 + (Z')2, putting the line integral (5-28c) in the form
reo,
A ( p0 , ,0 )-
i
L
z'=-L
_. floaJdz' Tz 4nvp
The unit vector a z has the same direction at all
+
(z')
2
r, yielding at P
(5-29) One finds B at P using (5-22) in circular cylindrical coordinates ap p
B=VxA= 8 8p
0
a",
az
p
0
0
0
Az
flo I
-a
=a - -
'" 8p
L
(5-30)
'" 2np
For p «L, (5-30) simplifies to flo I 2np
B=--a
1>
(5-31)
a result very nearly correct when near a finite-length wire, or correct at any p distance for an infinitely long wire. In Example 1-13 (5-31) agrees with (1-64).
EXAMPLE 5·5. Find the A and B fields of a thin wire loop of radius a and carrying a steady current I, as in Figure 5-10(a). Make approximations to provide valid answers at large distances from the loop (assume a « r).
5-5 AN INTEGRAL SOLUTION FOR A IN FREE SPACE: BIOT-SAVART LAW
273 291
I dtz'
I (y)
dA= dA l+ dA z
Field point P
dA
R
t Source point
P' (y)
(b)
(a)
FIGURE 5-10. Circular loop, finding the static magnetic field at P. use of symmetry to obtain fields at P.
the spherical coordinate geometry adopted for Circular loop carrying a current I. (b) Making
Without detracting from the generality, the field point P can be located directly above the y-axis as shown in Figure 5-10(b). The A field at P is given by (5-28c), in which f dt' = aq,fad(f/. The variable direction of aq, in the integrand is handled by pairing the eflcets of the current clements 1 dt l and f dt~ at the symmetrical locations about the y-axis in Figure 5-IO(b). From the geometry, 1dt'l = aq,fa d4>'
ax sin
f dt~ = (- ax sin
4>' -
a y cos
flat r 01
4>' + a y cos 4>') fa d4>'
(b) ,
4>') 1a d4>'
(1)
the' e oj
to provide a cancellation of the y components of the potential contributions of the pair of clements at P, leaving a net dA at P that is - x directed. Thus (5-28c) becomes (2) From the law of cosines applied to the triangle POP' in the figure, R2 = a2 + r2 2ar cos (l = a2 + (2 2ar sin 0 sin (//. If r »a, one can approximate, making use of the binomial theorem,2 R
~
r [ 1 - 2 ;a sin 0 sin
4>' J1
1
2~ r [ I -
;a sin 0 sin
4>' + ...
J
1
~
1
a.
.
--( + -sm esm 4> r2
2From the binomial theorem one may see that, in the expansion of (I
rg)
b) d en' Ill~
an OJ
la) :ll!
a ta
The reciprocal, for small a, is similarly approximated
R
eel,
iO ,
± b)", ifb« 1 then (I ± b)";?; 1 ± nh.
274
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
This puts (2) into the form
2/-lola .1:"/2 4n q,'=
A~--
q, -
n/2
[~r + a sin esin ¢'] sin ¢' d¢'
(3)
The integral of the (sin ¢')jr term is zero, so integrating the second term yields the answer
(5-32) Taking B = V
X
A in spherical coordinates therefore yields
(5-33) if a « r. The duality between the B field (5-33) of a small current-carrying loop and the electric field (4-44) of a small electrostatic dipole is noted. This gives rise to the name magnetic dipole, when reference is made to the field of a small loop earrying a steady current.
Taking the curl of (5-28a) leads to an alternative free-space integral expression for the B field of a static current distribution as follows.
B = V
X
A = V
X
r JicJ(U'l, u~, U3) dv'
Jv
4nR
(5-34)
One may note that the differentiations imposed by the V operator in this expression are with respect to the field point variables (u 1, Uz, U3), whereas the integration is performed within V with respect to the source point variables (U'l' . Thus R is a function of both the source point and field point variables, since R = so (5-34) becomes B
One can write V X
[J/R]
=
r
Jio V x
JV4n
[!J R
dv'
from the vector identity (17) in Table 2-2
The last term is zero because J is a function of only the source point variables; flll'thermore, the factor V (1/R) can be expressed
if aR is a unit vector pointing from P' to P. Thus
5-5 AN INTEGRAL SOLUTION FOR A IN FREE SPACE: BIOT-SAVART LAW
275
n
Field point P
R
(z)
iI
Source point P'
I I
------0----(x) (y) FIGURE 5-11. A volume distribution ofcurreuts, showing the dB contribution ofa typical current element J dv' from the Biot-Savart law.
obtaining (5-35a) This integral for B, expressed directly in terms of the static current distribution J in free space, is known as the Biot-Savart law. It provides an alternative approach for obtaining the magnetic fields of static current distributions in free space. Figure 5-11 shows the geometry relative to (5-35a), depicting a system of steady currents with densities J, and a typical field point P at which B is found by means of (5-35a). The differential contribution dB is given by the integrand of (5-35a)
hi o
b)
tht
~o
~el
meaning that dB contributed at P by J dv' is mutually perpendicular to both the current element vector J and the unit vector aR, as depicted in Figure 5-11. Specializations of the Biot-Savart law to surface or to line currents are readily obtained. Thus, if the volume current of Figure 5-11 is contracted to a thin filament of negligible cross section, putting J dv' --+ I dt' into (5-35a) obtains
rg~
ly 3; en in ar
:c (5-35b)
la
11l
)t;
EXAMPLE 5·6. Usc the Biot-Savart law to find the B field of the thin wire of length 2L and carrying a steady current, as given in Example 5-4. The form (5-35b) of the law is applicable. In the circular cylindrical system as shown in Figure 5-12, Idt' = azIdz', while a R is resolved into components as follows: azz'). With R = .}p2 + (zy, (5-35b) becomes a R = a p sin Ct: - a z cos tt. = Ir 1 (app
5(
'0
276
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
:(z')
£'
TIdf' R
Source point
P'
z'
z'
o ------------:.-:..----P
o
Field point
a -
",,~
I
--p----~~
---------
P
. . . --.,,'\
"',
P
-£ ,
-£ FIGURE 5-12. Geometry of'the straight wire of length 2L, using the Biot-Savart law to find B.
and integrating obtains
(5-36) Close to a wire of finite length (p« L), or for an infinitely long wire, (5-36) becomes B
(5-37)
results that agree with those of Example 5-4.
5-6 QUASI-STATIC ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS In previous sections of this chapter, only purely stalic magnetic fields, associated with steady current distributions, were considered. Such fields are required to satisfy the Maxwell integral laws (5-4) and (5-5) for all closed surfaGes or lines in the regions in question, or equivalently the differential laws (5-1) and (5-2) for all points in the regions. The boundary conditions, also to be satisfied at all interfaces, are (5-8) and (5-9). If the current sources are generalized to the time-varying case, their fields are then no longer purely magnetic but become electromagnetic, governed by all four Maxwell equations, (3-24), (3-48), (3-59), and (3-77), with the boundary conditions embracing the relations (3-42), (3-50), (3-70), and (3-79). For current sources that vary slowly in time, however, approximate methods, termed quasi-static, may sometimes be employed to advantage. An instance has already been given in Example 1-16. Quasi-static field solutions can be termed first-order solutions, because they do not satisfy Maxwell's equations exactly except in the zero frequency limit. Another view, bctter appreciated in Chapter 11 on radiation and antennas, is that the dimcnsions of the current-carrying system must be small compared with the wavelength AO in free space 3 if the system is to be amenable to a quasi-static method of attack. This 3Suppose one assumes that a device such as a coil or capacitor should not exceed 0.01,1,0 in its maximum dimension, adopted as a criterion for sufficient smallness to enable employing quasi-static analysis in the description of its fields. Operation of the device at a frequency of 100 MHz implies that its size should then not exceed 0.03 ill (3 em), since ,1,0 = 3 m at this frequency.
5-7 OPEN-CIRCUIT INDUCED VOLTAGE
277
91
constraint is equivalent to ignoring the finite velocity of propagation of the field from the sources to the nearby field points of interest, amounting to ignoring field radiation effects. A more sophisticated approach to quasi-static field solutions, using an appropriate power series representation of the fields, is described elsewhere. 4 The quasistatic approach to field problems is sometimes the only method that provides ready solutions to an otherwise difficult boundary-value problem. It has applications in the discussion of the voltages induced in stationary or moving coils immersed in magnetic fields that mayor may not be varying in time, as well as in the development of circuit theory, particularly regarding concepts of self- and mu tual inductance, to be discussed in subsequent sections.
EXAMPLE 5·7. Demonstrate that the approximate quasi-static fields of the long solenoid of Example 1-18 obey the Maxwell's equations (3-59) and (3-77) exactly only in the static field limit (}J -,> O. The quasi-static Band E fields inside the solenoid were found to be
wpBo E(p, t) = -a.,--cos wt
B(l) = azB o sin wt
2
Testing whether these fields satisfy (3-77), V ~ p
VxE=
a ap
0
X
a.,
az
0
0
pE.,
0
E =
(1)
-aB/at, one finds
p =
-azwB o cos wt
(2)
'!at oj
revealing that Band E of (I) do indeed satisfy (3-77). This is to be expected, because E was originally obtained using the integral form of (3-77), but Maxwell's equation (3-59), reducing to V x H = aD/at within the solenoid, is not satisfied by (I). This is evident on obtaining V X H = V x (B/Ilo) = 0, since B of (I) is independent of position inside the solenoid; whereas aD/at becomes
b), the ~
oj
:ell rg) b) j "
en'
a vanishing result only if w -> O. Thus (3-59) is satisfied only in the static field limit, though an approximate equality prevails if w is sufficiently small.
in~
an o la'
5·7 OPEN·CIRCUIT INDUCED VOLTAGE The transformer makes use of Faraday's law (3-77) to couple electromagnetic energy from one electric circuit to another through the time-varying magnetic field. Typical physical arrangements are diagramed in Figure 5-13. In (a) is shown the configuration of Figure 1-25(b): a primary coil consisting of a long solenoid, encircled by a secondary coil. Single-turn secondary coils are shown for simplicity; many turns are commonly
53
4See R. M. Fano, L. J. Chu, and R. B. Adler. Electroma.gnetic Fields, Energy and Forces. New York: Wiley, 1960, p. 221 If.
or
278
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS B flux
B flux
B flux
Primary Secondary
(!Lo)
8;" Bj :' ':3 :3
~C-~;~
: ttttttt: I I ; I ! 11
1111111
(c)
(b)
(a)
FIGURE 5-13. Typical transformer configurations. (al Primary coil a long solenoid. (b) Short solenoid primary, secondary laterally displaced. (c) Gonfiguration of (b) with ferromagnetic core.
used to enhance the induced voltage V(t). A ferromagnetic or a ferrite core can also be used in a magnetic circuit arrangement as in f'igure 5-l3(c), to augmentsubstantially the magnetic flux intercepted by the secondary coil. The voltage V(t) developed at an open-circuit gap in the secondary coil 5 of a transformer is shown to be V(t)
dl/l m
--V dt
(5-38)
in which l/I m denotes the magnetic flux intercepted by the surface S bounded by the secondary winding. Suppose the coil shown in Figure 5-14(a) carries a time-varying current 1(/). In the surrounding region, the accompanying magnetic field B(Ut, U2, U3, t) induces an azimuthally directed, time-varying E field as described in Example 1-18 and depicted in the cross-sectional view of Figure 5-14(b). The secondary coil is shaped such that Hux orB passes through the surface S bounded by the coiL This assures the alignment of the conductor with the induced E field such that the free electrons in the conductor are urged by the E field forces to move along the conductor as noted in Figure 5-14(c). Thus an excess of electron charge accumulates at one end of the wire, while a dearth of electrons (a positive charge) is established at the other, producing about the gap another electric field denoted by Eo. Then the total E field about the system becomes E = El + Eo. Faraday's law (3-78) written about the closed path including the secondary coil and its gap thus becomes
J. E. dt == Jrconductor Yt
(E t
+ Eo)
. dt
+ Jrgap
(EI
+ Eo)
. dt =
dl/l m dt
(5-39)
The relationship between the total electric field El + Eo along the conductor and the current density J within it is given by (3-7), bccoming J = a(El + Eo) along the coil. SIt should be borne in mind that the designation secondary coil is arhitrary; either coil ora transformer may be designated as the primary coil, with the other coil taking the name secondary.
5-7 OPEN-CIRCUIT INDUCED VOLTAGE
279
11
B
",
I
~
~~~nductor ~ with gap ;I Eo field of . / displaced charges (b)
(a)
(c)
HGURE 5-14. Development of the open-circuit voltage V(t) ora transfOlmer. Transformer configuration nsed to prove (5-38). (b) Sectional view of E, induced by timevarying B of (a). (c) Showing charges displaced by El to produce Eo, canceling total E along wire.
Assuming the coil a jJe~lect conductor, E + Eo must tend toward zero if J is kept to a necessary finite value, making El + Eo = 0 along the conductor portion of the closed path t. This simplifies (5-39) to obtain
A: E' dt = r (El + Eo) . dt ~ Jgap
dt/lm dt
(5-40)
ne
tt
implying that the total E' dt generated by the time-varying magnetic flux t/lm embraced by t appears wholly at the gap. The closed-line integral of (5-40) is sometimes called the induced electromotive force (emf) abou t t, and is denoted by the voltage symbol V(t). Then (5-40) is written
V(t)
==
V ~ E· dt = --dl
dlPm
t
at of I),
(5-41)
of ell ~y
)y a nt :lg re or
ay Thus the induced emf: or equivalently the gap voltage V(l), depends only on the time rate of change of magnetic flux through the surface S bounded by the closed line t described by the wire. The explicit values ofE 1 and Eo are not required to be known on/he path. Furthermore, the wire path t may be distorted, if desired, into any arbitrary shape; for example, a square or a helix, in which case (5-4,1) is still valid. A h~lix shaped (many turn) conductor is useful for increasing the induced voltage across the gap, and it is commonly used in practical transfi)fmer and inductor designs. If in the foregoing discussions a finitely conducting wire had been assumed, the result (5-41) would have been modified only trivially if the conductivity (J were sufficiently large (of the order of 10 7 U/m, as for most good conductors).
llg a~
:a'
0: 3'
280
STATIC AND QUASI.STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
Long solenoid
(J turn/m)
FIGURE 5-15. Showing open-circuit coils ( and (' and the induced voltages Vet) obtained from the time-varying t/lm.
EXAMPLE 5·8. A thin wire is bent into a cirele of radius b and placed with its axis concentric with that of the solenoid in Example 1-16. Find Vet) induced across a small gap left in the conductor, for the two cases of Figure 5-15: (al b > a and (b) b < a. Include the polarity of Vet) in the answers. (a) If b > a, (5-41) combined with (1-67) yields, for the solenoid current 10 sin
Vet) =
-~ r B . ds = dt Js
d dt
r[
Js a z
llon10 sin d
wt,
wt] • (azds)
b>a
( 5-42)
since Ssds = na 2 • The polarity of Vet) is found by use of a right-hand-rule interpretation of the induced voltage law (5-41). Assuming, at a given t, that t/Jm through t is increasing in the positive z sense in Figure 5-15, aligning the thumb of the right hand in that direction points the fingers toward the terminal P2 at the gap, which at that moment is the positive terminal. The presence of the negative sign in the answer (5-42), however, requires that the true polarity of Vet) becomes the opposite of the indicated polarity in Figure 5-15, at that instant. (b) If b < a, the surface S' bounded by the wire t' is smaller than the solenoid cross section; (5-41) then becomes
Vet) =
-~ r B· ds = dt Js'
b
(5-43)
5-8 MOTIONAL ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE AND VOLTAGE The Faraday law (3-78) provides the connection between the time-varying magnetic flux t/lm passing through a surface S and its induced E field. It states that the closed-line integral ofE over the closed path t bounding S exactly equals the time rate of change of the magnetic flux through S, or
~E' dt =
dt/lm dt
[3-78]
5-8 MOTIONAL ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE AND VOLTAGE
BI~
281
1
dt
,~~ (b)
(a)
FIGURE 5-16. A closed line t moving in spacc with a velocity'/} in the presence ofa time-varying B field. (a) A moving contour t in the presence ofa time-varying B field. (b) The contour t shown at the time t and t + dt.
In (3-78), the closed-line integral ofE' dt about t, termed the circulation ofE about the closed path, has also come to be known as the induced electromotive force, or just emf, produced by the time-varying magnetic field through S6. In the present section, the emf induced by a motion of the path t relative to the frame of reference of the magnetic field is discussed. Faraday's law (3-78) can conveniently be resolved into two terms on its right side, accounting for the induced emf's about t produced (a) by the time variation of the B field over the surface bounded by t and (b) by the relative motion of the closed path t with respect to the coordinate frame of reference of the B field, as shown in Figure 5-16(a). This form of the law, useful in the analysis of moving-coil devices such as generators, motors, and d' Arsonval type instruments, is developed in the following. If, as in the previous section, the closed path t in Faraday's law (3-78) is chosen to coincide with a conductive wire path immersed in a steady magnetic field, but the conductor is now moving with the velocity v (not necessarily constant about t), then the free charges q available within the conductor would be subjected to the Lorentz forces F B = qv X B given by (1-52a) in Chapter 1. The quantity v X B, having from (1-52a) the units of force per charge, is evidently a motional electricjield, Em, defined by
at of
I) , he of ell gy
by a nt ng
vxB The free conduction charges urged in the conductor by this electric field v X B will establish the voltage difference V(t) at a gap left in the conductive path t and produce current flow on closing the circuit; it is given by
V(t)
=
1, Em . df = 1, (v X B) . df
1
Je
(5-44a)
If the moving conductor were immersed in a time-varying magnetic field, then the added emf due to the time-varying magnetic field through the surface S bounded by the circuit t would be required. This emf, accountable only to the time-varying B(t)
f
6Elcctromotive force (emf), E· dt, obviously does not have the units of force, but rather volts, or joules per coulomb (work per unit charge about t). For this reason, the word eleclrornotance has been suggested as an improved term for emf. Becanse it is widely used, however, emf is the term employed in this text.
,rt' OJ
a) n~
a:
ta 10
282
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
field, has been given by (5-41)
dljlm dt
-~ dt
• ds r B· ds _Jsr aB at
Js
Adding the latter to (5-44a) thus obtains the desired total emf V(t) =
1"
E' de = -
r aB. ds + 1" x B) . de (v
Js at
(5-44b)
accounting {or two eontributions to the induced emf as follows
"" for the induced emf about 1. The first term of the right side of (5-44b) accounts t provided by the time rate of change of the B field integrated over the surface S bounded by t. 2. The second term yields the additional induced emf arising from the motion of the path t relative to the coordinate fi-ame of reference in which B is specified. If t is
stationa~y
in space (v
0), (5-44b) reduces to
rtJ. E . dt = _ Jsr aBat • ds V
t
stationary
(5-44c)
Suppose that a wire loop t is immersed in a steady magnetic field, but t is moving in space. Then (5-44b) becomes
x B)' dtV
Static B
(5-44d)
The correct polarities of the contributions to the voltage Vet) appearing at the gap of a wire contour can be grasped from Figure 5-17, involving two cases
A. In (a) of Figure 5-17, the polarity ofthe induced gap voltage Vet) obtained from the surface integral (5-44c) of the time-varying magnetic field is desired. The positively directed ds is chosen on that side of the open surface from which the positive B field emerges. On aligning the thumb of the right hand with the positive ds (or B) sense, the fingers will point toward the positive terminal of the gap voltage V(t).
CASE
B. In Figure 5-17 (b), the polarity of the gap voltage obtained from the motionalline integral (5-44d) is desired. For illustrative purposes, the wire contour t in that figure is assumed to be shrinking in size while immersed in a steady B-field (directed toward the observer as shown). If the line integration sense is chosen for (5-44d) in the same sense as v x B, the polarity is designated as positive at that gap terminal toward which the integration is being taken (this is the direction in which positive charges will be urged by Em = V X B).
CASE
283
5-8 MOTIONAL ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE AND VOLTAGE
-:1 r.
V(t) = -
B_~ .'
-
Is ~~ ods
---\
B
~--,...
~ (8)
l.(t
~--
ds
+ At)
aB (in time at)
)
--;----
-------r--~
Line integration sense
I I
Line integration sense
I
J vlCB
(b)
(a)
FIGURE 5-17. Conventions relative to Faraday's law. (a) Polarity of V(t) induced by time-varying B, with t stationary. (b) A shrinking wirc contonr, showing scnse of induced field" X B, with B stalic.
A rigorous calculus proof of the motional-emf result (5-44b) can also be obtained directly from the Faraday law (3-78)
r£ E· dt Jt
d dt
r B· ds
Js
(3-78)
fla r (
With the circuit t in motion, both Band ds in the right-hand integral of (3-78) are, in general, functions of time. The time derivative of that integral can be found from a three-dimensional vector extension of the rule of Leibnitz. Assuming the closed path t, as well as the surface S which it bounds, to be moving with velocities v thereon, the time derivative of (3-78) can be expanded into the following general form 7
r
d B. ds dt Js
= ~ (v
X
B) • dt
+
Is .ds + Is (V . B)v . ds 'oB
in which the last integral disappears, in view of the Maxwell relation (3-48), V • B = O. Substituting the resulting expression into (3-78) thus obtains the desired motional form (5-44b) of the Faraday law.
(b tb
e( ce :r~
t
l
~d
rei
rll a :s m:
ti EXAMPLE 5-9. A rigid, rectangular conducting loop with the dimensions a and b is located between the poles of a permanent magnet as shown. Let B = azB o , constant as shown over the left portion of the loop, and assume the loop is pulled to the right at a constant velocity v a x1-'o. Find (a) the emf induced around the loop, (h) the direction of the current caused to flow in the loop, (c) the force on the wire resulting from the current flow, and (d) the magnitude and polarity of the open-circuit voltage V(t) appearing at a gap in the wire at P shown.
1,
to
y,
7See S. W. Maley, "Differentiation of Line, Surface and Volume Integrals," Scientific Report 60, Electromagnetics Laboratory, University of Colorado at Bonlder, March, 1981.
284
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
(y) I I I
Region of a constant magnetic field /--i--.t' B = azBo l ; / 0 0 ir~0~"",,===='i1 (y)
I
i
/
{0
0
0
0
10
0
0
....
\0
0
0
0
0
0
'\.
I
P1lb
Positive integration sense of fE-de
~
0 \
J
01
P
~==;z!/===i:I=i=:==r:!J- --- - 7;)
' ..... --.a...-El/
Gap
Conductor
(a)
(b)
EXAMPLE 5-9. (a) Moving wire loop in a constant magnetic fielfl'. (b) Geometry showing assumed line-integration sense.
(a) The sense of the line integration is assumed counterclockwise looking from the front, as in (b) of the accompanying figure. The emf induced about the loop is found by use of (5-44d),
A:.
;Yt(t)
On P 1 (v
X
D) . dt
[(axvol
E' dt X
A:. jj(t)
(v x B) . dt
(azB o)]' aydy = -voBody, obtaining
A:. E· dt = Soy~1J (-'!JoB o ) dy = voBob
Ye(t)
(I)
(b) The positive sign of (1) denotes that the induced emf about t is in the same sense (counterclockwise) as the direction of integration. The result (1) therefore causes a current to flow in the same direction. (e) The force acting on the wire carrying the current I immersed in the field D is obtainable from (1-52a), FB = q(v x D). The force on a differential charge dq = Pv dv being dF B = dq(v X D), and with pvv of (1-50a) the current density J in the wire, one obtains dF B =
The product becomes
J dv
J
x Ddv
(5-45a)
defines a volume current element I dt in a thin wire, so (5-45a)
dF B
Idt x B
(5-45b)
Integrating (5-45 b) over the length OP 1 of the wire obtains the total force (2)
in which the integration in the direction of the current produces the proper vector sense of the force. F B is a force to the left in the figure, opposing the motion of the wire. (d) A small gap at P in the wire renders the loop open-circuited, reducing I to zero and yielding Vet) = E . dt = voBob across the gap. The polarity is determined by the direction of v X D, directed around the loop toward the positive terminal of the gap as in (b) of the figure.
ft
5-8 MOTIONAL ELECTROMOTIVE FORCE AND VOLTAGE
285
1
EXAMPLE 5-10. A small open wire loop of radius a in air is located in the y-z plane as shown in (a), immersed in a plane wave composed of the fields E:
t) = - E~ sin (rot - Poz)
(I)
E+
H; (z, t) =
m
sin (rot - (1oz)
(2)
tlo
Assume a « Ao. Find V(t) induccd at the loop gap. The gap voltage is obtained from (5-44c) because the loop is stationary. Using B = flo" and (2) obtains
aB = -a [axfloE~ - - - sin (rot at at tlo
-
Paz)
J
floroE~
= ax - - - cos (rot - PoZ)
tlo
With a « Ao, the coil occupies essentially the position past, so (5-Hc) yields fl roE+ fs [ ax -"~ cos (rot -
=-
V(t)
PoZ)
1
tlo
0 on the plane wave moving
Z =
• ax ds
-
2
roE+ na = ___ m_ _ cos rot
(3)
=0
IfE~ = 100 flVjm,f = I MHz, and a = I m (satisfying the criterion a« A), the induced voltage becomes V(t) = 396 cos rot flV. The five-turn coil shown in (h) provides a gap voltage five times that of (a), in view of the structure of the surface S bounded by the
B or H hnes\
ds = 8 xds
'¥
Gap voltage
V (t)
~~t'-"" ~ ~F'I-t-I. S)I
Loop t
I~
~
/Integratlon sense of
ftE.df
(z)
(a)
B lines
t
\I~'\~~ ~-~\~_-I -J--!::::-~ ±l-¢il~ /I
--B lines
j
;t-:----
Ga~ (b)
'\
\
"0
~~--l ____ I
o-
I
/
I
s
\~-~I
\I
~S X-~Ga~
0
19 lS
al
}) \)
(c)
EXAMPLE 5-10. (a) Loop immersed in a field. (b) Five-turn coil immersed in a time-varying field. (e) Effect of spreading the turns; fewer B lines intercept S.
·k
286
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
wire contour t, while from (e), the effect of opening the structure is to reduce cepting 51, reducing Vet) accordingly.
l/Im
inter-
5·9 INDUCED emf FROM TIME-VARYING VECTOR MAGNETIC POTENTIAL The emf induced about a closed path t linking a time-varying magnetic flux I/Im can also be expressed in terms of the vector magnetic potential A developed in Section 5-4. This is accomplished by use of (5-22), B = V x A, to permit writing Faraday's law (3-78) as follows
rh
:Yt
f
E. dt
f
d (V x A)' ds dt s
B· ds d dt s
_~rh A. dt
:Yt
dtV
(5-46a)
on applying Stokes's theorem (2-56) to obtain the last result. [f t is stationary (motional emf is absent), (5-46a) is written simply
rh
~t
E . dt = -
rh aA . dt ':Yt at
V
Stationary path t
One can see from (5-46a) that the flux through the path
./,
'I'm
=
f B . ds S
=
'rh :Yt A
t
(5-46b)
is expressed two ways
. dt Wb
(5-47)
Thus it follows that a knowledge of the vector magnetic potential A on the closed t determines the magnetic flux I/Im passing through S bounded by t. EXAMPLE 5-11. Find the emf induced about a rectaugular stationary path t in free space, in the plane of two long, parallel wlres carrying the currents 1(t) and -l(t) as shown. Find the emf two ways using the Faraday law expressed (al in terms of the B field and (b) in terms of A. (a) Fronl (1-64), the quasi-static B field exterior to a long, single wire carrying l(t) is B = a",p ol(t)/2np, if p is the normal distance from the wire to the field point. In the present example involving two wires, a cartesian coordinate system is adopted as in (a). At any x on 51 bounded by t, the quasi-static B field due to both wires is the vector sum • B - a
-
J
Po1(t) - - Ilo1(t) -------y [ 2n(x d) 2n(x + d)
The latter into (5-44c) obtains the induced emf about
t (1)
the desired result.
5-9 INDUCED emf FROM TIME-VARYING VECTOR MAGNETIC POTENTlAL
I(z)
i(t)
Closed
r __ L:1Path t
-i (t)
-i (t)
--=b=~{!)dz: b dx
= 1 coswt A
~
cm +.Vet)
I
1(8) I.: ____ ...JI _ _ __ (x)
~
, -d
291
~~E'df
l{X-~P(X.Z) I
287
=4 em
, 2d = 4 I
(a)
(x)
Wire loop
h
d
2cm
em
(b)
EXAMPLE 5-11. (a) Geometry ora parallel-wire system and a rectangnlar dosed path t. Showing polarity of gap voltage V(l), corresponding to sense of dt integrated about loop.
JE .
(b) To find the induced emf using A, note from Example 5-4 for a 2L that /1o I (t)
A= a
~.. -. z
411:
tn
..}L2
wire of length
+ p2 + L
-'-;==c=c.==c---·-
+-L
The latter is improved by noting that A for p « L is desired. The first two terms of the binomial expansion l')r the square root quantities obtains
flat r of
(b) , the e oj
cell rg) b) d ;;
valid for p « L. For parallel wires, A is the vector sum
'en'
2L A = a)'.o!. [tn _ - tn -'!:.~-J = 211: X- d x+d
a_lloI(t~ tn x + d "211:
X -
m~
an
d
; 0'
With A z-directed, the induced emf by use of (5-46b) becomes
~
jt
E • dt =
-~ ~ . dt
= -
\
jt
Ill! a Ita
at
~~ /10 {[t :-~!!.J jb dz + ot 211: x d x=h Jz~o 'It
/1o~tn 211:
_+__c.~___._.~ (h - d)(h
+ a + d)
[t
n
~~J fO dZ} x - d x=h+a JZ=b
50 (2)
which agrees with (1). Note that the integration has been taken clockwise about to conform to dle assumption in (a) of a positive y-directed ds on S.
')3
t, Dri
288
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
h/2
If the current J(t) = 1 sin wt A flows in the wires, withf= 1000 Hz and d = 2 em, the induced emf (2) becomes
= a= b=
~~ E . dt
- (2n x 10 3 ) cos wt
-17.4 cos wt flY This is also the gap voltage Vet) developed if an open-circuited wire loop replaces with a polarity as in (b).
t,
From (5-46b) for the induced emf about a fixed closed path,
~E'dt
r£ aA. dt
at
~
[5-46b]
one might be inclined to argue, because (5-46b) is true f(Jr all closed paths t, that the electric field can be expressed at any point in the region fi'om equating the integrands; that is,
aA
E=
at
J t is, however, noted that adding an arbitrary function - V to the latter, obtaining E
V
aA
(5-48)
provides an E field that still satisfies (5-46b), in view of the property (2-15), ft(V. Thus (5-48) is in general the correct expression for E in terms of its potential fields A and <1>. The physical meanings of each contribution to E in (5-48) is appreciated on noting, in the time-static limit, that (5-48) reduces to E =
V
a/at
°
(5-49)
Comparison of (5-49) with (4-31) identifies as the scalar potential field established by the free-charges of the system, whether they be volume, surface, or line charges. The potential integral (4-35a) provides this relationship, extended in (5-48) to timevarying charge distributions. Secondly, the A field in (5-48) is connected with the current distributions of the system through the integral (5-28). Summarizing, the total electric field (5-48) is written 8 E
Eo
~--.,~---'
Due to charges ~
E
V
+
E]
-----~------
Due to time-varying currents
aA
(5-50)
8From Section 5-7, one may observe that the notations Eo and E t with the meanings defined in (5-50) were used in that discussion.
289
290
5-10 VOLTAGE GENERATORS AND KIRCHHOFF'S LAWS
291
R
SWitCh\Q,i g
-
Rg
+ (a)
(b)
FIGURE 5·20. The electrochemical generator connected to an external resistive circuit. (a) Actual circuit and equivalent symbolism. (b) Magnetic flux by I.
I/tm generated
no current is delivered, the electrolyte is an equipotential region noted by the flat central plateau in the potential diagram, with no E field inside it. The behavior of the electrochemical system is thus equivalent to the lower diagram of Figure 5.19(b), a series pair of charge double layers maintained by the chemical reactions at the electrode-electrolyte interfaces. 1o To maintain Vg , energy is supplied at the expense of one or more of the materials comprising the celL When they are used up, the cell might be restored by replacing the materials, or in some instances by applying energi externally to reconvert them to their original forms. A cell that must be restored by' adding new materials is called a primary cell; it is not rechargeable, A cell is called a secondary or a storage cell if it can be rejuvenated by externally driving the current backward through the cell to reverse the electrolytic action that took place during discharge. The reactants as well as the products of the electrochemical reactions are in general gaseous, liquid, or solid. They can be stored in one or both electrodes or in the electrolyte as the reaction proceeds, or, as in the case of fuel cells, they may be removed continuously. When a cell is connected to a resistive loop as in Figure 5-l9(c), the resulting current is predictable fi'om a Kirchhoff voltage law, derived from field theory, as described in Figure 5-20( a) to emphasize the role of the external conductor. The total E field, at any field point either inside or outside the conductor or cell, obeys (5-50) V
oA
at
10I,'or details of the chemical reactions, see Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 2nd ed., Vol. 3. New York: Intersciencc, 1964.
292
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
field
The
system (5-54)
in which is the electric field associated with the current flow in both the conwhereas Eg is the electric field within the cell, present dueting wirc and tlw interfaces whether or not current flows, as depicted in at the and (5-54)
aA the closed path of Figure
Now
+ electrodes)
obtains
aA . dt
J
i at t
(J
fielr! Eg exists only inside the the first term of open-circuit voltage, - V g • with the last integral of
in which the
, to
' aA J a . tit t
I
d dt
f A.dt
Jt
d f B. ds dt Js
dt
(5-57)
Then
voltage expression {()r the
whieh can be rearranged illto the Kirchhoff circui t of Figure 5-20
(R +R)I+ d!/lm dt
9
The term d!/l",/dt is the time-varying ~I m linking t region is magnetically thus, ifJ m OC I. l-'he nr,o)""W' designated L as
voltage generated about the circuit t by the called the self-flux of the circuit). If the surrounding the self-flux is proportional to the current producing it; constant, called the self-inductance of the circuit, is
!/1m = to
(5-58)
(5-59)
LIWb
a definition irw the seH:inductance
I~ in which
!/1m denotes
!/1m
the flux linked
I
Wh/A
or
the circuit.
H
(5-60)
S-IO VOLTAGE GENERATORS AND KIRCHHOFF'S LAWS
293
RI
sr~ R 1-I + Rg
+ -=-Vg
M
~
~
FIGURE 5-21. Series electric circuit and models. (a) The physical de circuit. (Ii) Circuit model depicting voltage terms of (5-61). (c) Circuit model using inductance symbol L
With (5-59) inserted into (5-58), the Kirchhoff voltage expression for the circuit of Figure 5-20 is written Vg = (R + Rg)I + d(LI)jdt, and if L is a constant (independent of time), one obtains the Kirchhoff voltage law
dI
Vg = (R + Rg)I + L - V dt
(5-61 )
The transient and de (steady state) solutions of this circuit differential equation are well-known and are omitted here. A further discussion of the self-inductance parameter L, from the energy point of view, is discussed in the next section. The Kirchhoff equation (5-61) leads to the circuit model shown in Figure 5-21. The effects of a time-changing magnetic flux linking the circuit, as noted in (a) of the figure, is to produce a back voltage term, dt/l"jdt, seen from its polarity markings in (b) to oppose any tendency for the current to change. The circuit convention representing this phenomenon is the lumped-inductance element L of Figure 5-21(c), across which the back voltage L dljdt is imagined to be generated.
B. The Electromechanical Generator Another example of a generator is the electromechanical energy converter, or rotating machine. Its emf is derived from a magnetic flux linked by the machine windings, a flux that, in one version of such machines, becomes time-varying by virtue of the motion of the conductor windings relative to a static magnetic field. A generic model is diagramed in Figure 5-22(a). The magnetic flux is obtained from a permanent magnet or a field winding as shown. A cylindrical iron armature forming part of the magnetic circuit carries a winding that intercepts magnetic flux when the armature is rotated. The purpose of the armature is to provide physical support for the winding and to decrease the reluctance of the magnetic circuit by leaving only a small air gap, thereby enhancing the magnetic flux intercepted by the armature winding. A singleloop winding is illustrated for simplicity, although practical machines use many turns
-
294
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FlELDS
Winding contour t (one turn)
(a)
(bJ
(e)
FIGURE 5-22. The simple electromechanical energy convertor (generator). (a) Simplc generator showing field and armature windings. (b) Enhancement of air gap using armature slots. (c) Voltage-inducing effect of armature-winding motion.
distributed about the armature to increase the induced emf. The wires are usually in slots, as noted in Figure 5-22 (b), to lessen the eftective air gap even more and reduce the mechanical forces on the armature conductors through a transference of the forces to the core materiaL The armature iron is also laminated to reduce eddy current losses . (see Figure 3-14). If the armature of the generator is left open-circuited and rotated with an angular speed w rad/sec, the gap voltage V(t) is obtained from (5-44d) V(t)
[5-44dl
as seen hom details in Figure 5-22(c). Thus, a radially directed magnetic field of constant value Bo imposed on a single-turn coil of radius a and length d produces an open-circuit voltage V 2Bo daw V, as long as the rotating coil is immersed in a constant magnetic field. The polarity is shown in Figure 5-22(c), determining the direction of the current in an externally connected load. If the voltage were taken oft' slip rings, the waveform of V would approximate a square wave as the sides of the coil are moved from the B field of one pole of the stator into the reversed magnetic flux lines of the other pole, A proper shaping of the poles, to make the air-gap width variable with the angular position of the armature winding, could produce an essentially sinusoidal voltage V(t), making a sinusoidal alternator of the machine. Finally, the use of an interrupted contactor (commutator) instead of the slip-ring arrangement produces a rectified or unilateral output voltage polarity, to yield a direct current machine. An analysis of the induced emf of such machines is left to appropriate books on the subject. 11 If the output terminals of an electromechanical energy convertor are connected to an external circuit, the resulting current is influenced not only by the external IlFor example, see G, J. Thaler, and M. L. Wilcox. Electric Machines: Dynamics and Stead} State. New York: Wiley, 1966.
5-10 VOLTAGE GENERATORS AND KlRCHHOFF'S LAWS
295
circuit, but also by the reactions of the armature winding itself. One of these reaetions is the back torque that must be supplied by the motor driving the generator to keep the latter at the desired speed. Because of the presence of iron in both the field and the armature structures, the forees and torques developed between the armature and the stator are best expressed in terms ofthe changes taking place in the system magnetic energies with rotation. An interpretation is developed in Section 5-13 dealing with virtual forces. Another important reaction to current flow in the generator is the effect of the armature-winding inductance. The linking of the winding current with the self-flux produced by that current yields an opposition to changes in current with time resulting from the self-voltage generated by the changing self·flux, a phenomenon already observed relative to the circuit of Figure 5-20. In this way, an armature self-inductance can be defined as in (5-60) (5-62)
,
expressed as the ratio of the self-flux produced by the armature current, to the current itself. An equivalent circuit of the armature winding with a connected load is depicted in Figure 5-23, showing the generated voltage V(t) resulting from the rotation of the armature winding in the impressed static B field, the self-inductance La of the armature winding, and a series resistance Ra representing the ohmic winding losses. (Other losses such as iron hysteresis and eddy current losses, as well as rotational wind resistance and bearing friction losses, may be represented in more elaborate equivalent diagrams; they are omitted here.) If the externally connected load has the resistance Rand self-inductance L as developed in relation to the external circuit of Figures 5-20 and 5-21, one can deduce the equivalent circuit of the loaded rotating machine as in Figure 5-23. The Kirchhoff voltage differential equation for this system is evidently
V(t)
= (R + Ra)! + (L + La)
dI dt
(5-63)
with V(t) denoting the machine-generated voltage deduced from the basic expression
(5-44d).
( Armature self-flux y~
I
I
t :::
Load Machine
Impressed B flux (changing linkage with rotation)
Equivalent circuit
FIGURE 5-23. Development 0[' an equivalent circuit of a rotating machine connected to a load.
296
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS E=_V
J and ds elements at source V(t)
FIGURE 5-24. Electric and magnetic field qnantities associated with a cnrrent-carrying circuit.
5-11 MAGNETIC ENERGY AND SELF-INDUCTANCE 12 In this section, the glib assertions of the last section concerning the inductance of a current-carrying circuit are examined from the viewpoint of the energy required by the circuit to supply its heat losses and to build up the magnetic field. The generalized definitions of the self-inductance of a single circuit, and in the next section, the mutual inductance between pairs of circuits, are established in this way. This point of view regards the inductance parameter as the basic criterion of the magnetic field energy, or work done in establishing the magnetic field.
A. Self-Inductance in Terms of A and J Consider the series circuit of Figure 5-24. An external energy source of terminal voltage V(t) is connected to a conductive circuit of arbitrary shape, carrying a current I. It is assumed that the currents form closed paths, that is, the current-continuity relation is (4-22), V' J = O. Strictly speaking, the latter requires that the current be dc, although it is very nearly satisfied up to fairly high frequencies as long as the overall circuit dimensions are not an appreciable fraction of a free-space wavelength. At the higher frequencies, however, the current penetration into the conductor is severely limited by the skin effect, with negligible electromagnetic field penetration occurring at very high frequencies. 13 The work done by the source V(t) in bringing the current up to the value J, expressed in terms of the electric and magnetic fields developed in and around a conductive circuit, leads to the circuit parameters (resistance and inductance) as shown in the following. Observe in Figure 5-24 that the conductive circuit, the interior denoted by v;, , is bounded by S (conductor surface), with endcaps at the gap where the voltage V is impressed. At the gap V is specified by the quasi-static equipotentials = <1>1 and <1>2 at the endcaps such that V <1>1 <1>2. With the current 1 = J . ds delivered by V into the endcap at the positive terminal, and J . ds coming out rif the
f
f
12 If you desire a shorter treatment of self-inductance, studying selected portions of Parts A, C, and D in this section should provide a reasonable background, with emphasis on the important energy and flux-linkage methods for finding L.
13See Appendix B, part A for a discussion of the skin effect.
297
5-11 MAGNETIC ENERGY AND SELF-INDUCTANCE
negative side, the energy supplied by V(t) in the amount V dq = VI dt is written (5-64) The electric field anywhere in the conductor is (5-48)
E
aA
= -V--
(5-65)
at
The latter is given an energy rate interpretation by dotting (5-65) with integrating the result throughout the volume v" of the conductor; thus
J dv
and
f E· J dv = - f (V
Jvc
Jvc
Jvc
at
By the identity (15) in Table 2-2, J' (VJ), since div J = o. With this into the second volume integral and applying the divergence theorem (2-34), one obtains
f E· J dv + f J' aA dv :rs (J) • ds = Jvc Jvc at
_J.
(5-66)
From the continuity of the current flux, only tangential currents appear at the conductor walls in Figure 5-24, except at the gap endcaps. There, <1>1 on one end cap and = <1>2 on the other, reducing the surface integral of (5-66) to just
_J. fs(gap)
(J) • ds == (<1>1 - <1>2) f
JS(gap)
J' ds
= VI
the power delivered by V to the circuit at any instant. The second term of (5-66) is a measure of the irreversible heat energy expended in the volume; its value is 12 R, defining the low-frequency conductor resistance 14 R by (5-67) Inserting the last two expressions into (5-66) obtains
VI = RP
+
i
Vc
aA
J . :;dv vt
but the energy expended by V in the time dt is
VI dt
RI2 dt
+ Ivc J'
(dA) dv
(5-68a)
symbolized (5-68b) l4The question of conductor resistance, defined in terms of the heat generated by it, is examined in ample 7-1.
298
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
By integrating (5-68a) with respect to time, the result (5-69) is obtained, yielding the work done by V in bringing the circuit to its final state. The last term is interpreted as the energy Urn expended in establishing the magnetic field (the energy stored in the field)
(5-70)
The interpretation of (5-70) is straightforward. The current density at any point in the conductor is J, with A the vector magnetic potential there. Both J and A are fields, so they are generally dependent on position in v;,. Equation (5-70) states that the energy stored in the magnetic field is the integral of [J~ J . dA] dv throughout the conductor volume, in which S~ J . dA denotes, at any dv, the integral of] dA cos 0 as the potential A there is built up from zero to its final magnitude A. Note that the integrand has the units of joules per cubic meter. For a linear circuit (a linear magnetic environment), A anywhere in the conductor is proportional to the current density J (hence, to the total current J). If the circuit were nonlinear, the relationship between A and the value of J at each volumeelement in the conductor would not be a straight line, but for a linear circuit, the energy expression (5-70) simplifies as in the following. The integration within the brackets of (5-70) entails a buildup in time of the vector magnetic potential from zero to its final value A. For a linear magnetic environment, the vector potential anywhere in Vc is proportional to the densities J therein. Suppose J is built up in a straight-line fashion from zero to its final (quasi-static) value J
Urn =
t Jvr
c
A· J dv J
Linear circuit
FIGURE 5-25. Simultaneous buildup of J and A at a typical volumcelement dv in a conductor, as current is brought from zero to final value I ..
(5-71 )
5-11 MAGNETIC ENERGY AND SELF-INDUCTANCE
299
if the final value (f) superscript notation is dropped. Note that (5-71) is applicable to a linear system only. Like its more general version, (5-70), it expresses the energy expended in establishing the magnetic field, through an integration required to be taken only throughout the conductor volume region possessing the current densities J. The self·inductance of a linear circuit can be defined in terms of the energy (5-71). Tt contains a product of J and A and is thus proportional to /2, whence
(5-72) in which the proportionality constant L is termed the self-inductance of the circuit, expressed in joule per square ampere, or henry. Solving for L thus permits expressing the self-inductance in terms of the magnetic energy as follows
L
2U
I
= ---i'= 2I Jvc r A· J dv H I
(5-73)
assuming the circuit is linear (i.e., immersed in a linear magnetic environment).
*B. Self·lnductance of a Circuit in Free Space For a linear circuit devoid of magnetic materials (e.g., an air core coil or a parallel-wire line), (5-72) and (5-73) can be simplified by 'use of the free-space integral (5-28a) for A [5-28a] The circuit in Figure 5-26 depicts the quantities needed in the evaluation of A at a typical field point P by use ,of (5-28a). Substituting it into (5-72), the magnetic energy
FIGURE 5-26, Circuit in iree space, showing source point P' and field point P relative to energy and self-inductance integrals.
300
STATIC AND QUASI-STATIC MAGNETIC FIELDS
integral (5-71) becomes
which can also be written
U
=.1 m
2
r r
JioJ"
Jvc Jv c
J du' du J
4nR
'
Free space
(5-74)
The result (5-74) is independent of the order of integration, but note the use of the primed current density J' at the source point P' to avoid confusion with J at the field point P. The corresponding self-inductance expression becomes, using (5-72)
(5-75)
:Free space
No explicit use is made here of (5-75) in self~inductance calculations. If you are interested in applications of (5-75), consult other sources on this subject. 1s
*C. Self-Inductance from an Integration throughout All Space Another expression for the magnetic energy of a circuit can be obtained from
(5-70) in terms of the Band H fields of the system. The current densities J in the conductor are related to H therein by (5-2) for quasi-static fields: J = V X H. Making use of the vector identity (16) in Table 2-2, V . (F X G) = G· (V X F) F· (V X G), J' dA in (5-70) can be written
J'
(dA)
= (dA) • (V
X
H)
= V' [H
X
(dA)]
V' [H
X
(dA)]
=
+ H· V X + H . dB
(dA)
Inserting this into (5-70) and applying the divergence theorem (2-34) to the first volume integral yields
Urn =
Iv [IOA V, (H dA)JdU + Iv [I: H· dBJdV ~s [I: dA) J. + Iv [I: J X
(H
X
ds
H . dB dv
but the surface integral in the latter vanishes as S is expanded to include all of space, because H and A decrease at least as r- 2 and r- 1 respectively in remote regions, 15For example, see R. S. Elliott, Electrvmagnetics. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1966, p. 309.
5-11 MAGNETIC ENERGY AND SELF-INDUCTANCE
301
whereas surface area is picked up only as r2. Thus the magnetic energy expended in establishing the fields of a quasi-static circuit becomes
(5-76)
As with (5-70), the energy (5-76) is correct whether or not the circuit is linear, although (5-70) requires integration only throughout the conductor volume, whereas (5-76) must be integrated throughout all space to obtain the same result. One can simplify (5-76) if the system is linear, by making use of the fact that (5-76) is analogous in form to (5-70). Since the latter becomes (5-71) for a linear system, one should thus expect (5-76) to yield I
um = 1.2 Jv f B· HdvJ
Linear circuit
(5-77)
The integrand B • H/2, seen to have the units of joules per cubic meter, is called the magnetic energy density in the volume region V. Another expression for the self-inductance of the circuit of Figure 5-24 is obtained by equating (5-77) to the definition (5-72) for L, whence
I
Iv B· Hdv
(5-78)
One can separate (5-77), if desired, into two volume integrations as follows
um = 1.2 JVi f B· H dv + 1.2 JV f
B· H dv
(5-79)
e
attributing the total energy Um to two contributions: one associated with the volume i'i in the conductor, plus another outside it. With (5-79) substituted into (5-78), the total inductance is expressed
L
m = -2U 2 - = ?1 1 1-
1 B . H dv + 11 1 B . H dv = L; + Le Vi
-2
V.
(5-80)
The first term, L;, is called the internal se(f-inductance; the remaining integration taken outside the conductor yields the external self-inductance, Le.
EXAMPLE 5·12. Find only the internal self-inductance associated with every length t of a very long straight wire carrying a low-frequency current I.
302
STATIC AND QUASI-STATlC MAGNETIC FIELDS
j
EXAMPLE 5-12
For any length of the single infinitely long wire shown, the energy in the external magnetic field is infinite, a [act revealed on integrating (5-77) for the energy associated with the exterior fields Band H; however, the energy stored within a length t of the conductor is finite. The associated internal inductance is obtained from (5-80) ! I
fVi
B • Hdv
I)
By use of (1-64) for B1> inside the wire (the factor p used in the event of a magnetic conductor), one obtains from (5-81)
Li
1 = -2
I
~ Vi
pH~dll =
I
il' i 2" _
__
z-o 1>-0
J,"_
p-O
p(lp)2 pdpdc/)dz =pt ~ -
4n a
8n
(5-82)
a result independent of the wire radius. A nonmagnetic wire therefore has the internal inductance per unit length, Ldt po/Sn 0.05 pH/m.
t of a long coaxial line with the dimensions shown. Assume uniform current densities in the conductors. The total seH~illductance is obtained using (5-78). The magnetic fidds within and between the conductors, obtained by the methods of Example 5-1, are
EXAMPLE 5·13. Find the total self·inductance of every length
Ip 2na 2 H1>=
H1> =
1
2np
-;Tir(~/-b2) (~ p)
O
It has been seen that expressing Maxwell's equations in complex, time-harmonic form through a time dependence given by the factor eiwt eliminates t from the equations. Wave-guiding systems of uniform cross section, like those in Figure 8-1, permit an additional assumption of z dependence of the fields in accordance with the factor e+l'Z, inasmuch as any length t of the system will influence wave propagation in exactly the
8-1 MAXWELL'S RELATIONS WHEN FIELDS HAVE ei""+Yz DEPENDENCE
411
same manner as any other length t. The time and z dependence is therefore assumed to occur solely in accordance with the factor rl W1 + YZ , in which the - and + signs are identified with the positive z and negative z traveling wave solutions respectively.;. The E and H fields of Maxwell's equations are thus replaced with com/,lex functions {f and :it ofthe transverse coordinates Uj and U2, multiplied by the exponential factor as follows w1 YZ E(Ul' U2, Z, t) is replaced by,g± (UI' U2)rl + H(Ul' U2l
z, t)
wt
is replaced by :it±(Ul' uz)rl +
yZ
(8-1a)
assuming~genen:lized cylindrical coordinates (UlJ uz, z). The superscripts ± on the symbols {f and:Yt' denote the field solutions identified with the positive ~and negative z traveling waves in the waveguide. Once the complex solutions {f±(Ul' uz) and :itt (Ut' U2) are found, a restoration to their real-time form is obtained using
(8-1b) The dielectric region bounded by the waveguide conductors is assumed lossless, making 0 therein, so that Maxwell's equations (3-59) and (3-77) governing the fields in the dielectric are
J
aB
(8-2)
VxE=--
at
\
aD
(8-3)
VxH=-
at
With the replacement of the complex forms of (8-la) into the latter, assurmng m rectangular coordinates ~+
{f- (x,y) :itt (x,y)
v± = ax~x (x,y) + ay&'i (x,y) + az&'z = ax~; (x,y) + ay~: (x,y) + az~i (x,y) ~+
~+
(8-4)
one obtains from (8-2)
a az
a
ax
ay
=
a -± ~+ at La x Yf x + a yYf-y
-11-
r
~+. + a zYf-]e'W/TYZ T
Z
j±rlW1+ yz z
The exponential factors cancel, obtaining the simplified expansion of (8-2)
(8-5)
412
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
These results can be written in the compact form
V'
X
J±
(8-6)
provided one defines a modified-curl operator, V'
ax V'
X
J±
a ;j±x
X,
as follows
ay
az
a
oy +y ~+
!!;
(8-7)
~+
!!:;
You should regard (8-6) as the equivalent of the Maxwell equation (8-2), assuming the exponential t and z dependence of the fields noted in (8-1a). You may note that the operator V' X defined by (8-7) differs from the conventional curl operator V X of (2-52) to the extent of a replacement of a/az with +y, a consequence of the assumption of the z dependence of the fields according to the factor yz In a similar manner, with the substitution o[ (8-Ia) and (8-4), the Maxwell curl equation (8-3) yields the compact result
with the modified-curl operator V' X defined once more by (8-7). In the generalized coordinate system (u l , uz, u 3 ) it is seen that the Maxwell modified-curl relation (8-6), for example, becomes
V'
X
g± ==
al
az
az
hz
h}
h1h z
a
oU l ~±
h1!!l
a auz
+y
-jWp;ie±
(8-9)
h2;j i:
assuming v± tff (Ub uz)
.ie±(Ul' U2)
~±
=
~±
~±
+ az!!z (ul' uz) + az!!z (ul' uz) a 1il't(Ul, U2) + a2£'i:(11 1, uz) + az£';t(ub u2)
a l !!} (u 1 , uz)
(8-10)
Simplifications of the wave equations are also possible when field variations occur according to the [actor e iwt + yz. The simultaneous manipulation of the Maxwell relations (8-2) and (8-3), applicable to a current-free region, has been seen in Section 2-9
_,
'4$,
,~
_==_,_________________
..•
,~_
B-1 MAXWELL'S RELATIONS WHEN FIELDS HAVE el""+Yz DEPENDENCE
413
to lead to the homogeneous vector wave equations
(8-11 )
(8-12)
Using the definition (2-83) of V2 E applicable to the rectangular coordinate system, the vector wave equation (8-11), for example, expands into the three scalar wave equations (8-13a)
(8-13b)
(8-13c)
In the cartesian system, all three scalar wave equations are of identical forms, so their solutions are\)f the same type. From the definition (2-78) of the Laplacian of a scalar function, (8-13a) expands as follows
o
(8-14)
If the substitution of the complex exponential form of Ex, given by (8-1a), is made into (8-14), one obtains, after canceling the exponential factors,
Denoting
1'2
+
0)2 jJE
by the symbol (8-15 )
one may write the scalar wave equation
(8-16a)
414
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
Similar substitutions of
la) into (8-13b) and (8-13c) produce the simplifications (8-l6b)
(8-l6c) Beginning with the vector wave equation (8-12), a procedure identical with the foregoing evidently produces three similar wave equations in terms of the components of :ie±. Any of these six partial differential equations is useful in obtaining wave solutions f(:>r the rectangular hollow waveguide of Figure 8-1 (c), to be discussed in Section 8-3. Relationships pertaining to the mode character oftlle solutions are developed first.
8·2 TE, TM, AND TEM MODE RELATIONSHIPS A study of the expansions of the Maxwell modified-curl relationships (8-6) and (8-8) reveals that, for the TE and the TM modes, you can express the transverse components it-, Ji, ii't-, and ;.,~i explicitly in terms of the x and] derivatives of the longitudinal field components and £1'. These results form a basis for the mode description of the field solutions, relationships established in the following i.n rectangular coordinates. Beginning with the expansions of (8-6) and (8-8) in rectangular coordinates
$;
A,~+
0$;-
~+
--+y$-
oy -
~+
_
ffi+
+Y0 X- -
(8-17a)
y
0$;-
~ ± = -jWII£;'
(8-17b)
(8-17c)
(8-13a)
(3-18b) ~+~+
O£y 0£X. ~+ - - - - - = )WE$-
oX
oy.
(8-13c)
Z
one can see th~at the fiIst two of each of these groups of equations contain derivative terms in only and £;-; the other terms are algebraic. This makes it possible, for exto eliminate :it'i from (8-17b) and (3-18a) and solve for if;, yielding
$;-
(3-19a)
8-2 TE, TM, AND TEM MODE RELATIONSHIPS
in which yields
k; is defined by (8-15). Similarly eliminating 1
Successively eliminating .
.'
and
,.- +
415
and (8-18b)
[aJ± ait±] =+= y _z_ + j(;)/l--~ oy ax
(8-19b)
J;: from the same pairs of relations obtains the fol, . . . . ;+
lowmg ex presslOns for :If;; and :It i :
1 [
:It +- = -,,A
x
.
k;'}(;)E
aJ±z -+ Y ---ait±] z ax
(8-19c)
(8-19d) These results permit fmding the transverse field components ofa rectangular waveguide and are known. They also serve as whenever the longitudinal components a basis fi)r decomposing the fieldAso\utio!ls into classes known as modes, depending on which longitudinal component, or :!It';, is present. The modes of the uniform waveguides of Figure 8-1(b), (e), (d) are defined as
J;
it;
Iff;
it; J;
1. Transverse magnetic (TM) modes, for which = O. 2. Transverse electric (TE) modes, for which = O. 3. Transverse electromagnetic (TEM) modes, for which both
J;: = 0 and it;: = o.
Out of these definitions evolve properties of the modes as follows
it;: = 0,
1. TM Modes (Transverse-Magnetic Waves). With
the TMA mode in a = 0 into equations (8-19) produees the following expressions for the transverse field components in rectangular coordinates.
wav~l.{uide has five eomponents, as noted in Figure 8-2(a). Putting :It;
(8-20a)
(8-20b) TM (8-20c)
A
+
:If;
aJ z k; ax
j(;)E
= -
(8-20d)
in which k; denotes y2 + (;)2/lE . Sinee the factor and (8-20d), their ratio becomes B+
(f)x--
Y
it;: = +- jWE
which means
J; it:
aJi/ax is common to (8-20a)
y jWE
and
Y j(;)E
416
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
Rectangular
Circular
Rectangular
Circular
(b)
(a)
Parallel-wire line
Coaxial line (e)
FIGURE 8-2. Field components of TM. TE, and TEM mopcs in typical waveguides or transmission lines. (a) Field components of 'I'M mode, for which Jf'z O. (b) Field components of TE mode, for which i'z = O. (c) Field components of the dominant TEM mode of two-conductor systems.
Similar results, with changes in signs, are obtained li'om the ratios of (8-20b) to (8-20c); calling YUWE in each case the intrinsic wave impedance ofTM modes, denoted by the symbol1]TM' one produces the four ratios (8-21 )
The use of the latter makes it necessary to ohtain only two of the transverse field components from by means of (8-20); thc remaining two components are available in terms of the impedance ratios (8-21). In the detailed analysis ofTM modes carried out in Section 8-3, it is seen that the propagation constant Y appearing in (8-20a, b) and (8-21) is dependent OIl the waveguide dimcnsions and the wave frequency. Using the modified-curl relations (8-9) and (8-10) and following a procedure similar to the foregoing, modal expressions similar to (8-20) and (8-21), but applicable to waveguides in the circular cylindrical (p, cp, z) or the generalized cylindrical system (111' 112, z) can he found. This is left as an exercise for you. • 2. TE Modes (Transverse-Electric Waves). With = 0, the TE mode has the five components typified in Figure 8-2(b), so that equations (8-19) in rectangular
$:
$;
8-2 TE, TM, AND 'rEM MODE RELATIONSHIPS
417
coordinates (8-22a) . ]WM y
~
+
a,;Yf;
ax
(8-22b) TE
:if± - -l a:if; x - + k2 ax c
(8-22c)
(8-22d) An intrinsic wave impedance
ryTE
is evident from ratios of the latter as follows (8-23)
3. IFM ,\.fades (Transverse-Electromagnetic Waves). This mode, having neither nor ::If z field components, is the d<:!.minant mod~ of transmission lines having at least two conductors. Substituting tf'; = 0 and::lf; = 0 into the four relations (8-19) would appear to force all field components to vanish, thereby reducing the TEM mode to a trivial, nonexistent case. Inspection of the 1enominator k; in these relations reveals the flaw in this argument, for putting f/; = 0 simulta~+ ~ + 2 2 neously as one assumes tf'; = 0 and ::If; = 0 means y + W ME = 0, or
tfj'z
\
y = jW~ME = j{J fad/m
(8-24)
Comparison with (3-88) shows that the transverse field components of the TEM mode comprise a wave phenomenon possessing a phase constant (8-24) identical with that of a uniform plane wave propagating in an unbounded region of parameters tt and E. Substituting (8-24) into either wave impedance relation (8-21) or (8-23) further obtains the intrinsic wave impedance for the TEM mode ryTEM
== ~ = jwJJ;. ]WE
]WE
=
~
~'E
11(0)
Q
(8-25)
Comparing (8-25) with (3-99a) reveals an intrinsic wave impedance identical with that of uniform plane waves in an unbounded region. These similarities of TEMmode characteristics with those of uniform plane waves are appreciated when one realizes that the uniform plane wave is itself TEM. The TEM mode, the dominant mode of energy propagation on two-conductor lines, is of such importance in wave transmission along open-wire or coaxial lines that it is accorded a separate detailed treatment in Chapters 9 and 10. Generally speaking, hollow single-conductor waveguides are capable of propagating 'I'M and TE modes. In Section 8-4 it is shown that the so-called TE 10 mode of the rectangular waveguide is its dominant mode, that is, the mode propagating at the
418
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
lowest frequency in that waveguide. Two-conductor systems such as coaxial lines propagate all three mode types: TEM, TM, and TE, although only the dominant TEM mode is capable of wave propagation down to zero frequency. Signal transmission ir tt\e microwave region (at frequencies of about 1000 MHz and higher) by use of rect,angular waveguides is a practical reality. Because of their intrinsically high pass characteristics, hollow waveguides become physically too large and expensive at frequencies much below this range; at lower frequencies, coaxial lines or open-wire lines may be more practical. A rectangular waveguide designed to operate with its dominant mode at about 10,000 MHz will be shown to require an interior width of about 2.5 cm; at one-hundredth this frequency (100 MHz), the guide width is required to be about 2.5 m if waves are to be propagated and not cut off. Coaxial, two-conductor lines are the obvious choice at such lower frequencies. In microwave transmission, a rectangular waveguide is usually more desirable than one of circular cross section because the asymmetry of the rectangular cross section provides a deliberate control of the polarization of the transmitted mode, of importance when considering the excitation of the line termination (a crystal detector, an antenna, etc.). Circular waveguide is of more limited use, having applications to rotating joints that couple into spinning antenna dishes, to cylindrical resonant cavity frequency meters, and so forth.
8·3 TM MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES An analysis of the TM mode solutions of rectangular hollow waveguides is described in the following. The cross-sectional geometry of Figure 8-3 is adopted, and the following assumptions are made: 1. The hollow rectangnlar conducting pipe is assumed very long (avoiding end effects) and of uniform transverse dimensions a, b as noted in Figure 8-3.
ICY) I
~~~~~~
(x)
"-,,-
(x) FIGURE 8-3. Geometry of a hollow, rectangular waveguide of uniform crosssectional dimensions a, b.
8-3 TM MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
419
2. The dielectric medium filling the pipe has the constant material parameters p., E and is assumed lossless, such that Pv = 0 and J = 0 therein. 3. The waveguide walls are assumed ideal perfect conductors, simplifying the application of the boundary conditions. 4. All field quantities are assumed to vary with z and t solely in accordance with the factor ejwt+YZ, in which the - and + signs are associated with positive z and negative z traveling wave solutions. The sinusoidal angular frequency of the fields is w, determined by the generator frequency. 5. For the TM modes under consideration, = 0, leaving at most five field components in the pipe as noted in Figure 8-3.
if;
Bearing in mind that the field relationships (8-20) and (8-21) are applicable to the TM case, it is convenient to ~egin with the wave equation (8-16c), in terms of the longitudinal field component
iff;
jj2j± z
+
[8-16c)
in which k; = y2 + w 2 P.€. This partial differential equation is to be solved by the standard method of the separation of variables. Thus, assume a solution of the product form
j-; (x,y)
X(x) Y(y)
(8-26)
in which ,¥(x) and Y(y) are, respectively, functions ofx andy only, and in general are complex. Substituting (8-26) back into (8-16c) yields
X"Y + XY" = -kc2 Xl'
,
in which obtains
~rimes denote partial differentiations with respect to x to y. Dividing by Xl' X" 9" , -+-=-p
X
9
<
(8-27)
If the two functions of x andy comprising the left side of (8-27) are to add up to the indicated constant for all values of x and y within the cross section of Figure 8-3, then both those functions must be equal to constants as welL That is, one must have and
k;
(8-28)
k;
and denoting those constants. With (8-28) inserted into (8-27), it is with seen that the interrelationship (8-29) must hold among the constants. The meanings of the so-called separation constants kx and ky are ascertained later from the application of boundary conditions at the walls. A
420
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
Since the two differential equations (8-28) are, respectively, functions of x and)! only, they can be written as the ordinary differential equations and
(8-30)
\
These have the solutions
)
(
X(x) Y(y)
=
+ (;2 sin kxx cos ky)! + (;4 sin kyY
(;1 COS tx
(8-3Ia)
(;3
(8-3lb)
in which (;1 through (;4 are constants of integration (complex, in general), to be evaluated from boundary conditions. The separated solutions (8-31), substituted back into the product expression (8-26), thus yield the desired particular solution of the wave equation (8-16c) as follows (8-32) The complex constants appearing in (8-32) are evaluated from boundary conditions as follows. The component If; of (8-32) is tangential at the {our walls x 0, x = a an~d y = 0, y b noted in Figure 8-3. For perfectly conducting walls the tangential If z just inside the dielectric waveguide region must vanish, so from the continuity relation (3-79) one obtains the boundary conditions
1.
(O,y) = 0
2.
(a,y)
0
3.
0)
0
4.
(x, b)
0
(8-33)
Boundary condition (1) applied to (8-32) yields
0= ((;1)((;3 cos ky)i whence
G\ = 0 if the latter is to
hold for all_y
+ C4 sin kyY) 011
the wall x = O. Then (8-32) becomes
j± z
(8-34)
Applying the boundary condition (2) to (8-34) obtains
which holds for ally on the wall x = a on setting sin kxa = O. The latter is valid only at the zeros of the sine function, so that kxa rnn, in which 1Jl = ± I, ± 2, ± 3, ... , which corresponds to an infinite set of discrete values for kx (hence to an infinite number of particular solutions, or modes) that satisfy the original wave equation. The value rn 0 is omitted because it produces the null, or trivial, solution. The negative A
421
8-3 TM MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
values of m, moreover, add no new solutions to the set, so that one obtains A
kx
=
mn
m
a
i()[
= 1,2,3, ...
t (8-35)
making (3-34) become 'V+
'
Ji;; (x,y)
=
";.
C2
SIn
mn a
m = 1,2,3, . ..
(3-36)
The remaining boundary conditionii. (3) and~(4) of (8-33) are next applied to (8-36); from the similarity of the solutions X(x) and Y(y) appearing in (8-32), together with the resemblance of the boundary conditions (3) and (4) to (1) and (2), one may iufer by analogy with the preceding arguments that applying the boundary conditions and (4) to (8-36) must lead to the results A
and
nn
ky=t;
n = 1,2,3, ...
(8-37)
With these inserted into (8-36), the solution finally becomes ~
~
C2 C4 sin
mn
. nrc x sm - y a b
m, n = 1, 2, 3, ...
{)l:4 this solution.. Replacing (
s~t,
1)4
evidently denotes the complex amplitude of any member of which must include both positive z and negative z traveling waves. by the symbol mn yields
E:
--------------------------------~+
.
mn
. nrc
= Ez-.mn SIl1 a x Sln -b- y
m, n
1,2,3, ...
(8-38£1)
in which £:m1l or E~mn denotes the complex amplitude of any positive z or negative traveling ifz component associated with specific values of the mode numbers m and The solution set (8-38'1) describes the z-directed electric field component of the transverse-magnetic mode with mode integers m, n assigned, so the field component is said to belong to ~he TMmn mode, and assuming that the transverse dimena is the larger (a> b). Solutions (8-38a) satisfying the partial differential equation (8-16c) and the boundary conditions (8-33) are also called the eigerifunctions (proper !bnctiom, or characteristic functions) of 1hat boundary value problem. Examples of the field variations of Iffz predicted by (8-3~a) within the waveguide cross section are depicted in Figure 8-4, which shows how Iffz varies with x andy for two of the modes, TMll and TM z1 . These sketches show that the integers m and n denote the number of half-sinusoids of variations in $z occurring between the guide walls, with $z vanishing at the walls as required by the boundary conditions (8-33). The sketches of Figure 8-4 do not show the complete field configurations of those TMmn modes; the four remaining transverse field components denoted in Figure 8-3
422
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
TMll mode (m 1, n 1)
=
=
TM2l mode (m = 2, n = 1)
I (y) I I
I(y)
I I
FIGURE 8-4, Typic!:,l cross-sectional standing-wave variations ill the longitudinal electric tleld component E, of TMmn modes, for two cases.
are yet to be found. These are obtained by substituting mode relationships (8-20), whence
~+
$:;: (x,y) =
kc
J.
a'
~+
,
=
of (B-38a) into the TM
~+ mn . nn +"2 mn E:;mn cos - x sm - y
[ - ')Imn
= E;- mn cos
~+ (x,y) $;
i'1'
mn. nn x sin - y a h
[+')1"", nn ~+
E:;-mn
-A--'
fj;
"'+
b·'
.
b
a
(8-38b)
J
,mn x cos nn) ! sin a b
mn nn x cos - y a h
= Ey mn sm -
,
~!(x,y)
=
.iWE
[
nn ~+
(8-38c)
'-A--E:;mn k~ b '
J.
sm
mn nn xcos-y a b
~+ . mn rm H;-,mfl SIn a x cos - b y
~ +
£'y(X,y) =
~+ [. ±-A--= ~ $;-
- JWE
mn
I1™mn
kc
a
(B-38d) ~+
E:;'mn
mn. nn J cos-xsm-y b
a
~+ mn rm Hcos a x sin - b ~y V,mn
(8-38e) .
~±
~+
~+
11!e bracketed quantities denote the complex amplItudes Ex,mm Ei,mn, H;:'mn, ~a,!ld Hi,mn of the transverse field components, expressed in terms of the amplitude E:;'mn of the longitudinal component. Note further that the total electric and magnetic fields associated with any TMmn mode are given by (8-4), or the appropriate vector sums
w
fl-3 TM MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
423
of the components (8-38a) through (8-38e) (with the component
z direction
propagation constant y, becomes
2
(8-39b) in which the subscripts mn denote the dependence of Y on the choice of mode integers. Thus Ymn is a function of the wall dimensions a and h, the frequency W, the parameters Jl and E of the dielectric, and the specified mode numbers m, n. The bracketed quantities in the radicand of (3-39b) are both seen to be positive reaL Since the d~fference of these positive quantities is to determine Ymn, it is evident that Ymn becomes a pure 2 real quantity (an attenuation factor IX) if (rmr/a)2 + (nn/b)2 is larger than W JlE; with Ymn becoming pure imaginary (a phase factor (J) if the reverse is true. The transition between these two propagation conditions occurs at an angular frequency W w e.mn called the cutqff frcq uency, defined where the bracketed quantities of (8-39b) are equal; that is, )
=
W;.mnJlE
Solving the latter for j;.mn
= wc,mn/2n fc,mn
(many + (n;y
yields
= _ 1 [(~)2 C
(8-40a)
2,-/ JlE
a
+ (~.)2Jl!2 h
(8-40b)
With (8-40a) substituted into (3-39b), the propagation constant Ymn is expressible in terms offc,mn as follows
Ymn
(8-41 )
=
2With both 1" and E positive real, only the root of (8-39a) with positive real and positive imaginary parts need be chosen as the solution lor Y."" because the earlier assnmption of t and z dependence of the fields according to the factor exp (jwt 1'z) accounts properly for the presence of both positive z and negative traveling wave solutions.
+
424
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
From the latter one may infer, depending on whether a given TMmn mode in the rectangular guide is generated at a frequency f that is above or below the cutoff value !c.mn of (8-40b), that Ymn becomes either pure real or pure imaginary as follows
Ymn =
IXmn
== 0)\1cJ-lE
J(fc.mn)2 J
I Np/m
f
(8-42a)
f > j~.mn
(8-42b)
The factor (J)~ appearing in these expressions is a phase constant 13(0) identified with a uniform plane wave traveling at the frequency f in an unbounded region having the material parameters J-l and E, a value obtained from (3-90b) with (J = 0 or (3-110) with E"/E' = O. The quantity 13(0) thus serves as a convenient reference value with which the phase constant 13mn in the waveguide can be compared. From (8-42) it is evident that a rectangular waveguide carrying a TMmn mode acts as a highpass filter, allowing unattenuated wave motion characterized by the pure imaginary Ymn = j13mn if the generator frequency f responsible for the mode exceeds the cutoff frequency j~.mn' but attenuating the TMmn mode fields with Ymn = IXmn iff < j~.mn' An additional appreciation of the physical meanings of the real and imaginary results (8-42) for I'mn is gained if the wave expressions for the TMmn modes, including dependence on t and Z, are examined. For example, multiplying the component of (8-38a) by the exponential factor ejwt+Ymnz according to (8-la) produces field solutions that depend on whether the propagation constant I'mn of (8-42) is real or imaginary, as follows. Iff> !c.m,,, then Ymn = j13mn so that (8-38a), including exponential t and Z dependence, becomes
$;
~+ . If(x y)e1mt+Y~"z Z ,
~+ nn.( - fJ ) = Esin -mn z.rnn a x sin -by e1 wt+ ~nZ
m, n
=
I, 2, 3, ... and
f > fe.mn
(8-43a)
The traveling wave nature of this field component is clearly specified by the factor Z ei{
+
. ---
~
±
-
mn
nn.
tff;; (x, y) eJwt + Ymn Z = Emn ze + "-mn Z sin x sin _ y e1wt . a b
m, n = 1,2,3, ... and f < !c.mn
(8-43b)
The attenuation with z provided by the factors e-a",n Z or e"mnz is thus noted whenever the generator frequency I is too low. The mode will not then propagate as a wave motion; instead, the fields of the mode evanesce (vanish) with increasing distance from the generator or wave source. A mode at a frequency below its cutofrfrequency lc.mn is called ~n evanescent mode. The foregoing discussion was limited to the longitudinal component If;. The four remaining transvers~ components (8-38b) through (8-38e) are similarly propagated as waves along with If; iff> !c.mn or are evanescent iff < !c,mn-
8-3 TM MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
425
The real-time forms of the field components can likewise be employed to illustrate the conclusions of the foregoing discussion. Using (8-1 b), the real-time form of tll!\ time-harrnonic field component (8-43a) is, j()r f > !c.mn E~± Z, t) = Re [tff;(x,)i)eJ(rot+PmnZ)], yielding
mn
+
nn
Z, t) = E;.mn sin a x sin b ) cos (OJt
+ PmnZ + ;;n)
f > J~.mn
(8-Ha)
the traveling wave nature of which is illustrated, in a constant) plane, in Figure 8-5(a). Similarly, for f below the cutoff fi'equem:y j;',mn Z,
t) +
= E~~mne
'+
mn
amn Z sin a x sin
nn + bY cos (OJt + ;;;,,)
f
(8-44b)
Note that the complex amplitudes in these expressions may include arbitrary phase angles ;;" according to E;'m" E;'mnei
E:
t= 0
Wave motion ,J,:-.--"----
(a) I(y)
I
I
I
11';
FIGURE 8-5. Field intensity variations of the lonfiitudinal component (x,J, t) of the TM 2b mode, shown over the planeJ = b/2. (a) The forward z traveling wave E;, iff> j;, (b) The evanescence of E; with increasing z, iff
426
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
Once the phase constant (8-42b) is obtained, other TMmn mode properties, such as wavelength in the guide, phase velocity, and intrinsic wave impedance, can be derived. Assuming the generator frequency f of a given TMmn mode to be above the cutoff value (8-40b), the wavelength .-1 of that mode, measured along the.;; axis as noted in Figure 8-5(a), for example, is found from the definition p.-1 = 2n. By use of (8-42b), this yields
f> J~,mn
(8-45)
in which .-1(0) denotes the comparison wavelength 2rrJP(0) of a uniform plane wave in an unbounded region with the same dielectric parameters J1 and E. The.;; direction phase velocity is obtained using vp wlP, yielding
f > J~,mn
(8-46)
wherein v~O) = wIP(O) = (J1E) 1/2. The intrinsic wave impedance for TMmn modes, specifying the ratios of transverse field components, is found from (8-21). Iff> !c,mn, one obtains the real result A
lJTM,rnn
jPmn = JWE .
n(O) 'f
f~ (J~j,m.n)2
f.>
!c,mn
(8-47)
in which lJ(O) = ~. For a TMmn mode generated at a frequency f below the cutoff value, the wavelength and phase velocities are not defined, in view of the purely evanescent character ofthc field distributions as exemplified in Figure 8-5(b). The intrinsic wave impedance for f < J;.,mn, however, from the substitution of (8-42a) into (8-21), becomes A
lJTM,mn
rx
= JWE .
. (0)
-JlJ
J(.rc,mn)2 f-
1
f < !c,rnn
(8-48)
This purely reactive result implies no time-average power transfer in the.;; direction for an evanescent mode because of the 90° phase between the transverse electric and magnetic field components. If the information contained in the five field expressions (8-38a) through (8-38e) is combined to construct the total fields E and H of the TMmn modes, complete flux sketches resembling those in Figure 8-6 can be obtained. Flux sketches of two modes, TMll and TM 21 , are illustrated. A knowledge of such flux configurations is useful, for example, if the electric or magnetic fields are to be probed or linked with a short wire antenna or loop, for purposes of extracting energy from the mode. I.n general, a large number of modes, propagating or evanescent, exist in the neighborhood of waveguide discontinuities such as bends and transitions. The analysis of such nonuniformities in a waveguide is beyond the scope of this treatment. The propagation of energy in a rectangular guide is usually accomplished, at a given frequency, by selecting the dimensions a, b so that only one mode (the dominant
8-3 TM MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
427
c Section C-C
Section A
A
B (b)
Two low-order TM modes of a rectangular waveguide. (a) The TMIl mode. the TM21 mode.
propagates, to the exclusion of all higher-order modes thus forced to become evanescent. This procedure assures a well-defined single-mode field configuration in fI'om which energy can be readily extracted by use of suitable transition (for example, a waveguide-to-coaxial line transition). The discussion of the section, covering TE modes, reveals that of all the modes capable of propagating rectangular waveguide, TM and TE, the TE lo mode is the dominant one, a > b once again. IlAMPLE 8-1. A common air-filled rectangular waveguide has the interior dimensions a = 0.9 in. and b 0.4 in. (2.29 x 1.02 em), the so-called X-band guide. (a) Find the cutoff frequency of the lowest-order, nontrivial TM mode. (b) At a source frequency that is twice the cutoff value of (a), determine the propagation constant for this mode. Also obtain the wavelength in the guide, the phase velocity, and the intrinsic wave impedance. (c) Repeat (b), assuming J = .fc/2.
428
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
(a) From (8-40b) it is seen that the cutoff frequency has its lowest value for TM modes if m = I and n = I, the smallest integers producing nontrivial fields. Thus for the TM II mode, the given dimensions yield
The 'I'M 11 mode will thus propagate in this guide if its frequency exceeds 16,100 MHz. Below this frequency, the mode is evanescent. (b) ALI
32,200 MHz, (8-42b) yields =
In fi'ee space,
A(O)
=
eLl =
3 x L0 8 j32,2 x 10 9
585 rad/m
0,933 ern, so from (8-45) 0.933 0.866
= 1.076 em
while the phase velocity and intrinsic wave impedance, from (8-46) and (8-47), are
3 1'1'.11
(c) At I
=
8 X 10 0.866
~TM.ll =
37.7(0.8G6) = 32G Q
8.05 GHz, (8-42a) ohtains 2n(8.05 x 10 9 ) ~.~
291 Npjm
Below j~.ll' wavelength and phase velocity arc undefined, ill view of evanescent fields, but below cutoff, from (8-48)
~TM.1I =
_j1](OlJ(!jlY--]
-j377.j22-1 = -jG53Q
8·4 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES 'The analysis of the TE mode solutions of rectangular waveguides proceeds essentially along the lines employed for finding the TM mode solutions in Section 8-3, so only an outline of this boundary-value problem is given. The assumptions are as follows 1. The rectangular hollow pipe is very long and of interior dimensions a, b, as noted iIi Figure 8-7. 2. The lossless dielectric has the parameters fl, E, with Pv = 0 and J = O. 3. The waveguide walls are perfectly conducting.
8-4 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
429
y=b
x=O x=a y=O ~
"
#--C;)-
(z)
FIGURE 8-7. Geometry of a hollow rectangular waveguide, showing field components corresponding to the TE modes.
y
4. All field quantities vary as eimt + ". 5. 0 for TE modes.
if;
Only the last assumption differs from those used in the derivation of TM modes in Section 8-3. The four TE field relations (8-22) suggest that a solution for might first be obtained, whereupon (8-22) can be employed to obtain the remaining tr<;l:nsverse components. Beginning with the scalar wave equation (8-16f) in terms of ft;
if;
[8-16f] by analogy with the separation-of-variables method applied to the wave eqnation (8-16c) in Section 8-3, a particular solution of (8-16f) is analogous with (8-32) such that (8-49) The boundary conditions at the perfectly condncting walls shown in FigurS-8-7 demand tpat the tangenlial components oft~e electric field vanish there, that is, $;-(O,y) 0, (a,y) = 0, 0) = 0, and 111'; (x, b) = 0, bnt the latter are converte1 into equivalent boundary conditions applicable to the longitudinal component of (8-49), on inserting them into the two TE modal relations (8-22a) and (8-22b), yielding
tt;-
$;
Yf;
I
a.~;]
. ax
2.
3.
°
x=o
aif;] = 0 ax x=a
ait±] --==0 ay y=o a.~±]
4. --"-
ay
y=b
=
°
(8-50)
430
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
g;
Applying these boundary conditions to the appropriate x ory derivative of the solution (8-49) can be shown to obtain the following proper solutions (eigenfunctions)
~
+
:R;; (x,y)
mn
~+
nn
0, 1,2, ...
m, n
JJ;;'mll cos a x cos-/; y
=
(8-51 a)
in which m, n are arbitrary integers designating an infinite set of TEmn modes. As in the TM mode case treated in Section 8-3, two separation constants, = mn/a and ky = nn/b, are related to == y2 + W2/lE by (8-29). The remaining field components of the TErnn modes are found using (8-22), yielding
t
k';
@±
(() x
=
JW/l nn ~+ JJ:;-mn [ k2 b " ' c --A-
J
mn x sm .. nn y
cos -
b-
(1
~+ mn. nn E;:'mn cos -;; x 8m b _.Y
-JW/l mn ~+ [ ~ a H;;'mll
==
"'+ .
Ey- mn SIn •
mn (1
J.
x cos
(8-5] Il)
mn
nn b
(8-51c)
y
Ymll mn ~ + rlrE,mll
==
~+
.
=[ mn
nn
sm~--xcosbY
--;; H~~m"
J.
mn
. nn
sm--;; x COSb~Y
nn
(8-51 d)
H;; mn SIn - x cos . a b
[
g± y ~+
Ymn nn .• + b
mn. nn
!/y- m" cos , a
X SHl -
b
!!z.... mn
J
mn
cos -
(1
Y
. nn
x SIn -
b
J'
(8-5Ie)
wherein (8-51 f)
implying a propagation constant Ymn given by an expression identical with (8-:39b) for TM modes (8-52)
8-1 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
431
The latter implies a cutolffrequency lor TErnn modes in a rectangular waveguide given by all expression like (8-40b) lor the comparable TMmn modes (8-53)
It lherei()!'e follows that the propagation constant Ymn of (8-52) is a pure real attenuation factor am» if I < J~,mn' or a pure imaginary phase factor jfimn if I > lc,mn; thus, I Np/m
Ymn
Ymn
jfimn
=jw~~
f-e 7Y c
rad/m
1< lc,mn
(8-54a)
I > J~,mn
(8-54b)
From (8-54b) one can inkr, lor a specified TErn» mode, a wavelength Amn and phase veloci ly vp,mn given by expressions identical with (8-45) and (8-4b) Ii)!' the comparable TMmn mode
I> lc,rnn
(8-55)
I > J~,m"
(8-56)
in which A(O) and 1J~0) an, the wavelength and phase velocity associated with plane waves propagating at the frequency I in an unbounded region filled with the same dielectric with the parameters J1 and E, A comparison of (8-21) with (8-23) shows that the intrinsic wave impedances of TE and TM modes are not the same; from (8-23) and (8-54b) one obtains for TErnn modes above cutoff
JWI'
1](0)
1]TE,mn = -:p-- = -;=======(;==;==)~2 n ) mn
1
_!c:
I > J~,mll
(8-57)
t
which deserves comparison with expression (8-47) for ~TM,m", If a TEmn mode is generated at a frequency below the cutoff value specified by (8-53), the propagation constant Ymn becomes the pure real amn of (8-54a), producing an evanescence of the field components (8-51) resembling that for TMmn modes below cutoff as shown in Figure 8-5(b), Although wavelength and phase velocity are undefined in the absence of wave motion for I < j~,m'" the intrinsic wave impedance lor a TErnn mode below cutotfis obtained from (8-54a) and (8-23), yielding
f < ,Ic,mn
(8-58)
432
MODE TREOR Y OF WAVEGUIDES
,50) 1 {:I«()
Allin
o Increasing
o
f
f Increasing
f
f= t~,mn FIGURE 8-8. Universal circle diagram (left) and qnantities plotted directly against freqnency (right), fix TM and TE modes.
From this result one may again sec, as from (8-48) for TMrnn modes, that whenever a mode evanesces (f < j~,mn) the wave impedance qTM or qTE becomes imaginary, showing that tor an evanescent mode, there is no time-average power How through a waveguide cross section. The common factor 1 - (!c,mnlf) 2 appearing in the various expressions (8-45) through (8-48) for TMmn modes, together with the comparable relations (8-54) through (8-57) for TErnn modes, permits graphing them as normalized quantities on the universal circle diagram shown in Figure 8-8. For example, the expressions (8-4·2b) and (8-54b) for the phase factor Pmn of TM or TE modes are normalized by dividing through by P(O) = wJjlE to obtain
J
Pmtl)2 + (!c.mtl)2 ( pt O) f the equation of a circle, considering PmnIP(O) and J~,mtllf as the variables. A discussion of the group velocity Vg noted in the diagram is reserved for Section 8-5. To the right in the figure is shown a graph of the same quantities plotted directly against frequency, which may have some interpretive advantages. Thus, the phase constant Pmn of a desired mode is seen to be zero at the cutoff frequency !c.mn while asymptotically approaching the unbounded space value P(O) = wJjlE represented by the diagonal straight line as f becomes sufficiently large. The expressions (8-51) feJr the five f-Ield components of the TE_ modes lead to flux plots of typical modes as seen in Figure 8-9. The electric field lines are entirely transverse in any cross section of the guide, as required for TE modes; they terminate normally at the perfectly conducting walls to satisfy the boundary conditions there. The magnetic lines, moreover, form closed loops and link electric flux (displacement currents) in the process, as required by Maxwell's equations. A comparison with Figure 8-6 points out the inherent diflerences between TM and TE mode field configurations in a rectangular guide. In Section B-3, the TM mode expressions (8-38) reveal that the lowest-order nontrivial mode of this group is the TM 11 mode. A similar inspection of the field expressions (8-51) shows that the lowest-order nontrivial TE modes are the TElO and TEO! modes, flux plots of which are depicted in Figure 8-9(a) and (b). Of these two,
8-4 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
2
433
2
Section 1-1
um \\I\\l\! !![ Section 2-2
(b)
(el
(d)
FIGURE 8-9. A few low-order TEmn modes of the rectangular waveguide. (a) TE!o mode. (b) TEo! mode. (e) TEll mode. (d) TE2! mode.
the mode I)aving the lowest cutofffi'equency is determined by whichever of the two trans~erse guide dimensions, a or b, is the larger. With m = I and n = 0 inserted into (B-5~»), the TE lo mode is seen to have a cutoff frequency
!c,10
=
a
2a
(8-59a)
a result independent of the b dimension because n = O. Thus (B-59a) states that the cutofHrequency of the TE 10 mode is the freq uency at which the width a is just one-half
434
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
a frcc-space wavelength. Similarly, the TEol mode has a cutoff frequency (8-59b) a value larger than!c.10 if a > b, the dimensional condition depicted in Figure 8-1O(al. From the identical cutoff frequency expressions (8-53) and (8-40b), all higher-order TE and TM modes exhibit cutoff frequencies higher than (8-59a), assuming the standard convention of a> b, to make the TElO mode the dominant mode of that rectangular waveguide. For example, the so-called X-band rectangular waveguide, assumed airfilled and of interior dimensions a = 0.9 in. and b = 0.4 in. (0.02286 x 0.01016 m) has a cutoff frequency obtained from (8-59a), yielding 3 X 10 8 !c.lO = 2(0.02286) = 6.557 GHz
(8-60)
X-band guide
while the cutoff frequency of the next higher-order mode, TE 2o , becomes J~.20 = 13.12 GHz, from (8-53). The TEol mode, from (8-59b), yields !c.01 = 14.77 GHz, while using (8-53) or (8-40b) obtains cutoff frequencies for the TEll and TM 11 modes that are even higher (!c,ll = 16.10 GHz). Their positions on a frcquency scale are portrayed in Figure 8-10(a), showing why the propagation of electromagnetic power via the single dominant TElO mode in a rectangular waveguide is possible by kecping the generated frcquency f above the cutoff frequency of the TElO mode, but below the cutoff frequencies of all other modes. This choice assures a traveling wavc TElO mode and the evanescence of all other modes, thereby justifying the designation dominant for the propagating TE 10 mode. For example, the band 8.2 to 12.4 GHz is chosen as the X band; frequencies that propagate only in the dominant TElO mode in a 0.4 in. x 0.9 in. rcctangular waveguide.
ie, 10 = 01
6.557 GHz
For a = 0.9 in" b
=0,4 in,:
(GHz)
~
~ For
TE10
1- = 2.25:
[:j
.1
°
Q
r :}
TE21 TM21 I
tl
:)
3
i(>,rnn
fe, 10
(a)
I
1:
'f 2
TEJO TEoI
For~=
TEll TEoII TM[1 TE 20 I I I
I
TEll TMJl I
t
TE 20 TE02 I I
TE21 TEI2 TM21 TMI2 I I
r
~I__________-L 'f ____~_____ L_ _ _ __ L_ _ _ _~~~
°
1
't'
2
3
"
JO
(b)
}'IGURE 8-10, Cutoff frequencies oflower-order modes in rectangular and square waveguides, (a) }'or alb = 2.25, Cutoff frequencies shown relative to !c,IO on lower graph" (b) For alb = L
8-4 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
435
It is evident that a square waveguide (a = b) will not possess only one dominant mode, for the TE 10 and TE01 modes then have identical cutofftrequencies from (8-59). Figure 8-1O(b) shows the positions of the cutoff frequencies oflower-order modes for a square waveguide on a relative frequency scale. A comparison ofF'igure 8-1O(a) with (b) reveals that the use of a rectangular waveguide, with a> b as in (a) of that figure, provides a desirable control over the E-field polarization of the propagated mode. Figure 8-11 illustrates the manner in which a microwave power source (a klystron, magnetron, etc.) is connected to a waveguide by using a small antenna wire protruding into the waveguide, such that the wire alignment agrees with the polarization of the dominant mode being launched. The power can similarly be extracted at the other end, if desired, by means of the center conductor of a coaxial line used as a receiving antenna (a waveguide-to-coax transition). The propagation of the energy down the waveguide via the dominant TElO mode thus assures the known field polarization necessary to the efficient launching and retrieval of the energy. Since signal power in a rectangular waveguide is commonly dispatched by use of the dominant TE 10 mode, its properties are for convenience collected separately· in the following. The expressions (8-51) for TEmn modes, with m = I, n = 0 inserted, reduce to three components ~±
;j{'z
(x)
.
~±
n
= Hz ,10 cos -a
~+
(8-6Ia)
X
[-JWlla ~+
]
.
n
"'+.
n
Si (x) = --n-- Hz-;l0 sm a x = Ei,10 sm -;; x
.m±( .:n x X ) --
-+ it -A-- -
'lTE.I0
±j2a ~ + 11.10
(8-61 b)
[±jf310a H~±z,10 ] Sln . ~x n a ]
.
n a
~+
.
n a
= [ - - 1 - Hz.10 sm - x = Hx.10 SlIl- X
(8-61c)
assuming J > !c.lO' The foregoing may for~some purposes be more conveniently expressed in terms of the complex amplitudes Ei,10 of the y-directed electric field (8-61 b), Microwave source (klystron, etc)
[W] TEiO mode
Coaxial-to -waveguide transition
FIGURE 8-11. Typical waveguide transmission system, showing launching of the dominant mode and a transition from waveguide to coaxial transmission line.
436
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
yielding ~+
~+
n
"
a
gy- (x) = £;-;10 sin - x
(8-62a)
o . n A
1'/TE,1O ~+
SIn -
~ ± _. Ei:1O/i. yt'z(X)-J (0) 21'/ a
1(0)
a
.
~+
x
=
Hx.l0 sm
n a
(8-62b)
x
,n _ ~ ± n cos-x-Hz10cos X a . a
(8-62c)
The remaining properties of the TE10 mode are related to its cutoff frequency specified by (8-59a). From the latter, the ratio !c. I o/f is
.!c,10
viOl
J~.lO
(8-63)
-p-
2af
f
to permit writing the propagation constant, wavelength in the guide, and phase velocity for the TE IO mode as follows
YlO = 1J(1O == /3(0)
C(O)Y 2a
j/3(O)
Y1O=j/310
-
I Np/m
I - C(OIY rad/m
2a-
f < !c,10
(8-64a)
f > !c,10
(8-64b)
f > j~.10
(8-65)
f >
(8-66)
A(O) rn
)'10
vIOl
-(~:)Y
Pm/sec
j~,10
in which /3(0) = (JJ~, A(O) = 2n//3(0) = v~ol/I, and v~OI = (/lE) 1./2 as before. The intrinsic wave impedance obtained from (8-57) or (8-58) becomes 11(0)
fiTE, 1 0 = -;:::1=_='==(=A=(==01==)==2 Q
I > j~,lO
(8-67)
I
(8-68)
2a
fiTE,lO
111
U
.ih
8-4 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES
437
wherein 11(0) ~. Thus, the TE lO mode fields (8-61) propagating in a rectangular waveguidc at a frequency above cutoff involve inphase transverse field components and ,#'; related by the real impedance (8-67). Below cutoff, the imaginary result (8-68) assures no time-average power transfer by the accompanying evanescent mode, attenuated through (8-64a). The time and Z dependence of the TElO mode field expressions (8-62) are included by multiplying them by eiWI+YlOZ. Taking the real part of the resulting products obtains the real-time traveling wave expressions as follows, assuming f > !c.lO:
i;
1[
Z,
t)
E;lO . sin a x cos (wt
Z,
t) =
--(0-)-
+
H; (x,
Z,
t) =
- E+ + y,10
PI0Z
+
sin 1[ x cos ( .4(0»)2 2a a
11 -
=+=
Ei,lO.4(O) 1[. (0) cos - x sm (wt 2al1 a
(8-69a)
(wt =+= PlOZ
+
+
_
+ PlOZ +
(8-69b)
(8-69c)
in which
Ps
Js
C/m 2
[3-45]
n X HA/m
[3-72]
= n' D
in which n denotes a normal unit vector directed into the dielectric region. The electric field of the TE 10 mode develops a surface charge density Ps on only two walls of the rectangular guide, since the y directed E field produces a normal component n • D on only the lower (y = 0) and upper (y = b) walls. Thus, using the electric field (8-69a) in D = EE = EayEi, the boundary condition (3-45) yields the surface charge density as follows 11:
EEy\o . sin -a x cos (wt
=+=
PlOZ
+
(8-70)
in time-instantaneous form. One may similarly show that the surface charge density on the opposite wall (aty = b) is the negative of (8-70). Surface current densities given by (3-72) appear at all four walls of the guide, because tangential magnetic fields occur at every wall. For example, on the lower wall where the total magnetic field is the vector sum of (8-69b) and (8-69c), the
438
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
E;,
FIGURE 8-12. Sketches of the wave nature of the separate components H;, and comprising the TElO mode, plus a composite flux plot (below). All are shown at t = O.
H:
surface current becomes 3 cos
. n
sm
a
x cos (wt
=+
n a
x sm (wt
f3lOZ
=+
+ 4>1'0)
f310X
+ 4)[0) (8-71a)
'Based on the current-continuity relation (3-130), you might consider how the surface charge density p, on the waveguide walls can be found from the surface-current density results (8-71).
439
8-4 TE MODE SOLUTIONS OF RECTANGULAR WAVEGUIDES Detector probe
(0)
Interior surface current flux ( a)
(e)
FIGURE 8-\3. The surface currents induced by the tangential magnetic field of the TE 10 mode on perfectly conducting inncr walls of a waveguide and wall-slot configurations. (a) Flux plot of surface cunent, on waveguide inner walls. (b) Slots producing negligible wall-current perturbation. (el Slots producing significant wall-current perturbations.
On the side walls, the surface current density has but one component, being entirely
y directed. Thus, on the wall at x = 0 (B-7Ib) The densities at y = b and x = a are similarly obtained. A sketch of the wall currents (B-71) is shown in Figure B-13(a), useful if slots are to be cut in the walls. For example, a longitudinal slot centered on the broad wall of a rectangular waveguide carrying the dominant TE tO mode as shown in Figure 8-13(b) is useful in field-probing techniques for the detection of standing waves (slotted-line measurements). A slot that does not cut across wall current flux lines produces a minimal perturbation of the waveguide fields, permitting field detection schemes that yield measurements essentially the same as those expected without the slot. In Figure 8-13(c), however, are shown slots that interrupt wall currents significantly, producing substantial field fringing through the slot with power radiation into the space outside the waveguide. Such configurations form the basis for slot antennas or arrays using waveguide fields for excitation.
EXAMPLE 8·2. An air-filled, X-band rectangular waveguide carries a positive z traveling TElO mode ati = 9 GHz. (a) Find the phase constant, wavelength, phase velocity, ar:d intrinsic has the wave impedance associated with this mode at the given frcqueney. (b) If amplitude 104 Vim, determine the amplitudes of .i'; and .i':. What time-average power flux is transmitted through every cross-sectional surface of the waveguide by this mode? 8 (a) At 9 GHz, the wavelength in unbounded free space is 1(0) = 1?~O)/f = (3 x 10 )/ (9 x 10 9 ) 3.33 em. With a 0.9 in., the ratio J~,lo/f given by (8-63) is 1(0)/2a = 0.729, whereas {3(O) = WJttoEo = 2n/1(0) = 60n rad/TIl. By use of (8-Mb), the phase
$;
440
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
constant becomes
PlO
= P(O)
(~:)y = 60n-Jl
1-
- (0.729)2
60n(0.683)
=
= 128.8 m- 1
Thus, from (8-65), (8-66), and (8-67)
3.33 0.683
A10 = - - = 4.88 cm 3 x 108
4.39
0.683 120n
A
IJTE 10
,
(b) With
i:;'10 =
= 0.683
=
552
X
10 8 m/sec
n
104 Vim, the remaining amplitudes, from (8-62), are 104
18.1 Aim
552
jl04(0.033) ., 2(120n)-6:0229 =)19.3 The time-average power flux transmitted through any cross section is obtained using (7-48), in which the minus sign is omitted if it is agreed that power flux emerging from the positive .e: side of the cross section is desircd. Thus, with Pay = jlllOz S 1.) 2 Re [E X H*J· ds , in which E = a Y $+e-jPloz y' , H = [ax x + a z £)+]ez' , and $;, and .~: are supplied by (8-62), one obtains
J(
*+
*:,
Pav --
i 1" b
y=O
1. 2 Re
x=o
1i:\oI2 = _Y_, b
21JTE,10
f i:+ )(P+ )* a z \ Y,lO 'y,lO A
{
1J'~E,10
. 2 n rasm -
Jo
a
xdx
~+ Ey,lO
• 2 SlIl
11:
a
} x ( e - JfJiO Z ') ( e - JlilOZ)* • a z dx dry
12
1 --ab 4IJTE.IO
With i:;'10 10 Vim, IJTE,lO = 552 n, a = 0.0229 m, and b = 0.0102 m, the timeaverage transmitted power becomes Pay = 10.6 W. 4
*8-5 DISPERSION IN HOLLOW WAVEGUIDES: GROUP VELOCITY All previous discussions of wave phenomena in this text have been restricted to single-frequency sinusoidal waves. Whether with reference to plane waves propagating in lossless or lossy unbounded regions as described in Chapter 6, or in connection with waves traveling in hollow metal tubes as considered in the present chapter, z traveling single-frequency waves are characterized by functions of the f(Jrm (8-72)
in which A is any complex amplitude coefficient [possibly a function of (x,y)] and in which any equiphase surface is defined by mt - /3::: = '" = constant. This yields the
8-5 DISPERSlON IN HOLLOW WAVEGUlDES: GROUP VELOCI-[Y
phase velocity
vp
by setting dt/J/dt
441
= 0, whence (8-73)
a quantity that mayor may not be frequency dependent, depending on the phase factor 13. Thus, in the case of plane waves traveling in unbounded free space, f3 = 130 = W,jPoEo, to yield (2-125b) (8-74 )
a result independent of frequency. Free space is therefore termed dispersionless, in view of the constant vp regardless of the frequency. On the other hand, waves of a given TM or TE mode in a rectangular hollow waveguide have a phase velocity given by (8-46) or (8-56) (8-75)
a decidedly frequency-dependent result. Although the concept of phase velocity is applicable only to steady state sinusoidal fields (constant amplitude and frequency), the Fourier superposition of any number of sinusoidal steady state field solutions having diflerent frequencies can be used to construct modulated waves of variable amplitude or frequency. This important process leads to another concept known as the group velocity, or the velocity of the signal, or information, associated with the group of waves distributed over thc spectrum of frequencies comprising the modulated signal. This is considered in the following. No information or intelligence is transmitted by a steady state, single-frequency sinusoidal traveling wave as that illustrated in Figure 8-14(a)_ It can, however, become a carricr of information by inflicting on it the process known as modulation. The transmission of information via a carrier wave requires a modulation (or changing, in time), in proportion to the instantaneous value of a desired signal, of either the amplitude or thefrequen~y of the carrier, thereby yielding an amplitude-modulated (AM) or a frequency-modulated (FM) carrier. The present discussion' is limited to the AM carrier, examples of which are illustrated in Figure 8-14(b) and (c). As suggested by the name, in this type of modulation the carrier amplitude is forced to become proportional to the signal level at every instant t. The !rcquency spectra of signals used to modulate a carrier typically fall within the audio range (dc to about 15 kHz) for ordinary voice or music transmission, or in the video range (dc to several megahertz) I()!' television or coded-pulse transmission. The Fourier analysis of a high-frequency carrier, amplitude-modulated by a spectrum orIower signal frequencies, reveals what range offrequencies must be transmitted by the system containing perhaps waveguides, coaxial lines, filter circuits, antennas, and other elements. Such an analysis shows that the transmission system must he capable of passing the carrier frequency fo plus additional Jrequency components contributed by the signal spectrum of width 2 I'lf, components appearing in two adjacent freqnency bands termed sidebands of width I'lfjust above and below fo. For example, a 100 MHz carrier, amplitude-modulated by a video signal embracing frequency components from dc to 4 MHz, will require a transmission band fromfo - I'lf
442
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
:> t
t
Wo
>W
(a)
:>W
E(t)
(Em{1
+ mcoswst)lcoswot
(b)
Modulation signal
L------~t
~t
(c)
FIGURE 8-14. Amplitude modulation of a continuous wave (cw) carrier, showing time dependence (lift) and Fourier components (right). (a) The single-frequency ew carrier, shown at z O. (b) A single-frequency signal used to amplitude-modulate a carrier and frequeney spectra. (c) A pulse signal used to amplitude-modulate a carrier and frequency spectra.
to fo + I'l.f, namely 96 to 104 MHz, or an 8% bandwidth. On the other hand, if a 10,000 MHz carrier were modulated by the same video signal, only an 0.08% transmission band extending from 9996 MHz to 10,004 MHz would be required to handle the ± 4 MHz signal spectrum. Short-pulse-communication and other high information rate systems require a correspondingly wide frequency band, therefore pulse communication systems using many channels simultaneously must operate at carrier frequencies in the uhf or microwave regions, and more recently they have even gone into the optical range of frequencies. The generic example of amplitude modulation is illustrated in Figure 8-14( b), depicting the simplest case of a carrier at the sinusoidal frequency wo, amplitudemodulated by a time-harmonic signal at the single frequency wS. The carrier amplitude Em is modulated sinusoidally in time with a signal amplitude mEm, in which m is called the modulation factor, so that the real-time expression for an electric field carrier mod-
8-5 DISPERSION IN HOLLOW WAVEGUIDES: GROUP VELOCITY
443
ulated in this way becomes
E( t) = [Em (l
+ m cos wst)] cos wot
(8-76a)
The bracketed factor denotes the amplitude variations at the signal frequency Ws' Equation (8-76a) specifies field behavior in the reference plane z = 0, whereas the additional z dependence needed to provide its traveling wave behavior is included momentarily. The amplitude-modulated carrier (8-76a) possesses three terms in its Fourier series expansion, or spectrum. Thus, with the substitution cos A cos B = (t)[cos (A + B) + cos (A B)], (8-76a) yields E(l)
Em cos wot
+
mEm 2
cos (wo
mEm
+ ws)t + -2- cos (wo -
ws)t
(8-76b)
This is a three-term (finite) Fourier series, possessing a carrier frequency term of amplitude Em' plus just two sideband terms of amplitude mE"./2 at the sum and difference fi-equencies (wo + ws) and (wo - ws)' This spectrum of three frequency components is depicted in the diagram at the right in Figure 8-14( b). The expressions (8-76) can be taken as the amplitude-modulated electric field of a plane wave (at Z = 0) propagating ·in unbounded free-space, or denote a field component of a propagating mode inside a hollow waveguide or a coaxial line, or such Equation (8-76b) is readily rewritten to specify the spectrum of positive z traveling waves of an amplitudemodulated carrier moving through a lossless transmission region, simply by adding in the proper phase delay terms pz as follows.
mE+
Poz)
mE+
+ -{- cos [Cwo -
+ -{- cos [(wo + ws)t ws)t - P-z]
(8-77)
in which Po, P+, and P_ denote the z propagation phase constants at the respective frequencies wo, Wo + Ws> and Wo - ws' One is to examine (8-77) for its wave-envelope velocity, or so-called group velocity, for two classes of regions: a nondispersive region, in which all frequency components of a spectrum of waves move with the same phase velocity; and a dispersive region, in which the phase velocities of the spectral components arc frequency dependent.
A. Group Velocity in a Nondispersive Region Suppose the signal (8-77) denotes the amplitude-modulated field Ex of a plane wave propagating in free space. The phase velocity is then the constant Vp = (/loEo) 1 = c given by (2-125b), making free space a nondispersive region. Therefore (8-77) written with Po = wole, P+ = (wo + w.)/e, and p_ = (wo - ws)le yields
E: (z, t)
E:'
cos Wo
+ m~:'
(t - ~) + m~:' cos [(wo + w.) (t - ~)]
cos[(wo-Ws)(t-~)J
(8-78)
444
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
Since the three Fourier terms remain in the same phase relationship no matter how far the modulated wave travels, the wave envelope must move at a velocity identical with the phase velocity in a nondispersive region. The wave envelope velocity, also called the group velocity (from the spectral group), is thus
w
Vg
vp
= 7f
(8-79)
Nondispersive
for a nondispersive region. This result is correct no matter how complex the spectral structure of the wave. Hence, for the pulse-modulated signal of Figure 8-14(c), all terms of its Fourier series expansion will propagate through the medium at the same phase velocity vp' One thus concludes that a dispersionless region is also distortionless.
B. Group Velocity in a Dispersive Region A hollow waveguide is an example of a wave-transmission device exhibiting the phase-velocity dispersion characteristic (8-75), depicted as a function of frequency in the graphs of Figure 8-8. The different phase velocities of the Fourier terms that characterize a modulated traveling wave in a waveguide result in the wave envelope appearing to slip behind the carrier appearing under the envelope. This phenomenon arises from the group velocity being slower than the phase velocities of the Fourier components. Thus, while the phase velocities of the Fourier terms of a modulated wave in an air-filled hollow waveguide all exceed the speed of light, the speed of the transmission of the information (the wave envelope) at the group velocity is at a speed less than c. The foregoing remarks are proved using the example of an amplitude-modulated carrier signal operating in the dominant TElO mode in an air-filled rectangular waveguide. The applicable phase constant expression (8-64b) is rewritten as
/3 10 -- /3(0)
),(0))2
1 - ( 2a
=
W.Jl1oEo
J
1-
(w ~10 )2
[8-64b]
This is graphed showing /310 as a function of the wave frequencies w in Figure 8-15(a), redrawn, for convenience, as w versus /310, to yield velocities from slopes (rather than /
W
/
Wo+Ws
Wo
WO-W s
W,'.lO
o !.I.(3'~!.I.(3
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 8-15. The w-/3 diagram for the TE10 mode in a hollow waveguide and velocity interpretations. (a) The (J}-/3 diagram. (b) Constructions leading to the phase and group velocities for the TE10 mode.
445
8-5 DlSPERSION IN HOLLOW WAVEGUIDES: GROUP VELOCITY
inverse slopes). The departure of 1310 from the linear (dashed-line) asymptote 13(0)
W.JftoEo is noted.
Suppose, now, that the waveguide carries the simple amplitude-modulated signal depicted in Figure 8-14(b), operating in the TE lo mode and having the three-term Fourier spectrum characterized by (8-77). Its amplitude factor is given by (8-62a)
Then the three-term spectrum (8-77) is rewritten
+
--t m!f+
(8-80a)
cos [(wo - ws)t - f3-z]
in which 1370 denotes the value of the phase constant 1310 of (8-64b) at the carrier frequency w = wo' Figure 8-15(b) depicts, by the use of (8-64b), the phase-constant values 1310 that correspond to the carrier frequency Wo and the upper and lower sideband frequency Wo + Ws = Wo + L\.w and Wo - Ws = Wo - L\.w of this modulated wave. Calling these {31O values {3+ = {370 + L\.{3 and /L = {3~0 - L\.{3' ~ f3~o - L\.f3 respectively, as noted on the graph (and assuming small frequency deviation L\.w, to allow putting L\.{3 ~ L\.{3') , enables rewriting (8-80a) as the three Fourier terms
Mo,
o
(310Z)
+
--t m!f+
m!f; + -2cos [(wo + L\.w)t -
cos [(wo - L\.w)t - (f3~o - L\.f3)z]
0
(1310
+ L\.f3)z] (8-80b)
This can be shown to recombine into the following product form (8-80c) A comparison with (8-76a) shows that (8-80c) describes the amplitude-modulated wave delayed in phase from the z 0 reference plane by the amount {370z insofar as the carrier at the frequency Wo is concerned, whereas the bracketed factor specifies how the envelope progresses down the Z axis in time. Since any equiphase surface on the envelope is defined by L\.w • t - L\.f3 • z = constant, the envelope moves down the z axis with the group velocity '1.'g,10 = L\.w/L\.f3. With the signal frequency Ws L\.w small compared to the carrier frequency, L\..w/L\.f3 becomes the limit
dw (df3lO) - I '1.'g,10 = d{310 = dw
(8-81a)
The last form, written as an inverse, is the more useful since 1310 is given explicitly in terms of the frequency w by (8-64b). A comparison with '1.'p = W/f310, the defining relation for the phase velocity of any of the Fourier steady-state sinusoidal terms in (8-80b), shows that group and phase velocities are obtained from slope interpretations
446
MODE THEORY OF WAVE,GUIDES
of Figure 3-15(b). Thus, the group velocity v g ,10 is given by the tangent to the (O-P curve at point P; whereas the phase velocity 'up,lO is the slope of the line from the origin 0 to P. The constant slope of the dashed-line asymptote ((0 versus P(O» is the free-space plane-wave comparison value (J1.oEo) 1/2, falling between the Vg,lO and v p ,10 values for this TE 10 mode. By extending this analysis to the modulated wave of the form of (3-77) operating in any TErnn or TMmn mode, the group velocity becomes
Vg,mn
=(
dP )-1 -d;n
(8-8Ib)
It should furthermore be clear that the same analysis applies to any uniform wavetransmission configuration (whether a waveguide, a two-conductor transmission line as described in Chapter 9, or whatever), so that its group velocity relates in general to its phase constant P through (8-8Ic) Applying the result (8-81 b) to the expression (8-42b) or (8-54b) for the phase constant P obtains the group velocity (8-82) for any TM or TE mode in a hollow waveguide. A comparison with the phase velocity expression (3-46) and (8-56) shows that (8-83) revealing that the unbounded-space velocity v(O) is the geometric mean of the phase and group velocities for hollow waveguide modes. Figure 8-16 illustrates the phenomena of phase and group velocities relative to the upper and lower sideband frequency terms of an amplitude-modulated carrier propagating in a dispersive medium. (The carrier term is omitted to simplify the graphic addition of the waves.) Note the alternate constructive and destructive interference (i.e., amplitude modulation) produced by the sum of the waves. Hthe sideband components were propagating in a nondispersive medium, their identical phase velocities would produce the same envelope velocity (group velocity). In a dispersive region as shown, however, the upper sideband term has a phase velocity lower than that of the lower sideband term, as noted from the slope of OP in Figure 8-15 (b). This causes the point of constructive interference, or maximum amplitude on the diagram of Figure 8-16 (b), to slip behind both sideband terms with the passage of time, yielding an envelope velocity ('Vg) smaller than the phase velocity, that is, smaller than vIOl = (J1.E) tl2 by an amount such that (8-83) is satisfied. The example just given involves a simple Fourier spectrum ofjust three frequency terms, insufficient to exhibit the envelope-distortion effects that would occur if the carrier had been modulated with a short-duration pulse, such as that shown in Figure 8-14(c). In the latter event, the corresponding spectrum would possess many more frequency terms, as depicted. The effect of propagating this pulse-modulated carrier, in
8-6 WALL-LOSS ATTENUATION lN HOLLOW WAVEGUIDES
Envelope of El
447
+ E2, showing
_ / resulting amplitude modulation
f\ z
Motion
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 8-16. Group and phase velocities associated with an amplitude-modulated wave. (a) The sum of the two sideband frequencies of an amplitnde-modulated wave, showing beat effects. (b) Depicting phase and group velocities in the wave of (a), as time increases. The medium is assumed normally dispersive.
the TE mode, over a sufficient length of rectangular waveguide, is to distort the shape lo of the pulse envelope, the extent of the distortion depending on the length of the waveguide. The distortion is a consequence of the Fourier components having different phase velocities over the frequency band of the Fourier spectrum, such phase velocities being given by 'Up,IO = ill//310' This causes the sinusoidal components to arrive at their destination in a different phase condition than that occurring at the waveguide input, thereby producing the distortion. This phenomenon is therefore given the name
dispersion. *8-6 WALL-LOSS AnENUATION IN HOLLOW WAVEGUIDES In the previous discussions of wave propagation in rectangular hollow waveguides, it was assumed that the waveguide walls were perfectly conducting. Practical waveguides are necessarily made of finitely conducting metals (e.g., brass, aluminum, silver), and
448
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
waves moving down the interior will generate wall currents much like those depicted in Figure 3-12 for the dominant TE 10 mode. In the ideal, perfectly conducting case, the wall currents are restricted to surface currents characterized by a penetration depth of zero, the tangential magnetic field being a measure of the surface current density according to the boundary condition (3-72). The fields inside the perfect conductor are zero, to make the wall power losses zero for this idealized case. With finitely conductive walls, however, the continuity of the tangential magnetic field guarantees a time-varying magnetic field inside the conductor, producing therein an electromagnetic field rapidly diminishing with depth. The fields penetrate the conducting wall essentially at right angles to the surface. The ensuing ohmic power loss due to the transference of a small portion of the available transmitted mode energy into the walls results in a measurable attenuation of the propagated mode. For example, the wall-loss attenuation occurring in an X-band brass waveguide carrying the TE 10 mode at 10 GHz is of the order of 0.2 dB/m, a significant amount for long waveguide runs. It is the purpose of this section to outline a method for the approximate analysis of the wall-loss attenuation problem for hollow guides. In the propagation of a 'I'M or TE mode down an ideal (lossless) waveguide, the power flux travels unabated down the pipe, the same time-average power passing through every cross section of the guide. As shown in Figure 8-17(a), the positive z traveling, unattenuated fields arc designated in the usual complex notation
$+(u 1, u2 )e- jpz
(8-34)
--
(z)
(z)
(a)
I
(I»
[i'~'iii"drj ~ilrr mmj
Pav , [.
dz
Small Cy (exaggerated)
(c)
(d)
FIGURE 8-17. Relative to the wall-loss attennation in a waveguide of uniform cross section. (a) Unattenuated fields in a lossless, ideal waveguide. (b) The attcnuation of the fields due to power absorption by the walls. (e) Showing a small tangential Ey component at the walls, compared to the lossless mode configuration. (d) Volume regiou of length dz, lor comparing transmitted and wall-loss average powers.
8-6 WALL-LOSS ATTENUATION IN HOLLOW WAVEGUrDES
449
fields defining the unperturbed mode in a loss-free waveguide. In the event of a finitely conductive wall material, a portion of the transmitted power is diverted into the walls, leading to an exponential decay of the average power through successive cross sections of the waveguide, as suggested by Figure 8-17 (b). The wall-loss attenuation achieved ill this process is designated by a', and with the tleld distributions If(ull and :#'(Ul' uz) assumed unchanged from (8-84), the attenuated fields are written (8-85) The 1;+ and ;ie+ factors in (8-85) will differ by a small amount from lhose given in (8-84), a fact appreciated on inspecting Figure 8-17(c). Shown)s the tffy distribution for the TE lo mode of a rectangular guide, with a very small tffy component existing at the x = 0 and x = a walls due to the field penetration of the tangential magnetic field into the conductive walls, leading to a first-order analysis as follows. An expression is derived for the wall-loss attenuation factor a' in terms of the time-average transmitted power and the small fraction of this power that escapes into th~ walls in every length dz of the waveguide. It is shown, for a given mode, that
, a
=
1
dPav,L dz --Np/m
2 Pav,T
(8-86)
in which the meanings of the symbols are illustrated in Figure 8-17 (d). PaY, T denotes the average power flux transmitted by the mode through any cross section of the waveguide, whereas dPav,L is that lost into the walls through the peripheral strip of width dz. One can derive (8-86) by noting that if the volume slice of length tiz in Figure 8-17(d) contains no ohmic losses or sources, then by (7-31) or (7-56) the net timeaverage power entering (or leaving) the surface enclosing that volume is zero. Therefore, dPav,I, = -Pav,T + [Pav,T - (apav,T/aZ) dz], yielding dPav ,L
=
apav,T --az dz
(8-87)
The average power transmitted through the waveguide cross section is obtained from the cross-sectional surface integral of the time-average Poynting vector (7-47a), with the fields (8-85) inserted
f
1.
JS(c.s.) 2
e- 2a 'z
f
Re [(1;+ e -a'ze -
JS(c.s,)
!- Re [1;+
j[!Z) X
(;ie+ e -a'ze- j[!Z) *] . ds
x ;ie+*] . tis
Differentiating (8-88) with respect to Z obtains
(8-88)
450
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
and solving for
(x'
yields
(X' = 2 Pav,T but from (8-87), iJPav,T/iJZ can be replaced with -dPav,ddz, so
= ~ dPav,L
(X'dz
(8-89)
2 Pav,T
which is just (8-86), that which was to have been proved. To illustrate the use of (8-89) in finding (x' for a given waveguide mode, consider the dominant TElO mode. The average transmitted power Pav,T in (8-89) has already been found in Example 8-2 ~+
_ 1E y ,10
Pav
12
T -
,
411TE,10
b a
(8-90)
The power loss dPav,L in (8-89) arises from the electromagnetic wave induced inside the conductor. Just within the walls are tangential magnetic fields, identical, by continuity, with the magnetic fields of the known components (8-62) of the unperturbed TE 10 mode. Also appearing therein are electric fields, obtainable from the known magnetic fields by use of wave impedance expressions like (3-97), since the electromagnetic field propagates essentially at right angles into the conductors much like a localized plane wave. This fact is corroborated by the plane wave tilt incidence analysis in Appendix A, showing how field penetration is analyzed for obliquely incident plane-wave fields at sufficiently high frequencies. In Figure 8-18(a) is shown the contInuity of the knowp Ye; component (8-62c) t;?f the 1EIO mode. A small component Iffy is induced by Yez in the metal such that Iffy = f/Yez , and together they comprise essentially a plane wave traveling nearly perpendicularly into the conductor with a
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 8-18. ConcerniIlg the boundary condition on the tangential magnetic field, leading to wall-skin currents. (a) Continuity oftangentialYtz leads to induced if, inside conductor. (b) Showing cosine distribution of the tangential magnetic field on the top and bottom, uniform on side walls (TEIO mode).
8-6 WALL-LOSS ATTENUATION IN HOLLOW WAVEGUIDES
451
large attenuation. ifz is maximal at the x = 0 and the x = a walls, with a consinusoidal variation between these values existing along the y = 0 and the y = b walls as in Figure B-IB(b). The electric fields induced just inside the x = 0 and x = a walls thus become
jj]
Yx=O
= -
~if] zx=o
(B-91 )
in which ~ = (W/1/(J)1/2e i1t /4 from (3-112c), the negative sign properly accounting for the propagation of the wave into the metaL Similar expressions apply at they = 0 and y = b walls. The time-average power loss dPav,L in (8-89) is obtained by integrating over the four sides of the peripheral strip of length dz embracing a cross section; thus (B-92) the x
=0
strip, for example, making use of (8-91) obtains
(8-93) the wall-loss at y
= 0 - becomes (8-94 )
a result accounting for both tangential components if; and if: of (8-62b) and (8-62c), and making use of the identity (rc/a)2 + p2 = (fJ2/1E for the TE lo mode. Evaluating all four wall-loss contributions of (8-92) yields _ 1 \ E~+ y ,10 \2
dPav,L - 2
a
2
W 2 p,2
\£:'12 0\22 W
/1
fti[7 w/1
~
2rc 2b
+ aw
2
J
p,E dz
ro;;; W2p,E[2b (fc,10)2 .;. IJdZ
...J~
a
f
(8-95)
the latter making use of (j~.10/f)2 = rc2/w2/1Ea2 from (8-53). Inserting (8-95) and (8-90) into (8-89) yields the wall-loss attenuation for the TE mode
10
(8-96)
452
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES I
0.6 TE
0.5
I
[0.04 in.
:
r::
lO
0.6
(a = 0.9 in., b = 0.04in.) I I
I
0.4
E ......
co
:0 0.3 ~
0.2
01 -
o
0.1
5
10
15
20
25
30
o
5
10
Frequency (GHz)
Frequency (GHz)
(a)
(b)
15
FIGURE 8-19. Wall-loss attenuation versus frequency for copIX,r. (a) Attenuation versns frequency lor modes in rectangular waveguides. (b) Attenuation characteristic If)r a circular waveguide.
The b factor in the denominator of (8-96) shows that making the height too small results in a large wall-loss attenuation. This is a consequence, at a fixed field amplitude E;:10, and as seen from (8-90), of the smaller cross-sectional area through which the correspondingly smaller transmi.tted power Pav,T must flow, the wall-loss power remaining nearly the same as for a waveguide with a larger b height. It is also evident from (8-96) that as the cutoff frequency is approached, the wall-loss attenuation becomes indefinitely large. A graph of (8-96) versus frequency for two choices of b height is shown in Figure 8-19(a), along with the wall-loss attenuation characteris6c of the TM] 1 mode in a rectangular waveguide. 4 From Figure 8-19, it is evident that different modes undergo different amounts of attenuation in a given waveguide. It would appear that a way of reducing wall-loss attenuation is to minimize the exposure of the magnetic field component tangential to the wall. Nearly all modes in hollow waveguides have an increasing wall-loss attenuation with increasing frequency, with at exhibiting a minimum value at some optimum frequency, as already seen in Figure 8-19(a). It develops that a circular waveguide mode, the TE 01 , deserves special attention in that it exhibits an indefinitely decreasing at with increasing frequency, the result of a smaller and smaller component of the tangential H field at the metallic wall as the incidence of the wave hecomes more nearly grazing. 5 This mode, having the attenuation characteristic depicted in Figure 8-19(b), shows promise in long-range, low-loss transmission at superhigh frequencies in hollow metal cylindrical pipes, though problems are posed by the fact that the TEll mode, and not TE 01 , is the dominant mode in a circular wavegnide. 4A
further discussion of the wall-loss attennation factor associated with the remaining modes of rectangular waveguides can be found in S. Ramo, j. R. Whinnery, and T. van DuzeL Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1984, Chapter 8. 5Yor a discussion of the theory of the circular waveguide, see Ramo, S., j. R. Whinnery, and T. Van Duzer, Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1984, Chapter 8, Circular waveguides have important applications to rotating joints used for feeding movable antennas and to tunable resonant cavities.
PROBLEMS
453
GINZTON, E. L. Microwave Measurements. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1957, JORDAN, E. C., and K. G. BALMAIN. Electromagnetic Waves and Radiating ~ystems, 2nd ed, Englewood CliRs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1963. LANCE, A. L. Introduction to Microwave Theory and Measurements. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, RAMO, S., J. R. WIliNNERY, and T. VAN DUZER. Fields aud Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1934,
On inserting the replacements (3-1a) and (3-4) into the Maxwell relation (3-3) and expanding it in rectangular coordinates, show that the modified curl relation (3-3) is obtained, noting from (3-7) how the "modified curl operator" is defined. Repeat Problem 3-1, this time carrying out the details in generalized cylindrical coordinates. Use the rectangular coordinate expansion (2-33) of the Laplacian of a vector field to !!how that the vector wave equation (3-12) expands into three scalar wave equations analogous (3-13).
U
Expand the modified Maxwell curl relations in circular cylindrical coordinates, and from these obtain = -I
p
it+
;p
[±Yap' + j:;/l
=
k~ [~l
=
k~ [j~:E .vi
=
-1[.
)WE
o¢z]
vcp + j(WI'jJp 1= Y .. opt.
J
J
oiz± yoit;] op ± p-o¢
From the results, modal expressions analogous with (8-20) through (3-25), but applicable to tile TE, TM, and TEM modes of circular cylindrical waveguides and coaxial transmission lines, I:l:lay be found. Repeat Problem 3-4, exr:ept carry out the details in the generalized cylindrical coordinate ,ystem, obtaining
a check, show that these results reduce to (8-19) in the rectangular system.
454
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
SECTION 8-2 8-6. The results (8-19), relating the transverse field components in a rectangular waveguide to the longitudinal components, were found from the simultaneous manipulation of (8-17) and (8-18). Show the details of how (8-19b) is obtained.
8-7.
Repeat Problem 8-6, this time showing how (8-19c) is found.
8-8.
Use results given in Problem 8-4 to obtain expressions for the intrinsic wave impedances associated with the transverse field components of the TM and TE modes of uniform circular cylindrical transmission systcms, namely
j±
v
;yet
-.-'_.
+-;L =
_j:
+"';,?" oft;;
8-9.
Repeat Problem 8-8, but
j(lr
== ~TM
JW€
jW/1 _
A
= - _ . = IJTE }'
generalized cylindrical coordinates.
SECTION 8-3 8-10. Verify the expression (8-38b) for the x-component of the electric field of the TMmn modes by substituting the solution (8-38a) into the proper l~M modal relation (8-20). Leave the answer expressed in terms of the electric-field amplitude E;'mn'
8-11.
Repeat Problem 8-10, but this time verify (8-38e) for the y-component of the magnetic field. [Note in this instance that the modal relation (8-20d) need not be used.]
8-12. Sketch a diagram resembling Figure 8-4, showing tbe z-directed electric field component of the TM 12 mode. 8-13. Based on its cutoff frequency, determine the inside dimension of thc smallest air-filled square (a = b) metallic waveguide that will just propagate the lowest order TM mode (TM l1 ) at tbe operating frequency: (a) 5 GHz, (b) 5 MHz, (c) 5 kHz. lAnswer: (a) a = Ii 4.24 cm (b) 42.4 m (c) 42.4 km] 8-14. An air-filled rectangular waveguidc with interior dimensions a = 0.9 in. by b = 0.4 in. opcrates at tbe fi'equency f = 18 GHz in tbe TMlI mode. Find, for tbis mode in the given waveguide (a) tbe eutofffrequencyj~,ll' (b) the pbase constant /311, (cl tbe wavelength All in the guide, (d) tbc phase velocity v p .lI, (e) the intrinsic wave impedance l1TM.ll' (f) What does the propagation constant }'11 for this TMll mode become, on reducing the operating frequency f to 9 GHz? (g) Compare answers (b) through (e) with the values expected at this operating frequency for a uniform plane wave in free spaec. Comment on differences observed.
SECTION 8-4 8-15. Use the separation-of-variables method, applied to the wave equation (8-16c), to obtain tbe wave solution (8-49) for TE modes. 8-16. Cardully apply the four boundary conditions (8-50) to the z-directed magnetic field solution (8-49), showing that tbe proper solutions (8-5Ia) are obtained for the z-component of the magnetic field for the TEmn mode-set. 8-17. Verify the expression (8-51 c), for tbe.JI-component of the electricficld of the TEmn modes, by inserting the magnetic-field solution (8-51 a) into the proper T~ modal relation (8-22). (Lcave the answer expresscd in terms of the magnetic field amplitude Htmn") 8-18. Make use of the expression (8-52), the propagation constant ofTE mn modes, to show in detail how the cutoff frequency (8-53) is obtained. (In this regard, review tbe discussion following (1:)-39), the identical propagation constant expression obtained for the TMmn mode-seLl
PROBLEMS
455
1-19.
Given are six air-filled rectangular waveguides with the tollowing inside dimensions. Calculate their eutoff frequencies for the dominant TE IO mode: (a) L-band: 6.25 x 3.25 in. 5.875 x 8.255 ern), (b) S-band: 2.84 x 1.34 in. (7.214 x 3.404 ern), (e) C-band: 1.872 x in. (4.755 x 2.215 ern), (d) X-band: 0.9 x 0.4 in. (2.286 x 1.016 ern), (e) K-band: 0.420 x 0.210 in. (1.067 x 0.533 ern), (f) V-band: 0.143 x 0.074 in. (0.376 x 0.188 em). [Answer: 0.944, 2.073,3.152,6.557, 14.048,39.366 GHz.]
1-20.
Show in detail, for the so-called dominant TE IO mode, that the five field-component ex(8-51) reduce to just the three given in (3-61). (Leave the answers expressed in terms the amplitude fr;'IO of the longitudinal magnetic-field componenL)
1-21.
Given is the so-called X-band rectangular waveguide, designated to carry frequencies in the 8.2 to 12.4 GHz band in the dominant TE IO mode, with the inside dimensions a = 0.9 in. = 2.286 cm, b = 0.4 in. = 1.016 em. (a) Calculate its cutoff frequency for each of the following modes in this waveguide: TEIO' TE oI , TEl!' TE 20 , TE 21 , TM Il , TM I2 , TM 21 , TM 22 . Label these cutoff-frequency values and corresponding modes on a diagram as suggested by 8-IO(a), showing also the extent of the "X-band" on the frequency scale. (c) Which of modes will propagate as waves, and which will evanesce (decay), at the generator frequency (operating frequency) of 5 GHz? 10 GHz? 15 GHz?
1-22.
Show how the expressions for the dominant-mode (TEIO) fiele! components (8-61) can be rewritten in the form (3-62) (expressed in terms of the amplitude E~lo).
1-23.
Calculate the smallest a-width of an air-filled rectangular waveguide that will just propagate the electromagnetic TElO mode at the following frequeneies: 5 GHz, (b) 5 MHz, 5 kHz.
1-24.
An X-band rectangular air-filled waveguide with dimensions 0.9 x 0.4 in. carries the dominant TE IO mode at the source frequency f = 9.375 GHz. Determine, for this mode: (a) the cutofffl·equency,fc.lo, (b) the phase constant PIO, (c) wavelength }'10 in the waveguide, (d) phase velocity, vp.10, (e) intrinsic wave impedance 1JTE,IO' (f) What is the cutoff frequency for the TE 20 mode in this size waveguide? What do the propagation constant 1'10 and the intrinsic wave impedance I'fTE.IO become for the TE lo mode on reducing the operating frequency to 4.5 GHz? (g) Compare answers (b) through (e) with the values expected for a uniform plane wave in free space at the same operating frequency.
1-25.
E:
The amplitude of the field of the dominant TE lo mode in an S-band (2.34 x 1.34 in.) air-filled rectangular waveguide is 0.5 MV/m. (a) Determine the amplitudes of the J-C and field components, if the operating frequency is 3 GHz. (b) Based on the result derived in Example 3-2(b), what average power is being transmitted down the waveguide in this mode? (c) What maximum value of average power density exits within any cross section of this waveguide? Explain.
H:
8-26. Assume the same waveguide of Problem 8-24 to be connected to a generator operating at the frequency f = 4.5 GHz, the mode produced in the waveguide being the TE IO mode. Determine its (a) attenuation constant ()(IO, (b) intrinsic wave impedance IiTE,IO' (c) In view of the propagation constant 1'10 becoming the pure real ()(IO below cutoff, is the field produced in this waveguide a "wave", in the strict sense? See Figure 8-5(b) and comment. Calculate the <-distance required by this field to diminish to e-I 0.363 of any reference value. (d) Explain the meaning of the imaginary value of intrinsic wave impedance obtained in (b) for this field. Explain how it affects the propagation of average (real) power down the waveguide, beloweutoff.
8-27. An automotive tunnel is rectangular in eross section (6 m high by 15 m wide) and with metal walls. Determine the lowest radio frequency signal that will propagate as a nonevanescent wave through this tunnel. Which mode is this (TE or TM), and which electric-field polarization must it have (i.e., aligned with which dimension)? Show a sketch of the tunnel cross section, depicting the E field flux distribution for this mode. Will radio signals in the AM broadcast band (550 to 1600 kHz) travel in this tunnel as waves, or will they evanesce? In the FM band (88-103 MHz)?
f
4IiW"
I IIi
456
MODE THEORY OF WAVEGUIDES
SECTION 8-5 8-28. Show that the expansion of the amplitude-modulated traveling-wave expression (8-80c) yields precisely the three terms of the preceding expression (8-80b). Discuss the meaning of this result in relation to the w-{J diagram of Figure 8-15(b) and the concepts of group velocity and dispersion. 8-29. Show the details of the differentiation of the {Jm. expression (8-42b) or (8-54b) for rectangular waveguide modes, obtaining (8-82) for the group velocity. 8-30. Find the phase and group velocities at the operating frequencies 8.2, 9, 10, II, and 12.4 GHz, for an air-filled X-band rectangular waveguide (0.9 x 0.4 in.) having the dominantmode cutoff frequency le,lO 6.557 GHz. Graph these results versus frequency.
SECTION 8-6 8-31. Making use of (8-89), carry out the remaining details in the power-loss expression (8-92) to verify the wall-loss power expression (8-95) for the TElO mode. From this, verify the wall-loss attenuation factor a'lO of (8-96). 8-32. For copper waveguide walls (0" = 58 MSjm), evaluate the wall-loss attenuation factor for tt1e TEw mode in an air-filled X-band rectangular waveguide at f = 8,2, 9, 10, II, and 12.4 GHz. What happens to a'lO as the operating frequency f approaches the cutoff value?
~~.------
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ CHAPTER 9
TEM Waves on Two-Conductor Transmission Lines
The previous chapter considered the TM and TE mode configurations of reetangular hollow (single-conductor) waveguides. Omitted from detailed discussion was the TEM (transverse-electromagnetic) mode, the dominant mode of transmission lines using two (or more) conductors. The parallel-conductor line, shown in Figure 4-14(b) and in Example 5-16, and the circular coaxial line, depicted in Examples 4-9 and 5-13, are commonly used in the transmission of this mode. It is seen that at least two conductors a range of frequencies are required to establish the TEM mode, transmittable extending all the way down to zero frequency (de). Although the TEM mode is by far the most important, TM and TE modes are also capable of propagating on two-conductor transmission lines. The latter modes, however, are evanescent below their cutofffrequencies, which occur for ordinary coaxial lincs in the upper microwave frequencies and beyond. The TM and TE modes on two-conductor lines thus have no useful applications to signal or power transmission, so they are omitted from detailed discussion. 1 Two-conductor uniform transmission lines of the coaxial or parallel-wire type, operating in the TEM mode and illustrated in Figure 9-1 (a) and ( b), are commonly used in power distribution and signal communication systems. Power transmission lines carry power in the megawatts up to hundreds of kilometers from generating stations to urban regions. Voice and pulse-data signals are carried over telephone lines, with signal amplification applied every few tens of miles if the information is to be carried over long distances. Power lines usually operate at 50 or 60 Hz, employing parallel-wire lines suspended on poles or towers, or using buried cables. Telephone lines
'. IHigher-ord"r mod~s on the coaxial line are discussed in S. Ramo, J. R. Whinnery, and T. Van Duzer. Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd cd. New York: Wiley, 1984, p. 428.
457
458
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
(b)
(a)
(e)
(d)
FIGURE 9-1. Two-conductor uniform transmission tines. (al The coaxial line. Goncentric conductors separated by air or a dielectric material. (b) Parallel-wire line. Usually separated hy air. (e) Generalized line. One conductor inside the other. (d) Generalized line. Conductors externally located.
are seen in pairs on poles, though many buried coaxial and multiconductor cables are in use. These may carry audio signals directly, or information transmitted as a modulation of the amplitude of a carrier frequency operating up to several megahertz, permitting the transmission of several modulated carriers simultaneously over the same transmission line, or the signals may be multiplexed using pulse-code modulation at high pulse rates to increase the information-handling capacity significantly. Coaxial lines are commonly used, for example, to interconnect a radio frequency transmitter to an antenna employed for launching electromagnetic waves into the atmosphere. At the high.er microwave frequencies, hollow waveguides can be employcd to connect a data transmitter or perhaps a radar to an electromagnetic horn or a dish-reflector antenna. Short sections of uniform transmission line, having low losses at the higher frequencics, can be used as the high Q.resonant (frcquency selective) elements of filters; they may serve as reflective elements in pulse-forming networks; they may be used to transport pulse data from one place to another with low distortion in high-speed computers. From this partial list of applications, it becomes apparent that a detailed study of transmission line behavior can be of substantial importance to the engineer and applied scientist. This chapter begins with a discussion of the properties of the electric and magnetic fields of the TEM mode on two-conductor lines. The related currents and voltages are developed next, to introduce the concept of characteristic impedance. The transmission line equations are deduced in terms of the distributed line parameters, first assuming ideally perfect conductors, and then for the physically realizable line employing finitely conductive elements. The chapter concludes with a real-time analysis
9-1 TEM MODE FIELDS BASED ON STATIC FIELDS
459
of voltage and current traveling waves of arbitrary waveshapes on ideal (lossless) twoconductor transmission lines. The time-harmonic (sinusoidal steady state) analysis of voltage and current on lines with arbitrary load impedances is covered in the next chapter.
'·1 TEM MODE FIELDS BASED ON STATIC FIELDS 2 A uniform two-conductor transmission line is represented in generalized cylindrical coordinates in Figure 9-1 (c) and (d). The pure TEM mode exists (ideally) on a line composed of perfect conductors. For conductors with finite conductivity, the z-directed currents in them account for a z component of the electric field at the conductor surfaces. The small z component of the E field required to sustain the electric field inside even good conductors, if longitudinal currents are to flow in them, gives rise to what might be called essentially TEM waves. Such waves produce internal resistive and inductive eHects in the conductors, considered later in Section 9-6. A pure TEM wave, associated with two perfect conductors comprising a uniform transmission line, has only transverse components of the fields. The TEM mode is defined by putting (9-1 ) In generalized coordinates, the TEM mode E and H fields are thus given by expressions with the z components absent; that is, (9-2) assuming all field components to be functions of (Ub (3-45) and (3-79) yield that E/=O
and
U2,
n -D
z, t). The boundary conditions
= Ps
(9-3)
at the perfect conductors, meaning that E is normal to the conductor walls, terminating there in the surface charge density Ps' The magnetic boundary conditions (3-50) and (3-72), moreover, imply that and
n x H =J8
(9-4)
at the perfectly conducting walls, so that H is entirely tangential at the walls, terminating there in the surface current Js. The Maxwell integral laws of Faraday and Ampere, (3-66) and (3-78), applicable to the TEM mode obeying the conditions just noted, can be written in the reduced forms
1,
~(c.s.)
E-dt=O
1,
H-dt= JsIJ-ds
~(c.s.)
(9-5)
i)
(9-6)
2Section 9-1 covers details of the electric and magnetic fields of the TEM mode. Field details are important, for example, in the design of lines for which considerations of maximum field strengths, concerned with corona and voltage breakdown, may be of interest. The reader interested in a more conventional approach starting with line voltages and currents may elect to go directly to Section 9-2.
460
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
if the line integrations are restricted to closed paths t confined to any cross section of the transmission line. The simplifications to (9-5) and (9-6) are evident from the definition (9-1), that no z component ofE or H can exist between the conductors of the uniform line. This means that no flux of either D or B can pass through the surface S restricted to the cross section by any closed path t, thereby reducing the surface integrals of D . ds and B . ds in (3-66) and (3-78) to zero. The specialized forms (9-5) and (9-6) of the Faraday and Ampere laws provide the following interpretations for the TEM mode. I. Faraday's integral law (9-5) is of the same form as (4-6) discussed in Chapter 4. It means that the E field of the TEM mode of a two-conductor transmission line is a conservative field, relative to any closed path t within a fixed cross section at a given instant. One can thus expect that the static E-field solution ofa uniform
two-conductor line can be used as the basis for the TEM-mode E-field solutions on that same line. It is, moreover, correct to assume that a potential relation of the form of (4-31) will serve as an adjunct to the finding of the E-field solutions. 2. Ampere's integral law (9-6) is observed to have the same form as the static form (5-5) considered in Chapter 5. This form will be useful in relating the transmission line TEM-mode current to the corresponding H field in any cross section. The special forms (9-5) and (9-6) of the Faraday and Ampere laws are put to use for the TEM mode as detailed in the following discussions.
A. Electric Field and Line VoHage of the TEM Mode By analogy with similar conclusions drawn for electrostatic fields in Section 4-5, the Faraday relation (9-5) for the E field of the TEM mode also guarantees zero curl of E in any transverse cross section of the transmission line, or (9-7) in whieh the subscript T denotes the curl taken with respect to the transverse variables (u j , U2) only. Thus, by analogy with (4-31), the electric field E of the TEM mode must be related, within any fixed cross section, to an auxiliary scalar potential function such that E
(9-8)
VT
wherein VT denotes the gradient operator with respect to (Ub U2) only. By analogy with (4-38a), there then exists for the TEM mode the potential <1>, at any point in any fixed cross section, given by the integral of E . dt from an arbitrary potential reference Po to the desired point P. By extension, the voltage V between the two conductors of the transmission line is analogous with (4-46)
V=
-
(PI E . dt]
Jp2
(c.s.)
(9-9)
in which (c.s.) denotes that the integration path is to be kept within the fixed cross section. The additional property of the potential of the TEM mode is that it satisfies, by analogy with (4-68), the two-dimensional Laplace's equation
Vi· = 0
(9-10)
9-1 TEM MODE FIELDS BASED ON STATIC FIELDS
461
in which the Laplacian V} is defined by (2-79) with respect to the transverse dimensions (Ub u2) only. All the preceding expressions apply to the fields B(u t , U2, Z, t) and (])(Uj, U2, Z, t) in the time domain. They can more usefully be converted to the time-harmonicphasor form by assuming that the dependence on Z and t is specified by the exponential factor exp (Jwt yz), as already discussed in Section 8-1 for any wave transmission system uniform in cross section. Thus, let
+
(9-11) (9-12) with + and -~ superss.ripts denoting the positive Z and negative Z traveling wave solutions, and If± and (])± signifying complex phasor functions of only the transverse coordinates (ub U2)' Then (9-7), (9-8), and (9-10) can be written, after cancelling the exponential factors
(9-13)
- V T q,±
(9-14)
(9-15)
The total electric field distribution between the conductors is expressed by use of the + Z and - z traveling-wave electric field solutions of (9-14). Adding these together after multiplying them respectively by e -yz and el'z yields
(9-16)
The further replacement of V in (9-9) with v,;;d wthz , in which V';; denotes the cornplcx amplitudes of the voltage waves that accompany the electric fields of (9-11), yields, after canceling the exponential factors,
f~l j± . dt
1..
(9-17)
The integration is taken from P2 on the reference conductor to 1\ on the more positive conductor within a fixed cross section, as denoted in :Figure 9-2 (a). The linear superposition of (9-17), on multiplying the voltage amplitudes respectively by Y", yields the total line voltage on the transmission line
(9-18)
462
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
(a)
/
/
/
(6)
FICCRE 9-2, Two-comiuctol" generalized in relation to eknric and magndic field" (a) Voltage 1~ defined on the positive conductor.
showing' voltage
V
t;
and current.
1";:;
between condu<"lors, (b) Current
EXAMPLE 9-1. A long, uni/()rm coaxial transmission line consisting of perfect conductors with the dimensions shown has a dielectric with the parameters /1, E, apd (L (al Usc the static potential field solution (j) to obtain the time-harmonic potelltial (j)± in any cross section. (Express (j)± as a functioll of the potelltial difference between tlw conducto}"s, taking the outer conductor as the zero reference.) Obtain the transverse electric field .g'±. (Ii) Verify that the total voltage relation (9-20b) correctly leads to the result (9-18). (a) From Example 4-12, the static potential field of the coaxial system with the potential difference V is (4-70) $(p)
iii,I
I
II :1\
I ,
V
Ii
Ii t~ta
P
--t~t
(9-19)
9-1 TEM MODE FIELDS BASED ON STATIC FIELDS
(/J.,
463
f, a)
EXAMPLE 9-l
a solution of Laplace's equation and the boundary conditions. The analogous solution applicable to TEM waves is
~
$±(p) =
if;;; t" ~ a
tn
b
(9-20)
P
in which denotes voltage amplitudes associated with positive z and nq!;ative z traveling wavc solutions. The corresponding electric field solutions are f(mnd from 14) to yield
J±
= -VT
obtaining (9-21 )
a
(9-22a) (9-22b)
in which y is yet to be found, the amplitudes if~ and V;;' depending on the generator and possible reflections occurring down the line. (b) Inserting (9-21) into (9-17) yields
V(z)
= [-
S:d:]e-
V,\ t"
a
= V~e-YZ
+
or jllBt the expected result (9-18).
YZ
+ [- V;;'b t.!
a
Sba;]e
YZ
464
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISS[ON LINES
B. Magnetic Field and Line Current of the TEM Mode Much in the way that Faraday's law (9-5) was used to develop the connection (9-17) of the TEM mode If± fields to their corresponding voltage-wave amplitudes V;;, the Ampere law (9-6) leads to the relationship between the TEM mode magnetic fields and corresponding current-wave amplitudes. Thus, on converting (9-6) to timeharmonic phasor farm; that is, letting B(u!, U2,
z,
t)
i(z, t)
be replaced by jl'±(Ul> uz)ejwHyz
(9-23)
be replaced by I;;e iwt + yz
(9-24)
obtains, after canceling the exponential factors, a measure of the forward- and backward-traveling-wave current amplitudes ~+ 1m
= ~(c.s.) f~f±·
dt
(9-25)
provided that the closed line t completely encloses either conductor of the twoconductor line, as d£picted by the typical closed lines t ~s chosen in Figure 9-2 (b). If the wave solutions ff± were known, their superposition in the same manner as (9-16) leads to the total magnetic field distribution between the conductors, expressed as the sum of the +z and -z traveling waves
(9-26)
The solut0ns for jl'±(Ub u2) in (9-25) and (9-26) will be seen to be expressible in terms of the If± fields, previously found from the potential relation (9-14), and from use of the Maxwell modified curl expressions (8-6) and (8-8). Before finding these, note that the linear superposition of the sinusoidal current-wave amplitudes of (9-25), on multiplying them respectively by yz, yields the total line current on the transmission line
I;;
II "7)' = j+ e - yz + \'v
In
j-m eYz
(9-27)
in which I:. and I;;, are related to the fields jl'± by (9-25). The magnetic field solutions jl'± needed in (9-25) and (9-26) are found from impedance results obtainable from the Maxwell modified curl relations (8-6) and (8-8) developed in Section 8-1. Thus, with no z components of the fields present, expanding (8-6) yields two algebraic relations
±yit =
-jWJ1£"f
(9-28) (9-29)
seen to provide the following intrinsic wave impedance relationship fill' the transverse field components of the TEM mode
it
+-~-
- .Yt' f
=
_ it
+-~-
.Yt' 'f
jWJ1 Y
=-
(9-30)
9-1 TEM MODE FlELDS BASED ON STATIC FlELDS
465
which qTEM = jW/1/Y denotes the intrinsic wave impedance ratio between the indicated transverse components of the electric and magnetic fields in the line cross section. The other modified curl relation (8-8) is here extended to the form that accounts Ibr a lossy dielectric in the tranymission line; that is, (8-8) is written in the form including the conduction term alf± as follows
a) ~±
-
If
W •
A
......
+
(9-31 )
=)WEIf-
in which the complex permittivity E defined in (3-103) appears. Expanding (9-31) the two algebraic equations (9-32) (9-33) which provide another intrinsic wave impedance expression for the TEM mode field components' (9-34) Equating (9-30) and (9-34) yields for the TEM mode
"I
==
a
"12
=
W
2
/lE, obtaining the propagation constant
+ jf3 = jw# = jm
J(E /l
j;)
(9-35)
This is identical with the result (3-88) applicable to unijlJrm plane walles in an unbounded region; it is also seen to be the lossy-region extension of (8-24), deduced in Section 8-2. It thus follows that the expressions (3-90a) and (3-109) for the attenuation constant a, as well as (3-90b) and (3-110) for the phase constant f3, are equally correct for the fields orthe TEM mode on a two-conductor transmission line with ideally perfect conductors. On a completely loss less line (dielectric also perfect), the special results follow:
a=O The phase
lip
f3
w~
(lossless line)
is found by use of the universal result
v
p
W
=--
f3
(9-36) 101) (9-37)
in which the phase constant f3 is once again given by the imaginary part of (9-35), yielding either (3-90b) or 110) of the analogous uniform plane wave problem. From the frequency dependence of f3, it is clear that the phase velocity (9-37) will, in general,
466
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
also have a frequency dependence, denoted by P(w). This gives rise to dispersion effects related to (but somewhat different from) those described for hollow waveguides in Section 8-6, and yielding the group velocity, analogous with (8-81) v =
(d P)-l dw
9
(9-38)
This, as suggested by Figure 8-16, is the speed of information transmission (an envelope velocity) associated with the group of Fourier frequency components that comprise a modulated carrier wave on the transmission line. On an ideal lossless line, with P of (9-36) inserted into (9-37) and (9-38), the phase velocity and also the group velocity of the TEM mode reduce to the frequency independent result (lossless line)
(9-39)
Next, substituting the y expression (9-35) into either of the ~TEM relations (9-34) or (9-30) yields the following expression for the intrinsic wave impedance associated with the TEM mode
r;;
A
1fTEM
(=ry)
= ~I
(9-40)
seen to be identical with (3-97), the intrinsic wave impedance ~ associated with uniform plane waves in a (lossy) unbounded region. It is therefore evident that the wave impedance expressions (3-99a) and (3-111) are also correct for the TEM mode fields of a two-conductor line having perfect conductors. On a lossless line, with E -+ E, the intrinsic wave impedance (9-40) simply becomes the pure real
l
1fTEM =
(lossless line)
(9-41 )
Finally, an alternative expressiop for the impedance relations (9-30) and (9-34), including vector information about B± and 3{'±, is obtained from the expansion of the modified curl relation (8-6), yielding here (9-42)
y
±-.-az JWf1,
~±
X
B
(9-43)
9-1 TEM MODE FIELDS BASED ON STATIC FIELDS
467
if (9-30) is used. The result (9-43) enables finding the magnetic fields ~± of the TEM mode in a two-conductor transmission line, once the electric fields If± are known. (9-43) shows, moreover, that those electric and magnetic field vectors are everywhere perpendicular to each other and to the longitudinal unit vector a z • An extension of Example 9-1 to the determination of the magnetic field in that coaxial line, as well as the accompanying line current, is exemplified in the following.
EXAMPLE 9·2. (a) Find the phasor magnetic fields :ii'± for the coaxial line o[ Example 9-1, and use their superposition to express the total phasor magnetic field H in the lines. (b) Obtain the real-time sinusoidal E(p, z, t) and H(p, z, t) for this line, assuming the dielectric to be lossl~ss. Show a flux sketch of only the positive z traveling wavs:' of these fields. (c) Use the Je± fields of (a) to deduce the phasor curr~nt amplitudes r!;, on the line. Use their superposition to obtain the total line current I(z) for this coaxial line. (d) Sketch the +z traveling-wave electric and magnetic fields in a line cross section, showing the related voltage and current senses.
(a) The solutions (9-21) inserted into (9-43) yield +a4> -
A
Yf tn
(9-44)
bp a
The total magnetic field is given by (9-26), a superposition of (9-44) after multiplication by e- yz and eYz (9-45a) =
atjl
V+I
V-I]
_m _ _ e-Yz _ _ _ m_
bp Yftn~
[ in which
~
A
A
eYz
(9-45b)
bp
YJtn a
and yare given by (9-40) and (9-35).
(b) For a losslessdielectric, (9-35) yields y = jw.JP~ = jp and (9-40) yields ~ The real-time forms of (9-22) and (9-45), by use of (2-74), become
E(p,z, t)
a Re P
ap
[V~ .!. tJ(w,-pz) + V';; tn
bp a
tn
I
bp
'I
~.
tJ(W'+Pzl]
a
V+ I I .] cos(wt-fh+4>+)+ cos (wt+Pz+4>-) bp P In [ In a a _m_
(9-46) V+ I H(p,z,t)=a4> __ m_-cos(Wf bp [ 11 tn a
Pz+4>+)
_V_ m_
I cos (Wf bP 'I tna
+ pz + 4>-)] (9-47)
V;;
assuming complex amplitudes of the form V;; = tJ4> ±. A sketch of the positive z traveling fields is shown.
468
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
--(z)
H; lines~~~~~~~=i~~~~~~:-::~~-~··~~:--:~~:-:-:·:-·;;~:~-:;; I
I
I
I
I
I
o
i3z =
I
I
Wave motion
I 7T
27T
EXAMPLE 9-2(b)
(c) Use is made of (9-25) to find the phasor current amplitudes given by (9-44)
~+
I;;; =
~
"(c.s)
~
+ • dt = ;H'-
I,!
from the
_ie±
fields
(a 4> - V;;;) ± i21t - - . a p d pfilna
+
v±
(9-48)
rn
fi b --In 2:n:
a
whence insertion into (9-27) yields the
+ z and
-
z traveling current waves of the
total line curTent
(9-49)
Normal E terminates on charges
Tangential H terminates on surface currents
~ ~~rface
~'-.(z)
Negative current: - I EXAMPLE 9-2(c)
(z)
9-2 CHARACTERISTIC IMPEDANCE
469
(d) In the accompanying sketch are shown the electric and magnetic fields (;?f only JlIe positive z traveling waves), along with their related voltage and current V+ and
r.
9·2 CHARACTERISTIC IMPEDANCE It is usually desirable to characterize TEM waves on a line in terms of their voltage and current waves rather than the electric and magnetic field quantities discussed in the foregoing sections. The advantages are evident from the fact that voltages and currents on a transmission line are readily measured scalar quantities at frequencies below I GHz or so, whereas the electric and magnetic fields must usually be inferred from such measurements. The comparison of the total line current (9-49) as evolved in Example 9-2, with the expression (9-27) for i(z), suggests writing the total line current i(z) in the equivalent form
(9-50)
In (9-50), the quantity be defined by
<:0 is called the characteristic impedance of the given line, seen to
7 = +
v±
(9-51 )
m
"-0 ----:;;;::;:-
1m
as is evident from the direct comparison of (9-50) with (9-27). Thus, the characteristic impedance <:0 denotes the ratio V~ Ii;;. of the voltage and current amplitudes associated with the +z traveling s~nm.?idal waves of voltage and current on the line, while further denoting the ratio - V;;' 11;;' relative to the - z traveling voltage and current waves considered separately. The direct comparison of (9-50) with the total line current ~expression (9-49) obtained in Example 9-2 shows that the characteristic impedance ..(0 of a coaxial line, for example, is given by ~
..(0 =
~
2n
b a
In-
(9-52)
assuming idealized perfect conductors. A summary of the TEM mode relationships developed in this section is given in Table 9-1.
470
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
TABLE 9-1 Summary Relations for TEM Waves
Magnetic fields arc obtained from j± solutions by usc of
Electric fields are found from quasi-static potentials [9-14] in which $± are solutions of Laplace's equation (9-15). The total electric field, including dence, is
E(u 1 ,
U2,
=
depen-
The total magnetic field, including dence, is
z)
H(u 1 ,
U2'
Z)
.it'+ (u l ,
j+
+ ;ir(ul>
[9-161
[9-26J Current wave complex amplitudes are
Voltage-wave complex amplitudes arc
7±m
[9-171
J. :ltd (u 1 , 'j"t'(c.s.)
proportional to
[9-25]
[9-27]
[9-181
i' and 7;'
. dt
making the total current
making the total voltage
With
depen-
V,=;,
(9-27) can be written
[9-50] in which the characteristic .impedance
Zo is
~
. dt
a
X Z
t(c.s)
i}
[9-51 ]
j± •
dt
EXAMPLE 9·3. A 10ss1ess coaxial line has the dimensions 2a = 0.1 ~n. and 2b 0.326 in., using a dielectric with Er = 2. Assume J = 20 MHz. (a) Find its Zo, fl, and 'rp' (b) If the disiectric had the small loss tangent (E"IE') (l.0002 at this fi'equency, determine how much Zo, fl, and 'Up change and how much attenuatioq is introduced. (a) The charactcristic impcpance is (flUnd using q = /lo/2Eo = 120nj:j2 = 266.5 n. Thus
requiring (9-'11) which yidds
.J
q 2n
In
b
266.5
a
2n
In
0.326
0.1
son
9-3 TRA:>ISMlSSION-LlNE PARAMETERS, PERFECT CONDUCTORS ASSUMED
From
471
and
f3
=
Ohj/lo(2Eol
=
211:(2 x W),fi 8 3 x 10 2.12
X
0.594 rad/m
10 8 m/sec
(b) The dielectrie with E"/E' = 0.0002 has from (9-40) or (3-111)
, 1] =
12011:/./2
[1
yielding, lImn
ei(1/2) arc tan
+
0.0002
~
266.5ei0.OOOl
~
266.5 Q
Zo with the same negligible angle
The constants ex and fJ are evaluated by use of the small loss approximations (3-11 and (3-113b); thus - [ I + 8:1 (E")2J fJ ~ W.//lE 7 = 0.594 [(0.0002)2J I + ---8-- ~ 0.594 rad/m
ex
wf (~)
0.~94 (0.0002) =
5.94 x 10
5
Np/m
The latter implies a wave decay to e 1 in a distance d ry;-l = (5.94 x 10- 5)- 1 16.8 km = 10.4 mL With fJ essentially unchanged, 1J p remains at 2.12 x 108 m/sec in the lossy dielectric.
9·3 TRANSMISSION·LlNE PARAMETERS, PERFECT CONDUCTORS ASSUMED Maxwell's equations can be used to derive a pair of coupled differential equations expressed in terms of the voltage and current on a transmission line carrying the dominant TEM mode. The development is carried out tirst in the real-time domain. The present discussion concerns a line composed of perfect conductors separated by a dielectric with parameters (E, fl, 0'). It is shown that at any Z cross section on the line, the voltage and current satisfy the differential equations
iW
(9-53)
oz of C
'e,
av at
gV
(9-54)
in which c, and g are distributed (per meter) inductance, capacitance, and conductance parameters to be defined. The equations are coupled in the sense that both dependent variables V(z, t) and I(z, t) appear in each.
472
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
A. Distributed Parameters and the Transmission Line Equations The transmission line equation (9-53) is derived using the Faraday law (3-78)
~ E . dt = - at-aLs B . ds =
-~m -V
t
(9-55)
at
applied to a thin, closed rectangle t of width i\z --+ dz in a typical doss section as shown in Figure 9-3(a), with a magnetic flux i\t/Jm passing through the surface bounded by t. The left side of (9-55), integrated about t in the 1-4-3-2-1 sense, yields voltages - V and V + (aV;oz) i\z over 2-1 and 4-3, with no contributions over 1-4 and 3-2 at the perfectly conducting walls. Thus the left side becomes
av ) = -av i\z
~ E . dt = - V + ( V + -az i\z t
(9-56)
oz
The right side of (9-55) involves the flux L1..t/Jm intercepted by t. It was shown from (9-6) that the time-varying magnetic field of the TEM mode, 'in a fixed cross section of the line, satisfies the same Maxwell equations and boundary conditions as does the static magnetic field produced by a direct current flowing in the line. Therefore the external inductance expression (5-88a) is applicable, becoming (9-57a) in which L1..Le denotes the static external inductance associated with any L1..z slice. By writing L1..Le = (leL1..z), implying
(9-57b)
I.
(z)
- (z)
Hl1z (b)
FIGURE 9-3. Geometric constructions relative to transmission-line equations. (a) Thin rectangle t of width L\z intercepting magnetic flux L\I/I",. (b) Closed surface 8 8 1 + 8 2 + 8 3 of width L\z intercepting currents i9/conductor and dielectric.
II I\!
'11
473
9-3 TRANSMISSION-LiNE PARAMETERS, PERFECT CONDUCTORS ASSUMED
(9-57a) becomes (9-57c) in which Ie denotes the static external inductance per unit length, or external distributed inductance parameter, of the line. From (9-5 7b) it is evident that the distributed external inductance parameter Ie = I1Le/I1Z is identical with that provided by the static methods described in Section 5-11; thus, write (9-57b) as I = I1Le
(9-57d)
e
For example, Ie of a coaxial line is given by (2) of Example 5-13. With (9-56) and (9-57c) substituted into the Faraday law (9-55), one obtains
av az
a at
--(11)
(9-58)
e
The parameter Ie is a constant in a rigid line having a dielectrie with a eonstant fl, so (9-58) becomes
av az
01
-I e
(9-59)
at
which is (9-53), that which was to have been proved. Similarly, (9-54) is derived from the current continuity relation (3-82a)
J, J' ds = _ oq
r.5
at
[3-82a]
applied to a dosed surface 8 of width I1z -> dz in the same cross section, as shown in Figure 9-3(b). The conductor at the assumed positive polarity is chosen for the constructioIl, where the positive 1 sense is taken to be z-directed. The right side of (3-82a) involves a surface charge increment I1q deposited at any t on the peripheral 8 3 shown, in view of the boundary condition (3-45). As seen from (9-5) and (9-3), the timevarying electric field of the TE M mode, in a fixed eross seetion of the line, satisfies the same Maxwell equations and boundary conditions as the static electric field between those conductors. The definition (4-47) of static capacitance can therefore be used to rdate I1q (0 the instantaneous voltage V between the conductors as follows I1q = (I1C) V
with I1C dcnoting the static capacitance ofthc I1z slice. Putting I1C
c
I1C I1z F/m
(9-60a) (cl1z), or
(9-60b)
474
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
(9-60a) becomes
llq
= (c
llz) V
(9-60c)
in which e denotes the static capacitance per unit length, or distributed capacitance parameter of the uniform line. From (9-60b) it is seen that the distributed capacitance parameter c is also the static capacitance per unit length Cil as discussed in Chapter 4; so write (9-60b) as (9-60d) For example, e for a parallel-wire line is given by CIt obtained from (4-107). The left side of (3-B2a) denotes the net current flux emergent from S at any t. The contributions through S1 and S2 in Figure 9-3(b) yield the net amount
I
+J+
01
01 oz llz
llz
(9-61 )
An additional current increment llJ leaves the peripheral surface S3 and enters the region between the conductors, assuming the dielectric has a conductivity (J. From (4-119), llJ is proportional to V, obeying
111 = (llG) V
(9-62a)
in which llG denotes the eonductance of the llz slice. By putting llG = (g llz), implying
llG g= llzU/m
(9-62b)
III = (g llz) V
(9-62c)
(9-62a) becomes
in which g defined by (9-62b) denotes the conductance per unit length, or distributed eonductance parameter of the line. It is evident from (4-121), from which llG = ((J/E) llC, that g is not an independent quantity; it is related to the distributed capacitance parameter 3 c on making use of (3-IOB)
g
(J(
Elf) U 1m
(J
= -E e = -WE we = -E' we
(9-63)
Inserting (9-60c), (9-61), and (9-62c) into (3-B2a) yields
01 0 ozllz+ (gllz) V = -ot (ellz)V 3The last forms for g in (9-63) involve the frequency
ill
and so apply to tho; time-harmonic case only.
9-3 TRANSMISSION-LINE PARAMETERS, PERFECT CONDUCTORS ASSUMED
475
reducing to the differential equation
oJ OZ
0
= --(cV) -gV
ot
If the parameter c is not a function of time, the latter becomes
oJ
c
oz
oV -gV ot
(9-64)
or just (9-54). B. Line Constants ,)" Zo in Terms of Distributed Parameters Many dielectric materials used in transmission lines have parameters 11, E, and (J that may be functions of the sinusoidal frequency ill of the fields, as seen from Table 3-3. From this point of view, the time-harmonic forms of the transmission-line equations may be of greater interest than the real-time forms (9-53) and (9-54). Thus, if into the latter .
V(z, t) is replaced with v(z)ei wt l(z, t) is replaced with l(z)ei wt
(9-65)
one obtains the time-harmonic transmission-line equations
~
dV
- = -Jill I J
dz
e
(9-66a)
(9-66b) These are also written
dl
-=
dz
-if
(9-67a)
-yV~
(9-67b)
on taking i and y to mean
y = g + jwc t5/m
Series-distributed impedance
(9-68)
Shunt-distributed admittance
(9-69)
476
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
With the substitution of (9-63), Y is written in terms of the dielectric loss tangent as follows
(9-70) For example, using a dielectric with a loss tangent of 0.00] yieldsy = (0.001 + j)wc, or very nearly jwc. The wave solutions for V(z) and i(z) of the transmission-line equat~ms (9-67) have been supplied by (9-20a) and (9-49). They yield expressions for y and <:'0 in terms of parameters and y as ftJllows. into (9-53) and (9-54)
z
If:
.
~+
-
V(z, t) is replaced with V;;;e1 w t+ yz ~+
.
-
I(z, t) is replaced with I;;;e1 wt + yZ
(9-71)
one obtains purely algebraic results
+y~ = -jwIJ;:; = -zl,,~
+yI;:; But from (9-50), the ratio
= - (g
± 17;:;/1;;
is
(9-72)
+ jwc) V;:; = -yV;:;
Zo, obtaining from
(9-73)
(9-72) and (9-73)
(9-74)
The last equality enables expressing y in terms of the distributed parameters (9-68) and (9-69)
y == a +j/3 =
vzy
= ~(j(t)le)(g
(9-75a)
+ jwc)
m-
1
(9-75b)
also written
y
(9-75c)
y can also be expressed in terms of the dielectric parameters as
(9-75d)
9-3 TRANSMISSION-LINE PARAMETERS, PERFECT CONDUCTORS ASSUMED
477
obtained by substituting E = E(l + (Jf.jWE) £i-om (3-103) into (9-35). Ifg = ((J/E)C of (9-63) is combined with (9-75c) and (9-75d), one obtains the special result
(9-76)
The use of (9-63) and (9-76) permits finding g and Ie of a line once c, for example, has been obtained, presuming the constants /l, E, and (J (or the loss tangent) of the dielectric are known. Inserting (9-75a) back into (9-74) obtains also in terms of the distributed parameters
Zo
(9-77a) (9-77b)
Putting (9-63) and (9-76) into (9-77b), one finds that ductors and dielectric losses can be expressed
-
A
<0 = '1
Ie /l
A
Zo of a line with perfect con-
E
= '1-
(9-77c)
C
If the line is completely idealized by assuming' no dielectric losses, (9-7 5c) reduces to y =
jwji;: = jW.ji;., implying f3
=
wji;: = w.jJlE
Lossless
(9-78)
Then (9-77 c) yields the pure real characteristic impedance <0
= 1}(O) ~ = 1}(O) ~ = Lossless /l c~-;;
&
(9-79)
in which '1{O) = ~ is the intrinsic wave impedance associated with the lossless dielectric. Equations (9-78) and (9-79) are useful for short transmission lines used at high frequencies, for which neglecting the small losses may not entail serious errors. Note that (9-77c), applied to the special cases of coaxial and parallel-wire lines with perfect conductors, produces the f()llowing results on making use of the static capacitances (4-51) and (4-107) A
1}
2n
P
b
lj{t'l-
a
Coaxial line, perfect conductors
(9-80a)
478
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
800
200
700 f-
~
t
--
600 f - f -
V
_._-
V
V
f-l--
300
V
200 100
1/
/
¥
L
-
f-
I
,--If.-
Y
vI/Coaxial
t----t
1--'
50 -1--
iIt-f--
!--I
t---
2 34 6
10
20 4060100 200 !!:. or l!. R a
FIGURE 9-4. Characteristic impedance
~
01
,/ ....-
v
Vc~__
_ .. f- _.---f- f -
r-- I- V kt'oaxial
fL+- 1--t--V I---- 1-- +- +-
l-"
l·- f - f··-
--I-- !-t--
1,.-/
V
f---
i/-
.."
I
---
II
--
f-t·-
wire
f--fI--
..
V
~
,--
-f-- +-
i--j--
1·_·- /-- VParaliel
f-
/
~400 ~
/
rl
-V'
--
1--
I--- ..-- f-i--
-7
I-- i - - - j - f-j-- ._- r-
150 f-
Parallel wire / 500
V
f--l--
1-
1.21.4
or lossless coaxial and
ff-l-- -
1.8 2 2.4 !!:. or l!. Ii
1·-
t--
i -t----+--
-
3
4
5
a
parallel-wire lines.
and
Parallel-wire line, perfect conductors
(9-80b)
If dielectric losses are neglected, the wave impedance becomes fj ....., 11(0) = 120n1JE~ with the reasonable assumption ofa nonmagnetic dielectric. Then (9-30a) and (9-30b) yield the real results
Z'o Z'o
=
60 b ~tn Er
120
a
[h J(h)2 -R J
tn. -+ R
1
Lossless coaxial line
(9-80c)
Lossless parallel-wire line
(9-80d)
and are graphed in Figure 9-4. They are usefLl1 approximations for transmission lines at high frequencies, lor which impedive efiects due to the field penetration into the conductors, described in Section 9-6 under the topic of skin effect, are neglected.
EXAMPLE 9·4. A coaxial line has perfect conductors but not necessarily a lossless dielectric. (a) Adapt the static capacitance of the Ene to find its parameter c. (b) Find g. (e) Use (9-57c) to derive Ie, the distributed (external) inductance parameter.
9-4 CIRCUIT MODEL OF A LINE WITH PERFECT CONDUCTORS
):
The static given by f:.Cjf:.z, whence from (9-60d) c=
This ratio
2nE
479 also
(9-81a)
b
Cn~
a
(Ii) The distributed conductance parameter is given by
g=
(J E
2n(J
(9-81b)
c=--
Cn
b
a
Thc ShUlit distributed admittance (9-70) is therefore
y
g
EO) We =7 (En) 2nE + j w --b
+ jwc = (-;; + j
(9-82)
Cna
(c) The defining relation for the distributed external inductance parameter Ie is
(9-83) in which f:.t/lm is the flux intercepted by a thin rectangle as in Figure 9-3(a). Thus f:.t/lm in.tercepted by C is B· ds in which B = ,uH, with (9-44) providing the solutions :Ye± Ic)r the coaxial line. Thus (9-83) in complex form becomes, as f:.z --> dz
Is
but
± V;'/I;!;
=
Zo from (9-51), so canceling dz obtains (9-84)
a result also directly obtainable by use of (9-76). Then from (9-68)
A · I ·=)W , u p[n~ l!
Z =)W
e
2n
a
(9-85)
*9-4 CIRCUIT MODEL OF A LINE WITH PERFECT CONDUCTORS
The transmission-line equations (9-53) and (9-54) can be used to establish a circuit model ofa two-conductor line. Such a model employing lumped circuit elements L, C, and R exhibits the same voltage and current characteristics as the line being modeled.
480
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
--7.J.-
~======================~l=,,=========/~)============~~~T=w=o=-c=o=n=du=c=to=r='~in~e' b)
L/2
L
L
L
" I
r'
' L L
CGCGCG:
:
_...l
L
c = cLlz
G
L/2
= g!:J.z
FIGURE 9-5. Circuit model of a Ene with perfect conductors and dielectric losses.
It assumes the configuration as in Figure 9-5, depicting the model of some length increment Llz of the line to consist ofa series inductive element L = 'eLlz and shunt capacitance and conductance elements C = c Llz and G = g Llz, in whieh c, and g are the line distributed parameters. As many of such sections as are needed to model a line length d are cascaded as shown. This procedure permits scaling a transmission line of any length into a circuit model suitable for tests within the confines of a laboratory. Transmission-line network analyzers, useful in the performance prediction of power line and telephone systems, can be built according to such a modeling technique. Another application is to pulse-forming circuits, using the wave delay and reflection properties of a transmission line. To show that the model of Figure 9-5 essentially obeys the transmission-line equations (9-53) and (9-54), note that 1 flowing through the series inductive element L = Ie Llz produces an incremental voltage drop given by Ll V = - a/at[le Llzl], in which the minus sign accounts for the polarity relative to the assumed positive sense of 1. This is written
'e,
(9-86) if Ie is not time-dependent. The finite difference form of (9-53) is (9-86), one of the desired results. Similarly, the current increment diverted through the shunt elements C = c Llz and G=gLlz in Figure 9-5 is Lll= -a/at[(cLlz)(V+LlV)] - (gLlz)(V+LlV). Assuming c a constant and neglecting the Ll V terms yields
c I';
I. ,
I!II ,'!
I
the finite-difference counterpart of (9-54).
av -gV at
(9-87)
9-5 WAVE EQUATIONS FOR A LINE WITH PERFECT CONDUCTORS
481
*9·5 WAVE EQUATIONS FOR A LINE WITH PERFECT CONDUCTORS The voltage and current on a transmission line obey wave equations analogous to those derived in Chapter 8 for the fields E and H ofTM and TE modes. In the present case of TEM modes, manipulating the transmission-line equations (9-53) and (9-54) leads to wave equations in terms of Vor 1. Thus, if (9-53) is differentiated with respect to z and (9-54·) substituted into the result, a wave equation in terms of V is obtained, whereas reversing the procedure yields a wave equation in terms of 1. These become
(9-88a)
(9-88b)
The third term of each equation is attributable to dielectric losses, for setting g reduces them to
0
(9-89a) Wave equations for lossless line
(9-89b)
The complex time-harmonic forms of the wave equations (9-88) are obtained by the usual substitution of the exponential functions (9-65), yielding
(9-90a)
o
(9-90b)
also written
d2 V dz 2 d2 f dz 1
zyV = 0 zyI = 0
(9-90c)
(9-90d)
482
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
z
if = j(J)le and y = g + j(J)c according to (9-68) and (9-69). Solving (9-90c) and (9-90d) produces the wave solutions (9-91 a) (9-91b) with the propagation constant y given by (9-92) These results are consistent, as expected, with the solutions (9-18) and (9-27) for V(z) and I(z), and with (9-75) for y, all obtained previously via a rather different route.
9·6 TRANSMISSION·LlNE PARAMETERS, CONDUCTOR·IMPEDANCE INCLUDED4\,,: In previous sections, the transmISSIon line carrying the TEM mode was discussed, assuming possible losses within the dielectric but with the idealization of perfect conductors (O'c ~ CD). In the real world, conductors with a high (though finite) conductivity O'c are used in the fabrication oflines, introducing two new problems into the study of this mode I. The distortion of the electric field in the dielectric from a true transverse (TEM) condition, brought about by the presence of an E z component at the conductor walls. . 2. The current penetration into the conductor interiors, given the name skin effect. The longitudinal current I(z, t) in the conductors gives rise to a z-directed electric fIeld component along the conductor wall whenever its conductivity O'c is finite, in view of the relation (3-7), J O'eE. The presence of such a longitudinal component at the dielectric conductor interface would appear to contradict the assumption (9-1) defining the TEM mode for the line. With a sufficiently high conductivity of the conductors, however, an almost negligible E z component is developed at the walls, compared with the transverse component present there. This condition is shown in Figure 9-6(a), using a coaxial line for illustrative purposes. A slight curvature of the electric flux between the conductors is produced by E z . The current penetration into the conductors of a line complicates the derivation of suitable transmission-line equations resembling (9-67a) and (9-67b). Infinitely conductive lines possess only surface currents on the conductor walls, but with a finite conductivity, current conditions like those of Figure 9-6(b) are obtained, with a relatively small penetration occurring at high frequencies, while a uniform current density prevails over the cross section under dc conditions. An exact solution entails satisfying the boundary conditions fbI' the fields, that is, matching the normal and tangential components of the fields at the interfaces separating the dielectric region from the two conductors. Some of these solutions, derived for particular line geometries, are discussed in the following. 41f you wish to omit the development of internal resistance and indu!'tance parameters in this section, to conserve time, just refer to the results (9-103) and (9~105) for y and <:0 and proceed to Section 9-7.
9-6 TRANSMISSION-LINE PARAMETERS, CONDUCTOR-IMPEDANCE INCLUDED
483
Almost-TEM electric field lines
(a)
,~~~~~~~
Region 2 Region 3 ., Region 1
Low frequency (w (0-=)
0)
Medium frequency (medium 0)
High frequency (small 0)
(b)
FIGURE 9-6. Eficcts of finite conductivity in a coaxial line. (a) Infiuencc of the E z field on the distortion of the TEM mode (shown exaggerated). (b) Illustrating current density variations at various frequencies.
A. General Line Equations and Distributed Parameters In d.eriving the transmission-line equation (9-59) or its time-harmonic form (9-67a), dV/dz = -zI, it was seen that the Faraday law (3-78) yielded only an external inductance contribution, = jwle . No resistive term was obtained because of the assumption of perfect conductors, allowing no tangential E component along the short sides of the rectangle, For physical conductors with a finite conductivity, the timevarying tangential H-field at the conduct2r wall, required by (3-71) to be conti quo us into the interior, generates an associated E component propagating along with H into the conductors as suggested by Figure 9-6(b), A current density field J accompanies this electromagnetic wave, in view of (3-7). An illustration of this process was found in the propagation of wall-loss currents into the metal boundaries of a hollow waveguide, as in Figure 8-18, In the following development it is shown that the form of transmission-line equations (9-67) are also applicable to a line whose conductors have finite conductivity, the series-distributed parameter Z acquiring two interr}at imfJeda!,:ce contributions Zil and Zi2, attributable to the tangential components Ezl and Ez2 developed along the conductor walls, To show this, Faraday's law (3-78), E· dt = -dt/lm/dt, is applied again to a thin rectangle t constructed as in Figure 9-3(a) in~a cross section of the line. The finite conductivity produces additional voltage terms L1V1
z
't
484
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
Conductor 2
Hflux
E flux Conductor
(z)
1
(a)
tY' : Poynti ng vector
(b)
(c)
FIGURE 9-7. Relative to internal conductor-impedance em~cts in Iim's. (a) The coaxial line, showing dosed line t (1234) and voltages along its edges. (b) Parallel-wire linc, with rectangle t. (e) An isolated conductor, with axial symmetry.
and dV2 at the;: segments as depicted in Figures 9-7(a) and (b). Along the edge 4-1, using time-harmonic quantities, (9-93) is obtailled fl'om the integral of -E . dt along d;:. Continu~us into the conductor surface is E z, where it is proportional to the current density ]z through (3-7), while Jz is in turn proportional to the current I carried in the conductor, related to the H field
by (9-94)
I',J
One can therefore write (9-93) as
I I
(9-95)
9-6 TRANSMISSION-LINE PARAMETERS, CONDUCTOR-IMPEDANCE INCLUDED
485
in which the proportionality constant Zil is called the internal distributed (a surface impedance) parameter, in view of its units (ohm per meter). A similar argument concerns the voltage along the edge 2-3, so define internal impedance parameters for each conductor by (9-96)
The integral (3-78) taken about the four sides of t in Figure 9-7(a) or (b) thus obtains
~ + (~V +
V
af!) ~ ~ llz + (Zi1 llz)! + (zizllz)!
The right side of (3-78), moreover, in time-har~onic form, becomes -jw(lellz)J, based on the external magnetic flux lll/tm (lellz)! linking t as already considered for Figure 9-3(a). Thus (3-78) becomes
which, after canceling llz, yields the differential equation
(9-97)
The total series distributed impedance Z is therefore (9-98a) the sum of the internal parameters (9-96) plus the reactance of the external inductance parameter Ie defined by (9-57b). In the discussion to follow, it develops that Zii and Zi2 consist of resistive and inductive parts, to permit writing (9-98a)
= (ril =
r
+ jwlil ) + (ri2 + j w1i2) + jw1e
+ jwl !lIm
(9-98b)
in which r and I denote the total series distributed resistance and inductance parameters of the line.
486
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
The othcr transmission-linc equation, obtainable from the continuity relation (3-82a), maintains the samc forms (9-64) or (9-67b) as for the line with perlect conductors
(9-99)
in which thc shunt-distributed parameter y dcnotes
Y=
g
+ Jwe
= (
EN 7 +.i)
(9-l00)
we U/m
with g and e dcfined as usual by (9-60b) and (9-63), or by (9-70).
B. General Line Constants ,)" Distributed Parameters
Zo and
The simultaneous manipulation of (9-97) and (9-99) further lcads to wavc equations cornparable to (9-90) obtained for thc perfect conductor case, becoming
(9-101a)
zyl
0
(9-10lb)
Their solutions are evidcntly (9-102a) (9-102b) if y denotes the complex propagation constant
y
== Ct + J/3 =
JIJ = .j(r + Jwl)(g + Jwe) m
1
(9-103a)
~+ ± . and V;;; and 1m are the usual complex amphtudes of the forward and backward waves. If the line parameters r are small compared with Jwl and Jwe rcspectively, + gJlj-;;) + a useful simplification of (9-103a) can be shown to yield y= (i)
(rFc/i
9-6 TRANSMISSION-LINE PARAMETERS, CONDUCTOR-IMPEDANCE INCLUDED
487
Jw-Ji~, obtaining the attenuation and phase constants
rJ.
rA gA
'C::: -
- 2
-
I
+-
- Np/m
2
e
p ~ wJlc rad/m
(9-I03b)
Low-loss line
r« wi
(9-103c)
g« we
The f(xm of (9-103b) is seen to separate the attenuative effects into contributions due to the series and shunt loss-parameters rand g. ~ ~ That (9-1 02b) can be written in terms of V~ and V,~ according to (9-104)
is demonstrated by inserting the solution (9-102a) back into (9-97), yielding
Tbis becomes (9-104) on inserting (9-1 03a), provided the characteristic impedance is written
Zo
V,;; ~+
~
=
J' z
(9-105a)
r;:+Jwl Q
(9-105b)
ZO=±J~=
j
~g+Jwc
The circuit model illustrated in Figure 9-8 can be shown to he valid for the transmission line having both dielectric and conductor losses. Applying the method of Section 9-5, finite difference versions of the transmission-line equations (9-97) and (9-99)
(z)
Qr:=U}HV -
R- ,,6.z
L= 16.z
'
\C=g6,z
FIGURE 9-8. Circuit model of a line with dielectric (shnnt) and condnctor (series) losses.
488
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
hold for the model. A comparison with Figure 9-4 reveals that the effect of conductor losses is to insert the series resistance element r ~z into each section of the model, while the series inductance element I ~z must include internal inductance contributions. The details leading to analytical expressions for the distributed parameters and y of particular uniform transmission lines are considered in Appendix B. In part A, the so-called "skin effect" in a round wire due to its finite conductivity, leading to a surface impedance interpretation of the internal distributed impedance parameter r + jwl, is taken up in detail. This leads, in part B, to the determination of the distributed parameters of the parallel-wire line as functions of frequency. An extension to the coaxial line is taken up in part C. Examples are included.
z
z=
9· 7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES Although a good share of this chapter has involved the complex time-harmonic relationships between sinusoidal line voltage and current waves and their TEM fields, the detailed application of these phasor results to two conductive transmissions lines fed by generators operating in the sinusoidal stead)! state will be delayed until Chapter 10. In this section, attention is focused primarily on the voltage and current-wave solutions of the lossless-line wave equations (9-89) in the real-time domain. A generator of an arbitrary voltage waveshape Vg(t) is assumed applied to the input of a lossless line, and the voltage and current responses, V(z, t) and I(z, t), will be examined at any location z on the line. It is to be shown that whatever voltage disturbance V(O, t) is applied by a generator source to the lossless-line input (at Z = 0), will subsequently appear as a voltage V(z, t) of identical waveshape at the location z further down the line, except it will be delayed in time by the amount z/v seconds, a time delay determined by the intervening line distance and the wave velocity v. Two methods for relating nonsinusoidal voltage and current waves on a lossless line are discussed.
t. Direct solution 'If the wave equation. A method for determining the general form of the voltage and current waves launched on a lossless line by the generator of an arbitrary voltage waveshape uses a direct attack on the time-domain wave equation (9-89a) or (9-89b). Consider (9-89a):
82 V
I 82 V - -2 - = 0 v 8P
[9-89a]
in which lee in view of (9-39) and (9-76), is replaced with I wherein the phase velocity vp of (9-39) is here replaced with a wave speed, v, shown to be identical with Vp on a lossless line. I t is to be demonstrated that the general form of the time-domain voltage solution V(z, t) of (9-89a) consists of the linear superposition of arbitrary incident and reflected voltage-wave functions of (t ± z/v) as follows (9-106) In (9-106), V+(t z/v), the forward z traveling voltage wave, denotes anyJunction whatsoever of the variables t, Z in the combination (t - z/v), the waveshape of which is determined by the generated voltage source attached to the line
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES
489
input. 5 V- (I + is the reflected voltage wave function of (t + determined by the nature of the load termination, to be discussed later. To show that the voltage function V+ (t - z/v) is a solution of the wave equation (9-89a), let the variable t - z/v be denoted by u. Since au/at = 1 and au/az = - l/v, observe that
av+
av+ au ---
az
au az
{l2V+
a2 v+
{lz2
TuZ
1 av+ ----v au (9-107a)
Similarly, it is shown that (9-I07b)
On substituting (9-107) back into the wave equation (9-89a), an identity is obtained, thus verifying that the arbitrary function V+ (t - z/1)) is a solution. A similar proof verifies that the arbitrary reflected-wave function V- (t + z/t}) is also a solu tion of (9-89a), thereby proving the correctness of the general voltagewave solution (9-106). The real-time voltage-wave function V+ (t - z/1)) is easy to interpret physically. At Z = 0 (the line input), the wave has the function form V+(t). Further down the line, at any arbitrary Z location, the wave becomes functionally V+ (t - z/t}), of precisely the same waveshape as V+ (t) at the line input, except for being delayed (or shifted) in time by z/1) seconds. This confirms the remark made at the start of this section, that "whatever voltage disturbance is applied by the arbitrary voltage source to the loss less line input will subsequently appear at the location Z further down the line, except it will be delayed in time by z/1) seconds." This conclusion is not strictly correct, however, when the line has losses, for then the wave equatio~gffi,~ingthls~voltage wave behavior typically acquires a loss term like that seen in (9-88a), for example, to alter the solution. The general form of the time-domain current wave solution I(z, t) in a lossless line is of the same form as the voltage solution (9-106), or
I(z, t)
(9-108)
in view of the wave equations (9-89a) and (9-89b) being identical in form. The simple relationship between the incident and reflected current wave functions in (9-108) and their voltage wave counterparts in (9-106) is discussed next. 5 An important function of the space-time variable (t z/v) encountered earlier is the sinusoidal travelingwave functiou, A cos (WI - (h), also written A cos w[t - (/3/w)zl = A cos w(t z/u) (see Figure 2-11). Depending on one's observation point z along the z-axis, this function will replicate the wave A cos wt occurring at z 0, except it will be delayed by z/v seconds at the new z. Thus, z/v denotes a time-shift, or delay, a characteristic of this class of wave functions of t - z/v.
'i 490
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
2. Fourier method. Suppose that a voltage generator of voltage Vg(t) of arbitrary waveshape and with some series internal resistance R o' is connected to the input terminals z 0 of a lossless two-conductor line, developing the input voltage V+(O, t) there. An example of the consequence of this is shown in Figure 9-9(a), showing a generated triangular wave applied to the line input, launching onto the line the positive z traveling triangular wave shown. From the wave solution (9-106) obtained in part (I) by the direct method, this positive z traveling wave is precisely V+ (t - z/v). At the line input (z = 0), if the triangular voltage V+ (t) there were represented by its Fourier series of sinusoidal harmonics, these would proceed down the line as individual odd-harmonic sinusoidal traveling waves given by A1 cos w(t - z/v), A3 cos 3w(t - z/v), As cos 5w(t - z/v) , and so OIl. Each sinusoid travels with exactly the same phase velocity VI = V3 = Vs = v in the wave equation (9-89a) and given by (9-39) and (9-76)
v=v
=--=-p
JJ;.
.ji;
[9-39]
confirming the conclusion of part I, that no waveform distortion of V+ (t can occur on this lossless line, in view of this precisely maintained phase relation-
(1I)
(b)
(e)
FIGURE 9.9. Features of nonsinusoidal wave propagation on loss and lossy lines. (a) Typical recurrent nonsinusoidal wave, synthesized using Fourier series of sinnsoids. (b) Singly occurring wave; may be synthesized using Fourier integral. (e) Singly occurring wave on a lossy line, dispersion of Fourier components produces waveform distortion.
491
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES
ship among all the Fourier sinusoids,making up this voltage wave as it travels down the line, The positive z traveling current wave 1+ (t - z/v) in (9-108) that accompanies any arbitrary voltage traveling-wave function V+ (t - z/v) on the lossless line, is also of interest. This positive z traveling-current wave can be shown to be of precisely the same waveshape as the voltage wave, being given by
(9-109a) in which Ro Jij;: denotes the pure real characteristic resistance of this lossless line, obtained from (9-79) (or from (9-105b), if r = 0 and g = 0). The simple proportionality (9-1 09a)Js easily proved by inspection, on noting that an identical relationship, I~ = V~/Ro, obtained from (9-51), connects the amplitudes of all corresponding sinusoidal harmonic terms in the Fourier expansion of V+ (t - z/v) and the related expansion obtained for the current wave 1+ (t - z/v). Extending this argument to negative z traveling waves of voltage and current of arbitrary waveshape on the line, in the event of wave reflections from the load, a ratio similar to (9-109a) applies
(9-109b)
Having accounted for both positive z (incident) and negative z traveling (reflected) waves of voltage and current on this lossless line, one can now write (9-109) for the general voltage-wave solution
(9-11Oa)
in addition to the general current-wave solution (9-108), which becomes
(9-110b)
On a line with losses, the phase velocities of the harmonic Fourier terms vary with fl-equency, in view of the phase constant f3 given by the imaginary part of (9-103a). Waveform distortion is expected on a TEM line with losses, becoming more severe with longer line lengths because of the increase in the phase disparity among the Fourier terms. This phenomenon is depicted in Figure 9-9(c).
492
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
Rg
Vg(tJ
'---V-(-\l,,{D
o
z={ (a)
(b)
FIGURE 9-10. A lossless line fed by a nonsinusoidal generator. (a) Lossless line terminated arbitrarily. (b) Typical load terminations.
Consider a class of problems typified in Figure 9-1O(a). The source Vg(t) of arbitrary waveshape (i.e., a pulse, a ramp function, etc.) has an internal resistance R g . The details are given in the following in terms of (A) the input conditions resulting in positive z traveling waves of voltage and current and (B) the reflected waves obtained from the load conditions.
A. The Line Input Conditions and the Forward-Propagated Waves On applying Vg(t) to the system of Figure 9-1O(a), the. voltage and current waves
consist initially ofonly the forward-traveling terms V+ and r of (9-110a) and (9-1 lOb ), from the physical fact that, with active sources only at the generator end, backward waves V- and 1- cannot appear until the incident waves V+ and 1+ reach the load (and then only if a load mismatch exists there). So before reflectigIls appear, (9-1 lOa) and (9- J lOb) are written . .-~
(9-11la)
t< I(z, t) = 1+
(t
t (9-111 b)
The analytical form of V+ (t z/v) depends on the input voltage V(O, t) developed at A-A, found by writing (9-111) in a form valid at the input z
°
V(O, t)
(9-112a)
z=
°
and 0< t <
t v
(9-112b)
493
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES
but Kirchhoff's voltage law around the generator circuit and across A-A yields
Vg(t)
= Ri(O, t) + V(O, t)
(9-113)
so combining (9-113) with (9-112) yields the input voltage and current at Z V(O, t)
= v+ (t
-~) = Vg(t)---'--v Rg + Ro
=
°
(9-1l4a)
(9-114b) (9-114) suggests the equivalent input circuit in Figure 9-11(a). Thus V+(t-O/v) developed at A-A sees the characteristic resistance Ro of the line, to permit finding O/v) by use of (9-114b). the input current 1(0, t) == The forward waves V+ (t z/v) and (t - z/v) launched on the line are a direct consequence of (9-114) appearing at A-A; that is, they are simply (9-114) delayed by the retardation-time z/v. For example, if the applied voltage V(O, t) = V+ (t - O/v) obtained from (9-114a) were a steady voltage obtained by switching a battery onto the line at t = 0, the traveling wave V+ (t - z/v) would be a wavefront moving down the line with the velocity v = (JlE) 1/2, spreading the constant voltage distribution on the entire line after a time lapse of t/v seconds. For an arbitrary applied voltage V(O, t) like that of Figure 9-11 (b), the resulting wave V+ (t - z/v) is a consequence of the voltage V(O, t) appearing at A-A and moving down the line with the velocity 'I), illustrated at successive instants 0, t 1, t2 , t3 in the figure.
ru -
r
Rg
Vg(t) ~(z)
Rg
n(O,t) v,
"'O-)V(o."
~ rv=~+(t-ZIV)
t3:---~lL-Lr----'----z= (a)
°
~ (z)
(b)
FIGURE 9-11. Nonsinusoidal input phenomena for a lossless line. (a) Equivalent input circuit for determining forward waves. (b) Launching of forward voltage wave produced by V(O, t).
494
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LfNES
EXAMPLE 9·5 The generated voltage Vg(t) of I flsec duration and having the trapezoidal shape shown is applied at t = 0 to the lossless 50 Q air line. The generator has 20 Q resistance. Find the voltage and current developed at A-A, and the forward waves established after t = 0, up to the moment that they reach the load. Sketch the results. At A-A, by use of (9-114) and the input circuit of (b) 50
V It\
;>7-· V9(t)
+ 50
20
g\ }
(1 )
J(O, t)
(2)
The resul ting waves are (1) and (2) delayed by V(z, t) = V+
C
:) c =
,
~V (t 9
=
-If
z C
t:
in the air line), yielding
)
(3)
~)
V+ (
I(z
sec (with
t) = _-"-t_ ' -
(4)
50
The latter are sketched at typical instants in (e).
h
20
10
°
:-s
(Ro=50Q,v=c) (Air)
Vg (t)
I
Q---'--'-----,
(t)
V; (t) g
(a)
'I'
I
20 _ -1>10 ""
V(O, t) ! 7 5 V; g
=}
""j)'-
° 0.5
R
_
To load
1 fJ, sec
Vg (t)
OA] 201L I(O,t)
R g = 20Q
g(t)
01(0,
. V A _.
0
(b)
20 Q
V; (t) g
t)
~
(Ro, v)
A t \ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. A
_
,
(t) 1 fJ,sec
yeo, t) == (t-o/v)
Load
V(O, t)
,
z
::t
.+-----;---:----------,--- __ (z) /If·z t
r"
= 0.5 fJ,sec __ ___ l_ t = 1 jlsec --------
t=!-------c
(z)
z =t (c)
EXAMPLE 9-5
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES
495
B. Reflected Waves from Load Boundary Conditions Next are found the reflections produced when the incident waves arrive at the load. The general solutions (9-110a) and (9-llOb) incorporating both incident and reflected waves are required. At Z = t these are
~) +V- (t +~)
V(t, t)
t)
+(
I(t, t)
=V
(9-115a)
1/
IV
t - -;;
(9-l15b)
Ro The reflected waves in (9-1] 5) depend on the load, examples of which are suggested in Figure 9-10(b). The two relations (9-115) contain three unknowns, V(t, tl, I(t, tl, and V- (t + tlv) , since the forward wave V+ (t tlv) is presumed known from part l. A third equation is thus required at z = t. It can be established once the load configuration is assigned. For the representative loads shown in Figure 9-10(b), their Kirchhoff voltage relationships are
l(t, t)
j ~1I
VIt."
vet, t)
(9-1l6a)
RI(t, t)
I( t, t) )
v(t, t);~
T
Ie T
I(t, t)
cdV(t, t) dt
(9-116b)
R
vet, t) = RI(t, t)
+ L dI~; t)
(9-1l6c)
L
e I(t, t)
I( t. t)
vet, t)
~
+ C dV(t, t) dt
(9 -116d)
(R02. v) RL
V(t, t) I
I
z=t
=
R02
V(f, t)
RozI(r, t) (9 -116e)
496
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
Considered first is the simple though important case of a resistive load, depicted in Figure 9-12. At the load position z t, (9-115a), (9-115b), and (9-116a) must be satisfied, so with the incident waves V+ (t zlv,) and r (t arriving when t tlv, one may write for any t after that instant Vet, t) =
I(t, t) =
v+
(t - f) + v- (t + f)
v+
(t - ~)
v-
(9-117a)
(t + f) z
1/
Ro
Ro
t,
Vet, t) = RI(t, t)
t;;>:
t v
(9-117b) (9-117c)
Defining a real time domain rtiflection coefficient reflected to incident voltages
r
Vr(t, t) =
V+
at the load as the ratio of instantaneous
( +-;;t) t
(
t
(9-118)
t) v
permits writing (9-117a) and (9-117b) Vet, t)
= v+
(t - f) [I + r(t,
t)J
(9-119a)
[1 - r(t, t)]
(9-1 19b)
t)
V+ ( t-I(t, t) =
1/
Ro
From (9-117c), the ratio of the load voltage Vet, t) to the current I(t, t) is R, yielding from the ratio of (9-1 19a) to (9-119b) R-R 1 + ret) ' - () 1 - r(t)
V+(t -~)-'>oRg
Yg (t)
~
L
~V-(t+~)
(9-120)
I' 1
[(t, t)
r_(_R_O'_V_) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ V..:....(t..:....'....... t) c
~--- --~ z
z=O FIGURE 9-12, Resistive terminated line.
! z=t
~
R
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES
497
Solving for 1(t) obtains
(9-121)
1(t)
in which the notation 1(t, I) is altered to read just 1(t). Equation (9-121) is useful for finding V-(t + tlv) at the resistive load whenever the incident wave V+(t tlv) is known. It is emphasized that the pure real1(t) in (9-121) is a consequence ofthc output exprf:ssion (9-116a) being purely algebraic. 1\ time domain reflection cpefIicientjs undefined'll)r reactive loads corresponding to (9~116b, c,.aI~d d), except in the asymptotic limits for which the derivative terms in the load differential equations become negligible. EXAMPLE 9.6. If the line of Example 9-5 is terminated in a short circuit (R = 0), what reflected wave is produced by the incident trapezoidal voltage wave? Sketch the results. From (9-121), qt) = -1. 'fhen from (9-118)
(I) holding for all t> tic after V+ (I zlc) first appears at the load. To obtain the desired V" (t + ,:/c) reflected to theleft, the reflected wave (I) must be delayed in time by (t - z)le (a time delay incurred by wave motion from the load back to any Z location toward the generator), yielding
t
Rg ~(O,t) V(t,t) = 0 A:>--'-,.L£~-----"'''"'''''~--r . _/ --A ~------------------~ I
U
v. + g-
I Z
;"t
1=0
o t= 1. (
L - -_ _ _ _ _
o
L -_ _ _ _ _ _ _
--
-."j..J~ . .•.•i-Ir-:~~T~ __ I
o I=l! 2 (
...
~~= ~----~ --
•
I,.....f:.:'-_ ..
:~t:E;:J-:"'-" "..-----~---+--V---(-I....J:~:~ _v~,,-~ l--'f~m - .. -.
EXAMPLE 9-6
(z)
..,.... __
,b Mfl 498
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
As a check, observe that (2) becomes V+ (t 2t/c) at the input z = 0, the reflection arriving there after a delay of 2t/c. These results, shown in the sketch, reveal the echo V- (t + z/c) as a mirrored replica of the incident V+, inverted by the effect of the minus sign in (2) (maintaining zero volts across the shorted load). The echo apparently originates from an image location z = 2t, due to the time-delay 2t/c needed for the reflection to reach to the input. The corresponding reflected current wave 1- (t + z/t) is obtained by substituting (2) into the second term of (9-1 lOb), yielding
V-
(t + ~)
=
0.02V+
Ro
(t + ~ _ c
2t) A c
(3)
In the foregoing example, a second echo (re-reflection) occurs when V- (t + z/v) reaches the input at z = O. It can be found by use of the arguments of that example applied to the generator circuit. With a generator internal resistance Rg R no Ol re-reflection occurs. In general, an internal resistance Rg provides the time-domain reflection coefficient at the line input (z = 0)
vt (t ~v) _ Rg -
Ro
0) - Rg + Ro
--~-.....;:-
V1- ( t
vi
(9-122)
+v
with denoting the forward wave re-reflected from the generator to the load. These processes repeat when the wave in its turn arrives at the load, causing a third echo V;:(t + t/1-», and so on. The total wave solution is the superposition of all waves obtained in this way.
vt
EXAMPLE 9-7. A lossless 50-Q eoaxial line 200 m long using dielectric with E, = 2.25 is terminated in 100 Q and fed from a l50-V dc source having Rg = 25 Q as shown. With the source switched on at t 0, Vg(t) 150u(t) V, a step function. Find the voltage and current waves on the line after t = O. The equivalent input circuit of (b) yields at A-A V(O, t)
J (0,
'I
V+
~
(t -~)
l50u(t) _5_:-- = 100u(t) V
50
r(, -~) ~ v.~: ~) ~
The incident waves are (1) and (2) delayed
''itl
A
(I)
(2)
z/v sec
~)V 1-'
t
(3)
t
(4) wherein
'U
=
(J.loEoE,) -li2
= c/-li: =
2 x 10 8 m/sec.
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES
Rg = 25 n
~~~: \
o
Switch
<~"
Switch
______ (R_O_'V_)______
--Z-~
=n
B~Bj ~~"t J:
-=-150V
g
50n
:
I
z={
I I
z=O
(a)
(b)
25fl
R Vg = 150 V -=-
Ro=
(Ro = 50fl.)
G
>---------U R = 100 fl z=f (z) _ _ _ _ ..J _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .J __ +_
-
2f
~1). 33.3
3t
Image source _____r:.qC:,,":;~.?!."=_'=_~~_
r(o)
t
-21
-I
=_1.. 3
z=o
--..L..,,-- _____ L ____ - - - -
---.---.,
--
--
------------
~-~
Frornz - - - -
""-4( ---- ___ _
EXAMPLE 9-7. (a) Transmission-line system. (b) Equivalent input circuit. (c) Echo diagram.
499
500
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
After a delay of x 10- 8 = 1 psec, (3) and (9-121), 1(t) = t yielding the reflected voltage at z = t
arrive at the load. From
(5)
Equation (5) is delayed by (t - z)/v to produce the first reflection toward the generator
V-.1 . ( t+;z)
=
333 .u ( t- .t -t-u
v
z)
"33 ( t+; z
=J.U
~~)
(6)
incorporating the delay 2t/v = 2 psec. The accompanying wave diagram shows that (6) appears to originate from the image position Z 2t, arriving at the load after 1 psec and reaching the generator after 2 psec. When (6) reaches the generator, (9-122) yields 1(0) = (25 - 50)/(25 + 50) = -!, yielding from (6) at Z = 0 the second reflection
(t--;,-2t)
(7)
0, must be delayed
seconds as it moves toward the load
ILlu The latter, specified at
Z =
2t) v
(3)
The accompanying diagram shows how echo (8) originates from the image position Z =
-2t.
Extending the preceding details, (8) produces at the load a third echo, appearing to originate from Z = 4t. This process continues indefinitely, approaching the steady state 120 V (obtainable from the generator-load circuit in the absence of the line). The edw diagram shown catalogs these results. The total voltage (9-11Oa), given by the sum of all the positive z and negative Z traveling waves, thus becomes
V(z, t)
(I -;) +V- (t +;) [Vi C ;) + vi C-;) + ... J+ [Vi- C+ ~) + V2 (t + ;) + ... J = [IOOU(t -::...) - ll.lu(t _ z _ 2t) + 1.2u(t _::... ~)- ... J =
V+
=
v
/[)
v
V
In the preceding examples, resistive loads were assumed, permitting the use of the time-domain reflection coefficient (9-121). More generally, loads with capacitive or inductive elements as illustrated in Figure 9-10 (b) may prevail. Analyzing their effects requires satisfying (9-l1Sa) and (9-11Sb) in addition to the appropriate Kirchhoff
9-7 WAVES OF ARBITRARY SHAPE ON LOSSLESS LINES V+(t-~)·--'>--
l(t,t)
--E-V-(t+~)
RO
B 2V+ (/ -
Load V(t,t)
B
BI({,t)
U]
f)
I
-
Load
'B
V(t,l)
I
501
I I
I I
I
z =1
z =t
FIGURE 9-13. Equivalent load circuit correspondiug to an arriving voltage wave v+ (t - t/v).
relationship (9-116) (in general a differential or integro-differential equation). Eliminating the reflected voltage term V- (t + t /v) from the load relations (9-115) obtains
V(t, t)
= 2V+
(t -~) -
(9-123)
RoI(t, t)
seen to correspond to the load terminal Thevenin equivalent circuit, illustrated in Figure 9-13. On combining (9-123) with a load relation selected from (9-116), the rcsulting differential or integro-differential equation obtaincd is solved for the unknown load voltage or current, yielding the reflected wave. An example illustrates this procedure.
EXAMPLE 9·8. The 50-Q lossless line in (a) is terminated in a capacitor and fed from a 150-V de source, assumed switched on at t O. To eliminate reflections at the generator, it is in series with a resistance such that Rg = Ro = 50 Q. Find the waves on the system after t O. The input equivalent circuit of Figure 9-11 (a) obtains, at A-A, V(O, t) = - O/v.). Delayed it yields the forward wave
0< t<
f v
(Il
At the load position z = f, V(f, t) of (9-115a) consists of (I) plus an unknown reflected voltage V- (t + fjv). To find the latter, combine (9-123),
(2) applicable to the equivalent load cireuit of (b), with the current voltage relationship (9-1I6b) for the capacitive load
,dV(f, I) C - - - - = I(f t) dt ' (I) and (3) into
(3)
obtains the differential equation
f) dV(f, t) 150u ( t - - = RoC-q~ dt
+ V(C', t)
(4)
502
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
c
o (a)
(b)
(Ro.»)
C
L..-_.....Jy-------------9L..JT o
=t
z
-;0..
t= 0
------,-----,-'---1_ _ _ _ _JI V+(t z) t
LI
o t =}
-f I
(
t
__
_n _____ J --52
L
z
+;;)~
2t 75
n'_/_-___-___~-~~-_-J
I
-75):'-
75_
."
L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~L~ ,
'-
L---________________
0 2 v
h
V-It
0
t =~ t
_
75 -~
o t=1;
n
~~~, -:~~==~~==~
___ _
~~------------------------
0 t=
2!...v
v<
0
150
t_co 0 (c)
EXAMPLE 9-8. Figure 9-13. (c)
Transmission line {""ding a capacitor. (b) Equivalent load circuit f1'om and reflected voltage waves.
the solution of whieh is
Vet, t) = 150U(
(5)
the voltage aeross C. Equation (5) into (9-l15a) then yields the reflected voltage at <:
Vet,
t) - v+ (t
t
!..) ~v
t)
--. 11 ~I'
(6)
The reflection at any V-
( + z) t
~ 11
IS
= 75u
PROBLEMS
503
~) e -- [/ + (zlv) --(U!V)JIRoC
(7)
delayed by (I
(Z t+
~ V
2/)
- --V
150u t +
(
z 1}
The total voltage on the line is thus the superposition of (I) and
shown in (c).
REFERENCES JORDAN, E. C., and K. G. BALMAIN. E'lectromagnetic Waves and Radiating ,Systems, 2nd ed. Englewood Cliff" N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1968. MAGID, L. M. Fields, },,'rtergy and Waves. New York: Wiley, 1972. RAMO, S., J. R. WHINNERY, and T. VAN DUZER. Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd cd. New York: Wiley, 1984.
PROBLEMS
SECTION 9-1A 9-1. Using the replacements (9-11) and (9-12), show how the TEM mode expressions (9-7) through 10) are converted to their sinusoidal steady state limns the factors eiro' 'f yz canceled out).
through
(with
G\ 9-2.
A long parallel-wire linc in air carries the TEM mode and consists of ideally perfect conductors of radius R separated 2h as shown. Make usc of the static potential field solution given by and (4-97) in Chapter 1 to show that the time-harmonic scalar potential solutions arc given by
121)
in which Ii = from (4-103). [Hint: Express the static potential expression (4-96) in terms of the voltage between the two conductors by usif!:g q = CV and the capa~itance expression (4-107). Then employ the usual replacements of V~ illr the static V and
(x)
PROBLEM 9-2
504
o
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
9-3. Make use of (9-124) in Problem 9-2 to obtain the electric field in the region exterior to the parallel-wire line, showing that
~±
tff' (x,y)
V';;
= 2t
h
R
n
+ in which d= Jhz
_R2 from
+d
{[ x - d ~_ d)z + y2 -
ax
a{(X _{~2 +
y2 - (x
+
(x
x +d + d)z + yZ
J
~z + yzJ}
(9-125)
(4-103).
SECTION 9-1B 9-4. Expand the Maxwell modified curl relations (3-6) and (8-3) of Section 3-1 to obtain, assuming no z-field components present, the pair of results (9-23), (9-29) and (9-32), (9-33) relating the transverse electric and magnetic field components of the TEM mode. From these, deduce the intrinsic wave impedancc ratios (9-30) and (9-34) connecting the field pairs (if, .i?f) and (if, .il'f). 9-5. (a) From the equality of the results (9-30) and (9-34), deduce the propagation constaut y for the TEM mode, obtaining (9-35). Comment on its comparison to the propagation COllstant associated with uniform plane waves in an unbounded region. (b) Use the propagation constant y of part (a) in either (9-30) or (9-34) to obtain the expression for the intrinsic wave impedance 'hEM associated with the TEM mode of the uniform two-conductor transmission line, showing that (9-40) is the result. Comment on its comparison with the intrinsic wave impedance of uniform plane waves in an unbounded region. G 9-6. Employ (9-43) to show that the magnetic fields accompanying the elcctric field solutions (9-125) obtained in Problem 9-3 for the parallel-wire line become
~/±(x,y)
±;
, +d 21Jotn.~
{ax[-(~ + ~2+7 - (;~-d~T+y2J (9-126) x +d ~-+ d)2+ y2
with d =
oJ}
JIz2 - RZ.
9-7. Show that the line integral (9-17), with the electric field~solution (9-125) for the parallelwire line of Problem 9-3 inserted, yields the expected result (the sinusoidal amplitudes of
V;;
(x)
(a)
PROBLEM 9-7
\ \
PROBLEMS
505
(b)
PROBLEM 9-8
the voltage differences bctween the conductors, associatcd with thc forward and backward traveling voltage waves). To case the integration, the path t on the x-axis, between P 2 and P l as shown in the figure, is suggested.
9-8. Substitute the magnetic field (9-126) of the parallel-wire line into the cl.?sed-linc integral (9-25) to deduce the expression f()!' the traveling-wave current amplitudes F;' on this line in terms of V;'. Inserting the results into (9-27), show that the total phasor line current, in terms of the forward and backward traveling current waves, is expressed
v~
[v-) = 110
n
tn
h + d e-
(9-127)
Yz
R
wherein Ii .jT R2 from (4-103). [Note: The integration path should encompass one conductor, as noted in Figure 9-2(b). In this parallel-wire line problem, two suitable paths tl and t z arc shown in the figure given here. t z is suggested for case of integration; it is valid to assume no contribution to the integral about the semicircle at infinity.]
SECTION 9-2 9-9. From (9-1 in Problem 9-8, show that the characteristic impedance of an ideal parallel-wire line in air is given by
<:'0
110 1 h h + Ii - cosh - . - '" J20 t n - - -
n
R
R
(9-128)
with Ii = .ji1'. R2. Show that if three different air lines have the hlR ratios 2, 6, and 32, their characteristic impedances become about 160, 300, and 600 ohms, respectively. Sketch these lines in cross-sectional view, dimensioned appropriately. <=)
9-10. 1\ particular idealized (Iossless) coaxial line, as shown in Example 9-1, has an air dielectric and the dimensions a = I em, b = 3 em. It contains only positive z traveling waves, the electric field being given by
(I)
(the prop':).gation constant y of (9-35) reducing toj/3o). (a) Comparing (I) with (9-22a), identify in (I). Make use of (9-43) to show that the corresponding magnetic field can be the field
If:
; §.iii
506
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
expressed
(2) (b) Find lhe sinusoidal voltage amplitude V;:; associated with the electric field (1), making use of - S~~ 4+ . dt of (9-17) and denoting a suitable integration path t between P z and PI' sketched on a sectional view of the coaxia~line. (c) Determine the sinusoidal current amplitude I;:; related to the magnetic (2), using ft;H'+ • dt of (9-25). Show your closed integration path t on the same seetional view. Based on this result and that of part (b), what is the value of the characteristic impedance of this coaxial line? [Ails: (b) 1099 V (c) 16.65 A, 660]
9-11. Ths. coa~ialline of Problem 9-10 has its fields :E and H specified by (I) and (2). (a) Employ Re [E X H*] of (9-47a) to evaluate the time-average Poynting-vector power density as a function of p within the coaxial line. Sketch the vector fY'av, showing its vector sense at the typical point P(p) between the conductors. (b) Make use of the integral SS(e.s.) fY' av • ds over the line cross section to find the time-average power Pay flowing through any cross section of this lossless line. [Ails: (a) a z l325/pz W/m 2 (b) 9.15 kW]
t
SECTION 9-3 9-12. (a) Employ the defining relation (9-57c) to derive the distributed external inductance parameter Ie of a parallel-wire line with an air dielectric as diagrammed for Problem 9-2, showing that I
/10
e
It
+d
=-tn-1L R
(9-129)
Jil"-
if d = Ri. [Note: The integration for the magnetic flux increment /1t/J .. is simplified by using a rectangle bounded by the closed rectangular contour t as suggested in the figure.] (b) Compare the distributed external inductance parameter (9-129) with the static external inductance per length t deduced from (5-90) in Chapter 5, commenting on the approximation used in the latter. (c) Determine the distributed inductance parameters of three air-dielectric, parallel-wire lines with the It/R ratios of2, 6, and 32. Assuming a fixed-wire separation, comment on the effect on Ie of making the wires thinner.
G'l 9-13. (a) Use (9-60d) to adapt the static capacitance per length t of a parallel-wire air line, as found in Section 4-1 I of Chapter 4, to obtaining the distributed capacitance parameter of that line earrying TEM waves, showing that . 1LEo
C
=---'--It+d tJt--
R
PROBLEM 9-12
(9-130)
PROBLEMS
if d = .ji1 2~R2. (b) If this line were immersed in a region of conductivity tributed conductance parameter becomes
(j,
507
show that its dis-
n(j
(9-131)
g
(c) Find the c parameters of three air lines with the hiR ratios of 2, 6, and 32. Comment on the effect on c of making the wires thinner, assuming a fixed separation.
SECTION 9-3B 9-14. Prove the equality (9-76), based on an appropriate comparison of the expressions (9-75e) and (9-75d) for the propagation constant l' on an idealized TEM line with a lossy dielectric. 9-15. (a) Verify that the equality (9-76) is satisfied by the distributed constants (9-129) and (9-130) developed for the parallel-wire line in Problems 9-12 and 9-13. (b) Verify, on using the parallel-wire line distributed constants (9-129) and (9-130) in each of the three expressions for ,(0 in (9-79), that the result (9-128) is obtained in each instance. 9-16. A particular parallel-wirc air line has round wires 1 mm in diameter, separated 1.2 em center-to-center. Sketch a labeled cross-sectional view. Assuming ideal perfect conductors, use (9-129) and (9-130) to determine the distributed inductance and capacitance parameters. Make use of these in (9-79) to determine the characteristic impedance of this line. Cheek the lattcr by use of (9-80d). 9-17. (a) Employ (9-52) and (9-79) to determine the characteristic impedance and the distributed inductance and capacitance parameters of three ideal (los81es8) air-dielectric coaxial lines for which the b/a ratios are 3.5, 6, and 12. (b) Repeat assuming this time a lossless polyethylene dielectric. Compare the phase constant {J, the wavelength A, and the phase velocity 'up in an ideally lossless air-dielectric coaxial cable, carrying the TEM mode at the frequency f = 100 MHz, with the values obtained if the dielectric were polyethylene (Er = 2.26).
Q\ 9-18.
(,) 9-19. Three different, ideal coaxial lines are to have the characteristic impedances 50, 70, and 100 ohms. (a) Determine their bla ratios if the dielectric is air. With b = 1 cm, find the radius of the inner conuuctor (in mm) for each case. (b) Repeat (a), assuming the dielectric to be polyethylene (Er = 2.26). 9-20. Assuming only that an ideal (lossless) coaxial line has a polyethylene dielectric and a 50-ohm characteristic impedance, find its distributed parameters c, and g.
'e,
e" 9-21.
Shown in (a) of the figure is a printed-circuit configuration known as a microstrip trans.. mission line, a two-conductor line consisting of a thin conducting strip of width w separated from a conducting ground plane by a dielectric slab of thickness h. In figure (d) is depicted the low-frequency (quasi-static, pure TEM) view of the transverse electric field flux produced by an applied sinusoidal voltage-difference. This shows the relractive effect, at the air-dielectric interface, of electric flux emanating from the top side of the strip. This may be comparcd with the field distribution of (c) in the absence of the dielectric slab, and with (b), which ignores (incorrectly) the presence offield fringing ncar the strip edges. (a) Based on the parallel-plate result (4-52), neglecting field-fringing as in (b), show that the stripline distributed capacitance is roughly approximated by c ~ Ew/h. Employ (9-76) to show that the low-lrequency distributed external inductance parameter is then roughly approximated by Ie ~ Jiohjw, assuming a nonmagnetic dielectric. Use these results to deduce an approximate characteristic impedance expression for this microstrip configuration. (b) Compare the field maps of figures (b) and (d) (which assume equal voltage diflerenees between the conductors), arguing whether thc approximate static c deduced in part (a) is large or smaller than the "correce' value deducible from
508
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
(a)
(z)
(b)
PROBLEM 21
(e)
(el)
~~o
~
Zn
'''0 ~ p"am"~n d'~'''''i,ti, im. ~
, fidd pi", '"en'''ling hgun (d). I, 'he "ppm,im,,, dcd",.", in "'" H (,," h'g' '" 4 for wi,hthis b ll1icrostrip O.I25;n. linc. 3.13 mm and" 4, d",nninnh"'"ugh
m'aU? Why? I.e"ing approxinlations to c, Ie> "'Ih and
o
'-22. 10 Pcoblem 9-21 a 'n"gh 'naIY'i, of (h, dimibu"'d 'nd p,d"", of, mi,eo'('ip lin, (, giv'n. d,i, line h" in fidd. ""n(ained ''''"Y in 'b, did'uri, >
'h,
B",,,,,
'I',
'ex"
Ere
= z( 1 Er +
I ).J +:2 (Er
-
(10 h)
I) I + __ _
"""'''y
1/2
lei
t;!
h ( 13 --
w
170
=
~
w)
+ 0.25--
lei
h
W
~. [ h +
~/h ~
(9-132)
for-- ~ J h
10
1.393
+
O.GG7
t ";; + (
1.444 )]
(9-133a)
-1
w /or-3 It
(9-133b)
in w bid, " i, 'h, ,d"i" p. nni((iviry "«h, di,"'tit, 'lob. (a) A mi«o",ip lin, "''' n did,,,", "ah wi'h " 4 =d 4. Sk''',h a «"W-."",in"", vi,w. Find ,b, dftt"" eel"iv, p"mit!ivi'y and d" lin, eham'''"''ie imp,d,,,ce. (b) A, 'he vinn,"id,1 "peeaUng heq,,"",,, .f I GH" whO( i, 'h, WaV'-ph ..,. lin 'h, lio, of part ('II Wha( iy 'h, ph,,, co"'!a,,!?
<,
p'"'
ve/~i'y
~
'd,~",",
'>'0. n dig", '''nlnMass: Artech '''''''''on, .ee 60.-6.5. K. C. G"P!a, " ,I. ("_w.Aickd Microwave Circuits.vnd, Dedham, House, 1981, pp.
D,n" ,I
509
PROBLEMS
The wavelength? Compare the wavelength obtained on this line with the value obtained if the dielectric were all air (no slab); if it were all dielectric material of Ey = 4.
9-23.
Repeat Problem 9-22, this time assuming wjlt = 0.5.
SECTION 9-4 9-24. Manipulate the transmission-line differential equations (9-53) and (9-54) (the-so-called "tclegr
Repeat Problem 9-24, tbis time obtaining (9-88b).
SECTION 9-5 9-26. If r « wi and g « wc, show that the general propagation constant expression (9-103a) reduces to the two results (9-103b) and (9-103c), employing the binomial approximation (1 + a) 1/2 ~ I + for a « 1. Show also for this case that (9- J05b) reduces to ~ (llc) 1/2.
Zo
APPENDIX B 9-27. Starting with (B-2.\) in Appendix B, verify the dc limiting results (B-22) (as w the internal distributed resistance and inductance parameters of a long round wire.
-->
0) for
9-28. Beginning with (B-24) in Appendix B, verify the high-frequency expressions (B-27) for the internal distributed resistance and inductance parameters of a long round wire.
o
9-29. For the parallel-wire telephone line of Example B-3 in Appendix B, show that its distributed parameters (assuming g 0) becom(' the following (a) Ati = 10 kHz, c = 5.10 nF/km, r = 7.46 lljkm, I = ~.~6 mH/km. (b) At 1= 100 kHz, c = 5.10 nF/km, r = 21.8 Q(km, 1= 2.21 mH/km. 9-30. Make use of (9-103b) to determine, lor the coaxial line described in Example B-4 of Appendix B, what percentages of the attenuation factor IX are attributed to conduetor wall losses and to dielectric losses. Comment.
e
9-31. (a) Use the giV(,Il answ('rs to Problem 9-29(a) to determine the values of the propagation constant, attenuation constant, phase constant, and characteristic impedance of that airdielectric parallel-wire line at 10 kHz. Are (9-103b) and (9-103c) useful for this case? (b) Find the values of the phase velocity and wavelength on this line at lO kHz. Comment on the comparison of this vp with the free-space phase velocity for uniform plane waves. 9-32.
Repeat l'rohlcm 9-31 this time for the sinusoidal frequency
I
= 100 kHz.
9-33. Evaluate the distributed constants r, I, c, and g of the coaxial cable of Example 8A described in Appendix B, but for the frequency lOO times as large (f 2 GHz), noting how r and the external inductance contribution increase with frequency. (b) Employ the results of to evaluate the attenuation and phase factors and the characteristic impedance of this line, as well as the phase vdoci ty and wavelength 011 this line. 9-34. Use (9-J03b) and results developed in Appendix B, Section B-3, to express the attenuation constant of a coaxi
SECTION 9-7 9-35. Denoting the variable (t + tive <; traveling-wave function V- (t + function whatsoever of the variable (t
+
_",JUSk
s. SLii £££
510 @
o
TEM WAVES ON TWO-CONDUCTOR TRANSMISSION LINES
A 70-ohm coaxial cable, with losses and a polyethylene dielectric (Er 2.26), is of length t = 50 m. A single square-topped pulse, of 40 V amplitude and O.l flsec duration, is switched onto this line at t = 0 from a pulse source of JOO n internal resistance. (a) Wbat is the velocity of propagation of this pulse on the given line? Find the amplitudes of the forward traveling voltage and current waves initiated onto this line at = 0, sketching an appropriate equivalent input circuit for it as by Figure 9-11 (b) Express the positive traveling voltage and current waves V+ (t and f+ (t terms o/" the applied pulse V.(t), wilh appropriate delays properly indicated relative to Vg(t). Sketch the voltage waveforms devdop(;d on this line at successive instants, just as the wave leading edge is (I) at the line input, (2) halfway to the load, (3) at the load. Denote what those time instants arc. 9-36.
9-37. With the line of Problem 9-36 terminated in a short circuit, what is the time-domain reflection coefficient at the load? (a) Sketch and label the forward and backward voltage waves developed in this line (including any superpositions required), shown at typical instants (such as t = 0, tlv, I and 2t/u, for example.) (b) Repeat this time relative to the fc)rwalTi and backward curren! waves on this line.
9-38. A so-called time-domain rejlectometer (TDR) uses a step-voltage generator developing the voltage V(t) 2u(l) volt, in which u(t) denotes the Hcavisidf~ step function {defined by u(l) 0 lor 1 < 0, u(l) = I It)r t > 01. This generator has the internal resistance Rg 50 n, with its terminal voltage monitored by a last-rise-time calibrated oscilloscope (CRO). Sketch a block diagram, showing . (a) Let a section of 50-ohm air-dielectric coaxial cable, oCiength t = 2 m, be connected to the TDR terminals. With the cable output terminals shortcd, sketch a laheled waveform of the display observed on the CRO screen [showing Vet) versus tl, assuming the step voltage to be switched on at t = O. (b) Repeat (a), this lime with the cable output terminated in R = 100 n. @ 9-39. The voltage Vel) 10011(1) volts is applied, in series with a 500-ohm resistor, to a 200 m having the characteristic resistance Ro = 250 nand openlow-loss air line oflength t circuited at its load end. What are the time-domain reflection coefIicjents the load) and (at the line input)? (a) With Vet) switched on al I 0, find the line voltage V(z, t) as a function of time, during thc interval needed to produce three successive reflections from the load. (Give details, using an echo diagram to depict the remIts). (b) vVhat asymptotic value is approached by I) on this line, as t -> oo? (e) Repeat (a), this lime relative to thf~ line current, fez, t).
reO)
4
9-40. The transmission-line system of Example 9-B is now terminated in the pure inductance L. Carellllly determine the voltage waves V+ (t and V- (I + developed on the line after switching OIl the applied voltage at t = O. (Show the applicable "equivalent load circuit" required to determine V(C', t) at the load, and by usc of (9-11 thc reflection V-- (t + tlv) produced at thc load.) Sketch waveforms on the line at typical illStan ts (for example, as suggested by the wavct(mn diagrams of Example 9-B).
,
1
;~:
.~
Phasor Analysis of Reflective Transmission Lines
The introductory paragraphs of Chapter 9 cited applications of two-conductor transmission lines, emhracing the transmission or at the lower end of the frequency spectrum to transmission at frequencies of many megahertz. That chapter coven~d the determination of line parameters and propagation characteristics [rom the line geometry and materials, in addition to relating the electric and magnetic fields of the line to its voltage and current waves. This chapter continues with the analysis of such transmission lines when tenninated ill arbitrary load impedances. In engineering practice, a communication line used jt)r signal transmission is usually terminated in its characteristic impedance, unless the load value is fixed by the physical nature ortbe load (e.g., an antenna). Then it may be necessary to employ a load-matching scheme to adjust the input impedance of the combination of the value of the line-characteristic impedance. Power transmission lines, OIl the other hand, invariably operate under load-mismatch conditions, in view of the variable loading depending on power demand. At their low operating frequency (usually between 50 and 400 Hz), however, power lines are usually electrically short (l« A), so the analysis can often be simplified through lumped-element, equivalent circuit methods. These techniques are omitted from discussion here. This chapter begins with analytical methods f()r determining voltage, current, and line impedance conditions on a two-conductor transmission line l(~d from a sinusoidal source and terminated in an arbitrary load impedance. Use is made of the reflection coefllcient and line impedance technique, developed in Chapter 6 felf uni{()rm plane waves at normal incidence to plane inlerfaces. The logical application of the Smith chart f(lllows, wi th emphasis on both the impedance and admittance versions or lhe chart. There /clllows an analysis of standing waves of current and voltage on mismatched lines, making further use of the Smith chart. Analytical expressions for line
511
; ;
ii! !! ! f !!
512
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSM1SSION LINES
input impedance under arbitrary termination conditions are developed next. Impedance matching of a mismatched line by use of reactive stubs is considered.
10-1 VOLTAGE AND CURRENT CALCULATION ON LINES WITH REFLECTION In this section, a connection is established bctween the forward and backward wave amplitudes V;:; and V;;: .Jt is found that the reflected voltage amplitudc V;;: relalive to an incident amplitude depends on the disparity ~between the load value Zl. terminating the line and its chara£teristic impedance Zo, no reflection occurring on a line properly terminated with Zl. = Zo- In a manner analogous to the methods of Chapter 6 concerned with plane wave reflections in multilayer systems, the cascaded line system of Figure 10-1 (a) is analyzed by using reflection coefficien t and impedance concepts. A simple extension of these ideas permits analyzing transmission-line systems such as the branched arrangement of Figure 10-1 (b). From the developments of Sections 9-3 and 9-6, the total voltage and current on a line in phasor time-harmonic form are (9-102a) and (9-104)
V;:;
V;:;e- YZ + 17-me
V(~t:) i(::.)
=
V,~
17-m
e~Yz
yz
[9-102a]
eYz
[9-104]
The propagation constant and characteristic impedance are related to the line parameters by (9-103a) and (9-105) y(
=0:
+j{J) =
"!fP
=
Zo( =±if)= jj=
J(r +jml)(g r
g
+ jwl + jmc
+ jmc)
[9-103a] [9-105 J
A comparison of (9-102a) and (9-101) with the electric and magnetic fields (6-29) and (6-31) reveals the analogy of the waves of voltage and current on a transmission line with plane waves normally incident on multilayer systems as described in Section 6-6. Thus the cascaded line systeIlls shown in Figure 10-1 (a) can he analyzed by techniques already described in Chapter 6. Equations (9-102a) and (9-104), applicabJ.c to any line section of Figure 10-1, can be written in terms of a reflection coeliicient r(,z) as fc)llows (10-1 )
( 10-2) with r(z) defined in a manner analogous with (6-36)
(10-3)
10-1 VOLTAGE AND CURRENT CIRCULATION ON LINES WITH REFLECTION
513
Junction or interface
A
(b)
FIGURE to-I. Generators connected to loads by use oflincs with different and y values. (a) Cascad!~d system of transmission lines ofdijrer~nt y and Zo, connected between a generator and load ZL' (b) Generator feeding two loads through a branched system.
A transmission-line impedance, defined as the ratio of the line voltage (10-1) to the line current (10-2), is analo?;ous with (6-33)
(10-4)
Solving for ['(.~), one has conversely
( 10-5)
the analog of (6-39). The reflection coefficient at any other location z', in terms of [' (z), is obtained from (10-3) in the way used to obtain (6-40), yielding
['(z)e 2Y(Z'-Z)
(10-6)
514
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
Coaxial lines
Parallel-wire lines
Line 2
Line 1 Line 1 6
yi(z+)
,,
z FIGURE 10-2. Continuity of characteristic impedances.
z
V and f
at junctions s('parating lines with diHcrcnt
The item completing the analogy concerns the continuity of the impedance Z(,c) of (10-4) at the junction of different lines (e.g., in Figure 10-1 (a), the junctions A, B, and C). From the continuity of the voltage and the current to either side of the common plane between the lines, as in Figure 10-2, it is required that
(10-7)
the analog of (6-41). While frs>m (10-7) Z(,c) is...continuous at a junction of two lines, it is evident from (10-5) that 1(<:) is not, since <:'0 is different on the two sides of the in terface. Table 10-1 gives a summary of the foregoing relations, along with analogous relations of Chapter 6 for plane waves. The application of (10-1) through (10-7) to line problems is illustrated in examples to follow. In transmission-line systems it is noteworthy that, besides the dominant TEM mode, TM and TE modes can also exist on two-conductor lines. The latter modes, however, as for hollow waveguides treated in Chapter 8, are ordinarily highly attenuated below their cutoff frequencies, occurring for typical coaxial lines at the upper microwave frequencies and beyond. When a desired signal is dispatched in the dominant mode down a two-conductor line or a waveguide, a partial conversion of the signal power into higher-order modes will occur at discontinuities (sudden dimensional changes, sharp bends, etc.). Becanse of their high attenuation (evanescence), the higher modes vanish to negligible levels a short distance away. Accompanying the presence of the higher modes, however, is the development of an unwanted reflection in the dominant mode. For example, in joining two coaxial lines of dinerent radial dimensiems, the discontinuity at the junction may be shown to generate a reflection equivalent to that produced by a small capacitance C shunted across the lines at their junction, even if their characteristic impedances are the same. I At all frequencies except those approaching the microwave region, however, this dkct is ordinarily very small (C is of the order of a few picofarads). It is ignored in the present treatment.
1 For the application of higher modes to coaxial-line discontinuities, seeJ. R. Whinnery, and H. W.Jamieson. "Equivalent circuits for discontinuities in transmission lincs," Prot. I.R.E., 32, February 1944, p. 98; or R. N. Ghose, Microwave Cirruit Theory and Analysis. New York: McGraw·-Hill, 1963, Chapter I L
10-1 VOLTAGE AND CURRENT CIRCULATION ON LINES WITH REFLECTION
515
EXAMPLE 10-1. A transmitter, operated at 20 MHz and developing Vg = 100ei°' V with 50 n internal impedance, is connected to an antenna load through 6.33 m of the line described in Example B-4 of Appendix B. The antenna impedance at 20 MHz measures ZL = 36 + j20 n. (a) What are Zo, rJ., and Pof this line, and how long is}t in wavelengths? (b) Determine the input impedance of the line when terminated with ZL' (e) How mueh power is deli>:.ered to t~e line? (d) Compute the load current and time-average power absorbed by ZL' (e) I1~ZI, 50 n, what is the input impedailce and how much average power is delivered to ZL?
ZO
3 (a) From Example B-4, = 50 n, rJ. = 1.97 X 10- Np/m, p = 0.595 rad/m. With A = 10.55 m, { in wavelengths becomes {IA = 6.33/10.55 = 0.6.
(b)
Zin is obtained by first finding f
Thcn
f
at the load using (10-5)
at A-A, by usc of (10-6), becomes 2(0.00197)6.33 e - j4n(O.6)
=O.2765ejI1l9'O.975e-J432' ~ 0.212+jO.177
n il?
II'
Vg = 100e V
50 Q
j (0)
cio."'()
A::= ~
i~(t)
-
I'-z-=-O----------z-=-(
~- . _ - - t = 6.33 m
---I
(a)
=
.lin i
(0)
=
70.5 + j28fl
(b)
'"
Vg =100e
10" .
V
(c)
EXAMPLE 10-1
(2)
516
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
TABLE 10-1. Transmission-line Analog of Plane Wave Propagation in
Multilayered Regions
Multilayer regions with plane waves
A:
Region 1
Region 2
:J - - - - --- --
+
A
Hy
• -.....
--..
---
---
-
Region 3
Region 4 (terminal region)
--;.-.
--;0..
------- ----- ..... ---
----
(ii 4 , 1'4) To source
I
I I
~--
Interface A
I
I I
B
C
(z)
Total fields:
+
Ex(z) = E,;ie- YZ [l Hy(z)
1"(z)]
E,;i e-yz[l -
I\z)]
[6-29] [6-31]
with [6-30] Total transverse field impedance: Z(z)
== ~x(z)
=
Hy(z)
.ry 1 + 1"(z) 1 - 1"(z)
[6-32]
making 1"(z)
= ~(z)
- ~ + 1]
Z(z)
[6-33]
At another location z': 1"(z') = 1"(i)e 2Y (z, -
z)
[6-34]
Continuity of Z(z): Z(z-)
Z(z+)
[6-35]
Smith-chart use, normalizing (6-32): t(z)
== Z~z) TJ
=
+ i'(z) 1 - 1"(z)
1
[6-361
10-1 VOLTAGE AND CURRENT CIRCULATION ON LINES WITH REFLECTION
TABLE 10-1. continued
Cascaded transmission lines
Line 1
"--v-l~ Source or: generator
(201 ,1'1)
i I I
Line 2
Line 3
Line 4 or , a lumped : load
--;0..
~-~
I
(.2 02 ,1'2): (.2 03 ,1'3)
:
I I
' I
I
I
I
Junction A B C
Total voltage and current:
+
V';e- yz [1
V(z)
V';
~
I(z) = - , Zo
e-YZ[l
fez)]
,
r(z)]
-
[10-1] [10-2]
with
-
V,;
[10-3]
I'(z) == -~- e 2YZ
v.;i
Line impedance: Z(z) ==
~(z)
=
Z 1
l(z)
0
+
fez)
1 - f'(z)
[10-4]
making fez) =
~(z)
+
Z(z)
~o
[10-5]
Zo
At another location z':
fez')
=
f(z)e 2Y (Z'-Z)
[10-6]
Continuity of Z(z): Z(z-) = Z(z+)
[10-7]
Smith-chart use, normalizing (10-4): £(z) ==
Z~z) Zo
=
1 + fez) 1 - fez)
[10-8]
517
518
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
in which the I~lctor e = 0.975 is approximated as unity in what follows (line losses are ignored). into (10-4) then yields
75.8ei21.0' = 70.8
+ )27.1 n
~n is obtained from tbe equivalent input circuit of ------- =
(3)
(b)
O.813e- j12 . 6 ' A
(4)
Thus, the average input power becomes 1~*)-.1R,(7' 1~1A*)_1[> P P avjn --LR'(V~ 2 ( in in - 2 (. ". . . . in in in - 2 '"in in
=
1(70.H) (O.B!
=
23.4 W
(5 )
(d) I}y (I 7in 7(0) I,;;f°[I - f(O)L in which all quantities a~c known except 1:'. Solving f(H' it yields the l(lIward-travding currcnt-wave amplitude: O.813e - jI2,6'
7+ In
Then
7J"
1-0.212
(6)
)n.l77
written in terms ofJ,~ using (10-2), becomes
7L = itt) =
7:'e- jPt LI
- f(t))
=
I.Ok j216 l1
= 1.14e-j229.1" A
+ 0.103 -JO,257] (7)
The load average power is thell (8) agreeing with (e) With
cuit,
because of negligible line losses.
Z:L = ]:0 ~ 50!}, <'in = Zo = 50 n also. Then Ii'om the equivalent input cirlin =
VY/(,"(:g
+ (:o)
= I A,
yielding from figurc (e) (9)
From a well-known theorem of circuit theory, (9) represents the maximum power available from Vq •
In Example 10-1, the load current iL itt) was found irom t:.,he line inpu!. current by first solving, in (d), for the forwar2 currerlt wave amplitude 1:', whence I(l) "Yas obtained. A convenient way to find IE from lin, eliminating the need for finding 1:', is simply to fOrIn the ratiu of the load current to the input current 011 the line, by making use of (10-2) as follows
l:'e-Yt[l - T'(tl] i:';°[1 - T'(O)]--
(10-9a)
in which, from (10-6), T'(O) ~ t(l . (10-9a) enables finding the load current IL whenever the input current lin is known, or vice versa. Thus, in a comparison of the
10-]
519
VOLTAGE Al'\D CURRENT CIRCULATION ON UNES WITH REFLECTION
phasor input and output currents, the knowledge of the line output and input reflection coefficients, related by (10-6), plus the line input-output wave amplitude and phase changes associated with the e- yt factor, are all that arc needed. The current ratio (10-9a) can be generalized, if desired, by fcwming the ratio of the line current I(z), at any position z on the line, to the input (or output) current lin' The latter, by usc of (10-2) and (10-6) once more, obtains the result _~_
=
lin
l(z)
== e
~"",-
_
z
I - [(0)e 2Yz
'Y
1(0)
(10-9b)
""
I - flO)
This fc)rm is 1:seful, for example, in the graphing of both amplitude and phase of the line current l(z) as a function of z on the line. Additional results resembling (10-9) can be fC)fIned of various ratios of the desired line current or line voltage, as given by (10-1) and (10-2), to some known voltage or current on the line. An application of (10-9a) is found in the next example.
EXAMPlE 10-2. miles of the line of Example B-3 are connected between a generator (developing, at I kHz, Vg 20eiO" V with Z"g = 7000) and the 1000-0 load shown. (a) What are ,,~(» ct., and fJ and what is C in wavelengths? (Ii) Determine Z"in at A-A. (e) What is Pay into A-Ae (d) Determine iL and P av •L ' 'With the line terminated in Z"O and the ,gcm:rator adjusted It)r a conjugate match how much power is delivered to A-A and the load? 703e-)13.2' 0, ct. 0.0083 Npjmi, and fJ 0.035 radjmi. (a) From Example B-3, 179 mi, obtaining CjA = = 0.335. The latter yields ;, (b)
Zin
is {(JUnd by first obtaining I'" at the load from (10-5), yielding f(C) (ZL + Z"o) = 0.20ge j32 .4 ". With (10-6), f at A-A hemmes
flO)
['(t')e- Zyt = [,(/)e- 2at e -)2W (O.20ge)32.4")e'< 2(0.0083)60 e- j4n(0.335)
no
Z/Z = 700 n r~---
v~ ~ ;~,v
-
f= 60 ml
= 966 km--
flo =701,-'" ,_ Q
1000(1
2(0)
(b)
EXAMPLE 10-2
+ jO.0372
d~--~9Z' =
z=l
(a)
v~ = 20V
0'()678
----1
,.
00083+} 0035 ml- 1)
-
(1)
520
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
yielding the line input impedance, from (10-4)
~
«0) =
1 + f(O) frO)
<0 1 _
= 6l3.8e- j8 . 9 " =
606.4 - j95.2
n
(2)
(e) The line input power at A-A is found from the equivalent input circuit of figure (b): ~n = 1(0) = 20/(700 + 606.4 - j95.2) 0.01527ei4 . r A, yielding (3)
(d) To find ~_ = i(t) from the line input current, (1O-9a) yields, with itO) from part (c), and e- Yc e"xCe-jPt 0.608e"j120.6"
I = 1(t) =
~~L-yt
1(0) 1
L
1 - rtO)
= 0.OI527ei 4 . 2 " 0.823
122 0.608e - j120.6' l.068 - jO.0372
=
7 .18e - j106.6' mA
(4)
This yields the average load power (5)
(e) With a matched termination ZL
Zg
Z~
684 +j160.5
n,
Zo, the input impedance becomes Zo; also with 20/2(684) 0.01461 A. Then
=
~n
(6)
To find the load current on this reHectionless line evaluated in part (el), 7(t)
=
I(O)e- Yt
(f =
0), (l0-9a) yields, with
e- yt
= 0.01461 (0.608e - j120.6') = 8.SHe - j120.6· rnA
to obtain (7)
10-2 GRAPHICAL SOLUTIONS USING THE SMITH CHART A convenient way to solve transmission line problems Ii ke those of Examples 10-1 and 10-2 or those suggested by Figure 10-1 is through the use of th~ Smith chart. This convenient chart enables finding graphically the line impedance Z(z) at any location z on a transmission line from the known reflection coefficient there, or vice versa, providing graphical solutions to expressions (10-4) or (10-5). In addition, from a rotation about the <;hart, (10-6) is also solved graphically, to permit finding the reflec!ion coefficient r(z'), at any desired location z', from a known reflection coefficient r(z) elsewhere on the transmission line. The theoretical basis for the Smith chart is given in Appendix D. The reader unfamiliar with its theoretical development is advised at this point to stUll); Appendix D first, before proceeding with its applications to wave reflection and transmission
10-2 GRAPHICAL SOLUTIONS USING TIlE SMITH CHART
521
problems on transmission lines. Such applications are considered in the remainder of this section. To establish the desired normalized line impedance x(z) needed [or Smith chaIt applications, a division of expression (10-4) by the line characteristic impedance is required,
<0
1
+ r(z)
(10-10)
1 - r(z) The normalized expression (10-10) (or its inverse) is solved graphically by the Smith chart (see Appendix D); additionally, the translational expression (10-6), r(z')
= r(z)e 2Y(z'-Z)
[10-6]
is also solved graphical01, from an appropriate rotation about the chart as illustrated in the examples that follow. Although some accuracy is admittedly lost in such graphical solutions, the Smith chart is both a time saver and, with practice, a valuable tool capable of displaying many transmission-line solutions at a glance.
EXAMPLE 10-3. Rework (b) of Example 10-1, using the Smith chart to obtain the input impedance. ~ ~ The load impedance ZL = Z(t) is normalized using (10-10)
Z(t)
== -~~ =
Zo
36
+ j20
- - - - = 0.72
50
. + )0.40
(1)
a result entered into the chart at P in the figure. The rotation by 0.6A., the line It:ngth, toward the generator obtains the normalized input impedance £(0) = 1.41 + jO.56, shown at Q, Denormalizing obtains
+ jO.56)50 =
70.5
+ j23 = 75.3 e.i217 Q
the same as (3) in Exampl,:: 10-1. If desired, values of r at the output and input of the line can also be read at P and Q, obtaining
['(t) = O.28ei 112' agreeing with (1) and (2) obtained analytically in Example 10-1.
~(O)
1.41
.!.}, = 0.6
EXAMPLE 10-3
+j
= 0.56
522
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
~= 0.335
EXAM PLE 10-4
EXAMPLE 10-4. Rework (b) of Example 10-2, using the Smith chart to obtain line.
Zin of the lossy
Normalizing ZL == Z(t) by usc of (10-10) yields x(t) Z(t)/Zo 1000/703e- jl3.2- = 1.384 + jO.324, entered onto the chart at P in the figure. One obtains .£(0) from a phase rotation from P to Qplus a decrease in reflection coefficient amplitnde in accordance wi th (10-6) t(t)e 2(<>: + }[J)(O
t(O) =
t(t)e-2<>:t'e-J2[Jt' =
£)
t(t)e-2(O.0083 x 60)e-j2fJt'
0.369tCt)ej2pr
j2pt The phase rotation oft(t) by eneed not be evaluated, being obtainedtrom the rim scale on the chart, an amount 01'0.335 wavelengths clockwise (toward the generator) required by the line length. The real factor e' 2aC accounts for a decrease in the amplitude of r by e - 2aC 0.369 in rotating from P to Q, Then x(O) is read ofr the chart at Q, it is x(O) = 0.87 + jO.07. Denormalizing yields
in agreement with (2) of Example 1O-2(b).
EXAMPLE 10-5. An antenna with a measured impedance 72 + j40 nat 20 MHz is to be driven by a transmitter 27 fl: away. All that is available li)r this purpose are two coaxial lines with the characteristics Line I: Z01
=
Line 2: Z02
= 50 n, 12 =
70 n, t1
= 15 ft = 12 ft
4.57 m, air dielectric
= 3.66
m, dielectric
Er
=
2
Ignore losses for these relatively short lines, connected as dsricted in(:z). (al Ifxpress line lengths in terms of wavelength on each line. (b) With Vg = 100el° and Zg = 100 n, Ilse the Smith chart to find the impedance at A-A, and t.he average power delivered at
ZL'
(a) Line I is lossless, so by usc 01'(9-36) and (3-100), ).1 = 27[//30 = II = 4.57 m = (4.57/15),1.1 = 0.3052 1 , Similarly, for line 2, ,1.2 12 = 0.346,1.2'
=
15 m, whence 10.6 m, yielding
(b) The origins 0 1 and O2 arc located as. shown in (a). The normalized load impedance is x2(12 ) Z2(t2 )/Z02 (72 + j40)/50 = 1.44 + jO.B, which entered at A in figure (b) and rotated 0.346,1.2 toward the generator yidds X2(0) = 0.5 + jO.IB,
10-2 GRAPHICAL SOLUTIONS USING THE SMITH CHART Line 2
Line 1
(201
523
= 70~)
(202
= 50~) = 2)
(t r
(Air)
(a)
(cl
(b)
EXAMPLE 10-5
shown at B. From (10-7) it is the aetualline impedanee (not normalized) that is continuous at the junction, so .0enormalizing %2(0) ~obtains Zz(O) %2(OlZ02 = (0.5 + jO.13)50 = 25 +j9 = ,(1 (ttl. Normalizing ,(1 (tl ) yields
n
Zl (ttl 25 + j9 "'l(td =-~- = - - = 0.353 A
,(01
.
+ )0.123
(I)
70
entered at point C in figure (c). Rotating 0.305 Jo j yields the normalized input impedance 21 (0) = l.l - j1.07, whence at A-A
Zin = Zl(O) =i?l(O)ZOJ
= 73 -
)73.5
(1.1 - j1.07)70
= 107 .2e ~ j43.rn
From the equivalent input circuit one obtains O.513ei 224" A, yielding from figure (d)
(2)
l;n =
100/(173 - j73.5) =
(3) With both lines lossless, this is also P av •L delivered to the antenna.
524
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
i
£ chart
chart
(b)
(a)
nGURE 10-3. Reciprocal aspects of the Smith chart. (a) Reciprocal of rotation. (b) Normalized impedance and admittance charts.
x through
180"
In the cascaded system of Figure 10-1 (a), the line impedance appearing on the load side of any opened-up junction is the impedance seen by tbe line at the other side of the junction, evident from the continuity relation (10-]). If the junction at O2 in Example 10-5 were opened, for example, the impedance Z2(0) = 25 + j9 Q optained looking into line 2 is that seen by line 1 on closing the junction. Similarly, Z1 (0) = 78 - j73.5 Q into line I is seen by the generator when connected to those terminals. In a system with branched lines as in Figure 1O-l(b), the impedance seen by the line 1 at B-B, where line 2 and lipe 3 are pa~allel-connected, is just the parallel com bination of their input impedances Z2 (0) and ,(3 (0). To find the impedance of two elements and connected in pa'rallel, the expression
Z'l
applies. By use of their admittances
Z'2
1\
can be employed. If~an a,!tainable 1 graphic accuracy is adequate, the Smith chart is useful for finding Y == Z-I. This is possible through a property of the chart yielding the reciprocal of any complex number from its 180° rotation about the chart. 2 Thus, entering k = 1 + jl onto the chart and rotating it 180 as in Figure 1O-3(a) yields 11 = 0.5 - jO.5, the reciprocal of k. In the case of a complex number with a large or small magnitude compared with unity, however, an arbitrary normalization forcing its magnitude near unity improves the accuracy of this process. For example, Z = 150 + jlOO is very close to the point 00 on the Smith c!lart; thus its reciprocal falls near the diametrically opposite zero point. Normalizing Z through a division by 100 to obtain k = 1.5 + jl, however, yields from the chart its reciprocal 11 = x-I = 0.4§ - jO.3l, and denormalizing yields Y 0.0046 jO.Oml, the desired reciprocal of Z. The foregoing reciprocal property leads to another version of the Smith chart, the normalized admittance chart, shown in Figure lO-3(b) alongside the more usual 0
2This property can be proved by use of (10-31) in Section 10-4.
10-2 GRAPHICAL SOLUTIONS USING THE SMITH CHART
525
normalized impedance form. By simple relabeling the i and circles of the chart with f1 and 6, respectively, and rotating the chart 180°, one obtains the normalized ~ad mittance chart on which = f1 + j6 = £-1. Thns, a given reflection coeffIcient r(z) depicted at P yields £ = i + jx there on the £ chart, while simultaneously displaying the corresponding = f1 + j6 at the same point Oil the admittance chart. chart is especially useful in the analysis of systems involving parallel-connected components as depicted in Figure 10-1 (b); fe)r example in the application of stub sections of line to impedance matching taken up in Section 10-5.
y
y
They
EXAMPLE 10-6. Suppose the line and load described in Example 10-1 arc connected to the lines of Example 10-5, forming the branched system in (a). With the aid of a Smith admittance chart, determine the following. (a) Find the input admittance into line 2. (b) Repeat, but lor line 3. (c) Determine the admittance produced at B-B the parallelconnected lines. Find the line 1 input admittance. (d) What power is delivered into A-A?
Zg
100 n
ZL 0,305 (Z01
~1
= 70 ill
=
72 + )40 n
B
(a)
Zg
vg~~0-1----~I~I--------:~
ZL
= 36 + j20 ()
(b)
~ 1'1(0)
Vg~
or ZI(O)
(c)
(d)
(e)
EXAMPLE 10-6. (a) Branched line system. (b) Eqnivalence at B-B. (c) Equivalence at A-A. (d) i-chart on line 2, (e) On line 1.
526
PHASOR ANAIXSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
With the normalized on line 2 by = 1.44 + jO.30 = j29 1.647 e . I', its reciprocal yields ,o/-L XL I = 0.607e = 0.531 -jO.295 = ? The latter entered at PIon the admittance chart (d) and rotated 0.3461 2 (from 0.444 to 0.444 + 0.34·6 = 0.500 + 0.290, or to 0.290 on the rim yields at P z , 1.33 - jO.90, making
(b) Similarly, on line 3, £~ 0.72 + j0.40 = 0.824ei29 . 1', so if~ = (~) -I = 1.061 jO.590 = ? Entering this on the admittance chart and rotating 0.600 on the rim ,('ale yields (0) = 0.60 - jO.21, so the inpnt admittance into line 3 becomes
Y3 (0) = Y03 Y.1(O)
0.02(0.60 -JO.21) = 0.012 - jO.0042S
(2)
(e) As in figure (b), at B-B is seen the parallel combination oflinc 2 and 3 inputs, yielding th~re YBB Y2 (0) + Y3 (0) = 0.0486 - jO.OZ22.s:: Normalizing the latter using YO! = 70- 1 of line I yields ;;;I(t Il = YBB!}';)! = 3.40 - j1.55. Entered at Pion the if-chart of figure (e) and rotated by t l 0.3051 1 obtains ifl (0) = 0.30 +j0.47 = {I whence the admittance at A-A YI(O)
=
Yolifl(O)
=
70 1(0.30 +jO.47)
= 0.0043 + jO.0067 = O.0080ei 573
S
in which Gin = 0.0043 S and Bin = 0.0067 S denote the parallel-connected elements of the line admittance seen at A-A. The corresponding line input impedance seen by the generator at A-A is the reciprocal of (3), or '~I (0) = "'~AA = 125e- j57.3" 68 - j107 Q = Rin + jXin , the latter denoting the series-cqnnccted elements of the line seen at A-A. (d) Irom !hc iI1put~circuit of figure (e), the generator delivers into line 1 the current lin Vg/(Rq + ZAA) = 100/(100 + 68 - j1(7) 0.50ej3ZO A, to yield the average power input at A-A
10-3 STANDING WAVES ON TRANSMISSION LINES TllC ref!ected waves of voltage and current occurring at the mismatched termination «L ¥= of a line produce standing waves in a manner analogous to that process described fi:)r plane waves in Section 6-7. Voltage and current waves on a line with reflections are given by (10-1) and (10-2)
<0)
17+m e- YZ + 17-m eYZ = 17+m e - 1+ ['(z)J
V(z)
I(z)
=
j?+
___m.._
<0
e- yz
17-
~"'..e)'Z '7
""0
e
['(z)]
(10-11 )
( 10-12)
The real-time origins of standing waves established by f()rward- and backwardtraveling waves in a region is perhaps best visualized from the careful study ora diagram iike that of Figure 6-9. It is immaterial whether the waves depict electric and magnetic
10-3 STANDING WAVES ON TRANSMISSION LINES
~
M
527
~
r-:J, M r-:J, ~~b~~~ (Zo,jtJ)
(Zo,"()
o
z
=
-I
l
=
0
(al
FIGURE 10-4. Depicting {()rward and backward waves ofvoltag,· or current in real time (above) on a line of length t. Resulting sianding waves of voltage or current magnitudes (middle diagrams).
II fl
Smith-chart interpretations of the related quantities + (voltage magnitude) and (current magnitude) (below). (a) Line with losses. (b) A lossless line.
II ~ fl
flclds as in that figure, or voltage and current waves as apply here; the phenomenon of standing waves is the same, I t should be emphasized that the usage standing wave reiers to the changes in only the magnitude of the composite-wave oscillations with a change in z, Thus, as the incident and reflected waves move by in time, the observer sees the magnitude distribution "standing" in space with its characteristic undulations along z, as shown by the dashed-line standing-wave diagram at the bottom 0(' Figure 6-9, or as in the middle diagrams of Figure 10-4 (shown in the latter for both the lossy and lossless Ii ne The presence of i()rward and backward waves gives rise to standing waves of voltage and currcnt magnitudes as depicted in Figure lOA. In (a) is seen the effect of the factors e- az and eaz on the forward and backward vo!tilge or current waves with losses present..:, This pn~duces the standing-wave behavior shown as curves of the magnitudes \ V(.c) \ andlf(z)i plotted against distance, with the undulations becoming
528
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
smaller as the reflected wave diminishes with increasing distance from the load. The current standing wave dips where the voltage standing wave is maximal, a direct result of the minus sign in the reflected term of (10-12). On examining the magnitudes of (10-11) and (10-12)
(10-13)
(10-14 )
it is seen that their graphs are readily obtained with the aid of a Smith chart. Thus, with the r;.yaluation off at the load position by use of (10-5), the quantities 11 + fl and 11 appearing in (10-13) and (10-14) are obtained directly from the Smith chart as shown in Figure 10-4(a). Thus f is retarded in phase by ei 2fJt and diminished in length by according to (10-6) in going to ,::; t toward the generator. Then with 11 + fl and 11 fl multiplied l;y e -(LZ anel scaled by the factor V:; and Vr~ /,(0 according to (10-13) and (10-14), \V(z) and 11(z)1 f()llow cm:ves typified in Figure 1O-4(a). For a lossy line of sufficient length, the spiraling of r(z) toward the chart center reduces the undulations nearest the generator to practically zero, in view of the reduction of the reflected wave
q
I
(10-15) li(;:) 1
( 10-16)
The latter are analogous with (6-51) relative t~ the reflection of plane waves discussed in Chapter 6. In the absence of attenuation, r(zL varies ~nly in phase along the line in accordance with the 1(:!ssIess version of (10-6): r(z) = r(0)o:J 2 fJ z . This provides the familiar circular locns of r(z) on the Smith chart shown typically in Figure lO-4(b) and termed the SWR circle. From it one can find the volt!ige and currenl along the line, obtainable by use or (10-15) anc! (10-16), with + r(;:)1 and r(z)1 found graphically from the charts of Figure 1O-4(b). The analogy of this process with that of Figure 6-11 fc)r a region with plane waves is evident. In such lossles;; systems, the standing-wave maxima and minima occur 90° (or ,1./4) apart, with Vmax (or equivalently Emax) at the location of I min (or H min ), and vice versa. The standing-wave ratio (SWR) associated with the voltage and current magnitude diagrams of Figure 1O-4( b) is defined for a lossless line by
II
SWR:=S
IV(z)lmax Vmax IV(z)lmin := Vmin
II -
Imax
I min
(10-17a)
10-3 STANDING WAVES ON TRANSMISSION LINES
529
analogous with (6-50). From the Smith chart representations in Figure 10-4(b), Vmax and fmin on the line are seen to occur respectively at the locations of I + and I -Iq on the SWR circle. Thus (1O-17a) can be written in terms of the reflection coefficient magnitude as follows
ItI
S=
1+
jf('<;)1
I
Ir(z) I
(1O-17b)
~
having the inverse ~
lr(z)1 =
S- I
( 1O-17c)
S+ I
By arguments analogous with those used for plane waves, the SWR circle of a lossless line with reflections is centered on the Smith chart such that it passes through the SWR ,< point on the real axis of the chart, as depicted in Figure 6-10(c) for plane waves. Additional details concerning graphic interpretations of the forward and backward voltage and current waves can be developed from figures analogous with the electric and magnetic field diagrams shown in Figure 6-1 L
EXAMPLE 10.7. Find the SWR on the loss less line 2 in Example 10-5. Where afC Vmax and VOlin located) The magnilude of the reflection codficient obtained from thc Smith chart in Example 10-5 is Irj = 0.3b. The SWR using (IO-l7b) is therefore S
1+
ifl
1 + 0.3b
-If! = -j-O.-36
1.36 0.64
2.12
an answer also obtained horn the 1 value intercepted by the SWR circle along the positive real axis of the chart as shown in (a). Vmax occurs at N on the SWR circle, located d = 0.06}'2 toward the generator, or d = 0.06(10.b) = 0.63b m from the load as shown in (b). Vmin is at M, an additional quarter wave towards the generator as shown.
EXAMPLE 10-7
530
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
r
Slotted line se. ction
Movable voltage probe
c£J IV
.
Source:
i i ··
·l
Movable=ik...-'" probe! ....
..... --- •--- -.~
~ :
-..
-
I
,
k",
-,,~
L __________
~
_ _ _ _, __ _
,
~)
----~~~
°
:t: ~. . Y. fJ
~_· ::.t'L
___-",,-__ P (Proxy
0:
. load position) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~Short
Sectional view (a)
(b)
FIGURE 10-5. Slotted line and impedance measurements. A coaxial slotted-lines section and voltage (electric field) probe. (b) Determination an unknown impedance from standing-wave measurements.
At the higher frequencies, above 100 MHz or so, impedances can be inferred from standing-wave data obtained iI-om an instrument known as the slotted line, illustrated in Figure 10-5 (a). A slotted line may be a rigid section of air dielectric line having a precision slot milled lengthwise through the outer conductor to accept a movable voltage-sensing probe. The latter travels along an externally mounted carriage to permit measuring, usually by usc of a detector and amplifier system, the relative voltage anywhere along the slot. Position measurements are facilitated by use of an attached scale. The probe is permitted to penetrate only a short distance into the slot to minimize the distortion of the electric field being measured. When the slotted line is connected between a generator and a load as in Figure 10-5(h), the voltage standing wave developed within the slotted section is measured by the detector output. The impedance of the load can be inferre~ from measurements on the standing wave as follows. With an unknown load .(L attached to the slotted line, the SWR and the V min position are recorded_ The corresponding SWR circle is drawn on a Smith chart, with Vrnin (denoteg M) occurring at the intersection of the SWR circle and the negative real axis. If -(L is replaced with a short circuit in the load plane, the standing wave produced has nulls spaced by half wavelengths as shown in Figure 1O-5(hl- Each null location can be regarded as a proxy load position, a position where the load impedance is replicated when the line is once again terminated in (This property of a lossless line reproducing an impedance every half wavelength is evident from the Smith chart, since moving a half wavelength corresponds to a full rotation about the SWR circle.) Thus, if the proxy load position P were located a distance d II-om the Vmin location M as in Figure lO-5(h), the impedance at P would be obtained from the Smith chart by a rotation dl A on the SWR circle fi'om M to P. Denormalizing % there by use of the line .(0 obtains the unknown impedance at P, and hence .(L' .
ZL-
10-4 ANALYTICAL EXPRESSIONS FOR LINE IMPEDANCE
531
d A
(b)
(a)
EXAMPLE 10-8
EXAMPLE 'IO-S. An unknown impedance ZL is
to be measured at 500 MHz by use of a 50-Q slotted air line. Because of the location of ZL, it is cOIllC!ccted to the slotted line using an additionallcngth oflossless 50 Q cable as in (a). With'(L in place, the measured ~WR is 3.2, Vmin occurring at the scale position 19.4 cm along the slotte~ line. Replacing ,(1. with a short, a null is observed at the position 11.2 cm. Determine ,(L' Drawing the SWR = 3.2 circle on the Smith chart as in (b), Vmin is at M. The shift from Vmin to the proxy load position Pis d = 19.4 - 11.2 8.2 em toward the load, making d/2 = 8.2/60 = 0.137. Rotating by this amount to P yields XL = 0.65 - jO.93; denormalizing obtains
ZL = XLZO = (0.65 -)0.93)50 = 32 - j46 Q
1 0-4 ANALYTICAL EXPRESSIONS FOR LINE IMPEDANCE From previous sections, it was seen t~at the input impedance of a section of line is a function of the co~mplex termination ZL, the line length, and the line parameters that determine)' and Zoo One can consolidate these effects into a single expression for input impedance, if desired, noting first that the input impedance of the terminated line illustrated in Figure 10-4 is expressed by (10-4)
;; 1 + f(O)
(l0-18)
-<"0 -1-f(O)
The input reflection coefficient f(O) is transformed to its load value f(t) by usc of (10-6)
(10-19) in which f(t) is written in terms of the load value Z(t)
=
/ZL by
(10-5) (10-20)
'l~
532
[
The substitution of the latter and (10-19) into (10-18) obtains
1'1 PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
(10-21a)
yt
Zin Zo ~~--~~~---'--;.:::----;-~-, n yt
(I 0-21 b)
On collecting like terms, (10-21 b) can also be written in terms of the hyperbolic cJ>!'ine and sine functions, obtaining sinh yt sinh yt
n
( 1O-2Ic)
if the definitions cosh yt
+ e- yt
== - - - -
(10-22)
2
are employed. Note that if each of the expressions (! 0-21) is examined fl1r tl.!e inPllt impedance obtained if the load impedance equals ,.(0, the expected result ,.(ill = ,.(0 obtains. EXAMPLE 10-9. Usc one of the expressions (10-21) to find the input impedance of the 60 mi ofline terminated in 1000 Q described in Example 10-2. Substituting into (1O-2Ia) the values of ct., (3, and t obtained from Example 10-2 yields
Zo, ZL'
which agrees with (2) of Example 10-2.
One can simplify (10-21) for the special case of a lossless line. With y = the pnre real characteristic impedance Zo, (10-21 c) reduces to
-
,.«(0)
_ ZL cos pt + j,.(o sin f3t
= Zo
,.(0 cos
."'. n pt + J,.(L sm pt
Lossless line
jp
and
(10-23)
10-4 ANALYTICAL EXPRESSIONS FOR LINE IMPEDANCE
533
noting from (10-22) that cosh (jpt)
sinh (jpt)
cos pt
=j
sin
1M
(10-24)
In impedance calculations for lossless coaxial or parallel-wire lines, particularly at high frequencies, one is reminded that the Zo expressions (9-80c) and (9-80d), graphed in Figure 9-4, are useful in lossless line expressions such as (10-23). Additional special cases of (10-21) can be generated lor particular line ~engths and loads. Of interest are the short-circuit and open-circuit load cases. If ZD = 0, the input impedance (10-21c) reduces to Zin,sc
=
Zo tanh yt Q
Short-circuit load
(10-25)
with the hyperbolic tangent function defined by tanh yt With the line lossless (y =j{J, Zin,sc
sinh yt
e ~ 2yt
= --- = cosh yt
~--~
(+e~2Yt
(10-26)
Zo pure real), (10-25) becomes
jZo tan Ilt Lossless line, short-circuit load
( 10-27)
since from (10-24) and (10-26), tanh (jpt) = j tan pt. Equation (10-27) sbows that tpe input impedance of a shorted loss less line is a pure induetive or capacitive reactance Zin,sc = jX L or - jXn taking on all the positive and negative values of the tangent function with varying line length. In Figure 1O-6(a) is shown a graph of (10-27), together with its Smith chart interpretation. Entering the S!:,llith chart at the shorted load value 0 (eorresponding to the reflection coeflicient [' 1 there), a rotation on the rim by tjJc provides the desired input reactance predicted by (10-27). Thus, a quarter wave lossless shorted line has an infinite input impedance. A shorted length of low-loss line is called a stub; if its length is variable through the use of telescoping conductors, it is an adjustable stub. Stubs are often used at high frequencies as the reactive elements in narrow band impedance-matching schemes, as described in the next section. 1\ section of transmission line with open load terminals (ZL -+ 00) has an input impedance ohtained from (1O-21c) Zill,OC
=
Zo cotb yt Q
Open-circuit load
(10-28)
wherein the hyperbolic cotangent function, coth yl, means (tanh yt) ~ 1. Equation (10-28) reduces, for a lossless line, to Zill,QC
= - jZo cot Pl
Lossless line, open-circuit load
(10-29)
The unlimited range of capacitive and inductive reactance values provided by an open-circuited stub is depicted similarly in Figure IO-6(b). Of additional interest is the ~nput impedance of a lossless, one-half or one-quarter wave line with an arbitrary load ZL' For the line one-half wave long (pt = J[ = 180°), (10-23) reduces to Zin
=
ZI_
Lossless line,
~ long
(10-30)
+111/ <
"1'[ 'Ii
'I
534
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
j4
j4
j3
j3
j2
j
jl
o -jl -j2
J
L7T I
I I I I
-j3 -j4
I
/
1~? /~
90· X 4
I
I
J
j2
/
jl
270· 3X
"4
fit
t
9~
0
/i-
-jl
I
X
2
fit
7f /
t
I
I I
~<-f-----
1I
-j4
I I I--t-I
270·
1~0·
If
-j2 -j3
I
J
"----
I
/
i I
~""*-O
O---~A ~-jZo 0 0--
___
~
SL= 0 (Short)
8
~
~ ====~~
00
Xin, oc
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 10-6< Graphs of the input impedance of short- and Below arc Smith chart interpretations. (a) Shoft-circuited stub.
This result is not unexpected, since from the Smith chart, impedances on the SWR circle of a lossless line repeal themselves every half wavelength along the line, corresponding to a fiill rotation around the chart. For a line one-quarter wavelength long (/3t n/2 = gOO), (10-23) becomes ,{
Lossless line,
~
4
long
(10-31 )
lOA ANALYTICAL EXPRESSIONS FOR LINE IMPEDANCE
535
Feed line
EXAMPLE 1O-1O
Tn view of (10-30), adding any integral number of half-wave sections of Insoless line to the input of a quarter wave line still yields (10-31), making the latter valid fix any line length totaling an odd number of quarter wavelengths. A lossless line obeying (10-31) is called a quarter wave transformer, a name arising from its use in matching a high or a low impedance load to a transmission line, from the insertion of a quarter wave section ofloss\ess line having a properly chqsen characteristicjmpedance. Thus, if a given load '(,L is to be li~::1 from a line with a Zo different {roll' ZL, a quarter wave transf()rmer connected to /(,L will have an input impedance Zin that matches the feed-line charactcristic impedance if the transformer section has the characteristic impedance, fri)ITl (10-31), given by (10-32)
In practice, a quarter wave transformer is us~d at high frequencies to connect a resis-
tive load to a lossless line (with a pure real Zo). Because the method depends on the transj()rmer scction being a quarter wave long, the degree of impedance match is necessarily frequency-dependent. The fi'equency bandwidth of a matching scheme is COIlveniently specified in terms of the frequency deviation, to either side of the design frequency, over which the SWR on the feed line departs from unity by not more than some specified amount; a limit of 1.5 or so is often an acceptable criterion. It can be shown that an increased bandwidth of the quarter wave matching scheme is realizable if the impedance transformation is made in two or more stages, with lransf(Jrmations made to intermediate resistive values. The limit of stepped systems such as this is the transmission line, made several wavelengths long, providing a slowly varying characteristic impedance starting at the Zo of the input line and tapering to the load resistance value. The result is an extremely broadband matching device. Details of the bandwidth analysis of relatively narrow band matching devices wch the quarter wave transformer and of stub-matching systems described in the next section are {(lUnd in a number of sources. 3
EXAMPLE 10-10. A dipole antenna having; a measured terminal impedance of 72 n at 150 MHz is driven from a parallel-wire lirH~ baving a 300 characteristic imped8l1cc. The ICed-line conductors arc spaced 2h = 0.75 in. Design a quarter wave section of parallelwire air line that will match the 72 load to the 300 line at this frequency.
n
n n
3For example, see H. J. Reich, P. F. Ordung;, H. L. Krallss, and J. G. Skalnik. A1icrowave Theory and Techniques. New York: Van Nostrand, 1953, Chapter 1.
536
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
The characteristic impedance of the quarter wave transformer is obtained {i'oIn its load impedance and required input impedance, <:'in = 300 Q, by use of (10-32)
(i) Using the graph of Figure 9-4, (h/R) = 1.85 yields <:'0 = 147 Q for a loss less parallel-wire line in air. Choosing the spacing 2h = 0.75 in. f()f the quarter wave transformer, the conductor diameter becomes 2R = 0.4·05 in. At 150 MHz, A on the air dielectric transformer section, assumed loss1ess, is obtained using (9-34b) and (9-38); that is, ). = cU' = 2 m, yielding the required length ,1,/4 = 0.5 m lor the quarter wave section.
10-5 IMPEDANCE-MATCHING: STUB-MATCHING OF LOSSLESS LINES In communication systems, the matching of line terminations to line characteristic impedances results in no power reflections, important in maximizing the power transfer to the load. Just as vital to system performance is the considera lion that, if a load impedance were not rnatched to a line, the generator at the feed end would se diflerent impedances at the various frequencies within the information-carrying bana, a result of the frequency sensitivity exhibited generally by the input impedance (10-21) of an improperly terminated line. Thus, if pulse data were being transmitted, an improper termination would yield different reflections at the various frequencies within the Fourier spectrum of the pulse. The result is pulse-shape distortion, correctible by properly matching the load over the desired frequency band. Practical impedance-matching arrangements are shown in Figure 10-7. At lower frequencies, transforrners as shown in (a) of that figure can be employed for impedancematching, with untuned iron core transformers useful at power or audio frequencies. At radio frequencies not too high to eliminate the use of lumped or printed circuit elements, the L, T, and n configurations of Figure 10-7(b) are useable. Thus, antenna impedances can be matched with such schemes well into the VHF band (up to frequencies of the order of 100 MHz or so). At still higher frequencies wavelengths up
l
JIIO
RL
~o--rooor
oT
00
(Step up)
To
. (Step down)
L sections
Iron core
Single stub matcher
Air core (secondary tuned)
~
Tsection
~
Double stub matcher
M
FIGURE 10-7. Impedance-matching schemes. (a) Transformers as impedance matchers. (b) Narrow band matching sections using lumped reactors. (e) High-frequency matchers using translcmncrs or stubs.
10-5 IMPEDANCE-MATCIlING: STUB-MATCHING OF I.OSSLESS LINES /J
537
=0
Coaxial line
system
Parallel wire
system
(b)
(a)
(d)
(e)
FIGURE 10-8. Details of single-stub-matchiug on a lossles> line. (a) Use of a shorted stub in impedance-matching. (b) Usc of the} chart in impedance-matching. (c) Adjustment of d and t for it match. (d) Determining thl' stub length t.
to a few meters), lumped clements are physically too small or inefficient (low Q.), so replacing them with low-loss transformer or stub sections as depicted in Figure 1O-7(c) might be desirable. The object of the present section is to examine an impedancematching technique making use of reactive stn b elements introduced along the transmission line. The single-stub-matching arrangement of Figure 10-8(a) is analyzed. Similar schemes employ double- or triple-stub combinations. With the prl?per adjustment of the length t of the stub and its position d from the arbitrary load ZL, it is shown how a low-loss line can be matched to the impedance produced by the parallel cornbinatipn of the stub and the remaining length d of line terminated in the mismatched load ZL' The Smith chart is an important time-saver in the analysis. Because of the parallel connection of the stub and the transmission line, it'is advantageous to employ the admittance form of the Smith chart described relative to Figure 10-3(b). The line and stub are both considered lossless, each having the same pure real characteristic~admittance Yo = 0 1. With the known load Yr. = L I, normalized it becomes ih YdYo, yielding an SWR circle passing through itL at some point such as P in Figure 10-8(b). Moving toward the generator a distance d such that the intersection with the fI = 1 circle at Q.is obtained, the input admittance into that d length becomes it = 1 as depicted in Figure 10-8(c). Another intersection with fI = 1 is obtained farther toward the generator at R on the SWR circle; there the line admittance is 1 [fat either Q.or R the line is shunted with the susceptance =+= (provided by 6 an adjustable shorted stub), there results a cancellation of the susceptive part of the line admittance, yielding the parallel admittance it 1 at Q. or R. A matched impedance is thus obtained at Q. o[ R on reattaching the line to the left.
Z
Z
+J161
J161.
JI61
±ji i
538
PHASOR ANAI"YSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES (
6'
;1'>:;; = 0.411
= -1.6
I
/---- ...........
/
/
"-
\
.L
! (a)
(b)
(c)
EXAMPLE 1O-1l
-j161
The remaining task is to find the stub length t needed to provide at Q." or at R. Hthe stub is attached to Q.,as in Figure lO-8(c), the positive (capacitive) susceptance of the input admittance if = 1 + must be canceled by the negative (inductive) susceptance of the shorted stub oflength t. Its length is obtained as the distance tlA shown in Figure lO-8(d), measured as a rotation toward the generator from the susceptance 6 -> OCJ at the short to the required susceptance 161 at S on the chart rim.
+J!6!
JI61
JI61
(
EXAMPlE 10-11. A transmitter operated at 150 MHz (,10 = 2 m) feeds a 72-0 antenna load through 12 m of a lossless, 300-0 parallel-wire air dielectric line. Determine the position d from the load at which a shorted stub should be connected and the required stub length, to match the load to the line as shown in (a). Assume the stub to be made of the same 300-0 line. The load admittance being (72) 1 0.014 and with the line r'o (300)-1 OJ)0333, the normalized admittance becomes 1!L (0.014)/(0.00333) = 4.17, shown at P on the Smith chart in (b). Rotating the lattcr by 0.07lA on the SWR circle provides an intersection with fI = 1 at if = 1 - j1.6, so the stub must be located d = 0.07 lAo = 14.2 cm from the load. To cancel the inductive susceptance = -j1.6 there, the required stub length t is given by the clockwise rotation {jAo from its short to the normalized susceptance (f = 1.6 as shown in (e), yielding {jAo = 0.411, so { = (0.411)2 = 0.822 HI. If an open-circuited stub had been used, its length producing the same input susceptance is ,1/4 shorter than that of the shorted stub, corresponding to the distance o to S on the rim.
-jldl
REFERENCES JOHNSON, VV. C. Transmission Lines and Networks. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1950. JORDAN, E. C., and K. G. BALMAIN. Eleetroma,l!,netic Waves and Radiating Systems, 2nd ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1968. REICH, H . .J., P. F. ORDUNG, H. L. KRAUSS, and.J. G. SKALNIK. Microwave Theory and Techniques. Princeton, N.J.: Van Nostrand, 1953. STEVENSON, W. D., .JR. Elements
of Power Systems
Analysis. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1962.
PROBLEMS
SECTION 10-1 10-1. A sinus'2idal generator, operating atI = 50 MHz, has the internal resistance Rg = 500 l!.nd generates Vg 200 V (sinusoidal peak). It is connected to an antenna load impedance Z1- = 100 + j50 0 through 3 m of coaxial line. The line, assumed lossiess, has a polyethylene
PROBLEMS
539
dielectric (Ey = 2.25) and the characteristic impedance Zo = 50 Q. Assume the z-origin at the input. Sketch and label this system. Show by use of (9-30) that the propagation constant l' on this line is jp = jn/2 rad/m, and the phase velocity is two-thirds the speed of light. Find the value of ..:l on this line. Show that the line length is t = 0.75..:l at this frequency. (b) Find both the load and line-input reflection coefficients. What percentage voltage (or current) reflection is occurring at this mismatched load? (c) Find the line input impedance, and determine the current = 1(0) and the average power delivcred to the line input. (d) Deduce the load current IL = I(l) and average power kd to the load. In view of the Poynting theorem, explain why this power and that found in (c) should be the same. [Answer: (b) frO) = 0.447e-j153.4" (c) 1(0) = 2.8281', 81 A (d) I(t) = 1.265ei7 1.5T A]
I.n
10-2. In Problem,to-I, the load average power~was found to be 80 W, obtained from the line current magnitude 1(t) flowing into the load Zr. = 100 + j50 Q. Show that the same load powcr can be found from the algebraic sum, Pa~ + P a-;', of the incident and reflected average power How through any cross section on thjs 1o.'11ess coaxi31llil1e and obtained h'om the incident and reflected voltage and current waves (V~, J~) and (V';;, 1';;), respectively. lHinl: Show, for example, that the average power carried by the + Z tr31ve~ng waves at any line cn~~s section = } Re [V~ (!~) *J W, where V~ = Zo1~.] (ineluding the load terminals) is given by
F:v
10-3. Suppose a matched load (ZI" = 50!1) is now used to terminate the lossless 50-Q line described in Problem 10-1. Sketch this system. (a) What r~Hection coefficient is expected at this load? Elsewhere on the line? What is the line imped:mce Z(z) anywhere of} this line? (b) Write only the symbolic expressions for the line voltage V(z) and line current J(z) on this matched line. From an inspection of these expressions, at what location yn the line do the line voltage and line current become just the complex amplitudes V~ and J~? (e) Calculate the line input current lin 1(0), whenc~ deduce I~ and V~. Find the line voltage and current as functions of ;c. (d) Calculate the average power input to the line; the power to the load. 10-4. Recalculate the load current IL of Example 10-1, making usc of ( 10-9a) and the value of the line input current obtained in part (c). Compare your result with (7) of part (d). 10-5. (a) In a manner similar to that used to obtain (10-9a), show that the ratio of the load voltage to the input voltage of a section of line of length t can be expressed
(10-33) (b) Rcpeat (a), except find the expression 'tor the ratio of the load voltage to the input currmt, showing that (10-34)
10-6. In Example 10-1, the solution given ignores the ctfect of the line losses associated with its attenuation factor rx. Take now the effects of rx into account. (a) Recalculate the input reflection coefficient, showing that f(O) is about 2.5% lower when losscs are accounted for. (b) Find the line impedance and input average power, comparing the results with the lossless case. Deduce the load current and load average power. [Answer: (b) 23.2 W] 10-7. The same source and load as described in Example 10-1 are connected to an identical line except for its length, which is now 11.5 m, making t/..:l = 1.09 at the operating frequency. Sketch this system. Neglect the effects of the small line attenuation in the following (assume rx = 0): (a) Find the load reflection coefficient and the line input impedance. (b) Determine the line input current and the average power delivered to the line at A-A. (c) Find the line current at the load and the average power fed to the load. 10-8. Repeat Problem 10-7, except include the effects of the line attenuation factor rx = 0.00197 Np/m in this case.
540
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
10-9. In the lossless line problem of Exal.!:lple 10-1, the load average powe! was found to be 23.4 W by making use of the line current I(t) driving the load impedance ZD' Show that the same load power can be deduced from the algebraic sum of the forward and backward power flow, P:v and P;:v> associate~ wilh the for~ar~ and backward traveling voltage and current wave complex amplitudes (V;:;, I;:;) and (V;;;, I;;;) respectively. (See hint in Problem 10-2.) 10-10. The same source and load are connected to the lossy line described in Example 10-2, but the line length is reduced to 30 mi, making tlA = 0.167. Assuming the origin at the input, sketch and label this system. (a) Find bOlh the load and input reflection coefficients and the input impedance. (b) Find the current 1(0) delivered to the line by the generator and the average input power to the line. (e) Determine the load current let) and the average power fed to the load. (d) If}he lipe had been impedance-matched = and the generator were conjugate-matched (Zg = Z(l') for maximum power transfer, determine both the average power delivered to the line and to the load.
(ZL Zo)
APPENDIX D 10-11.
Work Problem 6-21 in Chapter 6.
10-12.
Work Problem 6-22 in Chapter 6.
10-13. Use the Smith chart to find the complex reflection coefficient f (in polar {()rm) corresponding to the following normalized impedance: (a) 21 = 0.4 + jO, (b) 22 = 3 + jO, (c) ;3 = 0.8 + jO.6, (d) ;4 = 0.25 - jO.55. Show a Smith chart sketch, labeling these x locations thereon, along with appropriate phasors (arrows) depicting the complex reflection coefficients with labeled magnitudes and angles. Check the answer to part (c) analytically, using the normalized version of (10-5). (Also label the proper rr and r, axes on your charL) [Answer: (a) f 1 = 0.43ei 180 (d) 0.68e- j120 o
]
SECTION 10-2
Zo
10-14. Use the Smith chart to determine the input impedancc of a lossless line with = 500 and length t = 0.25A, assuming the following load impedances to tcrminatc this line: (a) 100 n, (b) j100 0, (c) -j100 0, (d) 100 j50 O. Show a simplified Smith chart sketch depicting the solution of (d) only, labeling thc entry (XL) and exit (Xin) values, plus the rim-scale rotation employed. [Answer: (a) 250 (b) -j25 n (d) 20 + jlO 0] 10-15. (a) Make use of the Smith chart to obtain graphical solutions for Problem lO-l. In particular, use the chart to determine thc load reflection coefficient. Show details of this on a labeled chart, or sketch of the chart. (b) Graphically determine the line-input reflection coefficient and impedance. Add relevant details of this to the chart sketch, taking care to denote the entry and exit points of the rim-scale rotation used. The reflection coefficients should be displayed as labeled phasors (arrows) on the chart (including their angular arguments). 10-16. (a) Employ the Smith chart to obtain graphically the input impedance of the 50-ohm lossless line of 1.09A length described in Problem 10-7, Provide details relative to a labeled chart or sketch, showing also details of the rim-scale rotation required. (b) Find graphically the reflection coefficients at the load and the line input, labelingthe magnitudes and angles of these phasors on the chart. 10-17. Repeat Problem 10-16, except apply the Smith chart to that line with the small attenuation factor rx = 0.00197 Np/m taken into account. By what factor is the reflection coefficient phasor diminished in length as it is rotated from the load at z = t to the input at Z = 0 on the chart? Is this rotation (i.e., the rimoscale entry and exit points) affected by this attenuation? 10-18. Apply the Smith chart to the lossy lil1c of lcngth 0.1.67). described in Problem 10-10. (a) Find graphically the reflection coeffieient ret) at the load, entering labeled results on the chart or chart sketch. (b) Employ thc required rotation via the rim scale to obtain the reflection coefficient and line impedance at the input terminals, giving details and verifying that thc
PROBLEMS
reflection coeftlcicnt magnitude in this rotation must be diminished value. Label these results on the chart.
541
about 6] (ir, [rom its load
10-19. Alter the cascaded lossless line lengths of Example 10-5 such that now t 1 = 3 m = 0.2Al and t 25m = 0.4 72A 2. Make usc of the Smith chart to find the lille impedance seen by the generator, supplying details and labeled charts or sketches that indicate appropriate entry and exit points and rim-scale rotations. (b) Find the average power delivered by the generator to the line input at A-A. Why is this also the average power delivered to the load? Use this observation to deduce quickly the load current magnitude. 10-20. Use the Smith chart to obtain graphically the normalized admittances corresponding to the following normalized impedances: (a) I + j2, (b) 4 (c) 3, (d) j4, (e) O. lAnswer: (b) 0.16 +jO.121 10-21.
The load impedance terminating the transmission line in Example 10-1 is
ZI. =
36
+
j20 a. Using an appropriate nonpalization, employ the Smith chart to transfi)rm this impedance graphically into its reeiprocal, YL . Check your result analytically. 10-22. Make usc of the Smith chart to find graphically the complex reflection codlicicnt f (in polar corresponding to the following normalized admittance value. (a) Yl = 0.4, (b) Y2 = 3, (C)Y3 = 0.8 + jO.6, (d)Y4 = 0.25 - jO.55, (e)ys = 1.4 + jO.8, (f)Y6 = O. Show a Smith chart sketch, on which label these,y points and their corresponding values (the latter as complex phasor arrows). Label the rr and r i axes 011 yonry-chart sketch, as depicted in Figure 10-3(b). Check the aI1sweI to part (e) analytically, using f = (I - y)/(I [the normalized form of (10-5) with Z = Y- 1 inserted]. 10-23. In the branched linc system of Example 10-6, prove that the ratio of the awrage powers injected into lines 2 and 3 at their common input at B-B is (l'av,2/ P ((;2/(;3)' where (;2 and (;3 denote the conductive (real) parts of their line input admittances. Then, fi'om tJ:c know!l average power inpllt into line I, find the average power reaching each of the loads ZI. and Z~, on lines 2 and 3. [Answer: Pav,2 = 6.40 WJ 10-24. The branched lossless line system of Exam pie 10-6 is rearranged by a simple interchange of the lines I and 3, the generator anclloads being left as shown. (a) Usc the Smith chart as an admittance chart to find the input admittances of lines 1 and 2. Then find the admittance looking into line 3 at A-A. Determine the average power delivered by the s"ouree to the input at A-A. Usc the of froblem 10-23 to determine the average power reaching each of the branched loads and Z~·
SECTION 10-3 10-25. Make use of the Smith chart results obtained for the lossless line of Example 10-3 to determine the following. Find the SWR on this line, obtained in two ways: (I) hom the from tbe osculation point of the SWR circle reflection coefficient magnitude on the line; with; (= SWR) circle lchcck Figure 6-10(c)]. (b) Usc the Smith chart in the manner of Figure 10-4 to locale the first Vmax and Vmin to the left of the load plane (express the distances in deeimal wavelengths and in centimeters). Locate 1m.x and {min as well. Depict all these on a labeled sketch of the graph of line voltage and current magnitudes versus z·
ZL
10-26. A Zo = 50 a lossless line is terminated in the load impedance (a) 5011, (b) 25 a, (c) 100 (cl)J25 (e) -jIOO (f) 20 + jl0 (g) () (short), (h) 00 (open). Normalize each load value and usc a Smith chart to determine graphically the reflection coefficient magnitude and the SWR on the line produced by each termination. What is the SWR on any lossless line terminated in a pure reactance? Explain.
a,
a,
a,
a,
10-27. Standing-wave measurements on an essentially lossless, 50-a slolled air line reveal all SWR value of 4.00 when it is terminated in an unknown load. The voltage minimum with the load in place is seell to shift 0.150A toward the generator when a short cifeuit replaces the Ipad at its load plane. Show a sketch depicting these details, and find the value of the unknown ZL with the aid of a Smith chart.
542
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
10-28. An unknown load impedance is connected to a 50-Q slotted air line (considered lossless), operated at 600 MHz. The load produces a measured SWR = 3.5 with the standing-wave Vmin occurring at the scale position 15.20 ern, the scale having its zero rd(~rence nearest the generator. On replacing the load by a short circuit, a null occurs at the seale location 9.60 cm. Ske~ch a line diagram depicting these details, and employ the Smith chart to find the unknown ZL' 10-29.
On connecting a mismatched load to a losslcss line, it will yield a standing wave on that line with its Vmin located according to one of four cases. Vmin will be located (a) at the load plane; (b) a quarter wave from the load; (c) between the load plane and a quarter wave from it; or (d) between a quarter wave and a half wave away from the load plane. For eaeh case, use a Smith chart to deduce the type of load: that is, whether it is an inductive or a capacitive impedance or a pure resistance (in which case argue as to whether it is larger or smaller than Zo). Be dear.
10-30. The SWR reading S = 2.55 is provided by a slotted line known to be terminated in a pure resistance. Use a Smith chart to deduce what two resistance values the load might have. Find in each ease the distanee [rom the load plane to the first Vmin on the standing wave.
SECTION 10·4 10·31.
Make use of the hyperbolic [unction definitions (10-22) to obtain (10-21 c) from (1O-21b). Show [rom the latter how (10·23) follows for the losslcss case and that it ean also be written ( 10-35) or, in normalized form, as ( 10-36)
10-32. Use the input impedance expression (10-21 b) to derive the shorted load version (10-25), from which deduce its lossless version (10-27). 10-33.
A section of coaxial line with negligible losses and 50-Q characteristic impedance is terminated in a short circuit (a "shorted stub"). (a) Find its input impedance by use of (10-27) if it has the length (I) t = 0.05;[; (2) t = 0.15;[; (3) t = 0.35;[. (b) Verify the results of part (a) by use of the Smith chart. (Show a sketch.) (c) Neglecting losses, what is its input impedance if the stub length is a quarter wave? A half wave? 10-34.
Make use of(10-23) to prove the input impedance expressions (10-30) and (10-31) for the special cases of haU:'wave and quarter-wave lossless lines that are al-bitrarily loaded.
At the operating frequency J = 400 MHz, a quarter-wave-Iong section of line with negligible losses and polyethylene dielectric (E, = 2.26) is terminated in the load impedance (a) 25 Q; (b) 25 + j25 Q; (c) 100 Q. Find the input impedance in each rase, as well as the length of this line. Let Zo = 50 Q.
10-35.
10-36. A particular antenna load operated at 500 MHz has the measured input impedance of 104 Q. It is to be fed li'om a 50-Q coaxial line through a lossless quarter-wave section of line (a "quarter-wave transformer"), with its Zo chosen such that the input impedance to the quarter-wave section matches the load to the 50-Q feed line. Sketch this system, and find the required Zo of the quarter-wave line section and its physical length, if the line dielectric is polyethylene (E, = 2.26). 10-37. A lossless, 50-Q slotted line is attached to an unknown load <:1. = <:(0), located at the load plane z = O. The mismatch there produces a measured standing-wave ratio S on the slotted
PROBLEMS
2:
543
totr) (z)
f----I z = d
~Y\i
/~
(z)
PROBLEM 10-38
line, with the voltage minimum located to the left at z = - d. Sketch this system. (a) Prove that the unknown load impedance at = 0 can be exprcssed in terms of the measured SWR and the distance d as l()lJows
~
~
=
jS tan (2n~)A <0 (d) S - j tan
(10-37)
2n~
[Hint: Using the Smith chart, s~ow that the reflection codhcicnt at the Vmin location = has the negative-rcal valn<.: with its magnitude obtained trom (10-17).] (b) the load produced total reflection (\q = I), what would the SWR then becomc'? Show for this case that (10-37) red uces to
IrI,
d)
-j
=
What kinds of load impedances produce total reflection?
1()"38. The unknown Er of a low-loss dielectric sample can be measured as f()llows. A closcfitting cylindrical plug of dielectric material of measured length d and unknown Er is slid into the end of a coaxial slotted air line terminated in a short circuit as showu. (The dielectric is assumed losslcss and nonmagnetic.) A<;sume the z-origin ilt the air-dielectric interface. The short at z = d causes total reflection into both regions I and 2, with a null measured hy the slotted do to the left of the interface as noted. The generator, to the left, operates at the line at measured frequency j; and is not shown. (a) Use (9-80a) to show that the ratio
(10-39)
544
PHASOR ANALYSIS OF REFLECTIVE TRANSMISSION LINES
(Hint: Use (10-38) of Problem 10-37 for Zl(O).] (b) With the generator operating at the I:equency J '" 3 GHz, and a lossless dielectric plug of depth d = 2.35 em inserted, the slotted lme shows a null at z - do -0.89 em. Use numerical methods on (10-39) tD t1.nd EOr of tillS sample.
SECTION 10-5 • 10-39.
An unspecified impedance is connected to a section oflossless coaxial 50-Q air line. A 50-Q slotted air line is connected between a 500-MHz source and the load. Probed voltage measurements along the slot reveal an SWR of 3.50, with a voltage minimum loea t('d at the 50-em mark on the slotted line. Sketch this system. (a) Find, by use of an admittance Smith chart, where an air-dielectrie adjustable-length shorted stub should be located relative to the Vmin posltlOn. Find also the required length of the stub, choosing the position toward the load from Vmin for the point of attachment. Assume the stub to have a 50-Q characteristic impedance also. (b) What is now the SWR value on the lint' between the generator and the stub? Between the stub and the lOad? (e) Repeat (a), but this time choose the stub locati011 to be toward the generator frOm Vruin.
10-40. In single-stub matching, prove that locating a shorted stub where theAille normalized admi.ttan.ce has the value 1 + will yield a shorter stub length than lhat obtained when !ocatmg it where it has the value 1 What are your conclusions if an open-circuited stub IS used?
jlbl
jlbl.
~
__________________________________________ CHAPTER 11
Radiation from Antennas in Free Space
The problem of the radiation of electromagnetic energy from a transmitting antenna to a receiving system is of considerable interest to the communications engineer. Transmitting antennas are devices used in terminating a transmission line or waveguide with the intent of efficiently launching electromagnetic waves into space, and they may be regarded as sources of such waves in space. This chapter is concerned with the analysis of the radiation fields obtained Ii-mn typical antenna sources, important examples of which are the linear wire antenna and the electromagnetic horn illustrated in Figure II-I. First the physical E and B fields arc described in terms of the scalar and vector auxiliary potentials
t
~
-;,..
Generator ~\=::;:===~
Horn antenna
Linear
~antenna Aperture
Transmission line)
(a)
..0<;-
t (b)
FIGURE II-\. Examples of ant~nnas. (a) Linear wire antenna, center-fed by a transmission line. (b) Electromagnetic horn, excited by nse oj' a waveguide.
545
546
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
special case, with an integration leading to the radiated fields of a thin center-ted antenna of arbitrary length. The extension of Maxwell's equations to a symmetrical set using postulated magnetic charges and currents, together with their boundary conditions, forms the basis for predicting the radiation fields of electromagnetic horns and related aperture-type antennas.
11-1 WAVE EQUATIONS IN TERMS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC POTENTIALS As an aid in computing the radiation fields of antennas, frequently auxiliary functions (potential fields) are helpful in systematizing the mathematics. In particular, one may recall that the electric and magnetic fields of charge and current sources have already been related to potential functions by (5-22) and (5-48)
B=VxA
( 11-1 )
oA ot
E = -V
(11-2)
in which
,y,
)=
z
r
dv'
Jv~~-
r
Jv
P,oJ(x',y', z') dl/ 4nR
[4-35 J
[5-28aJ
assuming quasi-static conditions, that is, that the source densities Pv and J vary sufficiently slowly in time so that the finite velocity of propagation of the field effects (time retardation) can be neglected. For radiation problems in which the fields many wavelengths from the sources are usually desired, the time retardation eHects are of such significance that the potential integrals (4-35) and (5-28) become useless. Revised forms can be obtained by showing that
v·n =
Pv
( 11-3)
V'B=O VxE=
( 11-4)
oB at
VXH=J+
DD
ot
(1 \-5)
( 11-6)
11-1 WAVE EQUATIONS IN TERMS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC POTENTIALS
547
Note that there is no further need to use (11-4) and (11-5) here, for the potential relationships (II-I) and (11-2) were obtained from these two Maxwell equations originally. [Putting (II-I) and (11-2) into (11-4) and (11-5) merely leads to identities.] With E assumed a constant in what follows, write (11-3) as V . E = pjE, and substituting (11-2) into the latter yields V . (- V
V 2 <1>
+
a(v· A) at
P
= ---"-
(11-7)
E
if V . (V<1» = V2 <1> from (13) in Table 2-2 is used. From Section 2-3 it is recalled that the specification of both the divergence and the curl of a vector function assures its uniqueness (within an arbitrary constant), but only the curl of A, by (11-1), has thus far been established. The divergence of A is therefore still arbitrary, so put V·A=
a
( 11-3)
p,E-
at
whereupon substituting the latter into (11-7) obtains
pv
(11-9)
E
Comparing this result with the form of (2-100) reveals that (11-9) is a scalar wave equation in terms of the potential
The identity (21) of Table 2-2 permits writing V X (V X A) = V(V' A) - V A, and further substituting the Lorentz condition (11-3) produces a cancellation of terms containing <1> in (11-10) to yield (11-11)
the desired vector wave equation expressed in terms of A. A comparison of the wave equations (11-9) and (Il-II) with the Poisson-type differential equations (4-67) and (5-26)
pv
[4-67]
E
[5-26]
548
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACI':
shows that the latter are just special cases of the wave equations, subject to the timestatic assumption a/at = O. The integrals (4-35) and (5-28) given earlier are the timestatic solutions of (4-67) and (5-26) in free space. In the next section, comparable integral solutions of the wave equations (II-g) and (11-11) arc derived. Complex, time-harmonic fields are used to accomplish this. Thus, with A(u 1 , U2, u3 , t) in the time domain replaced with A(u 1 , U2, U3)ei wt in the manner of (2-~7), and simjlarly for the remaining fields, the Lorentz condition (11-8) becomes V - A = - jWJlE(j) , yielding
~
V-A
(j) = - - jWJlE
Lorentz condition
(11-12)
The collected results (/1-1), (11-2), (II -g), and (11-11) in time-harmonicform hecome
(11-13) ~ ~ ~ V(V E = - V(j) -jwA = .
_
-
}WJlE
in which and
A are
jwA
(11-14)
solutions of the wave equations
E
(11-15)
(II-Hi)
11·2 INTEGRATION OF THE INHOMOGENEOUS WAVE EQUATION IN FREE SPACE It is shown that a solution of the vector wave equation (11-16) in free space can, 1:>e represented as the following integral over the time-harmonic current sources J(U'b u~, U3)
(11-17)
a result closely resembling the integral (5-28a) fe)r direct current sources in free space, except for the additional time retardation factor exp ( - jPoR). The geometry of a generalized system of current densities in free space is shown in Figure 11-2.,The integral (11-17) over a system of such current sources leads to the vector magiletic
11-2 lNTEGRATlON OF TilE lNllOMO(;ENEOUS WAVE EQUAT10N IN FREE SPACE
549
System of,../f currents
FIGURE 11-2. Generalized field point P at which the
source distribution in free space, and {(lUnd using (11-17).
potential A at the field point P, wbence :B and E fields are then obtained using ( 11- 13) and (11-14). A formal proof of (11-17), as the particular integral solution of the vector wave equation (11-16), is given in Appendix C. The integral (11-17) has extensive applications to the determination of the radiation fields of current distributions on conductors in free space. Examples are shown in Figure 11-3(a). Insight into the radiation fields of such devices can be acquired initially From a study of the infinitesimal dipole element illustrated in Figure li-3(b), sillce an end-to-end superposition of such elements can be used as a basis lor constructing any of the antennas in Figure 11-3(a), and hence their fields as well. The field integral ( 11-1 7) is simply an expression of such a superposition.
Linear antenna
Loop antenna
Rhombic antenna
Linear array
(a)
p p
R
(b)
(c)
(d)
FIGURE 11-3. Antenna configurations amenable to field analysis by use of (11-17). (a) A few antenna configurations of physical interest. (b) An infinitesimal oscillating current-element. (c) Linear antenna as a superposition of current-elements. (d) Array of linear wire antennas.
550
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
dt' Volume-element
du'=ds'dt'
~-.l,
,',
•
++ ~ j +A+ q = lW
,, ,, ,, '' ,, :'
A
,'r-dl=Jds'
!.l.±t! ~t
-.9_- -Ij
ds' (a)
p
,,
(z)
, A
(f)
,,
()
,:~
'
H'
it '
---- 0
----
0
(b)
) (c)
FIGURE 11-4. The oscillating current-clcmtnt. (a) Limit of the volume current-element Jdv', becoming the linear current-element IdC' as ds' -> O. (b) Geometry relative to a current-element at the origin. (c) Components of electric and magnetic fields at P.
11-3 RADIATION FROM THE INFINITESIMAL CURRENT-ELEMENT The usefulness of (1) 17) lies in the fact that it yields, at any field point in free space, !:..he total potential A due to a system of time-harmonic current sourc~s. The physical E and H fields of such sources can then be derived fi'om the known A field by use of (1 1-13) and (I 1-14). It is instructive to find the fields of the most basic current source: lhe irifinitesimal current-element (or elementary ~dipole) illustratcd in Figures 11-3(b) and 11-4. Th!:: current-element is defined by J dv' appearing in the potential integral (11-17), with J denoting the complex lime-harmonic vector current density at some volume-elcment dv'. For present purposes, the transverse area ds' of the volume-element is assumed to vanish as suggested in Figu~e 11-4(a), with the current source carrying a finite (rather tha.!l infinitesimal) current I. This permits expressing the volume current-element Jjv' as J dt', a linear current-element. It is seen horn Figure 11-4(a) that the current I is accompanied by charge accumulations ± fj at the ends. The relation connecting a timeinstantaneous current flow i with real-time charge accumulations ± q is, by (3-82a), i = dq/dt. The corresponding time-harmonic form is I =jwfj
( 11-18)
Because the elementary current source involves charge displacements ± q to the ends of the element, it is often called an oscillating electric dipole. The vector magnetic potential of an oscillating current-element located at the origin of a spherical coordinate system is obtained with reference to Figure 11-4( b). Since only an infinitesimal current-element is assumed present, no integration of (11 17) is required, to yield the diflerential potential at P
(11-19)
11-3 RADIATION FROM THE INFINITESIMAL CURRENT-ELEMENT
551
The electric and fields corresponding to (11-19) are found by usc of (II-I) and (11-2). Equation (II is given in mixed coordinate systems, so it becomes desirable to express the z-directed potential in spherieal coordinates. From the geometry in Figure 11-4 (b) (1l-20) Then the
Ii field
of the elementary dipole becomes, from (11-1) ar r2
diI=
dB
Vx
lio
110
{LO
= a.p j dz'
e - j 'p or
471:
1 2"
r
r
r
r SlIl
a ar
a ao
0
dAr
rdA o
0
fPo + J. e _.
a.p
ae
sin 0
sm
(11-21 )
A/ m
The electric field E is obtainable two ways. One is by use of (11-4) ~ V(V . dA) ~ dE = . - jUJdA )UJlioEo
( 11-22)
into which the substitution of (11-19) and (11-20) yields the desired dE at P. An alternate method involves the use of the Maxwell equation (3-85), which in the freespace region becomes
dE
,
)UJEo
V
X
(dill
(11-23)
and into which the substitution of (11-21) obtains the desired electric field, Either method yields (11-24) in which
I dz'- e- J'P or [2Y10 dE~ = r 471: r2
j UJE or3
I dz'- e- jfior [jUJlio - - + Ylo dE"O;e -_ 4n
r
J
2 + ---
cos
e
J'
+ -,-1 ] UJEor3
(11-25)
SIll
e
(11-26)
and Ylo denotes the intrinsic impedance -./lio/Eo for free space encountered in Chapter 2 in connection with uniform plane waves. In Figure 1l-4(c) are shown the vector field components of the oscillating current element at the typical field point P(r, 0, 4») and given by (11-21) and (11-24).
552
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
The real-time forms of the tlelds of an oscillating current-element are found by use of (2-74); thus, from (11-21) and (1l-24)
. . [1
~ Re [dEre-'wtJ = Re -dz'. - e-'(rot - por) (2110 -4n r2 =
21 dz' [110 2 cos (wt - flor) 4n r
+ - -13 sin wEor
1 dz' [ wf..lo . dEe = - - - - - sm (wt - /301) 4n r
+ _1_3 sin wEor
(wt - /3or)] sin
+ 110 2 r
C
2e --j90 +-
)
wEor3
cos ()
(wt - /3or) ] cos
]
e
(] 1-27)
cos (wt - /3or)
e
)
1 dz' [ I /30 . dHq, = - - 2: cos (WI - /3or) - - 8m (WI 4n r r
(11-28)
/3or)] sin
e
(11-29)
assuming the current amplitude 1 to bc the pure real r. These real-time results are useful in sketching the flux fields of the oscillating dipole, depicted in Figure 11-5. Only the electric field lines are shown, since their components dEl) and dEr lie in the plane of the paper; the flux of dHq" from (11-29), consists of an azimuthally oriented system of circles about the z axis of the figure. The ficlds close to the dipole, termed the nearzone fields, resemble the electric flux of a static charge dipole discussed in Example 4-8, in contrast with the farzone, or radiation, fields that become impqrtant at distances of a few wavelengths or more from the source.
(z)
Wave motion ----..;,.. Nearzone region
~
Farzone region
FIGURE 11-5. Electric field flux of an oscillating current-element at a fixed instant.
INFINITESIMAL CURRENT-ELEMENT
II
553
fields warrants a look at the simregions, distinctions made possible 3 1, r- 2 , and r- in the field expressions For example, from the magnetic field inverse r to inverse r2 terms is obtained
The plifications in by a comparison and facilitated
( 11-30) From this it is term predominates" source (r« and (11-26) l/r 2 to the nearzone region (I' only the
from the dipole source (r» Ao) the l/r
of (11-21) is far more important near the to the electric field expressions (11-25) the l/r to the l/r 2 terms as well as the (11-30). One concludes that in the 1~I,ementary dipole are well approximated by of dEr and dEe as follows (11-31) Nearzone: r« Ao (11-32) a static charge dipole shows that (11-31) limit (w ---* 0), on substituting fj for J/jw magnetic field (11-32) reduces, as w ---* 0, to Savart law (5-35b) applied to a differen tial
curren t-elemen t. With the are on I y those
theJarzone region, the important field terms
1-21), (11-25), and (1/-26) to sin
e
(11-33) Farzone: r» Ao
itlor
These fields are in-phase, remote regions. Their ratiu
sin
e
(11-34)
become important in the radiation of energy into real intrinsic wave impedance
~ == '10 ~ 377 n V-;;;
( 11-35)
identical with (2-130), the wave impedance associated with uniform plane waves in free space treated in Section 2-10. This is not an unexpected result if one realizes that the spherical waves (11-33) and (11-34) are TEM waves. They are essentially uniform plane waves over a small portion of the surface of a large sphere of radius r centered at the radiating elementary dipole. The factor sin appearing in those field expressions
e
554
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
I
I I
I I
I I
()
/
I
,
~/
/r
(~~1C~~) I
IdEe
(a)
(b)
FIGURE 11-6. Relative to the elementary dipole. (a) Field pattern of the elementary dipole. Plot of sin versus Note the axial symmetry. (b) Large spherical surface S(r» ,to) enclosing dipole [or finding the radiated power by use of farzone fields.
e
e.
is called the field pattern factor of the elementary dipole. I t accounts for maximum field intensities in a direction broadside to the elementary dipole as shown in Figure 11-6(a), tapering to zero along the dipole axis. The time-average power radiated from any surface S enclosing the elementary dipole, depicted in Figure II-6(b), is obtained by use of the Poynting theorem (7-58). No ohmic dissipation occurs in the free-space region enclosed by S, making (7-58) ( 11-36)
The volume integral denotes the time-average power generated by active sources driving the elementary dipole, seen to equal the time-average power flux leaving (radiated from) the enclosing surface S. It should be realized that arry surfaee S whatsoever may be used to enclose the dipole source, but by use of a sphere of large radius r, requiring only the farzone fields (1l-33) and (11-34), one eliminates the need for incorporating all the terms of (11-21) and (11-24·). The additional contributions to the time-average power are found to be zero anyway because of the phase condition of the nearzone terms. Inserting (11-33) and (11-34) into (I 1-36), one may show that the time-average power radiated from the elementary dipole becomes P av
I
II
I
,r, 'jS 1- Re
~
~
[dE x dH*] • ds
'101[[2 =3
(rlz')2 ..1,0 W
(11-37)
On increasing the differential length dz' of the current element to a value It (though yet small compared to the wavelength ..1,0) it is seen from (11-37) that the radiated power is proportional to the square of the length. Even so, an electrically short currentelement is incapable of radiating much power. For example, a wire antenna 3 cm long operated at 100 MHz has a length It = O.OU o , making (h/Ao) = 0.01. If one could excite the wire with I A of current, its radiated power, from (11-37), would be only 50 mW. Aside from the difficulty of exciting an electrically short antenna with very much current, this is still substantially less than the power obtainable ii'om a half wave
CENTER-FED THIN-WIRE ANTENNA
11-4
555
iI'om the next scction, A detailed conimpedance, a subject not considered in impedance to current flow is offered by radiation,
linear antenna sideration of the this text, reveals that electrically short antelmas,
11.4 RADIATION FlaDI Of A UNIAR CENTER·FED THIN·WIRE ANTENNA The thin-wire antenna, point along the wire, radiated at remote an oscilla ti ng It involves the (11-17) or the electric the antenna, accoul1tillg fixed field point P, 011 is suggested by the
source applied at a gap located at some for years, The prediction of the fields antenna, making use of the known fields of section, is the subject of this discussion, (~ither the differential radiation potential 1 or (11-34) over the finite length of "'''''''",',,"., of the differential field contributions at a R to source points on the antenna. This . The field integrals arc seen to contain
(z)
(a)
(b)
(z)
(c)
(d)
FIGURE 11-7. Relative to antennas and their currcnt distributions. (a) The summing of field contributions infinitesimal current-elements along an antenna. (b) Linear antenna current obtained from a deformation of an open-circuited transmission line. (c) Loop antenna current standing wave, obtained from a deformation of a shorted transmission line. Pertaining to the distribution of a current standing wave along a thin wire, as a tilncti"!l
556
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
\ ~
/
(- the current /, a quantity that must be known or specified at each source position l along the ~antenna if the integration is to be carried out. The antenna current distribution /(z') may be found experimentally or by analytical means. Experiments in which antenna currents are probed show that their amplitudes along the antenna wire are very nearly sinusoidal standing waves. Qualitatively, at least, an open-ended linear antenna may be regarded as an opened-out section of an open-circuited parallel-wire transmission line, possessing sinusoidal standing waves of current tapering to zero at the wire ends as depicted in Figure 11-7 (b). Similarly, the circular loop antenna shown in Figure 11-7(c) has a current distribution on the wire that deviates only slightly from the current standing wave on the conductors of a shorted parallel-wire transmission line, as noted in the same figure. Although the effects of power radiation from an antenna tend to produce deviations from these simplified standing-wave pictures, a comparison of measured antenna field patterns with calculated results based 011 assumed sinusoidal current standing waves reveals that the assumption is quite suitable for tarzonc field calculations. A much better current distribution approximation is required, on the other hand, for predicting the terminal impedance of a linear wire antenna; this latter task is omitted from the present discussion. An analytical proof of the fact that a sinusoidal standing wave of current is a reasonable assumption for linear wire an tennas was original! y provided by Pocklington. 1 His conclusion is demonstrated from an expression for the vector magnetic potential A developed at t~e surface of a thin wire, using the integral (II 17). Assuming the antenna current 1(:::.') to be concentrated wholly on the wire axis as in Figure 11-7(d) does not significantly altel· the potential A(a, z) at the typical, fixed field point P the wire surface. A(a, z) is obtained from (11-17) with ide' = aJ(z') dz'
on
( 11-38)
in which the distance R from a source point P'(O, point P(a, z) on the wire surface is
on the wire axis to the fixed field
R=
( 11-39)
It is sufficient to assign the integration limits in (J 1-38) over only a rather small neigh borhood (~: - t, /: : + t) of the field point P, in view of the close proximity of the field point to the axial current sources. In otber words, current sources located at more remote points (;;;' - z) » a are too far away to alter the integral appreciably. Then the phase factor e-j/JoR in (11-38) takes on values near unity, since PoR will not depart greatly fimn zero. Also, the current 7(l) being investigated acquires an average value 7(Zl over the neighborhood (z - t, z + t) ~b()ut the Jixed field point P, or essentiaIly a unifixm value over that z' range. Then f(z) call be removed fforn the integral of ( II to obtain fz+1'
Jz~=z-I'
Thus that is,
at any field point dose to the wire axis is proportional to the local current 7(z); ( 11-40)
lB. E. Pocklington, "Electrical oscillations in wins," Cambro Phil. Soc. Prot., 9, On. 25,1897, pp.
324~-332.
557
11-4 RADIATION FIELDS OF A LrNEAR CENTER-FED THIN-WIRE
In an essentially axially symmetric system such as this, the field al position p a on the ~ire is dependent on z only. The wave equation \ 11-1 only in terms of the A z component, therefore reduces to
radial
for anyficld point Pta, z) on the wire surface,~but (11-40) substituted into yields a wave equation in terms of the current I(z) on the wire axis
11-41)
2~
() I
2
~
+Wf.1oEoI=O
(II
This homogeneous second-order differential equation evidently has the solution (11-43) a sum of iorward- and backward-traveling waves of current on the wire. With the current at the open ends of the linear antenna of Figure 11-7 (b) required to vanish, (11-43) agrees with the experimental evidence that the time-harmonic current distribution on a thin-wire antenna is essentially a sinusoidal standing wave. 'The phase factor 130 applicable to the eurrent standing wave on the wire implies that the wavelength associated with the current distribution is the same as that fi)f the field in the free space surrounding the antenna. In Figure II-8(a) are shown examples oflinear antennas driven by a sinusoidal source amI developing sinusoidal standing waves of current in accordance with the foregoing remarks. The following rules are applicable 1. The current through the driving source must be continuous. This follows from the requirement that just as much current must leave one generator terminal as enters the other terminal. 2. If the antenna ends are open (the wire does not form a continuous loop), the current at the ends must vanish. This follows from the conservation of charge.
: (z)
: (z)
t' ,
t11,
t\ t '-
,,
t "
t/ -t /
Center-fed
'\ \
\
\
I
I
---I I
I
o "'-:.:f.. :) 0 /
\
--~I
I I
I
\
\
---\1m1
t
\
\
\
I
t---~1 I m
\
\
L-~1 Tim
o '" --~\
,
,
\
I
I
I
I I I
'" ,/
1m2
I
:
/
I
'", 0 \
-t2
I"
II
\
Off-center fed (a)
(b)
FIGURE 11-8. Standing-wave current distributions found on thin linear antennas driven by a single sinusoidal generator. (a) Straight linear antennas: centerfed (lejt) and off-center fed. (h) Examples of curved linear antennas: open-wire (lejt) and loop antenna.
558
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
3. The current distributions to either side of the generator Illust be sinusoidal standing waves with a free-space phase constant /10 = wSoEo. The distribution is specified by (11-43), satisfying the boundary conditions of rules I and 2. The foregoing rules, ;(;~iied to the center:fed straight-wire antenna of Figure 11-8(a) lead to the following current distributions on the upper and lower halves of the antenna
1«) = I«)
=
7", sin /30 (t - <) Im sin /1o(t + <)
o«
(11-44)
!m
in which denotes the ~urrent amp~itud,e occurring at tl~y maximum along the standiQgwave. In general 1m may be assumed eornplex; that is, 1m = Imel'" iran arbitrary phase angle ¢ is desired to be included. The standing waves (J I -44) are seen to be continuous at the generator location < = 0 in accordance with rule I; whereas they further vanish at the antenna ends < = as required by rule 2. If the generator is placed off center as in Figure 11-8(a), nonsymmetrical current standing waves are obtained as shown. The rules applied to this case yield current standing waves
±t
/«) = 7",1
sin
/30(tl -
0< < < tj
I«) = Im2
sin
/30(t2 + z)
-t2 < ':: < 0
(11-45)
you may~verify what additional relationship between the standing-wave amplitudes 1m2 needs to be satisfied if current continuity through the generator is to prevail. T'he current standing waves are illustrated ft)r center-f(:d antennas of typical lengths in Figure 11-9(a). Shown in (b) is the variation of the antenna currents with time; the standing character of the waves is evident from the real-time bebavior.
1m! and
\
\
\
\
Im
~
,
I
I I I I
,V
I
\
--1
\
Im \
I I
Im\
--1
I
/
/
I
\
I
/
(Short dipole)
I
I I
it
I
--<
\
t
It
/
/
/
\
t
--<\
U --""21::.t
\
/
!
/
t= 0
T
8
T
"4
u= 1.3 AO (a)
(b)
FIGURE 11-9. Currents on center-fed linear antennas. (a) Current standing waves on antennas ofditferent lengths, operated at the same frequency. (b) Variations or the current standing wave with time t, for a three-quarters wavelength antenna.
11-4 RADJATJON fIELDS OF A UNEAR CENTER-rED 'I'IIlN-WlRE ANTENNA
559
Having seen ii-om the preceding developmen! that only local or neighborhood current-elements appreciably aHect the potential A near the suriace of a linear antenna, Olle should also expect sinusoidal current standing waves to exist on a linear antenna even when it is curved as depicted in Figure 11-8(b). For the open-wire antenna oflength 2l in that figure, the distribution (11-44) may still be taken as a approximation to the current standing wave, if,::: is replaced by a variable' delloting distance measured along the curved wire axis. A departure from the sinusoidal wave would be expected at sharp corners or regions of wire curvature small with a free-space wavelength. Finally, olle may note the efl(~ct of bringing the ends of the antenna together, f()lTning the "loop antenna" of Figure 11-8(b). The current standing wave in this case is predictable frorn a change in rule 2: instead orthe current vanishing at the previously open ends, it must be continuous and well-behaved at the midpoint M, and symmetric about A1. Armed with the knowledge of a reasonable approximation (11-44) of the current distribution on the center-ted linear antenna of Figure 11-9(a), one can with the evaluation of its farzone electromagnetic field. Two methods arc at this potential A at stage of the development: (a) the integration for~the vf~·t()r any f~m:one field point by use of (11-19), whence E and H may be l()llud (11-31) and (II 14); and (b) the direct integration for the faxzone electric field means of (11-33). Approach (h) is employed, appealing to the geometry of Figure J 1-10. The COlltrilmtion to the total electric field at the field point P, offered eurrentelement Idz' located at P' on the antenna wire, given by (11
. {3 0 JdZ' - jfJo}{.· iJ : _)1]0 dE"0 e sIn v 4nR
( 11-46)
With P(r, 0, ¢) in the filfzone and the antenna centered at the origin, the distance R from the source pc)int P' to P is essentially parallel to r, so that R:;:;r
( 11-47)
z'eose
dA z ,t A
I
dHq,_ x ...- P(r, (J,
4:»: field
point
y
-/ z'cos6
:FIGURE 11-10.
of center-fed linear antenna in relation to the determination of
560
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
assuming R very large compared with the antenna length 2t. Using (11-47), electric field at P is found by integrating (11-46)
·13'"
sin 0 4·n
=) 0'(0
.
e-Jfior
it
cos
z' =
-/ r -
z'
(1
(11-48)
cos 0
The ;:;' dependence of the current is expressed by (11-44)
i(z') = im sin Poll =
z')
0<;:;' < t
im sin Poll +
t
(11-49)
The phase factor exp (jPoz' cos 0) appearing in (11-48) accounts for the out-or-phase condition of the contributions dEe a~rtving at P, making the integral quite sensitive to the variable phase delay due to the variable distance R. In contrast, theJactor r - ;:;' cos 0 in the denominator in (11-48) affects only the amplitudes of the dEo contribution at P, permitting there the substitution r - z' cos ~ r. Therefore (11-48) sim plifies to
e
which the integration is by parts or by substituting the exponential expression 1 [eja e-jaJ for the sine functions. Thus sin ex
111
(11-50)
From the latter are deduced the following properties of the radiation fields ora centerfed linear dipole. 1. The fields E~ and ifq, in the [;irzone region are outgoing TEM spherical waves, related by the real intrinsic wave impedance 1]0 like the fields of uniform plane waves in free space. The fields have spherical equiphase surfaces (observed b·om putting r = constant in the spherical wave phase factor , whereas the amplitudes vary as r - i, 2. The fields are directly proportional to the excitatioll current amplitude 1m. 3. Eo and ifq, are independent of the azirnuthal angle
(/lot cos 0) sin
e
- cos
Pot
(II-51 )
11-4 RADIATION FIELDS OF A LINEAR CENTER-FED THlN-WIRE ANTENNA
561
(b)
(a)
(d)
(e)
(e)
(f)
FIGURE 11-11. Field patterns F(O) for several center-fed linear antennas. Cnrrent standing wave distribntions arc realized. (a) Field pattern of half wave dipole = Ao/2), for any q,. (b) F(O) as a solid pattern of revolution about the antenna (e) F(O) represented by relative intensity contonrs on an r constant sphere. (d) Field pattern of a fnll wave dipole Ao). (e) Three-halves wavelength dipole pattern (2t = 3Ao/2). (1) Field pattern very short dipole (2t -+ d;;'J.
F(O) is called the field pattern of the center-fed linear antenna. Some features of this factor are discussed in the following.
e
The pattern-factor F( 0) how the farzone fields vary with over a sphere. In Figure 11-11 ((I), (b), and are shown three ways to depict the field pattern of a center-led antenna a half wavelength long so-called half wave dipole). The pattern is axially symmetric, so the sectional-cut pattern of Figure II 11 ((I) adequately represents F(O). From (d) and (e), as the antenna length 2t is increased, the pattern acquires additional lobes, between which nulls or dead spots in the transmitted fields
562
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
occur. This is a consequence of phase interference effects, more pronounced {or longer antennas. Thus the pattern of the three-halves wavelength antenna in Figure 11-11 (e) shows how the phase effects of the field contributions in the broadside (0 = 90°) direction yields a relatively small lobe maximum there, a consequence of partial phase cancellation. For the limiting case ofa very short dipole having essentially a triangular standing-wave distribution (the tips of sine waves), F(O) reduces to the simple sin 0 function of Figure 11-11 (f). In all cases, a null occurs in the pattern along the antenna aXIS.
The total time-average power radiated from a linear antenna may be found in the same way as for the infinitesimal dipole, by making use of (11-36). The farzone fields (11-50) thus yield the radially outward-directed, time-average Poynting vector I'fh
_
iT av -
1. 2
Re
X
{jl1o I m 2n:r
a [ -j7;, 4>
2n:r
e
- j/3or
(cos
((Jot
cos 0) . ()
cos
8m
~flor (cos ((Jot co~ 0)
(Jot) ae
- cos (Jot)]}
sm 0
(II-52) The latter substituted into (11-36) and integrated over a sphere of radius r, on which 2 ds ards a r r2 sin 0 d(} d, obtains the time-average radiated power
Pay =
#8 &'av • ds = £"'=0 S::o &'av • a
= 110 1;;' fn: 4n:
Jo
[cos
((Jot
cos sin 0
r r2
sin 0 dO d
dOW
(11-53)
This expressiOIl is not integrable in closed form, though it can be evaluated by power series substitutions or by use of the tabulated sine and cosine integral functions Si(x) and Ci(x);2 also it is readily computerized or solved by graphical methods. Closely related to the time-average radiated power (11-53) of a linear centerfed antenna is its so-called radiation resistance, R rad . It is defined such that, on multiplying it by the square of the rms value of the current amplitude 1m associated with the antenna current distribution (11-44), the radiated power (II-53) is obtained; that is, R rad1?;j2 Pay, making
(II-54) Thus R rad denotes a fictitious resistance that, on carrying the rms current 1m1j2, dissipates the same amount of power as that radiated by a center-fed linear antenna possessing a standing wave of current with the amplitude 1m. It is emphasized that the radiation resistance of a lineal antenna is in general nol the same as the resistance part of the antenna impedance Za seen by a generator attached to the antenna terminals. This fact is related in part to the current amplitude 1m appearing elsewhere 2For example, see S. Ramo,J. R, Whinnery, and T. van Duzer. Fields and Waves in Communicationl,'iectronics, 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1984, p. 599.
I'~QtlATlONS AND THEIR VECTOR POTENTIALS
563
antenna terminals, as seen in Figure 11-8(a)~ the time-average power radiated from the of which may be recalled from Figures favorable two-lobed pattern without an exhalf wave dipole also has a desirable terminal is essentially a pure resi~tance, virtually view of the maximum value 1m of its standing terminals as noted in Figure II-II (a). The half wave dipole can he calculated by use of
1[/2)
,.~,.~~---~,~~
The radiation
dO
~
36.5/; W
Half wave dipole
(11-55)
therefore 73 Q
Half wave dipole
(11-56)
*11·5 SYMMETRIC MAXWal!S EQUATIONS AND
THEIR VECTOR POTENTIALS: THE FIELD EQUIVALENCE THEOREM Section 11-4 demollslrawd how the current distribution I(z') over a linear antenna leads to the fit'lds in the surrounding region of free space, regarding electric current deml'nt~ tilt, field sources. The external fields of aperture antennas such as the electromagnetic horn or 11-1 (b), can similarly be found from the integration over the electric currents, these occurring mainly on the inner conductive surfaces of the horn~ The radiation fields of parabolic reflectors might be obtained in the same way. However, bt:cause the irregularly shaped surfaces occupied by the currents are generally not in one of the common coordinate systems, the integration could be a tedious For aperture antennas such as horns and reflecting paraboloids, it is simpler more natural to regard the electromagnetic fields in the aperture plane as the sources of the exterior fields. This section describes a field equivalence theorem developed by Schelkunoff-3 that puts this idea to use. A brief discussion of the history of this subject, which had its beginnings in the theory of optical diffraction, is related first to help provide some additional insight into this problem. The radiation fields of aperture antennas may be explained by adopting a point of view not unlike that proposed by the Dutch physicist Christian Huygens in 1678. He regarded each differential surface-element of a wavefront in an electromagnetic (optical) aperture as the source of a spherical wavelet disturbance, the total effect of which, at any field point further along, was simply regarded as the phased superposition, or sum, of all the spherical wave contributions there. 4 This approach was 3S. k Schelkunoff, "Some equivalence theorems of electromagnetics and their application to radiation problems," Bell Syst. Tech. Jour., 15, January 1936, pp. 92~ 112. 4In this regard, one may sec that the integral (11-17) for the vector potential field ora system of current sources represents nothing more than a superposition of elementary spherical wave functions, e ~ jPoR / R, proportional in strength to the current sources J dv', and summed up (integrated) in proper phase at the field point P of Figure 11-2. The Huygens picture differs, however, in that it deals only with scalar wave phenomena.
564
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
refined later by Augustin Fresnel (1788-1827). The Huygens-·Fresnel principle was placed on a firm mathematical basis for acoustical wave phenomena by H. von Helmholtz in 1859 and for optical waves by G. Kirchhoff in 1882. Kirchhoff used essentially the Green's identity (2-92) to derive a field integral solution of the appropriate scalar wave equation. 5 A generalization of the Kirchhoff method, extended to the vector electromagnetic wave equation, was provided by Love 6 and subsequently extended by Stratton and Cbu. 7 In the latter method, the usc of potential fields is avoided by employing a vector version of Green's identity to yield direct integrals for the E and H fields in terms of electric and magnetic current and charge densities in an arbitrary volume region in free space. A vector field integral approach deduced earlier by Schelkunofr8 is entirely equivalcnt to the Stratton-Chu method, but it possesses the possible advantage of additional physical insight. SchelkunotT's method is to be described here and applied to problems involving aperture-type sources of electromagnetic radiation fields. It makes use offield potentials (both magnetic and electric vector potentials), and it incorporates a concept termedjield equivalence, involving the replacement of electric and magnetic fields on an arbitrary closed surface (principally on the aperture) with equivalent electric and magnetic currents and charges. The concept of field equivalence is seen to make it desirable to postulate fictitious magnetic charges and currents in the region in question.
A. Symmetric Maxwell's Equations clhd Their Vector Potentials Calling the magnetic charge density Pm and the magnetic current density 1m provides the following sJ1mmetricai f(mn of Maxwell's diflerential equations for free space, written here in complex time-harmonic form (11
(11-57 b)
VxE
(11-57 c) (11-57d)
Suppose diat the electric and magnetic fields fi = EoE and B ,uoH of the latter are resolved into the contributions fie = EoEe and Be = ,uoHe attributahle solely to the eJectric curzents and charges p" and j, plus the additional contributions = EoEm and Bm = ,uOHm related to only theJictitious magnetic currents and charges Pm and 1m in the region. The total fields in (11-57) can then be written as superpositions of the two sets of fields
Pm
(11-58) (II-59) SAn account of Kirchhoff's method is given in M. Born, and E. VI/olf. Principles of Optics. Elmsi(ml, N.Y.: Pergamon, 1964, pp. 375-382. 6A. E. H. Love, "The integration of the equations of propagation ofdcctric waves," Phil. Trans., (A), 197, 1901, p. 45.
7J. A. Stratton, and 8SeheikunoJf, op. cit.
L.J.
Chu. "Diffraction theory of electromagnetic waves," P~ys. Rev., 56,1939, p.99.
EQUATlONS AND THEIR VECTOR POTENTIALS
Maxwell equations (I as follows
v-n
V~
(e)
V
V-B m =pA m v x Em = - jm -
V
V x Hm
V
into two groups,
=0
m
565
jWEoEm
(f) ( 11-60)
jWfloHm
(g)
(h)
yield simply (11-57) again. Equations equations, identical with (3-24, 3-48, and magnetic fields associated with distri$.hjU,w'~Ml)rdensitiesj and PV' Equations (e) through (h) fields de;::cloped in a region presuming densities 1m and Pm are also present. In electric and magnetic, the superposed satisfy the Maxwell relations (11-57). (11-60) (a) through (d) has already vector magnetic potential A. Recall the (11-14), and (11-12) in this regard
VxA
(11-61 ) (11-62)
V
V-A
in which
(11-63)
A (11-64 )
(11-65 ) It was shown
is an integral of the wave equation (11-65)
r floj(r')eJv
j JoR /
dzi
(11-66)
4nR
The additional fictitious magnetic current and charge distributions in the frete-space Ill' deducted by analogy for the systtem of equations (11-60), (e) through (h), on the dualities that texist between pairs of quantities in the first and second columns of Maxwell equations (11-60). Analogous pairs of tequations are
566
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREe SPACE
(a) and (f), (b) and (e), (c) and (h), and
and
, so there exist the j()Jlowing dualities
Ee is the dual ofH m
He is the dual of
Em
Eo is the dual of flo flo
is the dual of Eo
p" is the dual of Pm j is the dual orjm
,I
(11-67)
Since the fields Eeynd He are related to the vector rnagnetic potential A anci the sca~u' electric potential
A is the dual ofF
of\f1
A substitution of the quantities in the second columns of (11-67) and (II duals in (11-61) through (1/-65) leads to the potential relations
:Om =
V X
I'
( 11-(8)
{c)r
their
(11-69) ( 11-70)
Vol' (/1-71 )
in which
0/
and
I' satisfy
wave equations analogous with (1 I-(4) and (II
(II (II 'I:hen the ve£tor electric potential dlstriQution lm(r') at P(r) is
I'
produced by the electric current density source
( 11-74) analogous with (11-G6), " Jl rom }he f()!'egoing it is seen that if both electric and magnetic cu!rents of denSHIes 1 and 1m exist simultaneously in a free-space region, the total field E produced at any field point P(r) hecomes the sum (11-58) of Ee and Em;from (II-62) added to
EQtJATIONS AND THEIR VECTOR POTENTIALS
567
(1
_ v<1> - jwA -
1 V X Eo
F
1 ~ ---VxF
(11-75)
Eo
from (11-61) and (11-70) substituted into
1
~
- jwF + - V
~
(11-76)
X A
flo
flJr once :E (r) has been found using ( 11-75) version of Maxwell curl relation (11-57 c) ~ources to which the foregoing potential exmoreover, the electric and magnetic curlimn ofsUlJace densities and jsm) in which j
1.
_:~::.C-_-'-_ _
ds'
(11-77)
( 11-78)
theorem described in the following.
The latter
theorem to be described requires the associated with the symmetric Maxwell of the latter, in real-time form, are
use of the equations (
c
(11-79a)
(11-79b)
11", Wb
_ i Jm'
Js
H'
i
Js
ds -
J' ds +
~ i B • ds V dt Js
diD' ds A dt Js
(I1-79c)
(11-79d)
568
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
The corresponding boundary conditions are derived by the methods of Chapter 3, using the devices of the Gaussian pillbox or tbe thin, dosed rectangle constructions typified in Figures 3-4 and 3-10. The results are ( 11-80a) n' n X J,
=
Psm Wbjm 2
(II-80b)
(El - E2l =
-Ism Vjm
( 11-80c)
(B 1
-
Bll
'
H
I'
f
2)
=l,Ajm
( 1I-80d)
in which n denotes as usual the normal unit vector directed frorn region 2 into region 1. A comparison oC (II-80b) and (II-80c) with (3-50) and (3-79) reveals the additional effects of Iictitious magnetic sur/iice charge aod surfilce current densities Psm and Jsm at an interface. The fieJd equivalence theorem is concerned with a boundary interface, to one side of whicb the fields are assumed nullilied. Witb the assurnption of nut! fields in region 2, the boundary conditions (I 1-80) specialize to n'
D[ = Ps C/m2
n . Bl
-n X E J
= Psm Wbjm 2
Ism
Vjm
n X Hl = Js Aim
(11-81 a) ( 11-81 b)
( 11-81c) (II-8l d)
(11-81 a) and (11-81 b) slate that the normal components of electric and magn(~tic fields may undergo an abrupt jump to zero from region I to 2 only if a surt~lCe electric charge Ps and a surfilCC. magnetic charge (Jsm are present iri strength equal to the normal ])"1 and Enl componeptihrespeclivdy. According to (Il-Slc) and (II-BId), moreover, abrupt transitions limn finite values to zero, of the tangential components E~I and Iftl' are allowable only ifthc respective magnetic current and electric current surfa.ce densities Jsm and Is prevail at the inlerbce. Although the free magnetic charge and magnetic current densities of (I I-8Ic) and (ll-8ld) have not been proved to exist physically, they are an important mathematical concept in the field equivalence theorem. Suppose lirst that known distributions of electric current and charge densities exist in some portion of a £I'ee-space region, as in figure 11-12(a). '['he fields at P(r) could, as usual, be /(mnd by use of the potential integral (11-17), whence E and 8 follow from (11-l3) and (11-14). The fields at P(r) can also he obtained, however, Irom equivalent currents established over an arbitrary surface 8 1 enclosing all !.he sou r<.:es , as depicted in Figure 11-12 ,the enclosed sources producing the fields El and HI on SI as shown. Suppose the sources inside 8 1 are consider-cd nullified, but the fields E1 and 8 1 just outside 8[ are maintained at their previous values. This condition is mathematically allowable only if the four boundary conditions (II-Bl) are upheld, implying the sinwltaneous existence of electric and magnetic charge and current densities p" Psm' Jsm' and Js on the surface :2'1' as sugges~ed by f]gure 1 1-12(e); with the establishment of the equivalent sources Ism = - n X El al~.d Js =~n X HI on 8 1 , the integrals (11and (11-78) can be employed to find A and F at any field point P(r) in the source free-volume region V. )fhese potential solutions, inserted into (11-75) and (11-76), then yield E and 8 at
f(r).
Il-Cl SYMMETRIC MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AJ';D THEIR VECTOR POTENTIALS
(a)
(b)
F(r) P(r)
R
(e)
A(r)
(d)
FIGURE 11-12, Development of the field equivalence principle, Arbitrary doss,d sl!..rface S 5\ + S2 excl':!,dcs sourceS from ~cgio!, V. The sources establish Ej> Hi> on SI' (c) Sources J assumed nullified in 8 1 with E I , H at P(r), (d) Application offield equivalence}o ~lectromagnetic hur!', !
1: 1 , HI, on SI' (b)
An illustration of this technique relates to Figure II-12(d), Shown is a rectangular horn f(~d Ii'om a rectangular waveguide carrying the dominant TE 10 mode, Assuming a reasonably small horn taper, the field distribution over the horn aperture differs negligibly {i'om that over the waveguide cross section, Then from assumed null fields imide the surJ;tce S\ just embracing the horn and feed system as shown, the aperture fields are replaced with equivalent current and charge surface densities over the aperture as given by (11-81). This field eq uivalence process is examined in the following example.
EXAMPLE 11·1. A pyramidal horn of aperture area ali is fed from a rectangular waveguide carrying the TE lo mode as in diagram (a). Find the equivalent electric and magnetic surface curren! distributions over the sUlface SI enclosing the horn and its f(~ed system. (Neglect fields OIl the exterior conducting surfaces of the horn, assuming the field distribution over the horn aperture to be essentially that in the waveguide cross section,) The of coordinates is assumed at the horn aperture center, as in The tangential in tlie horn aperture (at Z = 0) arc required; from the TEIO mode
570
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE I
£r__-
J. m flux
Surface 81
I(Y)
E I Yf1-'" ---_--...,..:.:..---,----r---n-..JJ++.J \ -_">--_L---I
E
r::::~~::::-::;;:;:r;o;:::-----::::~rtt
<..
_
enclosmg sources
:::=1"1
r<___
_/
1
'-- __
n-/
==,.; --(x)
-:;
-"" '\
1 I'I~~!
'\
1_ ",
r
I '"
== -n X E Vim
-r~~1 I '-t1J--L- I ,
-4-t"'-H,
n -tI ~I--'
I
't-..J-
J. ==
(a)
J.m
I In
J1tti< Lfj::r!-'-'- "'-J.
IH
,
(z)
r:~1
n)(
flux
H Aim
(b)
EXAMPLE 11-1. (a) Pyramidal horn, showing aperture fields and magnetic surface currents on St: J8m, J,<
expressions (8-62), the positive D+
L'y
z
fix (b) Equivalent electric <
traveling wave fields become
"+
0) = E y ,10 cos n a
0)=
Ey,
x
(I)
_ 1f;(x,O)
~ 'ITE,10
(2)
in which a denotes the horn width in the H plane as shown. (The cosine distributions are the result of placing 0 at the aperture center.) Thus, the equivalent magnetic and electric surface current densities over the aperture become, by use of (II-8Ic) and (1l-8Id)
(3)
1s = n
x
H1 = a z
X
a}i;(x, 0)
(4)
flux sketches of which are depicted in (b). You may verify what equivalent magnetic charge density fJsm exists over the aperture, using (II-8Ih).
The electromagnetic fields exterior to the boundary surface 5\ enclosing the electromagnetic horn in the previous example can now be obtained by use of the potential integrals (11-77) and (11-78) taJs..en oVt;[ the aperture equivalent source curren ts (3) and (4), from which the fields E and Hare fi)Und by usc of ( 11-75) and (11-76). This process is illustrated in the somewhat different example f()llowing, which considers the radiation (difIraction) fields of a rectangular aperture in an absorbing screen illuminated with a uniform plane wave. EXAMPLE 11·2. Suppose a rectangular aperture of dimensions a and b is cut into a thin, flat, perfectly absorbing (black) screen excited with a uniform, plane wave as in the accompanying figure. Assume that the fields are perfectly absorbed (without reflection) cvery-
11-5 SYMMETRIC MAXWELL'S EQUATIONS AND THEIR VECTOR POTENTIALS
571
where on the screen except in the aperture, and that the tangential tields are zero on the screen just to the right of it (at Z = 0 + ). (a) Find the equivalent surface current distributions over the elosed surface SI (consisting of the plane ,t 0+ located just to the right of the screen and a hemisphere of indefinitely large radius encompassing the entire righthalf space). (b) Evaluate Ar) and F(rL at anyJarzone field point l'(r) in the region z > O. Use spherical coordinates. (c) Derive E and H Irom the potentials at P(r) in the farzone. (d) Sketch the farzone diffraction field patterns in the principal planes 1> 0 and 1> n/2, if a = 5Ao and b = lOAD· A+ Ex
I (x)
I I
r--Thin. black screen
1""",'"',
.
.+
A+ Hy
aperture -----_._.-
(y)-
(z)
a
-----
~
Black screen
(/J.o, fO)
(b)
(a)
($ = 0)
/ P(r) (field poi
----- --------.
'J -----...
= ,'.m =0 on black screen A
\\\, - ------J \'
____...
\
($ =.-)
(c)
-~
r'~ I
----1 EXAM.PLE 11-2. (a) Edge view of aperture in black screen. (b) Showing uniform plane wave Equivalent source currents in the aperture and field point field in the rectangular ~perture. geometry in spherical coordinates. (d) Graphic constructions leading to the normalized field pattern of a rectangular aperture, in the I/! = 0° principal plane. (e) The field pattern of a Side lobes are shown only in the principal planes. rectangular, 5Ao by lOA"
572
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
--,r-_ _ _ _ _ _+_~---
. . \:' I
\ \ \ \ \
\\ . \
\
\
\
,
I I
""
\:
6 ',,'----_
(
~
,..)
" / ",
\
.~
( = 0)
1r)
U versus II (U= 57r sin 9)
I
)/904
80'2
001 = 11'
8--
0
(1)
/
\1I \1-/ )/ 803
__1--
--
I
\, I1
,
___o_-u--;..
Rectangular plot of farzone pattern (solid curve)
I
0
( = 0)
~002 ~
.' / / /
Incident ------>wave
a =5
0)
(
804 003
" 1 1 0 \ "" "01 =
h{~~=----7-n---n
~ot
Black screen1
Polar of farzone pattern: (
1
+ cos 2
0) I
Sin (5,.. Sin
5rrsinO
(1) 0)
~
0.".)
I
Cd)
= O· prinyiPat-plane pattern
I
--:--:.-__._/,,:://-01 -- (z) --~ --~ r = constant .
(e)
573
EQUATIONS AND THEIR VECTOR
m
. _ . " (~ol1ditions (ll-Sle) and (1 0) become
(1)
DxH 1 =a z
g+
xa---'"~ y 110
The geometry in figure (e) shows P(r) in a with the origin at the center of the aperture. The the source poiut P' (r') is approximated (3)
siu 4»
r - sin O(x' cos 4>
and r in (3) is significant in the phase exponent of the bnt negligible in the denominator provided P(r) is a becomes
• •
";+
-a/2
- lloa x E m e~.ipo[r- sin e(x' cos q,+y' sin qI)] dx' dy' 4n11of
e- jpor sin U ~Ln V
,
U
(4)
V
(S)
flob. . -_ .. sm () sm 4>
(6)
2
foE;;; ab 4nr
(II
e
_ 'PoP sin U sin V J ----~-[f V
(7)
usc of (11-7S) into which (4) and (7) arc subwith f no faster than lir are retained, the result sin U sin V
U
V
lae cos 4>
a,p sin
4>]
(11-32)
components i£e and R,p in the farzone. the free-space version of (ll-S 7c). If only the u·',lThmeu. the results an~ irn.n.Wo'"''
(II thus related by the intrinsic wave impedance 110
574
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
(d) Graphs of the farzone field pattern of the rectangular aperture of figurc (bJ arc usually desired in its "principal planes," the two symmetry planes that include the z axis and that slice normally through the aperture. Thus, the complete verticalfJrincipal filane of the aperture, as shown in figure (c), is defined by the = 0 and the 1) n semi-infinite planes, with the polar angle 0 having the nonnegative range 0 :s:; 0 ~ 0 90 in each. The taxzone E-fielel in that vertical plane is given by thc single expression
E(r, 0,
jfJoR~.. abe- J'p or
~ ao~~-
[(I + 0) cos
2m
sin 0)
sin
.~ ..-~-
----~~~
2
5n sin 0
J
( 11-(4)
sincc from (5) and (6),
U(O,O)
= 5n sin 0,
v=O
5n sin 0,
U(O, n)
(8)
in that complete vertical principal plane, to yield (11-84). jHlttem in the 'I 'he bracketed (actor of ( 11-84) is termed the complete vertical principal plane. In Jigure (d) is shown a graph of just the filctor lJ)/U plotted versus U. From (8) it is evidcnt, since 0 has the range of (0,90 0 ) within the semi-infinite planes offigmc (e), that the visible range of U in this graph extends over ( 5n, 5n). In the diagram to the right in (d) is shown the graph of the normalized field pattern plotted versus 0, with the curves to the right and to the kft of the origin o corresponding to the upper and lower semi-infinite planes 0 and n, respectively, in figure (c). There is a slight tapering effect of the factor (I + cos 0)/2, called the Huygensfactor, which has the di('ct of reducing the side-lobe amplitudes to values somewhat below those values predicted from the basic (sin lJ)/U function. The fidd pattern in the other complete horizontal principal plane, defined by = n/2 and = 3n/2, is analyzed in a similar manner. The aperture width b = lOA o applies in this case, yielding 18 side lobes (instead of the eight obtained in the (p 0 principal plane). The beamwidth of the principal beam of such an aperture is usually defined as the angular width meawred between the amplitude points. Since (sin U)/U has the value 0,707 at U o 1.39, one can write an expression lilr beam width (20 0 ) in a prim'ipal plane of the copbasal, unifbrmly illuminated rectangular aperture ill the f(lrln 2 sin -1 0.443
(~; )
rad
(11-85)
If the aperture width a is sufficiently large compared to Ao , (11-85) is approximated by
a
rad
~
Ao
50 -- deg
a
(11-86)
from which it is seen that an aperture width a = IOAo produces a beamwidth 20 0 = 5°, whereas a = 100A o pro~des an associated beamwidth 20 0 = 0.5°, and so forth. This result shows that the beaJ11width in the principal plane of a unifbrmly cophasally excited aperture is inversely proportional to the aperture width measured in that principal plane.
Another important characteristic of the diffraction patteI'll of an aperture source is the relative strength of its side lobes in relation to the level of the principal beam. The (sin U)/U diffraction patteI'll of the uniformly illuminated case treated in the preceding example and shown in figure (d) l1as a first side-lobe level that is 2 L 7% of the mainbeam maximum, or about 13 dB doWfi. The side-lobe level achieved in a
575
11-6 AN'I'ENNA DiRECTIVE GAIN
TABLE 11-1. Field-Pattern Characteristics of Large AperturesQ
Type of aperture illumination
Pattern beamwidth (deg)
Sketch of amplitude Rectangular aperture (a
=
width) 50° a/.A o
(1) Uniform
~
(2) Cosinusoidal
~
68° a/.A o
(3) Cosine squared
~
82° a/.A o diameter) 58° D/.Ao
~a----l
Circular aperture (D
(4) Uniform
~
(5) Parabolic
~
(6) Parabolic squared
~
a
L---D--1
=
First sidelobe level (dB)
13.2 23 32
17.6
72° D/.Ao
24.6
84° Dj.A o
30.6
By large aperture is meant one whose principal dimensions are large compared to
"0.
given aperture antenna design is dependent on the functional nature of the aperture field distribution. In particular, if the aperture field excitation remains cophasal but has a cosinusoidally tapered amplitude over the aperture, the first side lobe will be 23 dB below the mainbeam maximum, or 10 dB lower than that obtained with uniform aperture excitation. Side lobe suppression by means of aperture illumination tapering is usually obtained, however, only at the expense of an increase in the beamwidth. For example, a cophasally and uniformly excited aperture of lOA width has a beamwidth of about 5" in the principal plane that includes that width. With cosinusoidal tapering, the beamwidth increases to about 6.8°. A sumrnary of the effects that aperture amplitude tapering has on beamwidth and side-lobe level is given in Table 11-1 for the cases of rectangular apertures and axially symmetr'ically excited circular apertures. The proof of these results can be established in the same manner as described in Example 11-2 for the case of a cophasally and uniformly illuminated rectangular aperture. The equivalent sources over a horn aperture with a cosinusoidal tangential field distribution in one dimension has been consider'ed in Example 11-1. The char'acteristics of its farzone field pattern in the wineipal x-z plane are found in (2) of Table II-I. Additional details of the circular-aperture diffraction problem are found on p. 192 of the book by Silver listed in the refi'Tences.
11-6 ANTENNA DIRECTIVE GAIN To reduce transmitter power requirements in point-to-point transmit-receive communication systems, it is advantageous to use an antenna that will direct most of its radiated power within a relatively small solid angle. Figure 11-11 shows how the
576
RADIATION I'ROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
angular field patterns of simple axially symmetric linear antennas of diflerent lengths rndnage to enhance their radiated power densities in certain O-directions, while reducing them in other directions. This property of power-density enhancement, through the proper design of the antenna or antenna system, is even more pronounced in systems of antennas called arTl~Ys, as well as in aperture antennas sllch as horns or reflectors. Such antennas are generally capable of enhancing the power densities relative to both spherical coordinate angles 0 and 4>, thereby concentrating the radiated power density in a desired direction even further in some point-to-point communication link. A property of an antenna indicating how effectively its radiation pattern concentrates its power density in a given angular direction (0',4>') is known as its directive gain, denoted by D(O', 4>'). The directive gain of a given antenna is defined as the ratio of the power density fYJaAr, 0' ,
D(O', 4>')
fYuv(r, 0', 4>') 1
(11-87 a)
J, £!Pav • ds ~
This expression can also be written
D(O', 4>') Power radiated
antenna
Power radiated by given antenna
(11-87b)
suggesting an alternative interpretation of directive gain. The numerator of (11-87b) is seen to denote the power radiated from a fictitious isotropic antenna comparison antenna), defined to radiate the same power density 'O»av(r, (J', (/>,) in all diredions (its power-density pattern is a perfect sphere), with Of, 4>') denoting the power density of the given antenna in the particular direction (0',4>') for which its directive gain is being defined. To illustrate this concept, Figure 11-13(a) shows how the directive gain of the half:wave linear dipole is obtained by use or (II-87b). Its axially symmetric power density pattern is independent of 4>, shown as the pattern H (in sectional view) in the figure, so suppose that one desires the directive gain D(O') in the particular direction 0= ()' shown. The spherical power density pattern of the comparison isotropic antenna, labeled f, is drawn so that its power density at 0., with the power density ;J}>av(r,O') of the given dipole. Then, as given by (II-87b), the ratio of the radiated power 4nr2;J}>av(r, 0') of the isotropic source to that radiated by the given dipole, Pay = ~s 'o/>av • ds, yields the desired directive gain D(()') in the direction 0'. The radius r denotes the radius of the integration sphere S', with r arbitrarily located in the f;irzone region of the given antenna. ]\Tore commonly, the directive gain of the given antenna is desired in the direction of its maximum power density, since this is the direction in which the maximum possible power can be captured by a distant receiving antenna. I n this case, the coincidence point of the power density patterns of the given antenna and the comparison
11-6 ANTENNA DIRECTIVE GAIN
577
Sphere S /'
I (z)
/'
/'
/
/
"\ \
I
/
/
/
\
/
!
I
I
I
\
\
\
\
\ \
(b)
(a)
antenna, (a) the direction 110 of its dipole; I is the power
It)r the example of a half-wave linear direction II and (b) the Ii is the power density field isotropic antenna, both at the distance r.
isotropic antenna yielding for lht'
0) of that given antenna maximum, the given antenna
FIGURE 11-13.
(II-87c)
in which
maximum of its power density pattern at a fixed Figure II-B(h) /()r the special case of the in the following example,
gain of the half,wave dipole antenna. maximum of the POW!'f density pattern of the half: souree is shown at (Lo, where 00 = 90°, as in density rJ'a,(r, ()o) in (11-El7c), at the pattern (II-52), with flol = 90° (rjJ being absent becanse fixed range r, (II-52) yields the maximum power
[COS (90" 90u~J2= 151~
(I)
Sill
use of (II-55) m the denominator of (11-87c) 4nl2 (151~/nr2) 36.51~ 9 Maximum
1.64
(2)
578
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
the desired answer, showing that the comparison isotropic source of:Figure 11-13(b) would need to be driven with 1.64 times as much power as the given half-wave dipole to produce the same power density &'av at 90 0 • [Note that (2) can also be evaluated usiug the radiation resistance Read defined in (II if Pay !RradI; = t(73)1; = 36.51; is employed in (11-87e).] Expressed in decibels, (2) can be written
eo
D(900)dB
= =
10 log [D(900)]
lO log 1.64
= 2.15 dB
(3)
A second way of expressing the directive gain D(O',
dPav = W'av· ds = PJ>av(r, 0,
sin OdOd
With this, the directive gain (II-87b) becomes, in terms of the time-average radiation in tensi ty (1l-88) I , 4n$(O',
(11-89)
This is also wri tten
4n$(O' A.,) D( 0',
( 11-90a)
sinee sin 0 dO d
(11-90b)
in terms of the maximum radiation intensity $(0 0 , 4)0)' The directive gain results (11-87) and (11-90) can be written in a third form, on noting from (11-52), the time-average power dellsity expression for the example of the linear center-f{~d dipole of arbitrary length 21, that the power density PJ>av, and therefore also the radiation intensity $ defined by (11-88), are quantities that are proportional to the square of the electric and magnetic field-pattern factor F(O) defined by (11-51). For antennas in general, the field pattern factor F will be a function of both . I
ll-i TRANSMIT-RECEIVE SYSTEMS, RECEIVING ANTENNA
579
:(z)
}<"'2(0')
(b)
(a)
FIGURE 11-14. Graphical basis for finding, for the example of the half-wave linear dipole, (a) the directive gain D(O') in the arbitrary direction ()' and (b) the directivity D(Ool. Only the squared held pattern 1"2(0) is used. H denotes the halfwave dipolc pattern; J, the comparison isotropic source pattern.
eand ¢, denoted henceforth by F(O, ¢). Since both the numerator and denominator of (11-87) and of (11-90) are proportional to F2(O, ¢) through common proportionality constants that cancel out, one can write the directive gain (l1-87b) or (lI-90a) in the general form
D(O' A,') , 0/
4nF2 (e' A.') = ___ ,_0/_
fs F2 dQ
(11-9Ia)
if dO. denotes the usual differential solid angle dO. = sin 0 dO d¢ on the sphere S or integration. The directivity, or maximum directive gain, of an antenna having the field pattern factor F(fJ, (1)), therefore becomes
(Il-91b)
with F(Oo, ¢o) denoting the maximum of the radiated electric or magnetic field pattern factor F(O,
11·7 TRANSMIT-RECEIVE SYSTEMS: RECEMNG ANTENNA The electric or magnetic field pattern, power density pattern, directive gain, and input impedance are important characteristics of an antenna when connected to a signal generator and used as a transmitter of radiated power; but they are of equal importance when the antenna is used as a receiving antenna, that is, the receptor of a very small {i'action of the radiated power of a remote transmitting antenna. In the faI'Zone region of
580
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
a transmitting antenna, the radiation field arriving at the location of a receiving antenna is an essentially uniform plane wave. To maximize the power accepted fi'om this wave by the receiving antenlla and its attached circuit, that antenna must be oriented (or polarized) in relation to the polarization of the arriving wave (see Section 2-11), whereas the attached circuit must provide a matched load to the receiving antenna if a maximum power transfer to it is to occur. Using the principle of reciprocity in connection with the equivalent circuit used to model the behavior orthe transmitting antenna, considered to be extremely weakly coupled to the remote receiving antenna circlli!, the l()lIowing comparative properties of transmitting and receiving antennas can be proved.
1. The effective receiving area (or "power-acceptance area") of the receiving antenna is shown in the following to be proportional, thr!mgh the universal constant A~/4n, to the directive defined fell' that antenna when transmitting. 2. The equivalent internal (Thcvenin) impenance of an antenna, when used as a reeeiving antenna, is the same as its input, or terminal, impedance when used as a transmitting antenna. 3. The measured field pattern of' an antenna is the samc, whether it is being used as a transmitting antenna or as a receiving antenna. These comparable £('aturcs of any antenna, the direct consequence of the principle o/'reciprocity, mean simply that no essential distinctioIls need to be made between its important functions when acting as a transmitting antenna or as a receiving antenna. Affecting the relative signal picked up by a receiving antenna is its polarization relative to the wave arriving II·om the transmitting source. A discussion of this aspect of a transmit-receive link is considered first.
A. Antenna Poiarization 10 In general, the of an antenna, whet her transmitting or ITcelvmg, is taken to b(~ specified by the polarization of its radiation field when it is transmitting. In what /C)lIows, it is assumed that the transmitting and receiving antennas of any communications link are polarization-matched, and that the radiation field of the transmitting antenna is linearly polarized. An illustration of polarization matching is shown in Figure II 15(a) and ) depicting fell' simplicity a transmitting dipole I located a large distance T from receiving dipole 2. These dipoles arc r~olarizat~m-matched becaust~, if both were transmitting, their radiation electrie fields ~~Il and E 02 , as given by (11-50)) would then lie in a plane common to both dipoles (the plane of this paper). With the dipoles parallel to each other, oriented such thaI 0 01 = 90° and 0 02 = 90", and only dipole 1 transmitting as in Figure 11-15(a), tlle essentially uniform plane wave arriving at receiving dipole 2 has its electric fidd EOI aligned with dipole 2, thereby inducing a maximum voltage aeross its output load. Even if the dipoles were tilted in their common plane by the arbitrary amounts 8'1 and O~ relative to their separation distanee r as sh(~wn in Figure II-IS (a). they remain polarization-matched, al though the electric field Eo 1 arriving at the site of dipole 2 now induces less voltage across its load, due in part to the reduced value of the dipole I pattern factor FdO) given hy (11-51). A polarization mismatch would occur if the receiving dipole 2 of Figure II-IS (a), say, were tilted as shown in (c) of that figure by some angle r away from the plane of the paper (the polarization-mateh plane). Then the received signal would decrease lOScc Section 2-11 in Chapter 2 fbI' a discussion of wave polarization. A discussion or elliptical polarization is also given in R. E. Collin, and F. J. Zucker. Antenna Theo~y. Part I. New York: McCraw-Hill, 1969, p. 103.
11-7 TRANSMlT RECEIVE SYSTEMS: RECEIVING ANTENNA
581
FIGURE 11-15. A ft'e~-space transmittinf!; and receivinf!; dipole link. Two polarization matched systems: dipoles parallel-polarized wit h 0 90" for maximum signal; (b) with z-axes tilted by 02 0', and if1 relative to distance T. In (e), showing the depolarizing dfect of the tilt angle c.
from its previous polarization-matched value by the factor cos T, evident from only the component EOI cos T of the arriving plane wave now aligning itself with the receiving dipole. It is thus evident that a T = 90° polarization tilt or one of the antennas relative to the other would result in zero power captured by the receiving antenna, assuming a linearly polarized transmitted wave. If the transmitted wave were circularly or elliptically polarized, the receiving dipole would capture power for all angles of depolarization tilt,
T.
B. Effective Receiving Area To enable a quantitative assessment of the average power captured by a receiving antenna, an effective area is defined for it, denoted by Ae( 0, cp). The effective receiving area is dehned such that the power P avr removed by the receiving antenna from the incident plane wave and delivered to its attached (matched) load, is simply the product or Ae(O, cp) times the average power density £Ylavt of the wave arriving from a transmitting antenna, or (11-92)
582
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
Transmitting antenna
ReceIvIng antenna
FIGURE 11-16. A transmit-receive link, showing received power Pm interupted by a conceptual "effective receiving area,'~ Aero
This situation is illustrated in Figure II-Hi. It is later shown ill Part C that the effective area Ae(O, 4» of a receiving antenna is directly proportional to its directive gain D( 0, 4» when used as a transmitting antenna; hence, a dependence on the angles (0, 4» is noted in (11-92). It is important to realize that Ae is an area in concept only; it is in general not related to the antenna dimensions. A connection between the received power and the fi'ee-space distance r to the transmitting antenna is readily established. If the transmitting antenna, radiating P avt W, were for the moment postulated to be a fictitious alltellna, then its power density :c1Pavt at the range r in Figurc 11-16 would become Pavt/4rcr2 at the receiving antenna location. However, the actual transmiu\ng antenna, having the directive gain f),(O, 4» in the direction (0,4» of the receiving antenna, would increase its power density at the receiving antenna location by the amount of that directive gain, becoming (I 1-93)
Thus, the power P avr deliver'ed to the receiving antenna matched load becomes, from (11-92), (11-94) in which the positioning of the two antennas, relative to their common spherical radial distance r, is denoted by the subseripted positions (° 1,4>1) and (° 2,4>2)' A refinement of the result (10-94) is developed in the next part, in which an equivalent circuit of the transmit-receive link leads to some useful conclusions.
c.
The Transmit·Receive Antenna Link
A typical transmit -receive communication link in free space, generally employing different kinds of transmitting and receiving antennas, is depicted in Figure II-17(a). With the sinusoidal voltage Vi (at input port I) driving the input current 11 into the transmitting antenna I as sh2wn, the objective is to determine the average power P av2 accepted by the impedance ZL2 loading the receiving antenna 2. The latter is located
11-7 TRANSMIT RECEIVE SYSTEMS, RECF.lVING ANTENNA
583
Antenna 1
_ I
+
II
I
q;J~_1~~_~_1 rl I ;' " I I i / I
I I
I
I
I
iPort 1
(a)
Port 1: (1))
t2J
\ \ rc,
:
-
I
Port 11I
Vee2
i-+
I Port 11
,-' I
(e)
rv+
I
rc,
- -
= II Z3-
~
z:[:
+0= 0+ Z2
I
I
ZL2
Vz
iPart 2
I
I"
I
I I
I
-
4-
I
rc,
V''
-'
Port 2:
(if)
FIGURE 11-17, A transmit receive link, (a) Transmitting, receiving network representation, (c) Simplification for large antennas, (b) Equivalent separatioll, (d) Reciprocal version of (c),
in the firzone region of antenna I, r meters distant, such that the arriving wave is l~cally an essentially uniform p~ne wave there, producing the current 12 in the load ZL2, across which the voltage V2 (at output port 2) is thereby developed as shown. It is sufficient to represent the system of Figure 11-17 (a) by means of a two-port (four-terminal) network; for example, by use of an equivalent 'It or T network. The latter equivalence is chosen as shown in Figure 11-17 (b), with corresponding voltages and currents at the input port 1 and output port 2 as noted. The mesh-voltage equations of Figure 11-17 (b) are (11-95a) (1l-95b) with
Z3 being the common (mutual) coupling between the two meshes.
If the separation r between the antennas I and'J. of Figure 11-17 (al is presumed sufficiently large, then the mutual coupling element becomes very small compared
<3
584
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
ZI
Z2'
to and thereby enabling the partial d~sociation of the transmit and receive meshes as suggested by Figure 11-1 7 (c). Wi th <:"3 very small, (11-95) can be rewritten (11-96a)
:7)72 + '\.,L
(11-96b)
in which the Z3!2 term of (11-95b) is discarded because 72 «71 ; while Z)1 is retained in (11-96b) since this term amounts to an equivalent, open-circuit (Tht~vellin) driving voltage, <:"311 =~Voc2' required to drive the l'Cceiving antenna current 12 into the attached load <:"L2' Knowing the _value of ,(3 would evidently enable finding the received power reaching th(~ load ,(1.2' This is accomplished as follows. From the simple, series-circuit (Thevenin) equivalences of the separated transmitting antenna and recei'::.ing antenna circuits of Figure II 17(£'), it is evident~that (a) The impedance ,(1 is the transmitting-antenna terminal impedance <:"1 Rl + jX 1 seen by the driving terminal voltage Vl and responsible for the power radiated by that antenna, given by
1>avl (b) The irnpedance
-
I
-"2
in the
Re [I> 1-*] - 112R "' 1 1 - 2" 1 1
( 11-(7)
~quivalent
series circuit of the receiving antenna of that~antenna. On adjusting the load impedance so~tbat i~absorbs maximum power from Vue making it the complex cgnjugate Of,(2' or <:"1, R2 jX2 ), then the receiving antenna currcnt becomes 1L Voc l/2R2' yielding the power absorber! by the receiving antenna load
2 is simply the terminal impedance <:"2
R2
+ jX2
I
( 11-98)
The ratio of the re('(~iving-antenna load power to the transmitted power transmit-receive link thus bccomes, from (11 and (11-98)
III
this
(11-99)
This ratio should be compared with that given by (11-94) antenna effective area, expressed here as
Hl
terms of the receiving
[11-94]
in which the dependence of ])1 and Ae2 on the angular orientations (0,
585
11-7 TRAC:SMIT RECE1VE SYSTEMS, RECEIVI1'
the roles of the transmitting and receiving antennas of Figure 11-17 that is, replacing with the load impedance and with the d~ivillg ~oltage and assuming that receiving antenna 1 is now conjugate-matched (ZLl Zf), then Figure 11-17 (d) becomes applicable, and a result analogous with (11-IOOa) is obtained.
Zu,
t:\
Zu
(11-100b)
From their equality is obtained the simple ratio ])\ =
~~
1)2
Ae2
(11-101)
showing tbat, klr any antenna whatsoever, the directive gain D(e,4» is proportional to its effective receiving area Ae(O, 4»)· One can therefore write
(11-102)
A,(O, q» =KJ)(O, cp)
To evaluate the universal constant K in (11-102), the simplest example of mentary dipole receiving antenna is considered.
th(~
ele-
EXAMPlE 11-4. Find the maximum crfective area of the elementary dipole of Figure 11-6, when acting as a receiving antenna. Use this to deduce the universal constant K in (ll-l02). Assume, at the origin as in figure (a), a dipole oflcngth I{Z with a small gap, the terminals of which are connectn\ to it conjugate-matched load Zl., = R rad jX, as noted ill the circuit of (b), the equivalent series receiving-antenna circuit inferred il'om To obtain a maximum effective receiving area, the E field lllust be aligned Figure I with the conductor, 1e,! the arriving unitCmll plane wave be as Hl (Il), with the components , U;) given the complex = E~e'
~+ H
jPoY
x
=
Em"
jPoY
(1)
110
coming from a remote transmitter along the ,y-axis, From
, this plane wave has the
time-average y-directed power density 1
f} av
~
= - Re [E 2.
X
~ (1':,;, H*J = a ---v 2110
(b)
EXAMPLE 11-4
(2)
586
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
The open-;:ircuit voltage Voe developed at the dipole gap by the incident field at z = 0 is simply Voc E;' dz. With a matched load, the load current magnitude becomes
E;' dz 2Rrad
Voc 2Rrad
(3)
The radiation resistance Rrad of the dementary dipole is obtained by equating its definition (11-.54), Pay =!zRradl~, to the di.pole radiated power (11-37), obtaining (Elementary dipole) Then the power absorbed by the attached load valent circuit (b), becomes by use of (11-103)
(11-103)
ZL2 in Figurc (a), deduced from its equi16n170
By use of (11-92) and (2), the received power can also be expressed in terms of the (maximum) effective receiving area Ae as (.5) whence equating (4) and (.5) obtains the maximum effective area (Elementary dipole)
(11-104)
It is remarkable that, despite the infinitesimal size of the dipole, its eRective receiving area is finite. The maximum directive gain of the elementary dipole can be shown, from ( 11-91 b), to be D(Oo)
)
D(900)
1..5
(Elementary dipole)
( 11-10.5)
whence, from (t 1-102), the universal constant K, correct for any antenna, is
3Ail/8n
K
1..5
4n
(6)
Thus the relationship (11-102), enabling finding the eRective area of any antenna from its directive gain, is seen to become
Ae(O,
=
A2 4~ D(O,
(For any antenna)
(11-106)
Relative to the transmit-receive system of Figure 11-17, the insertion of (11-106) into (11-94) now produces the ratio of the received to the transmitted power expressed in terms of the antenna directive gains
(1l-107)
11-7 TRANSMIT-RECEIVE SYSTEMS: RECEIVING ANTENNA
587
a result called the Friis transmission formula ll . It assumes that both antennas are polarization-matched, that the receiving antenna load is matched, and it ignores the internal antenna losses (which have the effect of reducing the values of]) 1 and ])2)' The inverse-r 2 -dependence in (11-107) shows that, with the transmitted power Pay 1 fixed, the received power Pay2 is reduced by one-quarter each time the range r between the antennas is doubled (a 6-dB loss). It is also evident that the effect of increased range r on the loss of received power can be overcome by the use of antennas with higher gain, or by increasing the transmitter power P ay1 . EXAMPLE 11·5. In a
transmit~reeeive link, two identical rectangular horn antennas, operated at! = 3 GHz, have maximum directive gains of26 dB each and are located 5-km apart in free space, each directed toward the other and polarization-matched. The transmitting horn (1) is fed with 0.5-W average power at 3 GHz, and the receiving horn (2), using a waveguide-to-coaxial-line transition, is terminated in a matched 50-!! load. Find the received power that reaches the load and the load voltage. With power gain D expressed in decibels by D [dB1 \0 log D, the horn maximum directive gains become DI = /)2 = 1026110 = 400. The wavelength is Ao = 10 cm at 3 GHz, yielding Ii-om (I] - \07) the received power
0.5/400) • ;
2(-411:(5)0.1-\03-)2
0.20 {IW
(1)
Sinee antenna losses are ignored, the power P'V2 is absorbed by the 50-!! matched load of the receiver, with p. v2 Vi/2R L2 . Thus, the voltage at 3 GHz developed across the matched load becomes
V2
= .j2R LP' V2 = J2(50)O.20(10
6)
= 4.5 mY
(2)
EXAMPLE 11·6. Find the maximum directive gain (directivity) of the uniformly illuminated rectangular aperture antenna analyzed in Example 11-2. Make use of (11-87c) [1I-87c) From figure (e) in Example 11-12, the peak power density 9. v (r, 00 , 4>0), at a fixed farzone distance r, occurs along the z-axis wJlere (10 .... 0 and with 4>0 arbitrary (choose 4>0 = 0). By use of (11-82), the electric field E(r, 0, 0) at any farzone distance r along the z-axIs IS
(1) in which the values of sinc U and sine V in (11-82) become unity for 0 = 0, 4> = O. The corresponding magnetic field, from (11-83), is if", Eo/110' obtaining the maximum radiated power density needed in the numerator of (1I-87c)
rY-'.v(r, 0, 0)
I
= "2
-
Re [E
X
-
H*)
= a,
Ei 2110
=
(E~aW
a, - - ,-
211oAijr2
llH. T. Friis, "A, Note on a Simple Transmission .Formula," Proc. I.R.E., 34 (1946),
254~256.
(2)
588
RADlATlON FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
"Rectangu lar aperture
EXAMPLE 11-6, of a unif,mnly illuminated aperture, '#'"v(r, 0,
with flo = In tbe denominator of (11 the total radiated power can be [(lUnd from the integration of the f~!rzone power density I/f'avlr, 0, cfJ) • ds over the cnclosing sph!,:f(' S of radius r as depicted th!': flgHfe,
~~,
Re [E(r, 0, cfJ)
X
H*(r, 0, cfJl • ds
.it and H of (I and (I yet to be inserted, The resulting integral is not simple; its numerical integration would be prohibitive without the aid ora computer. However, the radiated power Pay is much more {,)Und li'OIll the integration oU#'"v . ds taken over the a/Jerture, since from the Poynting theorem the total power Pay keding the aperture must he that radiated through the enclosing sphere S. Thus, with flP.v = az(F:;' on the aperture, the time-average power fi:Tding it becomes
with thehelds
)
r
JS(apcr)
,i.fPw ' ds •
f~(apef) [
Substitming (2) and (4) into (11
obtains the desired directivity
D(O, 0)
For example, a unif()rmiy illuminated
b = 5,1.0 has the directivity Dm = 4n(aj,1.0) is Dm [dB] 10 log Dm 28.0 dB.
(11-108)
aperture with dimensions a lOA o , 200n = 628, Expressed in decibels, this
PROBLEMS
589
the method of Example 11-4, one can similarly show, for the TEJO-modefied rectangular horn antenna illustrated in Example 11-1, that its directivity becomes D(O,O)
Dm
32ab _ 12 nAo
(~) 4n 2 ab n
( 11-109)
A comparison of the latter with the directivity of the uniformly illuminated rectangular aperture shows that the effect of the sinusoidally tapered (TEIO mode) illumination ill the aperture is such as to reduce the directivity by the factor 8/n 2 , or to about 81 %) of the directivity obtained fi'om a rectangular aperture of the same dimensions if it were uniformly illuminated. The directivity of the rectangular pyramidal horn is in practice somewhat less than that specified by (11-109), which assumes (ideally) that the field in the horn apertun:' is cophasal over the flat aperture sur!itce S. A bowed-out curvature of the cophasal surface in the aperture is usually inevitable in physical horn designs, resulting in a broadening of the main beam and a reduction in the directivity. Considerations of the effects of such phase deviations, li'om the idealized in-phase condition of the fields over the flat aperture suriiu:e, yields modified expressions for the directivity of the pyramidal horn considered ill more detail elsewhere. 12
REFERENCES JORDAN,
E. C., and K. G.
BALMAlN.
tflfllIl.."fleI.U.
~Vaves
and
2nd ed. Englewood
Cliffs, NJ.: Prentice Hall,IlJ6!l. RAMO,
S.,
J.
R. WHINNERY,
and T. V AN
DUZLR.
Fields and '"Valles in Communication Electronics,
2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1984.
Microwave Antenna McUraw Hill, 1949.
SILVER. S.
and
Radiatinn
.rlf)l)1f1l0rv
SerifS, vol. 12, New York:
PROBLEMS
SECTION 11-1 11-1. Beginning with Ampere's law (11 show how (11-10) is obtained, whence supply details leading to (II-I I), the wave eqnation in terms of A. Make snbstitu tiolls appropriate to converting (11-11) to its tinw-harmonic lrJl'ln (11
APPENDIX C 11-2. Prove that the free-space Green's functioll, scalar wave equation , noting that R is specified
satisfies the homogeneous rectangular coordinates by (4-12).
SECTION 11-3 11-3. (a) Show, from geometrical detail added to Pin Fignre 11-4(b), that the expressions (1l-20) are correct. (b) Make use of the potential components (11-20) in the curl expressioll (J I-I) to show in detail that (11-21) is the magnetic field of an elementary dipole in free space. 12For example, see S. Silver, Microwave Antenna Theory McGraw-Hill, 1949, p. 587; or C. A. Balanis, Antenna Theory, 1982, p. 570.
Radiation Laboratocy Series, vol. 12, New York: and Design. New York: Harper & Row,
590
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
11-4. Shuw tbat the wave equation (11-16). 11-5.
side of (11
that of (1
by
and (11
Usc magnetic field result (11-21) in Maxwell's relation (11 the electric field of an elementary dipole in free space.
11-6.
Repeat Problem 11-5. bn! this time make use of (1
use
or (I 1-1)
and
todcrive in detail (11-25)
11-7.
From its complex time-harmonic form (11-21), derive in detail tile field expression (11-29) of the elementary electric-current dipole.
real-tim(~
magnetic
11-8. (a) Usc (11-30) to determine the distancc 1 fi'om an elementary dipole at which the inversc-r tcrm in (11-21) or (11 is 20 times as large as the invcrse-r 2 term, at the three frequencies: J MHz, 100 MHz, 10 GHz. (Assume here that (Jor 20 defines the "f~Hzone" region of the elementary dipole.) (b) Repeat (a), this time t{)r as that {Jor 2\) defines its "ncarzonc.") (c) Comment. on the dl<:ct of Jll the fil.rzoflc and fl(,arz(Jne of an dipole. Taking ratios of the magnitudes (a) or the inverse-I to the invcrsc-r 2 terms of ( I 1-26) and (b) of the inverse-r 2 to the inverse-r 3 terms of dEe in (] I and of dl~~ in (I show that results comparable to (11-30) arc obtained. Comment on terms are important in the nearwnc (r Ao), and in the farzone (I' Ao ).
11-9.
11-10.
Determine the rcal-time forms of the Elrzonc phasor (II dipule. your results with the f~lrZOf1(' terms in (I I
of the
and (II and (I
11-11.
cmTcnt-carrying dipole, with its length relaxed to the incremental carries the current j 5 A at the fi-cqucncy j 3()O M Hz. How At the phase distance :20 rad II'om this dipole, vt'rify (II in the " ~What distallce r (in m) is this? (Il) Find the Luzone electric and magnetic fields and dH,p at this same range in tl1<' broadside (0 90") direction. Determine the power al 1he loca t ion in .(b).
11-12. Prove ill<: time-average radiated power rcslli t (I I j()l" the elementary dipole, assuming a sufliciclltly sphere of integration that only the Euzonc ficlds (11 and (I I arc required. 11-13.
Prove (I terms in (11-:21) and (11
all
of
size, such that aft field
aT(' required.
11-14.
Assuming the same incremental dipole current excitation, and frequency as Problem II-II, determine its tolal radiated powcr. What valw, would the radiated power have if the dipole length were doubled? Halved? 1Il
SECTION 11-4 11-15.
Sketch the responding analytical (a) 2t 101B, (b) '2t =
and usc (11-4/1) to supply ('01'I()r thin-wire antennas of the t()llowing lengths: (d) '2t = Ao, (e) 2t
11-16. For the following thin-wire distrihutions II (b) t1 = (e)
()l!~("('ntcr-fC.d
antennas, sketch their the distributions /2 (d) (1
curren!
11-17. A circular thin-wire loop antenna, as by Figures 11 and 1I-8(b), has the cireumkrential length of 0.751 0 between the terminals of the applied generator. Sketch the standing-wave current distribution on the wire loop, as approximated the Cllrrent standing wave on the shorted transmission line of Figure 11-7(b). Express the current standing wave as a function of the angle 1> about the loop ccnter, assuming 4) = 0 at the current maximum M in Figure II What is the em~ct on the current distribution of making the loop length small (com pa red to
PROBLEMS
11-18. Beginning with (11 the center-led linear antenna
in detail the Figure 11-10.
f~uz()ne
electric Held
(\
591 for
11-19. Make use of (11-:) I) to calculate and plot t he polar Held pattern F( 0) of each of the /i)Uowing center-ted linear antennas: (a) hall~wave dipole, (0) five-eighths-wave dipole, (c) fullwave dipole. 11-20. Repeat Problem 11-19 Illr the lilllowillg antennas: (a) three-halves-wave dipole, (b) two-wavelength dipole. 11-21. For a half~wavc dipole in free space, usc (11 10 km. if the sinusoidal driving current amplitude is 5 there.
to find Filld
at the broadside range of the time-average power
11-22. For the hall~wavc dipole in free space, integrate (l 0-55) either graphically or by usc of a computer, to lind its radiation resistance. 11-23.
Repeat Problem 11-22 t(lr a three-halves-wave dipole in free space.
SECTION 11-5 11-24. For the plane-wavc-cxcited unii()J'mly illuminated rectangular aperture problem of Example 11-2, prove the lilfzonc vector magnrtic potential result (4) by carrying out a detailed integration. 11-25. Verify the filrzonc electric field result (11-82) for the uni/clfInly illuminated rectangular aperture, ii'om the substitution of the potential functions (4) and (7) into (11-75). tHirlt: use the coordinate lranshmnations (1-79) to express the poteutials A and F in the desired spherical coordinate system; If)r example, .4', = sin 0 cos rP, F~ = F~ sin 0 sin rP. On expanding V . A and V x F, discard all terms that decrease Elster than I/r ill the t;trzonc region.] 11-26. A unifrmnly illuminated rectangular aperture, as described in Example 11-2, has the dirn(']Jsiotls a and h Plot the normalized field pattern versus 0 in the rP () plane. Show (he plot in rectangular as well as polar limn, as suggested by . Find the locatiolls of the nulls 0 01 , . . . of the pattern, determine its \xamwidth plane. and its lirst side-lobe level in decibels beluw tile principal beam As figure (d) of Example 11-2, the dIt:ct of the slowly tapered can be ignored, except as () exceeds :ZO° or so.] 11-27.
Repeat Problem 11-26, this time for the
rP
90° principal plane.
11-28. Repeat Problem 11-26, in this case f(lr an aperture with the dimensions a h (a "slit aperture," producing a Jan-beam pattern). [Note: With the much-diminished dimension Il, in determining the normalized field pattcrn in the rP = 0 principal plane, the Huygcns factor must be cardlllly acounted {or. With this narrow aperture width, (11-8G) is no applicable. Beamwidth may be determined directly ii'om the pattern plot. I 11-29. Make usc or the equivalellt aperture surface currents , determined in Example 11-1 (assuming only the dominant 'I'E1O forward-traveling mode in the horn aperture shown) to derive the fiJliowing Euzone field results lilr the rectangular horn. Show that the vector electric and potentials at any farzone point become
592
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
AY ~
Fx
Jl/:
rI
P(r, 0, 1»
'! I
o
/
/
I I
/
/
/
(xl (y)
PROBLEM 11-29
in which A
/Job.
/3
2
3m
0
., Sill
t:p
(b) l;se thc latter potential solutions to derive the electric and rnagnetic fields in the jiuzone, ohtaining
~ 0, 1») = E(r,
[(ao.sm 1».('IJIO cos 0 + I ) + a,p cos 1> (#10 -- + cos 0)] 13 0
x
jfJOlC~,l 0
8
,
lio
.Ipor sin 15 cns A - - - - -,,-~:----
r
B
(n)2 - /1 2 2
(c) Compare the f~uzone fidd results !(n' the rectangular horn with those /i)Und in Example 11-2 for the unifi:mTl pJane~wave-cxcited rectangular aperture having the same dimensions a, b. Comment especially on the similarities or differences between the field patterns in the principal planes.
11-30. From (11-85) was dCTived in eHen a "5 and 10 rule" fiJI' a rectangular aperture illuminated unifi:lrlTliy in amplitude and phase. This rule implies that a 5)'0-wide aperture has a 10" heamwidth in that principal plane whereas making it lOAo reduces the bcamwidth to 5°, and so
PROBLEMS
593
on. Using the results compiled in Table 11-1 for other types of illumination but with the amplitude tapered in the manner shown) over rectangular and circular apertures, determine what comparable rule applies to the remaining cases in the table.
I.) se Table 11-1 to compare the beamwidths of the farzone field patterns of each of the 11-31. following circular apertures. Assume uniform aperture illuminations. (a) A parabolic dish having an aperture diameter of 10 wavelengths. (b) The same as (a), except 100 wavelengths diameter. (c) An optical laser having an aperture or5 mm diameter, transmitting red light at a wavelength of about 7000 A = 7 x 10 -7 m = 0.7 11m. (What is the aperture diameter in wavelengths?) (d) By what factor will each beamwidth in the foregoing increase, if the aperture illumination is assumed to taper parabolically in each case?
SECTION 11-6 11-32. dipole in
Employ (11-33,34) to show that the power density available from an infinitesimal broadside direction is
(1 dZ)2
[5I>,v(r,90 o ) = a, 110 - - , 2 2AoT
(1 )
Make usc of (11-37c) and tbc result (11-37) to prove that the maximum directive gain of an infinitesimal dipole is Dm D(900) = 1.5. 11-33. Use (11-33) and the result of Problem 11-32 (a) to find the expression for maximum radiation
SECTION 11-7 11-34. A particular hall~wave dipole, at 500 MHz, has the measured terminal impedance = 73 + 40 Q and is terminated in ZL = 73 - j40 Q. A distant source produces, at the site of dipole, a polarization-matched uniform plane wave of the knowll power density, 10 n\'Vjm 2 • Sketch this system, depicting the arriving wave and the terminated receiving antenna. \'Vhat amplitude E:' is associated with the arriving uniform plane wave? (b) Use the value of the directivity of this half~wavc dipole to determine its maximum efTeetive receiving area Aem at this frequency. Find the total time-average power accepted by this receiving dipole, based on (11-92). (e) Making usc of the equivalent (Th(~venin) receiving antenna circuit of Figure 1I-17(c) (sketch it), and with the received power of part (b) observed to be that power accepted by just the receiving-antenna load impedance, fmd the voltage developed across the load at this !J'equency. 11-35. Three difIcrent haH:wavc dipoles arc operated at the li'cqllencies (a) 100 MHz, (b) I GHz, (c) 10 (a-h. Find the physicallcngth (2l) of each antenna, and determine the maximum effective area of each. Provide a labeled sketch of each antenna, showing a sq uare surface superposed on each, the latter depicting the rdative size of the maximum cftcctive receiving area of each antenna in relation to the antenna length. 11-36. Use (11-103) and (11-\09) to obtain for the maximum eflective receiving areas oflhe aperture antenna of Examplc 11-:2, and o[the rectangular horn antenna sbown in Example II-I. Compare each result with the area of the appropriate aperture, and comment. 11-37. Two high-directivity aperture antennas used in a microwave communication link are separated 50 km, arc aligned tllr maximum directive gains, and polarization-matched. Each antenna has 30-dB at the operating liTquency f= 7 GHz. antenna losses. Use the Friis transmission tllflnuia (II to determine how much time-average transmitter 10- 8 W = 10 nW over power is required at this f1'cqucllcy to obtain the received power P'V2 this link. (Express P avl in rnW; and in dBm.) (b) Employ the equivalent receiving-antenna circuit of Figure 11-17 (c), assuming a 50-Q load connected to a matched voltage source (a series 50-Q equivaknt source resistance). Sketch this equivalent receiving circuit. With the received
594
RADIATION FROM ANTENNAS IN FREE SPACE
It'zl
power of ]0 nW from part (a), find the voltage developed aeross the receiving antenna load at this frequency. (c) [f the range of this link were increased to 500 km (as in an earthto-satellite system, for example), what new value of transmitter power would be required to provide the same received power as in (a)? (Express P av1 in W; in dEm.)
11-38. The farzone electric and magnetic fields of a transmitting antenna obcy the impedance relationship E/ll = l1tb whence the transmitted time-average power density is expressed
4>W
IE(r, e, 2110
(ll-llO)
Equating this to (11-93), show that the t~lrzone electric field magnitude, in any direction (B, 4», can be expressed in terms of the total radiated power P avt and its directive gain D,(e, 4» as
(11-111)
11-39. A transmitting half-wave dipole radiates the to}al time-average power P avt 10 W. (a) Employ (11-111) to find the electric field magnitude at a 10-km distance from this dipole in its broadside plane (e = 90°). [Answer: 3.24 mV /ml (b) Compare the numerical answer to (a) with that obtained using the dipole electric-field expression (11-50), showing first, in symbolic terms, that
lEI
60 [2Pavt r R.
J1 12
(1l-112)
[Hint: Express the dipole current 1m in (II-50) in terms of the real power delivered to the antenna terminal impedance, Ra + jXa.l
_ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - APPENDIX A
Oblique Incidence: Region 2 Conductive
A·i. REGION 2 SOLUTION BY ANALOGY Even if region 2 in Figure 6-15 were made a eonductive (lossy) instead of lossless dielectric, a wave analysis closely akin to that of Section 6-8e, is seen to apply. The difl'ercl1ces that arise are from the effeets of the added conductivity parameter (J 2· Thus, a complcx propagation constant ')'2 replacesjp2 in region 2, as defined by (3-88); while the complex intrinsic wav(~ impedance q2l as given by (3-99h), takes the place (~f the pure rca I 112. With these simple changes, the forms (6-67(") of the fields Et and H, transmitted into region 2 still apply, the ineident and reHected waves (6-67a) and (6-67b) in region I remaining unaltered in {()I'm. This modification or the earlier probl(~m applies to either polarization of the incident uniform plane wave. The analogy extends equally well to the boundary conditions (3-71) and (3-79) concerning the continuity of the total tangential fields at the interface between the regions. Then Snell's law equivalents of (6-81) and (6-82) are obtained ie)r this case with region 2 lossy, yielding (A-I) sin 0i sin Ot
with Ez seen to be the permittivity of 2 as defined by (3-103). The angle or incidence 0i in region 1 of Figure 6-15 is by definition a real angle, fe)!· which 0 ::::: 0i ::::: goo. The effect of the complex Ez in Snell's law of refraction (A-2a)
595
596
OBLIQUE INCIDENCE: REGION 2 CONDUCTIVE
is thus to make the quantity sin 0, c()mj!iex. Writing (A-2a) in the form
JW.J;;f; JWJfllEl
Y2
(1\-2b)
J/31
with the use of (3-88) and (3-89), allows expressing the complex sin Ot as _iLsinOi
sin Ot
(X2
(1\-3)
+ J/3z
in which the real attenuation and phase constants (X2 and found from (3-90a,b). The corresponding complex cos Ot =
"f
/32
of region 2 arc as usual sin 2 Ot is thus written
..J!"-
°i
/3i 5in 2 1+----2 ((X2
+ J/32)
(A-4a)
For convenience, write (1\-4a) in its complex rectangular form, denoted by COS
Ot = A
+ JB
(1\-4b)
These modifications, which account for the lossy condition of region 2, can now be applied to either field expression (6-75) or (6-77) in region 2 for the lossless parallelpolarization case. The simpler expression (6-77) is chosen, in view of its having only one (fly) component. Thus, with the phase factor J/32 in (6-77) replaced with Yz = (X2 + J/32' with sin 0, and cos Ot given by (A-3) and (A-4), and the complex ~2 inserted for 112, (6- 77) is seen to become ay
Ht
e -- (<2 + j{h)(x sin U, + z cos 0,)
A
112
'
Multiplying out the factors in the exponent yields (1\-5a)
(1\-5b) wherein the quantities
(xz,
fix,
and
/32 B ,
/3z,
defined by (1\-6)
signify, through (xz and /3z, both attenuation and phase variations of this wave normally away h·orn the interface. Furthermore, the wave-phase changes along the x-axis at the interface at .<; = 0 are seen to be in phase step with those occurring ill region I, ip view of the presence of precisely the same x-directed phase factor /3t sin 0; in the Hl expression (6-76).
A-\, REGION 2 SOLUTlON BY ANALOGY
597
I(~)
I Region 1
\ Region 2
I I
Equal-arnpli tude plane (b)
(<1)
FIGURE A-l. Showing the equiphase and equal-amplitude plam" of the nonuniform wave produced in regioIl 2: (a) as viewed along thc.y·axis; (b) seen in perspective.
Equiphase and equal-amplitude planes, discernible from a graphing of the wave (A-5), are of intcrest, leading to an example of nonunil()rrn plane waves. The equalamplitude planes are characterized by setting the real-exponential factor (a2A - f52 B )Z in (A-5a) equal to a constant, yielding simply ,z = constant surfaces that are parallel to the in ter[;tce, as shown in Figure A-I (a) _ The attenuation with Z in region 2 occurs at the rate nfthe ElCtor a2 A f52B neper/m, showing a depth of penetration 62 therein given by its reciprocal. Note, in general, that 62 diners from for a uniform plane wave. The equiphase planes in region 2 are defined hy setting the imaginary phaseexponent of (A-5) equal to a constant, or fixx + fizZ = constant, in which f5x and [J z , the x and Z components of the applicable phase constant of region 2, are given by (A-6). The normal to the equiphase planes is inclined at the angle!p denoted in Figure A-I (a). This angle is not the Ot of (lossless) region 2 depicted geometrically in Figure 6-16, since in the present example involving the lossy region 2, the angle Ot was absorbed into the cornplex angle manipulations involving Snell's law (A-3)_ The tilt angle !/I is evaluated from the equation of the equiphase planes: f5xx + {)zz = constant. Dividing it through by the phase-constant magnitude () = ((); + /3;) 1/2 obtains the standard li.mn of the equiphase plane
(A-h)
in which the coefficients ofx and.( are the direetion cosines cos A and cos C of (6-55). From the geometry of Figure A-I (a) it is evident that C = !/I, A 90° - "', and B = 90°, making (A-7a) or the f()rm
x sin ~I
+ z cos ~f
= ro
(A-7b)
598
OBLIQUE INCIDENCE: REGION 2 CONDUCTIVE
A comparison with (A-7a) reveals that the tilt angle Ij; is given by
cos Ij;
(A-B)
*A·2. REGION 2 A GOOD CONDUCTOR A special case of the Part A-I is generated on making region 2 a "good conductor," implying that (J2/WE2 1. Then tile ,implificd expressions 112) j()r a l , fil' and 112 are applicable. The complex transmission angle 00 moreover, tends toward zero, since applying (A-3) to a good conductor obtains
(A-9)
becomes sutficicntly large. This means also that cos fJ t -+ 1; whcrc;,ts from (A-4), I and B -+ O. Then the expression 1(lt' the magnetic field Hz in region 2 reduces to the good approximation, fi)r region 2 a good conductor.
as
(J2
A
-+
(A-IO) It is usdi.ll to note li'OIl! (A-1O) that the {-directed phase constant fJ2 is much larger than the phase constant fJl sin ()i applicable along x, parallel to the iuterEice. This is evident from the ratio
very large)
III
At an air-conductor interfiH'e, with regioJ] 2 having a conductivity (J 2 of the order of 10 7 , even f(lr frequencies into the microwave range (fof the order of 10 10 Hz), the ratio (A-II) becomes no less than 3000 or so, becoming eVClllarger at [ower frequencies. From it is thus evident, with A -+ I, B -+ 0, and (fll/fJ2) --+ 0, that the tilt angle Ij; of the wave transmitted into region 2, as depicted ill Figure A-I, approaches essentially zero for any of incidence (Ji' This is also clear geometrically from Figure vVith the phase constant #2 ill conductive region 2 so much larger than 13 1 , the wavelength A2 is necessarily much smaller thall )'1 in region J. In satisfying the boundary conditions at the interfiln:, the waves in the two regions mallage to keep in phase step at the interfilce only if' there is severe refraction of the incident Ot toward a very small exit angle t/J. For region 2 a good eonductor, the reflected and tl1UlSmitled complex wave amplitudes, relative to a known incident wave amplitude E i , are of interest. To this
A-2. REGION 2 A GOOD CONDUCTOR
599
: (x) I
"
>~~~0\\\
,,-
"',, '0,
"
/~
\\
\
\ \\
U
~
I~·. o,:~:; -" ~
\. \\
~~~::'{\\\\ \\\\\\\\ \
\
\
/'.' J\\\ \\\ I
.~;\ ~2
\
(a)
(b)
FIGURE A-2. Tilt angle '" of the normal to equiphase planes in n'gion 2 lor (a) region 2 moderately conductive; (b) region 2 a good conductor.
end, the reHe(l(ioll and transmission coefI1cient (6-83, 84) and (6-87, 88) are applicable, 011 making use of the simplification «111 for region '2 a good conductor. With this, 84) iC)f the parallel-polarization case are seen to be well approximated by
\qz\
(A-12a)
((J 2 very large) (A-12b)
The result (A-l'2a) means that nearly total reflection oceurs from a good Rr ~ R;, one has also that Hr ~ Hi in region 1, since the ratios RrlHr and fo'JH; are both lJi. From (A-l'2b) it is seen that the eleetric field transmitted into region 2 has (he amplitude (at the inteda.ce) given by
cond~ct2r. With
(A-13a) a~ very s!.Tlall amplilude, i~l view Of\q2\ « '11 fi)!' region '2 a good conductor. On inserting IIi for EilY/l and lIt for k'tlY/2 into (A-13a), one obtains
(A-I3b) stating that the magnetic field amplitude H, just inside the good conductor has twice the amplitude of the incident magnetic field, in this parallel-polarization case. These
600
OBLIQUE INCIDENCE: REGION 2 CONDUCTIVE
(x)
(a)
(b)
FIGURE A-3. The parallel-polarization case, region 2 a good conductor. (a) Depicting Geld vectors in both regions. (b) Time-instantaneous, ]-directed magnetic Geld in region 1, showing both standing-wave behavior with z, and traveling waves along x, at a fixed instant.
conditions are depicted in the vector diagram of the field components as shown in Figure A-3(a). The foregoing simplifications lead directly to the field eKpressions in both regions. The full expressions for the total electric and magnetic fields in region I are alrea<;ly given by (6-74) and (6-76)lix this case, so with the substitution of (A-12a) Ie)]' E;" one can reduce (6-74) to
Z)
a x (j2E'; cos
Oil sin
(fJtZ cos 0i)e-ifJlxsinOi
-a z (2E; sin 0i) cos (fJl'~ cos
Oi)e-jfJlxsinOi
(A-14)
while (6-76) becomes (A-15) A graph of the time-instantaneous form of this ]-directed magnetic field is shown in Figure A-3(b). The exponential function in (A-15) clearly exhibits the traveling-wave nature of this field along the x direction; while the cosine function shows its standingwave behavior with z, the result or essentially equal amounts of reflected and incident wave amplitudes in region 1. Observe that assuming the special case of normal incidence (0; = 0) reduces the expressions (A-14) and (A-15) to (6-5) and (6-8), the standing-wave fields obtained in the normal-incidcllce case discussed in Section 6-2. Wi~hin the good conductor (region 2), the electric field:E z can be found by subsituting Hz of (A-lO) into Maxwell's equation (3-85); or it can be inferred fi'om (6-75). Choosing the latter method, on repiacingjpz in (6-75) by the complex Yz = ()(z + jpz of this good conductor region and making use of the cornp!!~x Snell's law result (A-3) combined with the reduction cos 0/ ~ 1 and (A-13a) for E t , one obtains
A-2. REGION 2 A GOOD CONDUCTOR
601
the good approximation ~
EZ(x, z)
~ ax
2ryz ryt
A
Ei
sin(h
(A-lEl)
The accompanying Hz field has already been found as (A-IO). It might alternatively have been 1()Und by use of (6-77), or, if desired, from (A-16) and Maxwell's curl relation (3-84c). The result is repeated here. (A-17) It is evident that the ratio Ex/fly given by the foregoing expressions isjust the intrinsic wave impedance q2 of the good conductor. The details of plane-wave reflection and transmission, for the incident wave perpendicularly polarized, proceed along lines that closely resemble the parallel-polarized case just treated. They are left as an exercise lor you. The analysis given has revealed that the fields in the lossless region I remain essentially uncbanged, on comparing the reflection from a good conductor with tbat obtained from one assumed ideally perfect. This suggests that, in solving a boundaryvalue problem in which a lossless dielectric is separated from a good conductor by a suitable interface, the problem may be simplified by first finding solutions in the dielectric region b'L~ed on the assumption of a perft~ctly conducting boundary. Then, on relaxing the wall conditions by assuming a good conductor instead of a perfect one, tbe fields within the conductor can be inferred from the continuity of the tangential magnetic field component across the interface. The electromagnetic fields penetrating the metal walls of transmission devices such as hollow rectangular waveguides and cavities, j()r example, can be obtained in this manner. An instance of this method is detailed in Section 8-6.
__________________________________________ APPENDIXB
Transmission line Parameters
In the following, Iwo examples of transmission lines arc analyzed f()r their line pal'amdel's: (a) the parallel-wire line, assuming a separation sufTicienl to neglect proximity effects; and (b) the coaxial line, examined only fe)r its high-frequency and de behavior. The analysis of the internal distri bUled impedance of an isolated wire is usehd f()r simplifying both problems, so this is taken up first.
B·1. CURRENT PENETRATION IN ROUND WIRE (SKIN EFFECT): INTERNAL DISTRIBUTED PARAMETERS The isolated round conductor shown in Figure is to be regarded as an element of a two-conductor transmission line, so to the associated time-harmonic electric and magnetic fields are attributed the usual filctors r;iWl+ . Only positive z traveling waves need he considered, thus requiring only ei wt - yz • The internal impedance contribution Zi defined by (9-96) is desired for this conductor. Considered as one of a pair of conductors canying the qua~i-T£M mode, its magnetic fi~d is assumed to be the axially symmetric component Yt~e-'wt-yz. 'The continuity of £4) into the conductor interi~r generates an electric field component therein, related to its axial current density Jz by (3-7)
(B-1 ) The internal impedance Zh defIned by (9-96), denotes the voltage drop per unit length A VI A/~ =
602
B-t. CURRENT PENETRATION IN ROUND WIRE (SKIN EFFECT)
603
that is,
(B-2)
d
The evaluation oU i is facilitated iL~
p
,it = a
.lwPc
U
up 0
a
az
p
0
-'l
0
Sz
=a
oSz op
(B-3)
In the latter, satisfies a wave equation ofthe felffn of (2-96) which, fo~ the condu~tor with COllstants (p", Eo and in time-harmonic form, becomes V 2 E + w2PcEcE = JWPc(J Combining terms in E yields
J;.
A
V2E
+
2 (j)
A
11cEc( 1 - j(JjwEc)E
=0
but in a good conductor, (JjWE c » 1, reducing it to y2E - jWJIc!{cE = O. With only Ez prc:;;cllt, one obtains the scalar wave equation V 2 Ez -.fW/lc(JcEz = O. One expresses V 2 E z in circular cylindrical coordinates by (2-80), symmetry requiring Djo
(B-5) multiplying by p2 obtains (B-6)
a result known as tbe Bessel differential equation of zero order. Its solution is obtainable by assuming a power series solution,l leading to the current density
1 For details of the power series method and Bessel functions, see C. R. Wylie, 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Ifill, 1960, Chapter 10; Of S., Ramo, j. R. Whinnery, and Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd cd. New York: Wiley, 1984, pp. 360~-371.
Mathematics, . van Duzer.
604
TRANSMISSION LINE PARAMETERS
in which the factor
-jwflc
in (B-6), denoted by
k?,
implies
1!2JW fl c
V;
(B-8)
It is seen, on takingAthe principal square root ofj-l/Z as (1 - j)/)2, that if: of (B-8) can also be written k = (I - j)/(j. The symbol () used in (B-8) evidently means (B-9)
which from (3-95) and (3-112a) specifies the skin depth of penetration of a plane walle into a conductor with the same parameters Pc,
Jo(ul =
I
(B-1O)
m=O
If a = kp = (I - j)p/(j, and with the latter into (B-IO) and grouping the real and imaginary terms, one obtains
(B-IIa)
(B-llb)
The symbols bel' and bei (Bessel-real and Bessel-imaginary) thus denote the real and imaginary parts of Jo, and are tabulated in numerous rderences. 2 The Bessel Iimetion No(u) in (B-7), the second solution of (B-6), is discarded here because ofa singulari ty 3 at p 0 (No(O) -+ -00); ~hat is, the wire center p = 0 is within the region of discussion of the CUrr(,llt density ]z, so No(u) is of no physical use. Therei()re (B-7) can be written with (;z = 0 and (B-Ilb) inserted, obtaining
(H-12) 2For example, see H. B. Dwight, 'Tables 'if Integrals and Other Mathematical Data, revised cd. New York: Macmillan, 1961. 'Sec Ramo, S., et a!., op. cit., p. 366, for a graph.
B-1. CURRENT PENETRATION IN ROUND WIRE (SKIN EFFECT) a
°
i= I-
I- a T
I
For small
V~
1-
8=1
0.8
I- 1----
I/'
1--- 1--
l-
I
I--- I--
I---
It
r-- - 1-%=2
V!
I
0.4 --
j
/
1"- i--
0.2 ~t:-r _1:
o! I
~~;=
II /-:1
~
5
j,
1H/J.1__ wV0
1
I.
0.2
0.4
0.6
t=~
0.2 -
I---
0.1
IJz(a) Jz(O) I
-
f\
0.8 a
0.8
~
""-- Wire axis
0.5
\
--- --- i - I---
i\ --1--
0.006 -- -I---0.004 -- f--- f--
i-
-
L\
i-- i--1-- --
I-
i\
i- e_
1\
0.002 0.001
1.5
1---
0.06 1-- re- t-0.04 I- I---t--0.01 -- i-I----
-~ = 10
i
0.9
0.02
/
~
0.6 I--0.4 1-
605
\
°
2
4
6
8
10
--From exact (B-13) - - - From plane wave formula (B - 17) (a)
(b)
FIGURE B-1. Current density in round wires (a) Current density magnitude versus normalized radial distance pia. Q'Lshcd lines show plane wave approximations. (b) Ratio of current density magnitude at the center to that at the snrface, as a function of wire radius in plane wave skin depths.
Putting p = a into (B-12) expresses C1 in terms of the density lz(a) at the wire surface, obtaining C1 = lz(a)/[her (J2a/b) + j bei (J2a/b)J. The latter into (B-12) yields the current density distribution in the wire
(B-13)
Using tabulations of ber and bei, or resorting to the series definitions (B-1 I ), one can plot (B-13) as the skin elfect curves shown as solid lines in Figure B-I(a). The curves are universalized by expressing the argument J2plb in (B-13)
(B-14)
This permits using the normalized radius pia with a range (0, I) froIll the wire center to the surface, while all) expresses the wire radius a in terms of the plane wave comparison skin depth b given by (B-9). Both graphs show that the axial current density
606
TRANSMISSION LINE PARAMETERS
is depressed noticeably below the surface value if the wire radius exceeds a plane-wave skin depth or so (ali> > I). For example, if ali> 2, iJz(O)i is seen to be about 62'1,) of the value at the surface. Figure B-1 (a) shows (dashed) the amplitude attenuation of plane waves in a conductor, for comparison with the round-wire current density (solid curves) given by (B-13). Plane wave attenuation was described in Chapter 3 with ref<:;rence to Figure 3-17, implying that a z-directed current density plane wave, traveling in the x direction in a good conductor, is given by (B-15)
J m denotes a reference amplitude at x =
0, and~attenuation and phase factors 112a) and (:-1-11 . That.7Ap) of(B-13) in a round wire reduces essentially to (B-15) is shown using the asymptotic limits of the Bessel flmctions. Assuming the argument sufficient large (u > 10 or so), the following asymptotic form holds: 4
in which
rx
=
f3 = 15- 1 are given by
(B-16a) beeoming exact as u -> co. With the complex argument u =j-l/2/2pli5, (B-16a) becomes n;8)
(B-16b)
for large pli>. Using (B-16b) in the numerator of (B-13) and the same with P = a in the denominator yields the t()llowing approximate current density in a round conductor.
-p)lb
(B-17)
essentially correct if the conductor radius is several plane-wave skin depths (ali5 > 10 or so). Comparing (B-17) with (B-15) thus verifies that ifali5 > 10 or so, i> can be used to denote the depth ifpenetration in a round conductor. The solid and dashed curve" in Figure B-1 (a) indicate how well the plane wave expression (B-15) approximates the exact round wire relation (B-17).
EXAMPLE 8·1. (a) At 60 Hz, what maximum radius should a copper wire have if}. on the wire axis is not to be less than 90% of the surface value? (b) If J is raised to 6 GHz (in the microwave range), what maximum radius meets the same criterion?
4For a tabulation of asymptotic forms, sec for example S., Ramo, J. Whinnery and T. van Duzer. Fields and Waves in Communication Electronics, 2nd ed. New York: Wiley, 1934, p. 212.
.
607
B-1 CURRENT PENETRATION IN ROUND WIRE (SKIN EFFECT)
(a) From Figure B-1
,if \]z(O)/]z(a)\ = 0.9, then ali5 = 1.16, implying a plane-wave skin depths, but at 60 Hz, 15 from (B-9) heeomes
1.16
= 0.00853 m = 8.53 mm
so the wire radius must not exceed (b)
II
= 1.1615 = 9.89 mm
0.389 in.
If f were increased by 10 to 6 X 10 Hz, 15 of (B-9) becomes 0.00853 x 10-4, yielding II = 1.1615 = 0.989 x 10- 3 mm = 0.989 Jim 0.039 mil, a very small wire. Barrctter wires, used as resistance clements in microwave power bridges, are made this thin to yield de and rf resistances that arc the same, permitting substitution methods (rf lor de power) to be used. 8
9
EXAMPLE B·2. A copper conductor is ofa ImD! radius. At what frequency is the radius 10 skin depths? (b) What is 15 iff is increased by 104 ? o
(11) Pu uing (j forfyiclds
]
015 (or
a/l!
= 10) means From (15-9) that
f
so solving
(j
200
2n(]O 6)4n x 100.432
X
10 6 = 432 kHz
At or above this frequency, the skin depth ill the wire is essentially that for a wave in this conducting material.
(b) Increasing f to 4.32 GHz decreases 15, froIll (B-9), by 10-oJ mm = 1 pill.
4 = I ()
, yidding 15
The impedance parameter Zi or an isolated round wire is now found by use of (B<2), Substituting
(l3-1~?)
into (B-1) yields
ber ( ber (
J2 ~) + j
bei (
J2 ~)
J2 i) + j bei ( J2~)
(B-18)
Also needed is it~ at the wire surface, obtained Irom (B-18) by use of (B-3); hence
=jo~~c~?a~P) l=a = jW~/JC ~i~ll=a =jW~c;~ (-;) ~J~~P) 1="
blT(J2 i)+jbei(J2 g) /Jw~c~c J2~) + J2 i) ]z(a)
ber (
In (B-19) a change to the variable u
(B-19)
j bei (
J2p/b
has been made, the primes signifying
608
TRANSM1SSION LINE PARAMETERS
differentiations with respect to u. With (B-18) and (B-19) i~to (B-2), the symmetry of :Ye", permits a simple integration around the wire to yield I, obtaining
(£-20)
z;
One can decompose into r; + jOJI; by rationalizing the denominator, obtaining internal resistance and inductive contributions as follows
(B-2Ia)
_
1
wi; - 2na
/mJZ ber ( vf2 i) ber ( J2 i) + bei (fi i) bei ( 12 i) '1/ -;;: (Jc
[ber(J2
i)J2 + [ ()J2 J2 i bei
(B-21b) O/m
That the latter are correct is appreciated from the zero frequency limits. Noting that J2a/b w approaches zero as OJ -'> 0, all but two terms, one real and one imaginary, of (B-ll) can be discarded, yielding ber w -'> 1 and bei w -'> w 2 /4 as w -'> O. Similarly, derivatives of the power series obtain ber w -'> w 3 /16 and bei w -'> w/2 as OJ -'> O. These into (B-21a) yield the dc resistance (B-22a) a result seen to agree with the static result (4-138)
The zero frequency inductance obtaincd from (B-2 I b) is
(B-22b) 4 agreeing with the static result Lit of (5-82).
q 609
B-1. CURRENT PENETRATION IN ROUND WIRE (SKIN EFFECT)
10 8 6
---
,-
---- c--
,/
,--- - -
--
--
4
ri
r:--;;-" ~r' t. /'
- --
2
I
V
0.8 - - - -0.6
V/ /
I
dc,----_
"
1-
1--- ..._- r---
0, 2
I I! I
--
--
JL~
Ii,
I
From (B 27b)
t--~~
~
From (B- 27a) (high-frequency approximation)
/~
i
1
1I
C
'"
1';
--".-
"
r----- 1--O. 1 0.2
2
0.4 0,6
=
4
6 810
~ 20
FIGURE B-2, Internal resistance and inductance parameters for an isolated ronnd wire.
A graph of ri and Ii for the isolated conductor, expressed as ratios to the de values (B-22), is shown as solid curves in Figure B-2. Also shown dashed are highfrequency approximations to the internal parameters, approaching the exact curves for alb sufficiently large as discussed in the following. Asympt9,tic approximatiolls can be found for Zj from (B-2), but it is convenient to reexpress :if", in terms of Jo(kp), instead of using the ber and bei functions. From (B-3) and (B-12) (B-23a) wherein
k -J -jWJ.l(J
112.j2IO and 0 is given by (B-9). Also
OA -;--- Jolkp) = up
0
A
o(kp)
~A-Jo(kp) -~:1 =
o(kp)
up
A koJ (kp) A,
in which the prime denotes the derivative with respect to the argument 1/2 .j2pll5. Then (B-23a) yields, at p = a
r
kp =
(B-23b) Using (B-23b) in (B-2), the internal distributed impedance becomes (B-24)
610
TRANSMISSION LINE PARAMETERS
in which the Bessel function of order unity Jl(V).5 The asymptotic (orm ten' It(ka) IS
obtained from the identity
IS
J~(u)
=
(B-25)
and the latter with (B-16b) into (B-24) yields
1/2 jill;,: -
~
~(allJ-1C18)
Zi --> ----.--
J2na
20"c
=-
1
2na
(1
.
+ J)
JWfJc - - !l/m 20"c
(B-26)
valid for sufficiently large a/b. The real and imaginary parts of (B-26) yield
ri
-->
1 2na
JWfJc
1 20", =2~aO"tb
a
a =
2b
ri(dc)
!lIm
J large
(B-27a)
a -large
(B-27b)
b
C
For instance, if alb = 5, the asymptotic expression (B-27a) can be used in lieu of (B-21a) with an error orabout 10'1,,, decreasing to zero error {()I' alb sufficiently larger. The asymptotic result (B-26) is seen to contain the quantity ~ of (3-112c), that is, the intrinsic wave impedance for a plane wave in a conductive region. Thus (B-26) yields tbe ratio lor a round wire a (j
large
(B-28)
One concludes tbat for current penetration small, the impedance ratio izj:it~ at the surface of a round wire becomesq, the same as the ratio of electric to magnetic plane wave fields in a conductor. B-2. DISTRIBUTED PARAMETERS OF A PARALLEL-WIRE LINE, CONDUCTOR IMPEDANCES INCLUDED The isolated wire internal impedance results of the previous discussion can be applied directly to the parallel-wire line of Figure 9-7(b), with the object of tin ding (9-98b), the distributed pararneter z. Proximity em~cts6 arc neglected, which assumes fields in each wire undisturbed from the axially symmetric configuration attained when isolated, a 5See S. Ramo, J. Whinnery, and T. van Duzer. Field, and 111alles in Communicatiolls Electronics, 2nd eeL New York: Wiley, 1934, p. 370. 6An analysis of the cf1(,cts of the proximity of the wires on the increase in internal rcsistdllcC is found in A. H. M. Arnold, "The alternating-current resistance of paralid conductors of circular cross-section," Jour. lEE., 77, 1935, p. 49.
611
B-2. DISTRIBUTED PARAMETERS OF A PARALLEL-WIRE LINE
reasonable assumption if the axial separation is greater than about 10 conductor diameters. With effects of proximity neglected, the internal parameters of the parallel-wire line of Figure 9-7(b) are double the results (B-21) obtained for the isolated conductor, in view of the impedance encountered twice along the edges Az of the rectangle t. The series parameter (9-98b) therefore becomes
z = 2ri + jw(2li + Ie)
(B-29)
= r + jwlOjm
'i
in which ri and are given by (B-2l) or (B-27). In (B-29) Ie is related to the magnetic field exterior to the wires, permitting the use of that obtained in Problem 9-12 (a) for the perfect conductor case
Ie = J.l t n h + d Hjm
(B-30)
a
1t
wherein a is the wire radius, 2h the separation, and d = --.lh 2 - a2 . The expression (9-100) for the shunt parameterj = g + jwe is the same whether or not the conductors are perfectly conducting; thus, from Problem 9-13
y
g+jwe
- + (Ell)
j we =
(Ell) + j
-
E'
E'
W1rE Ulm tnh+d' a
(B-3l)
For an air dielectric, the assumption g = 0 is appropriate. In telephone lines using poles for support, the insulator leakage is often reduced to an equivalent distributed loss effect along the line, yielding a parameter g determined by the number of poles used per mile or kilometer.
EXAMPLE B-3. A telephone line consists of 0.104 in. (0.264 cm) diameter hard-drawn copper wires (o-c 5.63 x 10 7 Vim) separated 12 in. (305 em) in air. Neglect leakage due to the supporting insulators. (a) Compute the distributed constants r, I, g, and c at 1 kHz. (b) Find Zo, iX, (3, .Ie, and 1/p at 1 kHz. (a) With 2a
= 0.104 in. and 2h 1CE
12 in., It/a
= 115.5, so (B-31) yields
10- 9 /36
c=-tn-[~-l+-J-::-(=~=y=···=I-] ~ t. [2311 ~ 5.10 pF(m ~ 0.00822 ,F(m; in whieh the conversion 1609 mimi is used. If leakage is neglected g = O.
612
TRANSMISSION LINE PARAMETERS
With z given by (B-29), evaluating r, and Ii requires first expressing the wire radius as a funetion of 0 given by (B-9) 0.00213 m 0.999. Thus, with
making alb 0.622. From Figure B-2, rjr i •de 1.003, Irl1i,de r j = L003r j • de , (B-22a) in (B-29) yields
2r j
r
or 11.47 Q/mi. Similarly, using (.de of (B-22b) in (B-29) obtains 2/i 8n = 0.999 ,uH/m = 0,161 mH/mi., and tl'om (B-30)
Ie
It + d 4n x 10 - 7 t" (231) = 2.18 ,uH/m nan
,uo
= ~tn~- =
=
2(0.999),u0l
3.51 mH/mi
so the total distributcd ind uetanee in (B-29) becomes
1= 21i
+ Ie =
2,28 flH/m
= 3.67 mH/mi
(b) Onc obtains /~o using (9-105) '7 _
,,"-0-
By usc of
~r + jwl _ "--.-g +Jwc
03a) y=
yielding
(X
+ jwl)(g + jwc) = 0.0083 + jO.035 rni I
= 0.0083 Np/mi, f3 = 0.035 A = 2n
f3 up =
w
2n 0.035
7i = fA =
=
rad/mi. From (9-37)
179 mi = 288 krn
179,000 rni/scc = 2.88 x 10 8 m/scc
from thc valuc of (x, a wavc 011 thc line attenuates to e- I = 36.8'/,) ol'its input valuc in d (X I = (0.0083) - I 120 mi at f 1 kHz.
B-3. DISTRIBUTED PARAMETERS OF A COAXIAL LINE, CONDUCTOR IMPEDANCES INCLUDED Figure 9-6 shows the current distributions obtained in the outer conductor ofa coaxial line at low, medium, and high fr·equencies. At the higher frequencies the currents concentrate toward the TEM fields responsible for those currents, namely, toward the outer wall of the inner conductor and toward the inner wall of the outer conductor. This latter property of the coaxial line, like hollow waveguides, makes it an excellent shielding device at high frequencies, the essentially zero currents on the outer wall eliminating the possibility of a small tangential electric field being coupled outside the outer conductor.
B-3. DISTRIBUTED PARAMETERS OF A COAXIAL LINE
613
Poynting vector
I,
;, (a-) Conductor 1 ;; flux
(a)
(b)
FIGURE B-3, Relative to the distributed internal impedance or a coaxial line. (a) Contin':!.ity of tangential magnetic fields into conductors. (b) Longitudinal electric field induced by .1f
The isolated wire, internal impedance results (B-2 I ) are, in view of the axial symmctry, directly applicable with no approximation to the center conductor of t~e coaxial line. An additional internal impcdance is associated with the continuity of :ffi/J on the inner wall of the outer conductor (at p b), as suggested by Figure B-3(a), Defmed by (B-2), it is written (B-32) which requircs expressing if<{J in terms of the induced Sz just)nside the outer conductor, already accomplished through (B-3). The solution for €!z(p) in the outer conductor, moreover, must satisfy the differ~ntial equatipn (B-6), yielding once again solutions (B-7). Both Bessel functions Jo(kp) and No(kp) must be rctained to satisfy boundary conditions on the outer conductor. (Thus, from the range b < p < c within the outer conductor, the singularity at p 0 of No does not become troublesome,) The cxact field solution in the outer conductor is, however, not pursued further here; only a high-Irequency approximation to the internal impedance for the outer conductor is employed in the following. In determining the distributed impedance parameters of the coaxial line, £I-om axial symmetry the high-frequency approximation (B-26) for an isolated conductor is the same for the inner conductor of the coaxial line; hence A
Zil
I
.
-l> -2 ( 1 + J)
1W
A Wile
-2-
(B-33)
(J e
Thus, the internal resistance and inductance contributions are (B-34a) High-frequency approximations (B-S4b)
614
TRANSMISSION LINE PARAMETERS
The outer conductor internal impedance defined by (B-32) can be heuristically expressed in the high-frequency limit by use of the wave impedance 3-112c
iz(b)
-~--~ ->
.Yt'
A
11
= (1 +.1) J"wJ1.c '-,•
(B-35 )
2ac
a ratio approaching that for plane wave fields in a good conductor, at frequencies sufficiently high to make (j small compared to the radius b. Thus (B-35) applied to (B-32) yields (B-36)
-
with real and imaginary parts analogous wi th (B-34)
Ti2
->
1 2nb
fJ,'2a
OJJ1.c
(B-37a)
c High-hequencyapproximations
(B-37b) Adding (B-34), (B-37), and (9-84) thus obtains, from (9-98)
Z
=
ZII
+ Zi2 + jOJlc =
Til
+ Ti2 + jOJ(lil + li2 + Ie)
->~ (~ +!) j~~J1.c + JOJ 2n a b 2a c
•
[_1,(~ +~) w2n
a
f0i. +~ tn ~J 2n a
b >J2~
= T + jwl n/m I ligh-freq uency approximations
(B-38)
The series distributed parameters of a coaxial line, from (B-38), have the following properties in the high-frequency approximation L The resistive part!" increases as the square root of the frequency, and it decreases inversely with c• 2. The inductive part has two contributions. The first is the inductive part of the internal impedance, behaving like T. The second is the external inductance (9-34), providing the major contribution to I in practical coaxial lines.
J'a
Finally, the shunt parameter (9-100), Y = g + jOJe, remains unaltered Irom (9-82), applicable to the line with perfect conductors. This conclusion follows as usual from the dependence of g and e on only the electric field in the dielectric region. Thus, A
y =g
(Elf.) We (Elf.) E' +.1 W2nE - - (JIm b
+ .1we = -? +.7 •
=
In
a
valid at all frequencies, and not just a high-frequency approximation.
(B-39)
B-3. DISTRIllUTED PARAMETERS (W A COAXIAL LINE
615
The general derivation of the series parameters of the coaxial line at an arbitrary frequency ill is omitted here, but at low frequencies they are readily obtained in the absence of the skin effect. Then the dc inductance results obtained in Example 5-13 are applicable, while the resistance parameters are obtained from an adaptation of 4-133), assuming uniform current densities over the conductor cross sections. It is left for you to carry out the details. EXAMPLE B·4. Assume the cable in Example 9-3 has the 1ielectric loss tangent of 0.0002, hut this time copper conductors are used. Recaleulate ZO, IX, and fj from the distributed
pal'ameters y and z, atf = 20 MHz. _._ Note first the plane wave b obtained from (3-114) is b -J2/CO~IPc = 1.48 x 10 - 5 m, = 0.0148 mm, sufficiently smaller than a = 0.05 in. 1.27 mm such that the high-frequency approximatioll assumed !()r (B-38) applies. The series r parameter then becomes r
I
(~+
2n
a
1,))(;12 b 2u c
=~, (}03. + 211
1.27
3
10 _) 4.14
r.;;(2~}~)411 ~li:-..~ 7
-V'"
2 x 5.8
X
10
(I)
= 0.191 Q/m
The inductance parameter has internal and external contributions
bJ.[
. .[r+w--tn" /Lo )col=) 2n a
7
l
,7 x 100.191+2n(2x 10 ) ..4n ·---tn3.26 2n
=)
= j29.8 Q/m
z
in which Ie contributes almost wholly to jwl. Thus, == r + jcoi 0.191 + j29.8 Q/m. The shunt parameter y is found from (B-39), whence c = 2nE/tn (bfa) =2n(2 x 10 9/36n)/1.18=94.2 pF/m, yielding y=g+jwc +j)wc (0.0002 + j)())c= ,i1.l84 x 10" 2 Vim. Dielectric losses are negligible in this example. The characteristic impedance is found by lise of (9-105) (3)
or essentially that of Example 9-3
f()f
the lossless case, expected since r« col
g « wc. The 191 + j29.8)j1.184 x 10-
obtained = 0.595ei 89 . 85 " m
(J = 0.595 sin 89.8,'j"
~
~wle
and
Jfi
I,
Ji'om (9-103a) IS ')' yielding from the imaginary part
0.595 rad/m
(4)
The latter is also obtainable using (9-103c), since r« col and g« wc are satisfied. To find IX, (9-103b) provides good accuracy
r
gZo
""- + -- = 2Zo 2 ~
1.97
X
10"3 Np/m
0.191
" -..~
2 x 50
2.37 x 10- 6
+ ~---,- .10 2
1.71 x 10- 2 dB/m
and while still a low value, it represents an increase of ovcr 30 times that obtained in Example 9-3 with conductors assumed. Waves thus attenuate to 35.8'1,) of the input value ofalcngth d=IX- 1 = (1.97 x 10- 3 ) I =508mofthislineatf=20MHz. At 20 MHz, (9-37) yields A 2n/f5 10.55 m and vp w/f5 2.12 x 10 8 results essentially those of Example 9-3, in view of the small losses.
_____________________________________________ APPENDIX C
Integration of the Inhomogeneous Wave Equation
The formal proof that (11-17) is a solution of (1l-16) is given here. It is convenient to expand (II 16) in rectangular coordinates into the scalar wave equations
(C-l) making use of (2-83). Denote any of (C-l) in the unsubscripted form (C-2) Recall the Green's symmetrical theorem (2-92) g
~~)dS
an
(C-3)
correct for any pair of well-behaved functions f and g in and on a volume V bounded by the closed surface S. It is shown that (C-3) leads directly to the solution (11-17) if suitable choices are made for the functions f and g. Choosef as the field A in (C-2), assuming A means any component of A located at a source point pt. Thus, A A(u'u u~, u~) = A (r'), in whicl.!c r' denotes the position vector ofP'o The wave equation (C-2) is certainly satisfied by A (r') at all such points in space, and the Green's theorem
616
INTEGRATION OF THE INHOMOGENEOUS WAVE EQUATION
617
P'(r')
on 81 Enlarged
view of 81
(b)
(a)
FIGURE C-1. Geometries relative to the derivation of (11-17). (a) Current distribution at source points P' and a fixed field point P enclosed by surface S. (b) Showing small sphere 8 1 excluding P( r) from the region of integration.
(C-3) is written (C-4)
in which dv and ds are primed, since they are identified with locations P' in V and on S. For reasons about to be clarified, the function g in (C-4) is chosen as
e- i/loR
(C-5)
g=--
R
In (C-5), flJr the free-space region to which the constants /10' Eo apply (C-6)
Po = w)/1oEo
and R = Ir - r ' \ denotes the d~tance between the source point P' (r') and any fixed field point P(r), at which A is desired to be expressed in terms of the sources. The geometry is shown in Figure C-l(a). The integration (C-4) in V and on S being taken over all points P' and with P an arbitrary fixed point in the region, it is seen that R = () at P (i.e., P is the origin of R). Moreover, a property of the function g is that it satisfies the scalar wave equation,
(C-7) With (C-5) inserted into (C-4), the latter becomes
rh [~ 0 = Ys A(r') on
(e-.iPOR) e- jPoR OA(r')] --R- - R --an- ds'
(C-3J
618
INTEGRATION OF THE INHOMOGENEOUS WAVE EQUATION
From (C-7), - p~ can replace V 2g in the first term of (C-8), obtaining for the volume integral
r[
Jv
A(r')p~
J
e - j(JoR R
=
e - j(JoR 2 R V A(r') dv'
r _ e-j(JoR [V A(r') + pf;A(r')]dv' = r J1.o](r')e- i (JOR dv' 2
Jv
Jv
R
(C-9)
R
the latter following from the use of (C-2). Next, an inspection of the right side of (C-8) reveals that if the field point per) is to be inside the volume region V of integration as in Figure Col (a), then the requirement of Green's theorem that the function g = e-j(JoR/R be well-behaved in V is violated at P (where R = 0), in view of the singularity in g there. The point P is excluded from the volume region of integration by constructing a small sphere S1 of radius R = R1 about P as shown in Figure Col (b). Then V is bounded by the closed surface S = S1 + S2 as noted in the figure, whence (C-8) is written symbolically
r [. ] dv' Jv
=
r JSl
[] ds' + JS2 r [] ds'
(C-lO)
in which the brackets denote the volume and surface integrands of (C-8). The contribution of the integral on S1 in (C-lO) is now shown to approach the value 4nA(r), or just 4n times the potential A at the field point P, as the sphere S1 vanishes. From Figure Col (b) it is evident that %n = -%R on S1, since the normal is directed outward with respect to the volume region V (meaning in the negative R sense). Th us ~ , 0 (e- j(JOR) A(r) -oR R
r [] ds' = JSl r [ JSl =
l { ~ (r), (I-Rl + . A
]Po
S,
e - j(JoR oA (r') ]
+-----
)e-i(JORl Rl
R
oR
R~Rl
+ e-j(JORlOA(r')J -R1
oR
ds
t
R=Rl
}' ds (C-II)
By definition A(r') is well-behaved in the vicinity of the fixed point P(rl;. Allowing the radius Rl of the sphere S1 to become arbitrarily small, the value of A(r') on S1 can be replaced by its mean value
The integral ISl ds' is just 4nRi, so as R1 ~ 0, (C-II) becomes lim
r [] ds' ~ 4nA(r)
(C-12)
R1-.O JSl
or just 4n times the potential A at the field point per), that which was to be proved. On putting (C-9) and (C-12) back into (C-lO) and solving for A.(r), the desired integral
INTEGRATION OF THE INHOMOGENEOUS WAVE EQUATION
619
(External current sources) Fixed P(r) I,'
1.
~
r,
I , ......
I
II /I
R
H ,I
(V)
f I
IJ I.
(a)
P'(r')
(c)
(b)
FIGURE C-2. Three cases applicable to the Helmholtz integral (C-14). (a) Sonrces outside S. A is fcmnd by usc of (C-l5a). (b) Sources inside S only. A(T) is obtained using (C-15b). (c) General case. Sources inside and outside S; (C-14) applies.
solution for the scalar wave equation (C-2) is obtained
~ A(r) =
! J.lo.7(r')ev
jfJo
4nR
R
dv
,
1 ~ [oA(r') e- jfioR
+4n
S
-an-
~
A(r')
R
-i(iOR)] ds' ana (e~
(C-13)
in which the subscript on S2 is discarded since Sl is no longer present. Since (9-13) is a solution of each scalar wave equation in (C-l), three such solutions, for AAr), Ay(r), and Az(r), can be added vcctorially to provide the desired solution for the vector wave equation (11-16)
~
A(r)
! J.loJ(r')e-i(JoR dv, +-1 ~ [oA(r') - - e- {3oR j
=
v
4nR
4n
S
an
R
~
a (e-i(JOR)] ds.'
-A- - R
an
(C-14)
a result due originally to Helmholtz. The meaning of the integral solution (C-14) is clarified on referring to Figure C-2, and three cases of physical interest can be identified. CASE A. Suppose no current densities exist inside the region V, bounded by a finite closed surface S as in Figure C-2(a). With J = 0, (C-14) yields only the surface integral
~
iiloR
I ~ [oA(r') e---S an R
A(r)=4Jr
~ A(r')
-iilOR)] ds' ana (e-R-
(C-15a)
620
INTEGRATION OF THE INHOMOGENEOUS WAVE EQUATION
VVith no sources inside V, the potential A(r') on the closed surface S must be attributed to current sources lying entirely outside S. This type of integral was extensively investigated by Kirchhoff in optical diffraction problems.
B. Suppose current densities exist within a finite distance from the origin. Then the closed surface S in (C-13) can be expanded indefinitely toward infinity, to reduce the contributions to the potential at the field point P to the volume integral (11-17)
CASE
(C-ISb)
as depicted by tbe geometry in Figure C-2(b). This is the reduced form of (C-H) commonly encountered in free-space antenna radiation problems.
If current density sources exist both inside the closed surface S and outside it, the general form (C-14) is applicable, amounting to a superposition of(C-lSa) and (C-1Sb). This case .is largely academic, for the better expedient is usually to expand S until all current sources are enclosed, in which event Case B applies.
CASE C.
In a manner analogou~to the arguments leading to (C-15b), one call show that the scalar electric potential
f ----..__... dv' Jv
(C-lti)
assuming the closed surface S to have been expanded inddinitely toward infinity. In antenna radiation problems to follo~, no llse is made of (C-lti), since the Lorentz condition (11-8) yermits expressing E and B, via (11-13) and (11-14), solely in terms of the potential A.
__- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A P P E N D I X D
Development of the Smith Chart
In the following are given the details of the theoretical basis for the Smith chart, a necessary background for its intelligent application to solving reflected wave problems. The chart provides graphical solutions of wave or transmission-line relationships involving impedance and reflection coefficient; for example, (6-38) in Chapter 6, concerned with uniform plane-wave fields in layered regions treated in Sections 6-5 and 6-6; or such as (10-4) in Chapter 10, concerned with voltage and current reflection on two-conductor transmission lines taken up in Sections 10-1 and 10-2. Additionally, by means of simple angular rotations about the Smith chart, it yields graphical solutions to the related translational relationships (6-40) and (10-6), concerning the effect on the reflection coefficient of a z-position change in the region or transmission line in question. The foregoing properties of the Smith chart become possible because the chart represents an overlay, or mapping, of constant-resistance and constant-reactance components of the impedance of (6-38) or of (10-4), onto the complex-reflect ion-coefficient plane, as developed in the following. ~ Suppose one begins with the total-field impedance Z(z) defined in Chapter 6 by (6-38) (applicable to a multiregion wave system), by normalizing it through a division by the intrinsic wave impedance of the region in question.
(6-42]
in which the dimensionless ratio Z(z)/ff, symbolized £(z), is called the normalized totalfield impedance of the region. Alternatively, beginning with the line impedance Z(z)
621
622
DEVELOPMENT OF THE SMITH CHART
defined in Chapter 10 by (10-4) (applicable to a uniform tran5rr~ission line), normalizing it through a division by the line characteristic impedance <:0 obtains a result of a form identical with (6-42)1
Zi z ) == x(z)
<:0
=
1 + ['(z) I
[lO-IO]
in which the ratio Z(z)IZo, also denoted by x(z), is called the normalized line impedance of the region. On solving (6-42) or (10-10) for ['(z), their inverse is obtained: ['(z) = - , - - - -
(D-I)
+1
x
Now writing and [' in the rectangular complex forms
x = -z + jx
(D-2)
yields, on substituting these into either (6-42) or (10-10), the following
1+ rr + jri
-z+jx
~-~--.---
I
rr - jr i
(D-3)
Rationalizing the denominator and eq uating the real and imaginary parts of each side yields -z
1
r; - rf
=-------~--c~
(I
(D-4a)
(D-4b)
x
Setting"t and x equal to any real constants in (D-4) yields two mappings (transformations) from coordinate straight lines in the complex ~lane into circles in the complex r plane, as depicted in (a), (b), and (el of Figure D-l. This is proved as fi)llows. With -z = constant in (D-4a) and manipulating it into the form
x
(D-5) one obtains in the [' plane a family of circles wi th radii 11 (,z. + I) and centers displaced horizontally to the positions Po(-z/(It + 1),0). For example, the It = 2 line in Figure D-l (a) transforms, by use of (D-5), into the circle la beled ·i = 2 in Figu re D-l (b), with a radius of and its center at 0).
t
pori,
the theory of complex variables, (6-42) or (10-10) art' bilinear Iransflnmalions, having the property of translarming circles (or straight lines) in the plane of one of its complex variables into circles in the plane of the other complex variable. See also R. Y. Churchill, Complex Variables and Applications. New York: McGraw-Hili, 1948.
1 From
2Since th~ 1 = constant and x constant lines of Figure D-I (a) intersect orthogonally, their maps as circles onto the r plane of Figure D-l (d) also intersect at righ t angles. This is the conformal property of a bilinear transi()rmation.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE SMITH CHART
623
«-plane)
o -~-~~-
21
31 41
51
61
71
-1
~t---r-i-t-t-1~
-
-+-+-+~+~~~+I I I I I I
-2
-3
~+~+~+-+~+-+
I
I
I
I
I
I
(a)
,= 0
r plane 4
r plane
= 05
_-+__-Ic---+-+--c"=----k-->-l'r
(c)
(b) ,,-=2
r
r = 0.5 + jO.5 = O.707e
j45 '
(Corresponding to" 1 + j2)
plane
.r=-2
Cd)
FIGURE D-1. Development of the Smith Chart. (a) Typical i-constant and x-constant coordinate lines in the plane. (b) Circles of cons~ant i mapped by (D-5) onto tbe plane. (c) Circles of constant ,,; mapped by (D-6) onto the r plane. (d) Complete mapping of -i-constant and x-
r
constant lines onto the
r plane: the Smith chart.
Similarly, any::]'; constant line in Figure D-I(a) maps into the circles in (e) of that figure, evident from manipulating (6-40b) into (D-6)
This is a family of circles with radii I/o: and centers at thelocations Po(l, 1/0:). Typical circles corresponding to a; = 0, ±O.5, ± 1, ±2, and ±4 are shown in FigUl:e D-l(c).
624
DEVELOPMENT OF THE SMITH CHART
f
plane
~
"";!-
~
~-r "'tv
~
1:
0."
sOIJ
rCe
FIGURE D-2. Smith impedance ch~rt, with a dashed line overlay shown, to denote magnitude and angle of the reflection coeflicient r. (Note that lhis overlay is missing on commercial charts, to make the -; and circles more readable.)
The superposi tion of the circles of Figures D-l (b) and (e) yields (d), the so-called Smith chart. Any point (r" r i ) denotes solutions to (10-10) or (6-42) or, conversely, to (D-I . Thus, if some reflection cocflicicnt fl.::) rr +.JTi If(.::)lejiJ is located at p(r" ;) on tlu~ chart, that point also provides the coordinates read off the .z = constant and = constant circles,~yielding the solution .£ = i +J:'l' of that was sought. For example, given that f(.:::) 0.5 +jO.5 = 0.707ei 45 ', (r" = (0.5,0.5) on the Smith chart produces (t, ,r) (I al that same implying the solution .; 1 = I + j2 2.23ei63 .4". Thus = O. and = 2.23ei62 .4' are a solution-pair seen to satisfy the normalized impedance relations and (10-10), or their converse, (D-l). More accurate solution-pairs satisfying and (10-10) are available from the enlarged Smith chart of l:igure D-2. Besides the usual oveday of circles of constant .z and constant x onto the r plane, Oil the chart rim are three scales, the inner of which denotes the angle e of the reflection coefficient, a q uilntity usually expressed in j the polar form, f = ifle (/. The radial dashed line overlay on th~ chart gives the angle O. The concentric dashed .line circles denote the magnitude with a range from zero to one.
el, ,
Ill,
DEVELOPMENT OF TIlE SMITH CHART
625
The two outer rim seales Oll the chart pertain to the angular rotation associated with the exponential filctor of (~ither (6-40) (in the multi region wave problem) or of (10-6) (in the transmission-line prohlem):
[6-40 j, [l0-6\ going from a location to a !lew position l in a region. For the case of a lossless region, wherein the propagation constant y is the pure imaginary 'Y = jp j2njJe, (6-34) simplifies to
111
-z)
(D-7)
stating tha.t the reflection coellicicnt at the location .:' is found multiplying at some other positioll times the pure phase farlor exp [2(j2njA) z) j. The factor 2 denotes that the phase shift that undergot's is twice that with the wave motion in going from to . Both outer rim scales are calibrated to include this factor of two, so the user needs only to read the displ
r
0)
(D-8)
In this case, besides the phase Elctor of (1)-7) appearing in (1)-8), there is also the double-altenuation factor exp !2ex(l - z)], implying a decrease in the magnitude of the reflectioll coeflicicnt as ont moves toward the source.
30 ne may note that if the direction of motion in going ironl ,:: to is toward the SiJUtFf,\ of the wave') in a region (to the lefi in Figure 6-8), the quantity is then more negative than z, making the corresponding
phase shift produced by the exponential betor of (D-7) it negative, or dockwi,lc angular shill around the f-planc of the Smith chart. The (Juter rim scak of Figure D-:! i, calibrated to dellote lhat phase shin (in decimal in moving toward the source (generator). The middle scale is used when moving away waves,
_____________________________________________ INDEX
waveguide, below cutoff, 424, 431, 436 Absolute potential, 191 waveguide wall-loss, 451 Acceleration, 13 Average power: Addition, vector, 3 definition, 394, 400 Adjustable stub, 537 Poynting'S integral for, 402 Admittance, 524 radiated by antenna, see Radiated power A field, 269. See also Vector magnetic potential in terms of complex Ilelds, 400 Air gap, magnetic circuit, 265, 266, 293, 328 transmitted in waveguide, 440 Ampere's circuital law: in free space, 35 Band theory, 115 in material region, 134, 259 Bandwidth, 442, 535 for static Ilelds, 35, 259, 263 Barrier potentials, 290 Ampere's differential law, 85, 132 Beamwidth, antenna, 574,575 Analogy: Bei, ber functions, 604, 607 capacitance and conductance, 232, 236 Bessel functions: magnetic and electric circuit, 264 asymptotic forms, 606, 610 scalar and vector Poisson equation, 270 complex argument, 604 Anisotropic, 165 differentiation, 607 Antenna: B field, 28, 30, 35, 40, 75, 126. See also Magnetic aperture, 567-575 field, from A center- fed, 555, 558 B-H curve, 142 curved linear, 557 Bilinear transformation, 622 directive gain, 575-579 Biot-Savart, 275 directivity, 577 Black screen, 571 effective receiving area, 586 Boundary conditions: elementary dipole, 550-555 of electrostatics, lSI half-wave dipole, 558, 561, 563, 577 of magnetostatics, 259 horn, 545,569, 589 for normal Bn> 127, 139 impedance, 563 for normal Dn, 123, 148 isotropic, 576, 579 for normal}n, 172 linear, 545, 549, 555-563 for normal Pn' 124 loop, 555, 557 at perfect conductor, 124, 136, 344, 459 polarization, 580-581 for rectangular waveguide, 420, 429, 450 receiving, 579-582 table of, 147 transmit-receive link, 582-589 for tangential E t, 14S Antenna pattern: for tangential H t , 135 aperture, 572 for tangential M t, 136 elementary, 554 in terms of complex permittivity, 17 I horn, 592 at transmission line conductors, 459, 602 linear, 561 Boundary-value problems, 204, 209-215, 342, Antiferromagnetic, 145 347,418,428,512 Aperture antenna, 567-575 Bound charge, II 7-119 Argand diagram, 99 Bound current, 127-132 Armature, 294 Brewster angle, 375 Associative law, 3 Assumed solution, 209, 419 Cable, coaxial, see Coaxial line Atomic currents, 127 Capacitance: Attenuated waves, 154-160 approximation, 225 Attenuation constant: of coaxial line, 198, 203, 231 from distributed parameters, 476, 482, 486-487 of concentric spheres, 199, 235 for low-loss line, 487 of current analogy, 238 plane waves, 154, 159, 162, 163 dellnition, 197 transmission line, 465, 476, 486, 612, 615
627
628
INDEX
Capacitance (Continued) energy definition, 203 of field- cell, 230 by field mapping, 228-232 of parallel plates, 199 of parallel wires, 225-228 Q.of, 235 of transmission line, see Transmission line parameters of two-dimensional systems, 228 Cartesian (rectangular) coordinates, 4 Characteristic impedance: coaxial line, impedive conductors, 615 perfect conductors, 478 definition, 469, 470 line: impedive conductors, 487 perfect conductors, 477 parallel-wire line: impedive conductors, 612 perfect conductors, 478 Charge: bound, 117·-119 cloud, 33 conservation of; 150 differential, 23 electric, 23, 49 {()fce on, 28, 189 free, 112, 119 line, 24, 33, 184, 193 magnetic, 45, 564 planar, 34 point, 31, 182,220 spherical, 33 surface, 23 volume, 23, 33 Charge density: on coaxial line, 188 definition, 23 of image system, 221 on parallel plates, 149 on perfect conductor, 124 Circle diagram, waveguide, 432 Circuit model, 291, 294, 295, 317,327,480,487 Circular cylindrical coordinates, 4,5,8,9 Circulation, 76 Closed line integral, 35, 41, 81,190,459 Closed surface integral, 44, 72 Coaxial capacitor, 197, 203, 231 Coaxial line, capacitance of, 197 characteristic impedance of; 469, 478 with different dielectrics, 188, 250-251 distrihuted parameters of, 478 electric field of, 187
magnetic field of; 302-303 propagation constant, 471 self inductance of, 303 TEM mode, 458-47 I TE and TM modes, 5 I 4 as transmission line, see Transmission line waves in, 461-469 Coercive force, 143 Commutative law: of addition, 3 of multiplication, 15 Complex amplitude, 98, 154,345,421 Complex angle, 377,596 Complex conduCtivity, I 15 Complex dielectric constant, see Complex permittivity Complex permittivity, 160 - 161, 171 Complex phasor notation, see Time harrnonic Complex Poynting theorem, 401, 402 Complex time harmonic, see Time harmonic Components, vector, 5, 7, 8 Conductance, 241 Conductance analogy of capacitance, 232, 234, 236 Conductance by field mapping, 239 Conduction current, 36 Conduction model of capacitance, 232-239 Conductive region: classification of; 160 current density in, 113, 156, 605 parameters, table, I 68 skin depth in, 156, 163,604 Conductivity: defInition, 113 Drude model, I 15 table, 168 Conservalion of charge, 150 Conservative field, 23, 66, 188 Continuity, see Boundary conditions Convection current, 36 Coordinate lines, 6 Coordinate points, 4, 6 Coordinate surfaces, 6 Coordinate system(s), 4, 8 circular cylindrical, 4, 10 generalized orthogonal, 7 rectangular (Cartesian), 4, 10 spherical, 4, 10 Coulomb's force law, 33, 181 Coupled circuits: energy oC 319-321 mutual inductance of; 320-325 Crank method, 158 Critical angle, 376
INDEX
Cross (veaor) product, 17 Curie temperature, 145 Curl: definition, 77 of electric field, 84, 146 of magnetic fleld, 85, 132 of velocity fleld, 77 Curl operator, 79, 90 modified, 412, 465, 466 Current, flux oC 27 linear, 271 magnetic, 564 Current density: definition, 26 dielectric polarization, 121 discontinuity, at interface, 170 displacement, 36 magnetization, set Magnetization current density on parallel plates, 149 on perfect conductor, 136 in plane conductor, 156 in ronnd conductor, 605 sudace, 136, 149, 271 in waveguide, 439 Current loop, inflnitesimal, 127 torque on, 128 Current sheet, 38, 40 Curvilinear coordinates, 7 Curvilinear squares method, 230 Cutoff freqnency, waveguide, 423, 431, 433 Cylindrical coordinates: circular, 4, 10 generalized, 412 Del operator, 66, 70, 80 Depth of penetration: plane waves, 156, 163 in round wire, 605 D field, 119 Diamagnetic, 140 Dielectric, anisotropic, 165 Dielectric boundaries, 122 breakdown, 120 complex permittivity, 153, 160, 161, 171 constant, see Relative pennittivity losses, 160-163 permittivity, see Perminivity polarization, 116 polarization current density, 121 properties, table, 168 susceptibility, 119 Differential, total, 64 Dipoie:
629
static electric, 195 static magnetic, 274 Dipole antenna: center- fed, 555 infinitesimal, 550 Dipole moment, 116, 127 Dipole moment per unit volume, 116 Directivity: aperture, 588 rectangular horn, 589 Dirichlet boundary condition, 207 Discontinuity: at charged surface, 124, 170 in D n fleld, 123 in H t field, 135 transmission line, 514 waveguide, 426 Dispersive,' 444 Displacement current, 36 Dissipation !actor, 160 Distributed parameters, set Transmission line parameters Distributive law, 3, 15 Divergence: deflnition, 68 of electric field, 75, 119 of magnetic field, 76, 126 Divergence theorem, 72 Domain wall, 141 Dominant mode, 410, 417, 427, 434 Dot (scalar) product, 14 Drift velocity, 112 Drude model, 115 Dry ·cell, 290 Duality: between electric and magnetic dipoles, 274 electromagnetic, 564-567 Echo diagram, 499 Eddy currents, 143 Effective area, 581-582, 585 E field, 28. See Electric field Eigenfunction, 421 Electric charge, 23. See also Charge Electric dipole: field oC 195 moment, 116 moment per unit volume, 117 receiving area, 586 Electric field: of charged aggregate, 182 of charged cloud, 33 of coaxial line, 188, 463 conservative, 41
630
INDEX
Electric field (Continued) definition, Lorentz force, 28 energy, 199--204 flux, 31 induced by magnetic field, 43, 278 of line charge, 33, 183 of parallel plates, 125 of parallel-wire line, 504 at perfect conductor, 148 of planar charge, 34 of point charge, 32 from potential fields, 189, 288, 546 Electric permittivity, see Permittivity Electric polarization, 116. See also Volume polarization density Electric susceptibility, 119 Electrolytic tank, 238 Electromechanical generator, 293 Electromotive force (emf), see Induced voltage Electronic polarization, 116 Electrostatic energy, 20 I Electrostatic forces and torques, 241 Electrostatics, equations of: 181 Elliptic integrals, 3 I 4 Emf, see Induced voltage Energy: of capacitor, 203 of coupled circuits, 319-321 electric field, 20 I of inductive circuits, 296--308 magnetic field, 298-301, 306, 308 summary, 316 in terms of inductance, 299, 320 Energy density: electric, 202, 387 heat loss, 297, 387 magnetic, 301, 387 Equipotential surface, 193, 220, 223 Equivalence theorem, 567 Equivalent conduction loss mechanism, 161 Evanescent mode, 424 E waves, see TM mode External inductances, 30 I, 308 Faraday's law: applied to moving circuit, 280 applied to transformer, 278 differential form, 85, 146 integral f()rm, 29, 40, 146 static form, 41 Farzone field, 553, 560 Ferrimagnetism, and ferromagnetism, 145 Ferrite, I4 6 Ferromagnetic alloys, 144 F field, 566. See also VeCtor electric potential
Field: conservative, 23, 66, 188 defined, I mapping of, 228, 236 non conservative, 23 scalar, I solenoidal, 76 temperature, I, 66 vector, I Field cell, 229 Field mapping, 228, 236 Field pattern, see Antenna pattern, aperture Field- point source- point concepts, 181-184 Filter, waveguide as, 410, 424 Finite- difference method, 215 Fluid-velocity field, I Flux: current, 27 definition, 25 electric, 31 magnetic, 127 partitioning, 306 plots, 71, 229 power, see Power flow Flux field plot: of antenna, 552 of coaxial line, 468 of waveguide modes, 427, 433 Flux linkage, 306, 322; 323 Flux plotting, 228-232, 236 Flux tube, 228 Force: between charges, 181, 244 between parallel plates, 244 on current-carrying wire, 284 electric Held, 28, 242 Lorentz, 28,116,127 magnetic field, 28, 329 on moving charge, 28 from virtual work, 242, 329 Fourier series, 213 Gap voltage, see Induced voltage Gauss' law: for electric field, 29, 121 for magnetic fields, 44, 126 Generator: electrochemical, 290 electromechanical, 293 Gradient: detlnition, 64 of potential field, 189 of temperature field, 66 Grad operator, 64 Graphical flux plotting, 228-232
INDEX Green's theorems, 93,616 Group velocity, 444, 445 Guided waves, see Transmission line; Waveguide Half-wave dipole, 561, 563, 577 Half-wave line, 533 Heat power, see Ohmic (heat) loss Helmholtz equation, 619 H field, see Magnetic intensity Highpass filter, 410, 424 Homogeneity, 167 Horn antenna, 545, 570, 589 H uygens- Fresnel principle, 563 H waves, see TE mode Hyperbolic functions, 532 Hysteresis, 142 Identities, vector, 92 Image method, 219-225 Impedance: of antenna, 563 charaneristic, see Characteristic impedance internal, of isolated wire, 608 internal distributed, 485, 610, 611, 614 imrillSic, see Intrinsic wave impedance; Characteristic impedance measurement of, 530 normalized, 521, 621 total field, 353 total series distributed, 485 transmission line, 513 Impedance matching: of coated lens, 382 methods, 536 quaner wave line, 535 stub, 537 tapered section, 535 Imperfect (lossy) dielectric, 160 Incremental permeability, 143 Index of refraction, 374 Induced voltage (emf): of circuit in motion, 280-286 of coupled circuits, 326 of electromechanical generator, 294 from energy, 317 from time-varying A, 286 from time-varying B, 279 of transformer, 278 Inductance, see Mutual inductance; Self inductance; Transmission line parameters Infinitesimal current element, radiation from, 550 Inhomogeneity, 167 Inhomogeneous wave equation, 94 Input impedance, transmission line, 515-526, 531-536
631
Insulator, 116, 162. See also Dielectric Integral form, Maxwell equations, 29, 86, 147 Integral solution: for static A, 270 for static B, 275 for static IP, 189, 190 for time-retarded A, 548, 619, 620 for time-retarded IP, 620 Integration: line, 21,36,41 surface, 27, 33, 43, 74 volume, 25, 33, 74 Internal (surface) impedance, 485, 610 Internal inductance, 30 I, 309 Intrinsic wave impedance: conductive region, 157, 163 free space, 102, 553 lossy dielectric, 162, 163 plane wave, 102, 157 TEM mode, 417, 466 TE mode, 417, 431 TM mode, 416,426 transmission line, 464, 465 Iron core, inductor, 137, 261, 308 transformer, 324, 325 Irrotational field, 76 Isolated wire, cunent penetration (skin effect), 605 internal (surface) impedance, 608, 610 static magnetic field of; 37, 272, 275 Isotropic, 165 Iterative process, 218, 268
J
Held, see Current density Joule heating, see Ohmic (heat) loss J unction, between transmission lines, 514 Kirchhoff voltage law: for coupled circuits, 327 for de circuit, 240 from energy considerations, 317 for inductive circuit, 292, 295 Klystron, 435 Laminar core, 145 Laplace's equation, 205, 209, 217, 460 Laplacian: of scalar Held, 89, 205 of vector Held, 90, 92, 94 Leakage flux, 263 Ledanche cell, 290 Length element, venor fmill, 11 Lcnz's law, 44 Linear: antenna, 545, 549, 555-563 current, 272, 276
632
INDEX
Magnetic potential, see Vector magnetic potential Magnetic properties, table, 144 Magnetic susceptibility, 133 Magnetic torque, 128, 329 Magnetization current density: surface, 130-132, 136-137 volume, 129 Magnetomotive force (mmf), 264 Mapping of fields, 228 Matching, see Impedance matching Material parameters, table, 168 Matrix, 165,218 Maxwell equations: differential limn, free space, 75, 86 material region, 119,126,132,146,147 with e1 w1 'Fyz dependence, 411-412 integral form, free space, 29, 86 material region, 121, 126, 146, 147 static form, 36, 41, 181, 258--259 summal), tables, 86, 147 Magnetically coupled circuits, sec Coupled circuits time-harmonic form, 86, 88, 153 Magnetic charge, 45, 564, 568 Mean free time, 113 Magnetic circuit, 262-269, 330 Median path, 239, 263, 264 Magnetic core, 137,262,263, 265, 278, 308, 311, Metric coeflicients, 10 M field, see Volume polarization density, magnetic 324 Magnetic dipole: Microstrip line, 507, 508 field of, 274 Mixed boundary value problem, 207 moment, 128 Mks system of unils, 49 moment per unit volume, 129 Mm!,264 torque on, 128 Mobility, 113 Magnetic energy, see Energ), Mode: Magnetic field: definition, 415 from A, 272 relationships, 414--417 of circular loop, 274 TE, 416, 428-440 of coaxial line, 261, 302 TEM, 417, 459 of current distribution, 270-271, 275 TM, 415, 418-428 definition, Lorentz force, 28 Model: of flat current sheet, 39 electrolytic tank, 238 resistive paper, 238 of long isolated wire, 38, 272, 276 of long solenoid, 40, 43, 137 Modified curl operator, 412,465,466 of magnetic circuits, 262-269 Modulation, of carrier, 442 of parallel-wire line, 59, 504. See also Parallel wire Moment: line, capacitance dipole, electric, 116 of toroid, 39, 262 magnetic, 127 with gap, 267 Moment of force, 19. See also Torque Magnetic flux: Motional emf, 282. See also Induced voltage from A, 286 Multilayer system in plane wave propagation, from B, 263, 286 353 Mutual inductance: Magnetic force, 28, 127,329 from flux linkages, 323 Magnetic intensity, 102, 132 Magnetic materials, 140 from magnetic energy, 321 Neumann integral for, 321 Magnetic moment, 138 per unit volume, 129 reciprocity fill', 320 in terms of coupling coefficient, 325 Magnetic permeability, 133 of toroidal transformer, 324 Magnetic polarization, 127
Linear (Continued) region, 164 Linearity, 164 Line current, 464, 469, 482, 486, 491 Line impedance, 513, 517, 521 Line integral, 21-23, 35, 41, 81. See also Ampere's circuital law; Ampere's differential law; Faraday's law Line voltage, 461, 482, 486, 491 Linkage, flux, 306, 323 Loop antenna, 555, 557 Lorentz condition, 547, 548 Lorentz force, 28,116,127,140 Lossless dielectric, 123 Lossless transmission line, 466, 477, 481 Loss tangent, 160, 162 table of; 168 Lossy dielectric, 162-163. See also Conductive region
INDEX Nearzone field, 553 Networks, matching, 536 Neumann boundary condition, 207 Neumann formula, for mutual inductance, 321 NOllconservative field, 23 Nondispersive, 441, 443 Nonlinearity, 120, 164 Nonsinusoidal waves: echo diagram, 499 forward propagated, 492 011 lossless lines, 488-503 with reactive load, 501 reflected, 495 Normal incidence, see Plane waves Normalized admittance, 524 Normalized field impedance, 358, 621 Normalized transmission line impedance, 521 Normal to surface, 10 Ohmic: (heat) loss: in circuits, 297, 315 from Poynting theorem, 387 time-average, 397,402 Ohmic region, see Conductive regioll Ohm's law, point form, 113 w-fJ diagram, 444 Open-circuit voltage, sa Induced voltage (emf) Orientational polarization, 116 Orthogonal curvilinear (generalized coordinates), 7 Orthogonality, of trigonometric functions, 214 Paddle wheel, 77 Parallel line charges, 222 Parallel plates: capacitance, 199 force, 244 Parallel wire line: capacitance, 225 characteristic impedance, 478, 612 distributed parameters, 611 electric field, 504 electrostatic potential, 222 external inductance, 506 internal inductance, 611 magnetic field, 504 time harmonic potential, 503 as transmission line, 459, 478, 484, 503,
GiO Paramagnetic, 140, 145 Parameters, see Transmission line parameters Partial derivative, 62 Pattern, see Antenna pattern Penetration, depth 01: 156, 163
633
Perfect conductor, 124, 148, 156 surface charge on, 124 surface current on, 136 Perfect dielectric, 123 Period, 100, 159 Penneability: of free space, 30, 36, 133 incremental, 143 of materials, table, 168 relative, 133 Permeance, 265 Permittivity: complex, 153,160,161,171 of free space, 30, 50, 120 of materials, table, 168 relative, 120 P field, 116. See also Volume polarization density, electric Phase constant, from distributed parameters, 476, 477,482,486,487 for low-loss line, 477,487 for plane wave, 99, 154, 162, 163 forTEM mode, 417, 465, 476, 477,482,486, 487 for transmission line, lossless, 465, 477,487 lossy, 465, 476, 482, 486, 487 vector, 368 lor waveguide, 424, 431, 436 Phase velocity: apparent, 369 plane wave, 101, 159 transmission line, 465 waveguide, 426, 431, 436 phasor notation, see Time harmonic Plane, equation of; 366 plane waves: in conductive region, 152-163 in empty space, 96-103 normally incident, multiple region, 352-358 perfect conductor, 344-347 two regions, 347-350 oblique incidence, 365-366 power relations, 389-394, 395, 397-399, 401 Pocklington's theorem, 556 Point charge, 32, 42, 182, 199 Point in space, see Coordinate points Poisson equation: scalar, 204, 215 vector, 269 Polarization: circular, 105 electric, 116 elliptical, 104, 105 linear, 103, 104 magnetic, 127
634
INDEX
Polarization (Continued) parallel, 371 perpendicular, 375 Polar molecule, 116, 117 Position vector, 11 Potential: reference, 190, 197 retarded, 548 scalar electric, 189, 288 for time varying fields, 288, 548 vector magnetic, 269, 288, 546 Potential difference, 197 Potential field: in coaxial line, 462-463 complex form, 461 of dipole charge, 195 of elementary antenna, 550-551 ofline charge, 193 of parallel-wire line, 222, 503 of point charge, 194 Power density, see Poynting vector Power flow: in plane wave, 389, 392 in transmission line, 515, 518 in waveguide, 440 Power loss, see also Ohmic (heat) loss plane wave in conductive region, 393, 394, 399, 401 time-average, 397, 398 in waveguide walls, 447-452 ill wire, 388 Poynting theorem: complex form, 401, 402 real-time form, 386, 387 time-average form, 397, 402 Poynting vector: complex representation, 400 definition, 385 for plane waves, 390, 392 time-average, 394, 400 time-instantaneous, 385 Primary cell, 291 Probe, slotted line, 439, 530 Product: scalar (dot), 14 vector (cross), 17 vector with scalar, 4 Product solution, 209, 419 Projection of vector, 7, 14 Propagating mode, 424, 437 Propagation constant: for plane wave, 154 for transmission (TEM) line, 417, 465,476,477, 482, 486 for waveguide modes, 423, 424, 430, 431, 436
Proper (eigen) function, 421, 451 Q(pertaining to complex Poynting theorem), 402 Q(quality factor), 235 Quarter-wave line, 534 Quarter-wave transformer, 535 Quasi-static fields, 43, 276-277 Radiated power: from elementary dipole, 554 from half-wave dipole, 563 Radiation: from aperture antenna, 567-575 from elementary dipole, 550-554 from linear antenna, 555-563 Radiation resistance, 562 Radiation zone, see Farzone field Rationalized mks units, table, 50 Real amplitude, 99 Real part of complex field, 88 Real-time field, 87, 99, 155,344,425,437,467 Rectangular (Cartesian) coordinates, 4, 5, 8, 9 Rectangular waveguide modes, see Mode Reflection: at dielectric interface, 347 of nonsinusoidal waves, 495 from plane conductor, 344 at transmission-line junction, 512 Reflection coefficient: lor oblique incidence, 374, 375 for plane waves, 353 for transmission lines, 512 Refraction: of current flux, 172 of electric flux, 148 of magnetic flux, 139 of wave at oblique incidence, 373 Relative permeability: definition, 133 table, 144, 168 Relative permittivity: definition, 120 table, 168 Relaxation time: charge, 152, 234 drift velocity, 114 Reluctance, 264 Remanent (residual) magnetic field, 142 Resistance: analogy of magnetic circuit, 264 radiation, 562 ofthin circuit, 240-241, 264 transmission line, see Transmission line parameters
INDEX Resistive paper model, 238 Retardation effects, 546, 548 Retarded potential, 548, 619, 620 Rhombus, 15 Right-hand rule, 18,35,41,77,82 Round wire, 37, 81,272, 302, 309, 388, 484, 602-610 Saturation magnetization, 142 Scalar, 2 Scalar electric potential, see Potential Scalar field, 1 Scalar (dot) product, 14 Secondary cell, 291 Self inductance: from A and], 299 of circuit in free space, 300 of circular loop, 315 of coaxial line, 303 from energy, 299 external and internal, 301, 308-309, 313 from flex linkages, 306 from integration throughout space, 301 internal, of round wire, 302, 309 from Neumann integral, 312 of parallel-wire line, 305, 310 summary table, 316 of toroid, 311 Separation constants, 209-210,419 Separation of variables, 209, 419, 429 Series solution, 213 Sidelobes, 572, 574 Single-stub matching, 537-538 Sinusoidal steady state, see Time harmonic Skin depth, 156, 163 Skin effect: plane wave in conductive region, 156, 163 in round wire, 605 Slotted line, 530 Slot in waveguide, 439 Smith chart: derivation, 621 phase rotation on, 358,359,521,625 plane wave problems, 358-361 transmission line problems, 520-526 Snell's law, 377, 595 Solenoid, 40, 44, 137,278,280 Solenoidal field, 76 Source-point field-point concepts, 182-184, 189 Speed oflight, 49 Sp herical capacitor, 198, 235 Spherical charge, 32-33 Spherical coordinates, 4, 5, 8, 9 Spin, 127
635
Standing wave ratio: for plane waves, 362-364 from Smith chart, 364 on transmission line, 527-529 Standing waves: plane wave, 345-347,361-365 on transmission line, 526-529 Static fields: electric, properties of, 181 magnetic, properties of, 258-259 Step function, 498 Stokes' theorem, 81 Stored energy, see Energy Stub matching, 537 Surface, outward normal on, 10, 11, 73 Surface current density, 136:149, 151, 271 Surface divergence, 151,170 Surface free charge density, 24, 32, 34, 122-124, 125,148,149,151,169,171 Surface impedance, see Impedance Surface integral, 26, 27, 29, 33, 74, 75, 83,84 Surface polarization charge density, electric, 124-126 Surface polarization current density, magnetic, 130-132, 136, 137 Surface vector element, 10, 11 Susceptibility: electric, 11 9 magnetic, 133 SWR, see Standing wave ratio Symmetry: in field mapping, 232 about a line (axial), 33, 37 about a plane, 34, 38 about a point (spherical), 31, 33 Tangential component, see Boundary conditions Taylor's expansion, 69, 78, 216 TEM mode, 417, 459-469 TE mode, 416-417, 428-440 TE 10 mode, rectangular waveguide, 433-440 Temperature field, 2, 66 Time constant, see Relaxation time Time-domain fields, set Real-time field Time harmonic: Maxwell equations, 86, 88, 153 phasor notation, 87-88 Poynting theorem, 397-402 wave equation, 95 Time instantaneous, see Real-time field TM mode, 415, 418-428 Toroid, with gap. 267 magnetic field of, 39-40, 261-262 self inductance o( 311
636
INDEX
Torque: electrostatic, 242 on infinitesimal current loop, 128 magneto static, 330 Total differential, 64, 190 Total field impedance, 353, 516 Total reflection, M4, 376 Transmission band, 441, 535 Transmission coefficient: parallel polarization, 374 perpendicular polarization, 375 Transmission line, attenuation constant, see Attenuation constant characteristic impedance, see Characteristic impedance circuit analog (model), 264, 480, 487 coaxial, see Coaxial line current waves, 464,469,482, 486, 491 diHerentiai equations of (transmission line equations), 471, 475, 4805-486 electric field of; 460-461, 463 fields of, 460-468 hall~wave, 0533 input impedance, 515, 532 intrinsic wave impedance, 466 lossless, 466 magnetic field of, 464, 465, 466, 467 microslrip, 507-508 mode (TEM), 417, 459 non sinusoidal waves on, 488-503 normalized im pedance, 521 parallel wire, see Parallel wire line parameters, see Transmission line parameters perfect conductor, 459-482 phase constant, see Phase constant phase velocity, 465 propagation constant, 417, 465, 476, 477, 482, 486 quarter-wave, 534 quasi- static potential field of, 460, 462 reflection coefllcient, 496, 05 12-513 Smith chart, applied to, 520-526 standing waves, 526-529 table, summary relations, 517 tapered, 535 voltage waves, 461, 463, 470,482,486,488, 491-503, 512, 526-530 wave equations, 481, 486, 488 Transmission line equations (telegraphist' 5), perfect conductor line, 471 conductor impedance included, 485-486 Transmission line parameters: coaxial line, perfect conductors, 478-479 conductor impedence included, 612-6 I 5
parallel wire line, perfect conductors, 506-507 conductor impedance included, 610-612 perfect conductor line, 471-479 Transmit-receive link, 582-589 Transverse electric, see TE !node Transverse electromagnetic, see TEM mode Transverse magnetic, see TM mode Traveling wave, 99-100 Trigonometric series, 213 Two-conductor line, see Transmission line Uniform plane wave, see Plane waves Uniqueness, 93, 206, 269 Units, mks, table, 50 Unit vector, 3, 5, 6, 8 Universal circle diagram, 432 Vector: acceleration, 13 complex, 87-88 displacement, 3, 11-12 negative, 3 position, II Poynting, see Poynting vector unit, 3, 5, 6; 8 velocity, 13 Vector algebra, 3, 4, 14-20 Vector calculus, differentiatioll, 61-63 integration, 20-23 Vector component, 5, 7, 8 Vector diHerential operator, see Curl; Gradient Vector electric potential, 566 Vector field, I conservative (irrotational), 41, 42 nonconservative, 76 solenoidal, 76 Vector identities, table, 92 Vector length element, 11 Vector magnetic potential: static, 269 time-varying, 288, 0546 of wire loop, 274 Vector product, 17 Vector sum, 3 Vector surface clement, 9, 10 Velocity: drift, 112 group, 444-446 phase, see Phase velocity Virtual work: electrostatic, 242 magneto static, 328 Voltage, induced, see Induced voltage (emf) Voltage generators, 290-296
INDEX
Voltage standing wave ratio, see Standing wave ratio Volume charge density, 23-25, 27, 29-30 Volume current density, 26, 27, 36-38,113, 156 Volume element, 9, 10 Volume integral, 20,25,33,74, 75 Volume polarization density: electric, 116-122, 124-126 magnetic, 129-134, 136-138 VSWR, see Standing wave ratio Wall loss: attenuation, 451-452 waveguide, 447-452 Wave equation: with e1wt'fyz dependence, 413-444, 419, 429 scalar, 95, 98 time harmonic, 95, 98 transmission line, 481, 486 vector, 94, 95, 96 Waveguide: attenuation below cutoff, 424, 431, 436 boundary conditions, 420, 429 cutofffrequency, 423, 428, 431, 433-436 group velocity, 444-445 as highpass filter, 424 mode relations, 415-417 modulated signal in, 445 phase constant, 424, 431, 436
637
phase velocity, 426, 431, 436 propagation constant, 409, 423,424, 431, 436 rectangular, 418-452 TE mode solutions, 428 TM mode solutions, 418 wall losses, 447 wave equation for, 419, 429 wave impedance, intrinsic, 416, 417, 426, 431, 436 Wave impedance, see Intrinsic wave impedance Wavelength: free space, 101 in lossy region, 157, 160 plane wave, 101, 157 waveguide, 426, 431, 436 Waves: incident and reflected, 344, 347, 351, 353, 361, 411 Ilonsinusoidal, 488r489, 492, 495 plane, see plane waves spherical, 552, 553, 560 standing, see Standing waves transmission line, 461-468, 488-491 traveling, 100 X band waveguide, 427,434,439 Zero potential reference, 190 Zero reflection angle, 376