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Roger wrote:
. . . This does raise the question of the description of the traveling wave used in an earlier posting. The example was the open ended 1/2 wavelength transmission line, Zo = 50 ohms, with 1v p-p applied at the source end. The term wt is the phase reference. At the center of the line, (using the source end as a reference), you gave vr(t) =-.05*sin(wt-90 deg.) and ir(t) = 0.01*sin(wt-90 deg.) By using the time (wt-90), I think you mean that the peak occurs 90 degrees behind the leading edge. The leading edge and peak of what? The function sin(wt -90) looks exactly like the function sin(wt) except that it's delayed 90 degrees in phase. So the forward voltage wave is delayed by 90 degrees relative to the source voltage. This is due to the propagation time down 90 electrical degrees of transmission line. This posting was certainly correct if we consider only the first reflected wave. However, I think we should consider that TWO reflected waves may exist on the line under final stable conditions. This might happen because the leading edge of the reflected wave will not reach the source until the entire second half of the initial exciting wave has been delivered. Thus we have a full wave delivered to the 1/2 wavelength line before the source ever "knows" that the transmission line is not infinitely long. We need to consider the entire wave period from (wt-0) to (wt-360. If these things occur, then at the center of the line, final stable vr(t) and ir(t) are composed of two parts, vr(wt-90) and vr(wt-270) and corresponding ir(wt-90) and ir(wt-270). We should be describing vr(t) as vrt(t) where vrt is the summed voltage of the two reflected waves. Sorry, it's much worse than this. Unless you have a perfect termination at the source or the load, there will be an *infinite number*, not just one or two, sets of forward and reflected waves beginning from the time the source is first turned on. You can try to keep track of them separately if you want, but you'll have an infinite number to deal with. After the first reflected wave reaches the source, its reflection becomes a new forward wave and it adds to the already present forward and reflected waves. The general approach to dealing with the infinity of following waves is to note that exactly the same fraction of the new forward wave will be reflected as of the first forward wave. So the second set of forward and reflected waves have exactly the same relationship as the first set. This is true of each set in turn. Superposition holds, so we can sum the forward and reverse waves into any number of groups we want and solve problems separately for each group. Commonly, all the forward waves are added together into a total forward wave, and the reverse waves into a total reverse wave. These total waves have exactly the same relationship to each other that the first forward and reflected waves did -- the only result of all the reflections which followed the first is that the magnitude and phase of the total forward and total reverse waves are different from the first pair. But they've been changed by exactly the same factor. It's not terribly difficult to do a fundamental analysis of what happens at each reflection, then sum the infinite series to get the total forward and total reverse waves. When you do, you'll get the values used in transmission line equations. I've gone through this exercise a number of times, and I recommend it to anyone wanting a deeper understanding of wave phenomena. Again, the results using this analysis method are identical to a direct steady state solution assuming that all reflections have already occurred. The infinite number of waves could, of course, be combined into two or more sets instead of just one, with analysis done on each. If done correctly, you should get exactly the same result but with considerably more work. I do want to add one caution, however. The analysis of a line from startup and including all reflections doesn't work well in some theoretical but physically unrealizable cases. One such case happens to be the one recently under discussion, where a line has a zero loss termination at both ends (in that case, a perfect voltage source at one end and an open circuit at the other. In those situations, infinite currents or voltages occur during runup, and the re-reflections continue to occur forever, so convergence is never reached. Other approaches are more productive to solving that class of theoretical circuits. . . . which is the total power (rate of energy delivery) contained in the standing wave at the points 45 degrees each side of center. If we want to find the total energy contained in the standing wave, we would integrate over the entire time period of 180 degrees. So think I. I haven't gone through your analysis, because it doesn't look like you're including the infinity of forward and reverse waves into your two. . . . Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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