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Roger wrote:
Roy Lewallen wrote: No interpretation necessary. Plug in a time t and distance x from the input end of the line in degrees, and the result is the value of the forward voltage wave at that time and place. For example, if the frequency is 1 MHz, w = 2.828 X 10^6/sec. So 100 ns from the time you connected the source (or 100 ns from the beginning of any source cycle, since the signal is periodic), the value of the forward voltage wave 20 degrees from the input of the cable is sin(2.828 X 10^6 * 100 X 10^-9 radians + 20 degrees) = sin(36.2 degrees) ~ 0.59 volts. Sorry, I can not follow the numbers. For frequency of 1 MHz, I would expect w = 2*pi* 10^6 = approximately 6.28 * 10^6 radians per second. 100 ns would be about 0.628 radians = 36 degrees. The wave would have moved 36 degrees. I apologize. I made an error and you're correct. A point in 20 degrees from the input end would be found 16 degrees behind the leading edge of the wave. The voltage should be sin(16) = 0.276v. I wonder why we can not get the same results? If you mean for the calculation of the voltage at 100 ns and 20 degrees down the line, it's because of my error. It should be sin(36 + 20 degrees) ~ 0.83. Consider that it can be derived various ways, agrees with all published information and, as I've demonstrated, can be applied to get the correct answer to a transmission line problem. I have never seen the derivation that supports a negative 1, and still can't get the same numbers that you get. The derivations that I have seen say otherwise. It's not clear to me what the problem is. Do you mean that you can't get the same end result for the voltages and currents on the line at various times? The results I got were confirmed with the SPICE model, so I have high confidence they're correct. If you're using some reflection coefficient other than -1 at the source, it's not a surprise that your final results would be different. As I mentioned, time domain analysis of transmission lines is relatively rare. But there's a very good treatment in Johnk, _Engineering Electromagnetic Fields and Waves_. Another good reference is Johnson, _Electric Transmission Lines_. Near the end of Chapter 14, he actually has an example with a zero-impedance source: "Let us assume that the generator is without impedance, so that any wave arriving at the transmitting end of the line is totally reflected with reversal of voltage; the reflection factor at the sending end is thus -1." And he goes through a brief version of essentially the same thing I did to arrive at the steady state. Maybe my concept of voltage being a concentration of positive (or negative) charges is leading me astray. If two waves move in opposite directions, but both of a positive character, at the time of crossing paths, the voltages add. The from two waves always add, vectorially, no matter what the direction, value, or polarity, as long as they're in a linear medium. I don't think you mean vector addition here. As you said previously, the traveling waves add voltage when they pass. That would be scaler addition. I should have said phasor rather than vector addition, a mistake I've made before. You can add the waves point by point at each instant of time, in which you're doing simple scalar addition. Or you can add the phasors, which have magnitude and phase like vectors, of the whole time-varying waveforms at once. It happens at the open ends when the direction reverses. Any time the Z0 of the medium or transmission line changes, a reflection takes place. The magnitude and angle of the reflected wave compared to the original wave is known as the reflection coefficient. An open end is only an extreme case, where the reflection coefficient is +1. It MUST happen identically when the reflected positive wave returns to the source (at time 720 degrees in our one wavelength example) and encounters the next positive wave just leaving the source. No, for two reasons. One: Contrary to Cecil's theories, one wave doesn't cause any change in another. Although they vectorially add, each can be treated completely independently as if the other doesn't exist. If you'll look carefully at my analysis, I did just that. Two: The input in the example isn't an open circuit, but exactly the opposite case: it's a perfect voltage source, which has a zero impedance. I agree that one wave does not change the other. It looked to me like you were using SCALER addition in your analysis, which I agreed with. The "perfect voltage source" controls or better, overwhelms any effect that might be caused by the reflected wave. It completely defeats any argument or description about reflected waves. If you'd like, I can pretty easily modify my analysis to include a finite source resistance of your choice. It will do is modify the source reflection coefficient and allow the system to converge to steady state. Would you like me to? There's no reason the choice of a perfect voltage source should interfere with the understanding of what's happening -- none of the phenomena require it. When you use a "perfect voltage source" with a -1 reflection factor, you are saying that a perfect polarity reversing plane (or discontinuity) exists which reflects and reverses the reflected wave. Yes, it behaves exactly like a short circuit to arriving waves. However, the reflecting plane (or discontinuity) is one way because it does allow passage of the forward wave. This is equivalent to passing the forward wave through a rectifier. Is it fair to our discussion to insist on using a voltage source that passes through a rectifier? The voltage source isn't acting like a rectifier, but a perfect source. It resists as strongly as it can any change to what it's putting out. I'm using superposition to separate what it's putting out from the effects of other waves. We could use a "black box" wave source. The only thing we would know for sure about this source is that when it fed a Zo resistor through a Zo feed line, there would be no swr on the feed line. Would that be an acceptable voltage source for our discussions? I have no problem with a "black box" source for which we know only the voltage (as a function of time, e.g. Vs * sin(wt) where Vs is a constant) and source impedance. The voltage is the open terminal voltage of the black box, and the source impedance is that voltage divided by the short circuit terminal current. One circuit (of an infinite number of possibilities) having these characteristics is the Thevenin equivalent, which is a perfect voltage source like I've been using in the example, in series with the specified impedance. But for the analysis I won't need to know what's in the box, just its voltage and impedance. Analysis with any finite source (or load) resistance is easier than the no-loss case because it allows convergence to steady state. But the source resistor has no impact whatsoever on the transmission line SWR -- it's dictated solely by the line and load impedances. So you'll have to think of some other criterion to base your choice on. If you want "no SWR" (by which I assume you mean SWR = 1) on the line, the only way to get it is to change the load to the complex conjugate of Z0. But then the analysis becomes trivial: the initial forward wave gets to the end, and that's it -- steady state has been reached. Finished. I followed your analysis and thought it very well done. My only concern was the "perfect voltage source". I think that using a source voltage that has effectively passed through a diode destroys the results of a good analysis. Well, the results are correct. But as I said, this doesn't guarantee that the analysis is. I welcome alternative analyses which also produce the correct result. I'm sorry you can't get around the concept of separating the source output from its effect on returning waves. Superposition is a powerful technique without which an analysis like this would be nearly hopeless to do manually. The source isn't "rectifier" at all and, in fact, introducing any nonlinear device such as a rectifier would invalidate most if not all the analysis, and eliminate any hope that it would produce the correct answer. The fact that it does produce the right answer is strong evidence that no nonlinear devices are included. But if adding a source resistance would help, I'll do the same analysis with a source resistance of your choice(*). Shoot, you can do it too. Just change the source reflection coefficient from -1 to (Zs - Z0) / (Zs + Z0) using whatever Zs you choose. The steps are the same, but you'll see that the reflections get smaller each time, allowing the system to converge to steady state. (*) You could, of course, put a pure reactance at the source. But then we'd end up with a source reflection coefficient having a magnitude of 1 but a phase angle of + or -90 degrees, and still get a full amplitude reflection and no convergence. A complex source impedance (having both R and X) would give us a reflection coefficient of less than one, and convergence, but make the math a little messier. So I'd prefer a plain resistance if it's all the same to you. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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