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Owen Duffy wrote:
. . . Even the low frequency model of such a balun reveals this. If the balun is analysed using the techniques common used for a 50Hz or 60Hz transformer, the magnetising current (the current that flows into the transformer with no load attached) is design point. If the core is a low loss core, one could choose a relatively high mangetising current yet still have low H+E losses because the Power Factor of that magnetising current is quite low... or in the case of the RF transformer, one could use a relatively lossy material (high magnetising current Power Factor), but the higher µ of the lossier core means lower magnetising current, and the losses are acceptable. . . . As you say, though, there are always tradeoffs. A higher magnetizing current means a lower winding impedance. In a winding connected across a transmission line, this means adding a relatively low shunt impedance across the line. In a series connected winding, as in a current balun, it means less effective choking of common mode current. Maximizing winding impedance, which also minimizes magnetizing current, is always beneficial. But as we've both pointed out, sometimes we're forced to choose a material that gives us less impedance in order to lower the loss to a level that won't cause a problem at high power levels. The price is a smaller shunt winding impedance or less effective common mode choke, and also typically a narrower operating bandwidth. Roy Lewallen, W7EL |
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