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#1
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My first thought was a short antenna for 160M that would fit into a 30'
cube as 30' is about as high as I can go around here for various reasons. Everything that follows was done at 1.9 MHz, which is a wavlength of 518 feet with a wire size of #12. The first thing was to see what a 30' vertical with 4 15' radials spaced 1' over real ground presents. In the below, R0 means wire resistance zero, Rc means wire resistance copper, G0 gain with zero resistance, Gc gain with copper, and the elevation angle of maximum gain turned out to be 19 degrees for all cases. 30' vertical (.058 wavelengths) Rc R0 X G0 Gc 2.1 1.8 -1961 3.11 3.11 Note the slight difference in the resistive part. There was no significant change in anything else. Now cut the size by a half. 15' vertical (.029 wavelengths) Rc R0 X G0 Gc ..6 .4 -3939 3.13 1.88 OK, now we see a drop in gain as the wire resistance starts to become a significant fraction of the radiation resistance, so lets change to a 15' cube which contains the antenna. I would think a 0.029 wavelength antenna qualifies as short. Now stick in a loading coil and see what that does at various heights, denoted by h and in terms of percent of total height. L is the inductance in microhenrys required to get X below |1| Ohm. This is all with a wire resistance of zero h L R0 X G0 10 268 .4 -.5 3.0 20 200 .6 .7 3.0 30 326 .7 .1 3.0 40 383 .8 1 3.1 50 444 1 .4 3.1 60 546 1 -.6 3.1 70 706 1 -.2 3.1 Note that as the inductor height goes up, the required inductance goes up as does the gain ever so slightly. The next step was to optimize the height and inductance against gain, raising the height and adjusting the inductance until the gain stopped increasing by less than 0.01 dB. This resulted in a optimum height of 66.4% and an inductance of 626 uH and a gain of 3,12 dB. Now it is time to add a top hat of 4 15' wires and see what they do and also look at the results with copper. The first set of results are for an h=50%, L=177 uH, and the second for h=66.4% and L=179 uH. Note that with a top hat the required inductance drops significantly and is much less effected by the placement height. Rc R0 X G0 Gc 2.0 1.7 .5 3.01 2.16 1.9 2.3 .5 3.00 2.15 Some observations: Total gain varies only slightly until resistive losses are concidered. An elevated loading coil increases the impedance from about .5 Ohm to about 1 Ohm. This is a good thing. An elevated loading coil increases the inductance needed by a factor slightly over 2. This is a bad thing. A real inductor will have a real resistance and ohmic losses which will add to the other ohmic losses in the antenna. Therefore even greater care is required to ensure the Q of the elevated loading coil is as high as possible. Adding a top hat increases the the impedance from about 1 Ohm to about 2 Ohms. This is a good thing. Adding a top hat decreases the inductance needed by a factor slightly over 3. This is a good thing. The currents in the top hat are very small compared to the current in the vertical radiator, so they can for all practical purposes be ignored as a source of loss. It is not shown, but by changing the material from #12 copper wire to 1.5" aluminum tubing all the numbers are very close to the lossless numbers. Some comments on connections: Some years ago I was involved with this thing my company was attempting to build which had a 100 A power supply and all sorts of "strange" things were occuring. Long story short, after we obtained a precision milliohmeter and looked at all the connections, both internal and external to the power supply, did we realize that at 100A, a few milliohms here and a few there were causing all the problems. For lowest resistance, crimped on connectors have to be soldered in addition to the crimp. Screw connections have to a large an area as possible and TIGHT. We had to develop torque specs to ensure that happened in production. A high Q inductor is wasted if the end connections are 100 milliohs. We are still faced with the issue of matching a 50 Ohm transmitter to a 2 Ohm antenna, but for now I am more interested in seeing if there is some way to further increase the antenna impedance. -- Jim Pennino |
#2
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#3
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On Thursday, November 6, 2014 1:46:04 PM UTC-6,
We are still faced with the issue of matching a 50 Ohm transmitter to a 2 Ohm antenna, but for now I am more interested in seeing if there is some way to further increase the antenna impedance. Maybe a caged monopole? I've never tried anything like this myself, but you might find this kind of interesting. http://www.kintronic.com/resources/t...alPapers/2.pdf |
#5
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John S wrote in :
Maybe a caged monopole? I've never tried anything like this myself, but you might find this kind of interesting. http://www.kintronic.com/resources/t...alPapers/2.pdf Interesting indeed! Thanks for the link. I saved that too. It goes over my head for now, but it's a well-presented and interesting idea, one I never saw before. |
#6
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#7
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Wimpie wrote:
snip From 50 Ohms to 2 Ohms is a small step, so matching can be done with relative low loss. When using an L-match, the loaded Q is 4.9. A series inductance of about 0.82 uH with a parallel capacitor of 8.2 nF will do the matching. Other option is to reduce the value of the top hat series inductance a bit to create a capacitive series component (of about 8.5 nF). Adding a parallel inductor will do the matching. I will just accept that you are correct as I don't want to get into matching at the moment and off the top of my head it sounds reasonable. With 4, 15' radials just 2' above ground, at lambda = 518', I would expect more ground loss, hence higher real part of input impedance. Are you sure your NEC version handles this situation well? I do believe so as I can see significant differences between ideal, good, average, and poor ground. All this was done with average ground BTW. -- Jim Pennino |
#8
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El 08-11-14 19:53, Wimpie escribió:
El 06-11-14 20:37, escribió: My first thought was a short antenna for 160M that would fit into a 30' cube as 30' is about as high as I can go around here for various reasons. Everything that follows was done at 1.9 MHz, which is a wavlength of 518 feet with a wire size of #12. The first thing was to see what a 30' vertical with 4 15' radials spaced 1' over real ground presents. In the below, R0 means wire resistance zero, Rc means wire resistance copper, G0 gain with zero resistance, Gc gain with copper, and the elevation angle of maximum gain turned out to be 19 degrees for all cases. 30' vertical (.058 wavelengths) Rc R0 X G0 Gc 2.1 1.8 -1961 3.11 3.11 Note the slight difference in the resistive part. There was no significant change in anything else. Now cut the size by a half. 15' vertical (.029 wavelengths) Rc R0 X G0 Gc .6 .4 -3939 3.13 1.88 OK, now we see a drop in gain as the wire resistance starts to become a significant fraction of the radiation resistance, so lets change to a 15' cube which contains the antenna. I would think a 0.029 wavelength antenna qualifies as short. Now stick in a loading coil and see what that does at various heights, denoted by h and in terms of percent of total height. L is the inductance in microhenrys required to get X below |1| Ohm. This is all with a wire resistance of zero h L R0 X G0 10 268 .4 -.5 3.0 20 200 .6 .7 3.0 30 326 .7 .1 3.0 40 383 .8 1 3.1 50 444 1 .4 3.1 60 546 1 -.6 3.1 70 706 1 -.2 3.1 Note that as the inductor height goes up, the required inductance goes up as does the gain ever so slightly. The next step was to optimize the height and inductance against gain, raising the height and adjusting the inductance until the gain stopped increasing by less than 0.01 dB. This resulted in a optimum height of 66.4% and an inductance of 626 uH and a gain of 3,12 dB. Now it is time to add a top hat of 4 15' wires and see what they do and also look at the results with copper. The first set of results are for an h=50%, L=177 uH, and the second for h=66.4% and L=179 uH. Note that with a top hat the required inductance drops significantly and is much less effected by the placement height. Rc R0 X G0 Gc 2.0 1.7 .5 3.01 2.16 1.9 2.3 .5 3.00 2.15 Some observations: Total gain varies only slightly until resistive losses are concidered. An elevated loading coil increases the impedance from about .5 Ohm to about 1 Ohm. This is a good thing. An elevated loading coil increases the inductance needed by a factor slightly over 2. This is a bad thing. A real inductor will have a real resistance and ohmic losses which will add to the other ohmic losses in the antenna. Therefore even greater care is required to ensure the Q of the elevated loading coil is as high as possible. Adding a top hat increases the the impedance from about 1 Ohm to about 2 Ohms. This is a good thing. Adding a top hat decreases the inductance needed by a factor slightly over 3. This is a good thing. The currents in the top hat are very small compared to the current in the vertical radiator, so they can for all practical purposes be ignored as a source of loss. It is not shown, but by changing the material from #12 copper wire to 1.5" aluminum tubing all the numbers are very close to the lossless numbers. Some comments on connections: Some years ago I was involved with this thing my company was attempting to build which had a 100 A power supply and all sorts of "strange" things were occuring. Long story short, after we obtained a precision milliohmeter and looked at all the connections, both internal and external to the power supply, did we realize that at 100A, a few milliohms here and a few there were causing all the problems. For lowest resistance, crimped on connectors have to be soldered in addition to the crimp. Screw connections have to a large an area as possible and TIGHT. We had to develop torque specs to ensure that happened in production. A high Q inductor is wasted if the end connections are 100 milliohs. We are still faced with the issue of matching a 50 Ohm transmitter to a 2 Ohm antenna, but for now I am more interested in seeing if there is some way to further increase the antenna impedance. From 50 Ohms to 2 Ohms is a small step, so matching can be done with relative low loss. When using an L-match, the loaded Q is 4.9. A series inductance of about 0.82 uH with a parallel capacitor of 8.2 nF will do the matching. Other option is to reduce the value of the top hat series inductance a bit to create a capacitive series component (of about 8.5 nF). Adding a parallel inductor will do the matching. With 4, 15' radials just 2' above ground, at lambda = 518', I would expect more ground loss, hence higher real part of input impedance. Are you sure your NEC version handles this situation well? I ran some simulation also (old version IE3D, now part of Mentor Graphics). Of course this software has limitations also (for example surface wave effects), but it accepts conductors on and inside lossy dielectric layers. When I saw your gain figure for the capacitive head case, some red flags appeared in my mind. For the free space case, loss of the wires is acceptable (that is 4 radials, 1 radiator and 4 capacitive head radials, all about 4.5m (15') ) I get an impedance around 0.6-j1300 Ohms for: 4 radials, 1 vertical wire, 4 capacitive head wires, all 4.5 m long (about 15'). Some numbers: Using 100W input and assuming very high Q for the series coil (that is 2000), feed current is about 13Arms. Voltage between top and bottom radials will be about 24 kVp (24000 Vp, nice corona display). Because of same size of radials and head, this 24kVp distributes as 12kVp at the top, and 12 kVp at the bottom radials. When approaching a PEC ground, radiation resistance rises with factor 2 (as expected). With a lossy dielectric layer (good ground), things are different. Directivity is 4.4 dBi @ 19 degr elevation, but real part of input impedance rises significantly, radiation efficiency and gain reduces significantly. Based on comparison between measurements and simulations for similar structures (but other frequencies), your radiation efficiency will be in the 1 percent range. I would not classify that as a good radiator. -- Wim PA3DJS Please remove abc first in case of PM |
#9
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Wimpie wrote:
snip I ran some simulation also (old version IE3D, now part of Mentor Graphics). Of course this software has limitations also (for example surface wave effects), but it accepts conductors on and inside lossy dielectric layers. When I saw your gain figure for the capacitive head case, some red flags appeared in my mind. For the free space case, loss of the wires is acceptable (that is 4 radials, 1 radiator and 4 capacitive head radials, all about 4.5m (15') ) I get an impedance around 0.6-j1300 Ohms for: 4 radials, 1 vertical wire, 4 capacitive head wires, all 4.5 m long (about 15'). Some numbers: Using 100W input and assuming very high Q for the series coil (that is 2000), feed current is about 13Arms. Voltage between top and bottom radials will be about 24 kVp (24000 Vp, nice corona display). Because of same size of radials and head, this 24kVp distributes as 12kVp at the top, and 12 kVp at the bottom radials. Yes, but this was an exercise on the effect of loading, load placement, and the effects of a top hat and nothing more than that. I also neglected to, but should have stated, that the resistance of the coils is zero. When approaching a PEC ground, radiation resistance rises with factor 2 (as expected). With a lossy dielectric layer (good ground), things are different. Directivity is 4.4 dBi @ 19 degr elevation, but real part of input impedance rises significantly, radiation efficiency and gain reduces significantly. Ehh? For a fixed ohmic loss, as the real part of the input impedance rises, the radiation efficiency should increase as radiation efficiency is directly proportional to the two. The quality of the ground does have a large effect on the numbers and the ground I used was "average". Changing the ground changes the numbers but not the general effects of loading coil placement and the effects of top hats, which was the only point. Based on comparison between measurements and simulations for similar structures (but other frequencies), your radiation efficiency will be in the 1 percent range. I would not classify that as a good radiator. For such small structures, I would not expect to get numerical accuracy any better than a single digit and correct order of magnitude. And again, this was an exercise in getting the real part of the impedance greater than the ohmic losses and showing the effects of load placement and top hats, not an exercise in practial antenna design. -- Jim Pennino |
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