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#1
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When people talk about tuning caps for transmitting loop antennas, they
always talk about air or vacuum capacitors. I was wondering why dielectrics are never used. Someone in a Yahoo group mentioned that the variation of dielectric constant (εr) with temperature will cause the tuning to drift out of the bandwidth when keyed. I guess this also requires a poor dissipation factor (DF), or at least a poor DF relative to the application. I took a look at some potential materials and indeed, many have a rather steep slope of εr with temperature varying many percent over a 50°C range. But they make fixed capacitors that have low temperature coefficients. I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with εr change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. -- Rick |
#2
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On Fri, 30 Oct 2015 03:29:26 -0400, rickman wrote:
When people talk about tuning caps for transmitting loop antennas, they always talk about air or vacuum capacitors. I was wondering why dielectrics are never used. Someone in a Yahoo group mentioned that the variation of dielectric constant (?r) with temperature will cause the tuning to drift out of the bandwidth when keyed. I guess this also requires a poor dissipation factor (DF), or at least a poor DF relative to the application. I took a look at some potential materials and indeed, many have a rather steep slope of ?r with temperature varying many percent over a 50°C range. But they make fixed capacitors that have low temperature coefficients. I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with ?r change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Me thinks you are overlooking the very high voltages involved. |
#3
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On 10/30/2015 2:29 AM, rickman wrote:
When people talk about tuning caps for transmitting loop antennas, they always talk about air or vacuum capacitors. I was wondering why dielectrics are never used. Someone in a Yahoo group mentioned that the variation of dielectric constant (εr) with temperature will cause the tuning to drift out of the bandwidth when keyed. I guess this also requires a poor dissipation factor (DF), or at least a poor DF relative to the application. I took a look at some potential materials and indeed, many have a rather steep slope of εr with temperature varying many percent over a 50°C range. But they make fixed capacitors that have low temperature coefficients. I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with εr change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Here is a PDF you might find useful: http://tinyurl.com/oge6436 |
#4
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On 10/30/2015 9:07 AM, Jeff wrote:
I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with ?r change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Me thinks you are overlooking the very high voltages involved. I would have thought that glass was a good candidate and in plentiful supply in various thicknesses, and would withstand very high voltages. The Er is in the range 5 to 10 depending on the actual type. It is the high voltages that makes the dielectric useful. The plates in these capacitors have to be widely separated and the use of dielectric allows this spacing to be reduced, that's one dimension. The Er increases the capacitance which allows the capacitor to be reduced in the other two dimensions. The problem is the change in Er with temperature which will cause the resonance of the antenna to change, potentially outside the bandwidth if the Q is high enough. I'm not sure how low the loss tangent would need to be to minimize self heating to a point that higher Er changes with temperature won't matter. Even if self heating is not a problem, larger Er changes will temperature would mean you could not retune the capacitor to the same value with environmental temperature changes and so the tuning would not be repeatable. Possibly this could be compensated for by measuring the temperature and calibrating for temperature. -- Rick |
#5
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On 10/30/2015 10:46 AM, rickman wrote:
On 10/30/2015 9:07 AM, Jeff wrote: I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with ?r change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Me thinks you are overlooking the very high voltages involved. I would have thought that glass was a good candidate and in plentiful supply in various thicknesses, and would withstand very high voltages. The Er is in the range 5 to 10 depending on the actual type. It is the high voltages that makes the dielectric useful. No, it is the increase in capacitance that makes the dielectric useful. The plates in these capacitors have to be widely separated and the use of dielectric allows this spacing to be reduced, that's one dimension. The Er increases the capacitance which allows the capacitor to be reduced in the other two dimensions. Yes. The problem is the change in Er with temperature which will cause the resonance of the antenna to change, potentially outside the bandwidth if the Q is high enough. Are you planning to operate this antenna over a wide range of temperatures? I'm not sure how low the loss tangent would need to be to minimize self heating to a point that higher Er changes with temperature won't matter. Even if self heating is not a problem, larger Er changes will temperature would mean you could not retune the capacitor to the same value with environmental temperature changes and so the tuning would not be repeatable. Possibly this could be compensated for by measuring the temperature and calibrating for temperature. Sure. Have you mathematically analyzed any of your proposed scenarios? That might help. |
#6
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On 10/30/2015 12:01 PM, John S wrote:
On 10/30/2015 10:46 AM, rickman wrote: On 10/30/2015 9:07 AM, Jeff wrote: I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with ?r change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Me thinks you are overlooking the very high voltages involved. I would have thought that glass was a good candidate and in plentiful supply in various thicknesses, and would withstand very high voltages. The Er is in the range 5 to 10 depending on the actual type. It is the high voltages that makes the dielectric useful. No, it is the increase in capacitance that makes the dielectric useful. That sounds rather argumentative. I explain this in the next paragraph which you seem to be agreeing with. So which is it? The plates in these capacitors have to be widely separated and the use of dielectric allows this spacing to be reduced, that's one dimension. The Er increases the capacitance which allows the capacitor to be reduced in the other two dimensions. Yes. The problem is the change in Er with temperature which will cause the resonance of the antenna to change, potentially outside the bandwidth if the Q is high enough. Are you planning to operate this antenna over a wide range of temperatures? I'm not sure how low the loss tangent would need to be to minimize self heating to a point that higher Er changes with temperature won't matter. Even if self heating is not a problem, larger Er changes will temperature would mean you could not retune the capacitor to the same value with environmental temperature changes and so the tuning would not be repeatable. Possibly this could be compensated for by measuring the temperature and calibrating for temperature. Sure. Have you mathematically analyzed any of your proposed scenarios? That might help. -- Rick |
#7
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On 10/30/2015 12:18 PM, Jeff wrote:
I would have thought that glass was a good candidate and in plentiful supply in various thicknesses, and would withstand very high voltages. The Er is in the range 5 to 10 depending on the actual type. It is the high voltages that makes the dielectric useful. The plates in these capacitors have to be widely separated and the use of dielectric allows this spacing to be reduced, that's one dimension. The Er increases the capacitance which allows the capacitor to be reduced in the other two dimensions. The problem is the change in Er with temperature which will cause the resonance of the antenna to change, potentially outside the bandwidth if the Q is high enough. I'm not sure how low the loss tangent would need to be to minimize self heating to a point that higher Er changes with temperature won't matter. Even if self heating is not a problem, larger Er changes will temperature would mean you could not retune the capacitor to the same value with environmental temperature changes and so the tuning would not be repeatable. Possibly this could be compensated for by measuring the temperature and calibrating for temperature. Glass is used as a dielectric in high quality low loss RF capacitors so I suspect that it would be usable in a home-made one. Doesn't necessarily follow. The loss tangent of glass is low to very low so it won't heat up much in use. But the important part is the change in Er with temperature as I explain. In fixed value caps changes in capacitance of a few percent are usually not a problem. But in this application tuning of the circuit may be very critical and require a much higher degree of stability. I am also looking at alumina ceramics. The properties vary with composition, but there are composites with very high stability numbers. They usually are in a materials data sheet rather than in a product offered for sale. Seems a lot of ceramics are custom items. -- Rick |
#8
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On 10/30/2015 12:29 AM, rickman wrote:
When people talk about tuning caps for transmitting loop antennas, they always talk about air or vacuum capacitors. I was wondering why dielectrics are never used. Someone in a Yahoo group mentioned that the variation of dielectric constant (εr) with temperature will cause the tuning to drift out of the bandwidth when keyed. I guess this also requires a poor dissipation factor (DF), or at least a poor DF relative to the application. I took a look at some potential materials and indeed, many have a rather steep slope of εr with temperature varying many percent over a 50°C range. But they make fixed capacitors that have low temperature coefficients. I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with εr change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Air and vacuum are self-healing in case of arcing. Paul, KD7HB |
#9
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On 10/30/2015 2:20 PM, Paul Drahn wrote:
On 10/30/2015 12:29 AM, rickman wrote: When people talk about tuning caps for transmitting loop antennas, they always talk about air or vacuum capacitors. I was wondering why dielectrics are never used. Someone in a Yahoo group mentioned that the variation of dielectric constant (εr) with temperature will cause the tuning to drift out of the bandwidth when keyed. I guess this also requires a poor dissipation factor (DF), or at least a poor DF relative to the application. I took a look at some potential materials and indeed, many have a rather steep slope of εr with temperature varying many percent over a 50°C range. But they make fixed capacitors that have low temperature coefficients. I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with εr change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Air and vacuum are self-healing in case of arcing. Yes, the air or vacuum survives mostly intact, but not so much the other components. What's your point? How about preventing arcing by having a higher dielectric withstand voltage? -- Rick |
#10
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rickman wrote:
On 10/30/2015 12:01 PM, John S wrote: On 10/30/2015 10:46 AM, rickman wrote: On 10/30/2015 9:07 AM, Jeff wrote: I looked up some materials for fixed capacitors and found dielectrics with ?r change with temperature as low as 10 ppm/°C. These materials also have a loss tangent less than 0.001, some much less. I'm wondering if they would be practical to use for the dielectric in a variable capacitor. Me thinks you are overlooking the very high voltages involved. I would have thought that glass was a good candidate and in plentiful supply in various thicknesses, and would withstand very high voltages. The Er is in the range 5 to 10 depending on the actual type. It is the high voltages that makes the dielectric useful. No, it is the increase in capacitance that makes the dielectric useful. That sounds rather argumentative. I explain this in the next paragraph which you seem to be agreeing with. So which is it? It's clearly both, as an insulator with a higher breakdown voltage than air would enable the plates to be closer and thus smaller for a given capacitance, as well as more fitting into a given length, even if the dielectric constant was the same as air. The plates in these capacitors have to be widely separated and the use of dielectric allows this spacing to be reduced, that's one dimension. The Er increases the capacitance which allows the capacitor to be reduced in the other two dimensions. Yes. The problem is the change in Er with temperature which will cause the resonance of the antenna to change, potentially outside the bandwidth if the Q is high enough. Are you planning to operate this antenna over a wide range of temperatures? I'm not sure how low the loss tangent would need to be to minimize self heating to a point that higher Er changes with temperature won't matter. Even if self heating is not a problem, larger Er changes will temperature would mean you could not retune the capacitor to the same value with environmental temperature changes and so the tuning would not be repeatable. Possibly this could be compensated for by measuring the temperature and calibrating for temperature. Sure. Have you mathematically analyzed any of your proposed scenarios? That might help. -- Roger Hayter |
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