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Roy Lewallen wrote:
John Popelish wrote: You keep going back to how lumped components can mimic actual distributed ones (over a narrow frequency range). I get it. I have no argument with it. But why do you keep bringing it up? We are talking about a case that is at least a border line distributed device case. I am not interested in how it can be modeled approximately by lumped, ideal components. I am interested in understanding what is actually going on inside the distributed device. I'm sorry I haven't explained this better. If we start with the inductor in, say, the example antenna on Cecil's web page, we see that the magnitude of current at the top of the inductor is less than at the bottom of the inductor. Cecil has promoted various theories about why this happens, mostly involving traveling wave currents and "replacement" of "electrical degrees" of the antenna. He and others have given this as proof that the current at the two ends of an inductor are inherently different, regardless of its physical size. I agree up till you add, "regardless of physical size". I have seen him talk only about large air core space wound coils. I came to the discussion late, but this is what I have seen. My counter argument goes something like this: 1. If we substitute a lumped component network for the antenna, there are no longer traveling waves -- along the antenna at least -- and no number of "missing electrical length" for the inductor to replace. Or if there is, it's "replacing" the whole antenna of 90 degrees. Yet the currents in and out of the inductor are the same as they were before. I feel this is adequate proof of the invalidity of the "replacement" and traveling wave arguments, since I can reproduce the same results with the same inductor without either an antenna or traveling waves. This is shown in the modified EZNEC file I posted. But what is the need for such an argument? Just to prove that lumped component networks can model real, distributed things? I get that. As I see Cecil's point (and I hate to say this with him absent), it is that real, large coils with all their poor turns coupling and stray capacitance both turn to turn and more important, to ground, take a lot of those lumped components to model, accurately, but only their own self, described by distributed network concepts to model, accurately. 2. The argument that currents are inherently different at the ends of an inductor is shown to be false by removing the ground in the model I posted and replacing it with a wire. Doing so makes the currents nearly equal. But the ground is there, in the application under discussion. All components act differently if you connect them to something else. This coil is connected to ground by its capacitance. 3. Arguments have then been raised about the significance of the wire and inductor length, and various theories traveling waves and standing waves within the length of the coil. Let's start with the inductor and no ground, with currents nearly equal at both ends. Now shrink the coil physically by shortening it, changing its diameter, introducing a permeable core, or whatever you want, until you get an inductance that has the same value but is infinitesimal in physical size. For the whole transition from the original to the lumped coil, you won't see any significant(*) change in terminal characteristics, in its behavior in the circuit, or the behavior of the whole circuit. Sounds reasonable to me. But it is not the application in question. So I conclude there's no significant electrical difference in any respect between the physical inductor we started with and the infinitesimally small lumped inductor we end up with. And from that I conclude that any explanation for how the original inductor worked must also apply to the lumped one. But only if you reduce the capacitance to ground to a low enough value. That's why I keep bringing up the lumped equivalents. We can easily analyze the lumped circuit with elementary techniques; the same techniques are completely adequate to fully analyze the circuit with real inductor and capacitance to ground. (*) I'm qualifying with "significant" because the real inductor doesn't act *exactly* like a lumped one. For example, the currents at the ends are slightly different due to several effects, and the current at a point along the coil is greater than at either end due to imperfect coupling among turns. But the agreement is close -- very much closer than the alternative theories predict (to the extent that they predict any quantitative result). I have no argument with any of that. (snip) Or start with a less simplified theory that covers all cases, so you don't have to decide when to switch tools. That's fine, too. Will Cecil's theory explain the behavior of a lumped constant circuit? Or everywhere along the transition between the physical inductor and lumped circuit I described above? Distributed network theory includes the possibility of lumped components, it is just not limited to them. (snip) (if you add to that model, the appropriate lumped capacitors at the appropriate places) No. The inductor itself can be adequately modeled as a lumped inductor without any capacitors at all. Not if it is located in close proximity to ground, as this coil in question is located. It does not act like any kind of pure inductance, but as a network that contains some inductance and also some other effects. When you add ground to the model, you have to add the equivalent shunt C to the lumped model. The C isn't a property of the inductor itself; it's the capacitance between the inductor and ground. That is a very strange statement to my mind. Stray capacitance is an unavoidable effect that any real inductor in any real application will have as a result of it having non zero size. A thing made of wire that takes up space has inductive character and capacitive character, and transmission line character, and loss, all rolled into one. You can set the situation up that it finds itself in, is that some of those properties not very significant, but that are all part of the effect of a real, physical inductor. I don't understand why you keep pretending that these non ideal effects are the fault of something else. They are a result of the device taking up space and being made of metal. This difference is the source of confusion and misunderstanding about the current -- the current we see at the top of the inductor is the current exiting the inductor minus the current going via the shunt C to ground. It's not due to a property of the inductor itself. We're seeing the *network* current, not the inductor current. I agree. But a large, air core, spaced turn coil is a network, not a pure inductance. This is just reality. Removing the ground lets us see the inductor current by itself. Or, emphasizes that particular aspect of its nature. Another reason to avoid that model, unless you are just looking for the least amount of math to get an approximation. But computation has gotten very cheap. The problem is that it obscures what's happening -- we can no longer easily tell which effects are due to the radiation, which are due to the capacitance, and which are inherent properties of inductance unless we separately analyze separate simplified circuits (as I did with EZNEC). And that's really what the whole disagreement has been about. Effects due to shunt capacitance have been claimed to be inherent properties of all inductors, and elaborately crafted theories developed to attempt to explain it. If all you want is numbers, they're plenty easy to get without the programmer needing to have the slightest understanding of what's happening. And he will have learned nothing he can apply to other situations. Distributed analysis is just fine, but it should predict the same coil currents with the antenna replaced by lumped components. And it should predict nearly equal currents in the inductor ends when ground is removed. And it should predict the same results when the coil and the shunt C to ground are replaced by lumped components. Because that's what really happens. My simplified lumped component analysis does all this. A rigorous solution of the fundamental equations for distributed networks does this also -- EZNEC does its calculations with just such equations and reaches the correct conclusions. But I don't believe that Cecil's theories and methods provide the correct results in all these cases. (snip) Sorry, here is where I have to withdraw. I can't say what Cecil is thinking. |
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