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Having learned something about how we generate signals with bipolar and field effect transistors, wenow turn our attention to the problem of getting those signals from one place to the next. Ever since Samuel Morse (and thefounder of my alma mater , Ezra Cornell) demonstrated the first working telegraph, engineers andscientists have been working on the problem of describing and predicting how electrical signals behave as they travel downspecific structures called transmission lines .
Any electrical structure which carries a signal from one point to another can be considered a transmissionline. Be it a long-haul coaxial cable used in the Internet, a twisted pair in a building as part of a local-area network, acable connecting a PC to a printer, a bus layout on a motherboard, or a metallization layer on a integrated circuit,the fundamental behavior of all of these structures are described by the same basic equations. As computer switchingspeeds run into the 100s of MHz, into the GHz range, considerations of transmission line behavior are ever morecritical, and become a more dominant force in the performance limitations of any system.
For our initial purposes, we will introduce a
"generic" transmission line
, which will
incorporate most (but not all) features of real transmissionlines. We will then make some rather broad simplifications,
which, while rendering our results less applicable to real-lifesituations, nevertheless
greatly simplify
the solutions, and lead us to insights that we can indeed applyto a broad range of situations.
"generic" transmission line
In order to be able to describe how and behave on this line, we have to make some kind of model of the electrical characteristics of the line itself. We can not just make up any model we want however;we have to base the model on physical realities.
Let's start out by just considering one of the conductors and the physical effects of current flowing though thatconductor. We know from freshman physics that a current flowing in a wire gives rise to a magnetic field, ( ). Multiply by and you get , the magnetic flux density, and then integrate over a plane parallel to the wires and you get , the magnetic flux "linking" the circuit. This is shown in for at least part of the surface. The definition of , the inductance of a circuit element, is just
We are now ready to build our model. What we want
to do is to come up with some arrangement of inductors andcapacitors which will represent electrically, the properties of
the distributed capacitance and inductance we discussedabove. As a length of line gets longer, its capacitance
increases, so we had better put the distributed capacitances inparallel with one another, since that is the way capacitors add
up. Also, as the line gets longer, its total inductanceincreases, so we had better put the distributed inductances in
series with one another, for that is the way inductances addup.
is a representation of the distributed
inductance and capacitance of the generic transmission line.
Distributed parameter model
We
could make a more
realistic model and realize that all real wires have seriesresistance associated with them and that whatever we use to keep
the two conductors separated will have some leakage conductanceassociated it. To account for this we would introduce a series
resistance
(ohms/unit length) and a series conductance
(ohms/unit length). One section of our line model then
looks like
.
Complete distributed model
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