Cable Impedance: What Is The Cable Impedance and When It Is Needed?
Cable Impedance: What Is The Cable Impedance and When It Is Needed?
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Cable impedance
This document tries to clear out some details of transmission lines and cable inductance. This document is only
a brief introduction to those topics. If you expect to work much with transmission lines, coaxial or otherwise,
then it will be worth your while to get a book on that subject. The ideal book depends on your background in
phsics or electrical engineering, and in mathematics.
The key tenet of all transmission line theory is that the source impedance must be equal to the load
impedance in order to achieve maximum power transfer and minimum signal reflection at the destination. In
real world case this generally means that the source impedance is the same as cable impedance and the value
of the receiver in another end of the cable has also the same impedance.
Ohm's Law states that if a voltage (E) is applied to a pair of terminals and a current (I) is measured in this
circuit, the following equation can be used to determine the magnitude of the impedance (Z). The following
formula will hold truth:
Z = E / I
This relationship holds true whether talking about direct current (DC) or alternating current (AC).
Characteristic Impedance and is usually designated Zo or "Zed nought". When the cable is carrying RF power,
without standing waves, Zo also equals the ratio of the voltage across the line to the current in flowing in the
line conductors. So the characteristic impedance is defined with the formula:
Zo = E / I
The voltages and currents depend on the inductive reactance and capacitive reactance in the cable. So the
characteristic impedance formula can be written in the following format:
Zo = sqrt ( (R + 2 * pi * f * L ) / (G + j * 2 * pi * f * c) )
Where:
z R = The series resistance of the conductor in ohms per unit length (DC resistance)
z G = The shunt conductance in mhos per unit length
z j = A symbol indicating that the term has a phase angle of +90 degres (imaginary number)
z pi = 3.1416
z L = Cable inductance per unit lenght
z C = Cable capacitance per unit lenght
z sqrt = square root function
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For materials commonly used for cable insulation, G is small enough that it can be neglected when compared
with 2(3.1416) f C. At low frequencies, 2(3.1416) f L is so small compared with R that it can be neglected.
Therefore, at low frequencies, the following equation can be used:
Zo = sqrt ( R / (j * 2 * pi * f * L))
If the capacitance does not vary with frequency, the Zo varies inversely with the square root of the frequency
and has a phase angle which is -45o near DC and decreases to 0o as frequency increases. Polyvinyl chloride
and rubber decrease somewhat in capacitance as frequency increases, while polyethylene, polypropylene, and
Teflon* do not vary significantly.
When f becomes large enough, the two terms containing f become so large that R and G may be neglected
and the resultant equation is:
Zo = sqrt ( (j * 2 * pi * f * L) / (j * 2 * pi * f * C) )
Zo = sqrt ( L / C )
If you feed a sinusoidal electrical AC signal of reasonable frequency into one end of the cable, then the signal
travels as an electrical wave down the cable. If the cable length is an extremely large number of wave-lengths
at the frequency of that AC signal, and you measure the ratio of AC Voltage to AC current in that traveling
wave, then that ratio is called the characteristic impedance of the cable.
In practical cables the characteristic impedance is determined by cable geometry and dielectric. The cable
length has no effect of it's characteristic impedance.
The following formula can be used for calculating the characteristic impedance of the coaxial cable: (formula
taken from Reference Data for Radio Engineers book published by Howard W. Sams & Co. 1975, page 24-21)
Where:
z log = logarithm of 10
z d = diameter of center conductor
z D = inner diameter of cable shield
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In a nut shell the characteristic impedance of a coax cable is the square root of (the per unit length inductance
divide by the per unit length capacitance). For coaxial cables the characteristic impedance will be typically
between 20 and 150 ohms. The length of the cable makes no difference whatsoever in regard to the
characteristic impedance.
If the frequency is much too high for the coaxial cable, then the wave can propagate in undesired modes (i.e.,
have undesired patterns of electric and magnetic fields), and then the cable does not function properly for
various reasons.
The following formula can be used for calculating the characteristic impedance of balanced pair near ground:
(formula taken from Reference Data for Radio Engineers book published by Howard W. Sams & Co. 1975,
page 24-22)
Where:
z log = logarithm of 10
z d = wire diameter
z D = distance between wires in pair
z e = dielectric constant (= 1 for air)
z h = distance between balanced pair and ground
Not that this formula is only valid for unshielded balanced pair when D and h are order of magnitude larger
than d. If the twisted pair is far away from ground (h is nearly infinite), the the effect of the ground is
neglegtible and the impedance of the cable can be approximated with simpler formula (my own derivation
from formula above):
For twin line Zo will be typically between 75 and 1000 ohms depending on the intended application. The
impedance of typical old telephone pair in the telephone poles in the air has characteristic impedance of
around 600 ohms. The telephone and telecommunication cables in use have typically a characteristic
impedance of 100 or 120 ohms.
L L L / / L
---+uuuu+-+-+uuuu+-+-+uuuu+--/ ... /+uuuu+---
| | | / / |
--+-- --+-- --+-- --+--
C --+-- C --+-- C--+-- C --+--
| | | / / |
----------+--------+------+-/ ... /------+---
/ /
For this model it is a beneficial to know an useful impedance equation which described the relation of
impedance, capacitance and inducatance:
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Z = sqrt ( L / C )
Where:
z Zoc = impedance of a length of cable is measure with the far end open
z Zsc = impedance of a length of cable is measure with the far end shorted
NOTE: The Zoc and Zsc measurements both have magnitude and phase, so the Zo will also have magnitude
and phase.
High frequency measurements of Zo are made by determining the velocity of propagation and capacitance of
the cable or by reflectometry.
Most wires will have a speed of travel for AC current of 60 to 70 percent of the speed of light, or about 195
million meters per second. An audio frequency of 20,000 Hz has a wavelength of 9,750 meters, so a cable
would have to be four or five *kilometers* long before it even began to have an effect on an audio frequency.
That's why the characteristic impedance of audio interconnect cables is not something most of us have
anything to worry about.
Normal video signal rarely exceed 10 MHz. That's about 20 meters for a wavelength. Those frequencies are
getting close to being high enough for the characteristic impedance to be a factor. High resolution computer
video signals and fast digita signals easily exceed 100 MHz so the proper impedance matching is needed even
in shor cable runs.
There are many exceptions to this normal driving method, but those are used for for special effects. You can
choose an impedance match for maximum power transfer at low bandwidth, or mismatch the impedance for a
flatter frequency response. It's the engineer's call, depending on what he wants.
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An anomoly that is not in all text books is when antenna pushes power back (not a proper termination), it
looks at the inside of the shield and the outside, which ever one is lowest gets the power . This means the RF
can travel on the outside of the coax. The most difficult concept about coax is the XL,XC do not exist (to your
transmitter) if cable is terminated.
Most common reasons for listing a cable impedance is that because of its reliable electrical characteristics, and
that very impedance listing. Coax is often is used to carry low level higher frequency signals that are
separated. Separations are very expensive in terms of signal loss -- a perfect impedance match will cost you
half the signal, and even a slight mismatch is very costly, particularly at antenna strength signals. Carefully
matched carriers, like coax, are necessary to preserve signal at reduced noise.
And this transmission line characteristic is used to hide capacitance in high frequnecy PCB's. Engineers can
design the PCB traces so that they have the proper capacitance and inductance values so that the transmitter
will see nothing but a proper impedance transmission line.
If the impedances are not matches, part of the waves in the cable will be reflected back on the cable
connections distorting the outbound waves. When these reflected waves hit the wave generator, they are
again reflected and mingle with the outbound waves so that it is difficult to tell which waves are original and
which are re-reflections.
The same thing happens when pulses are sent down the cable - when they encounter an impedance other
than the characteristic impedance of the cable, a portion of their energy is reflected back to the sending end.
If the pulses encounter an open circuit or a short circuit, all of the energy is reflected (except for losses due to
attenuation - another subject). For other terminations, smaller amounts of energy will be reflected.
This reflected energy distorts the pulse, and if the impedance of the pulse generator is not the same as the
characteristic impedance of the cable, the energy will be re-reflected back down the cable, appearing as extra
pulses.
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application are special cases, where the cable impedance is take acount so that the combination of the cable
and the terminations at the ends of the cable produce the desired transmission characteristics to the whole
system. In this kind of special application the cable is not considered as a passive transmission line, but a
signal modifying component in the circuit.
(1/d + 1)/ln(1/d)
where d is the ratio of inner conductor diameter to outer conductor ID. A spreadsheet or calculator gets you
close pretty quickly: D/d = 3.5911 is close. Thr formula was claimed to be derived from the formula for coax
impedance versus D/d and a formula for loss that you'll find in "Reference Data for Engineers" published by
Howard Sams, on pg. 29-13 in the seventh edition.
The interesting thing to notice is that this minimum loss does not directly yield a line impedance: the line
impedance depends on the dielectric constant of the dielectric. For air insulated line, the corresponding
impedance is about 76.71 ohms, but if the line is insulated with solid polyethylene, then minimum attenuation
is at about 50.6 ohms. So, however it came to be, all the RG-58 we use for antenna feeds and test equipment
connections is pretty close to minimum attenuation given the above conditions, and that the dielectric is
polyethylene.
But if the line uses foam dielectric with a velocity factor of 0.8, then the impedance of minimum atten would
be about 61 ohms. However, that minimum is a pretty broad one, and you don't start loosing a lot till you get
more than perhaps 50% away from the optimal impedance.
Note that foam-dielectric line with the same impedance and outer diameter as solid-dielectric line will have
lower loss. That's because, to get the same impedance, the foam line will have a larger inner conductor, and
that larger conductor will have lower RF resistance, and therefore lower loss.
Another commonly used cable type is 75 ohm ciaxial cable which is used in video applications, in CATV
networks, in TV antenna wiring and in telecommunication applications.
600 ohms is a typical impednace for open-wire balanced lines for telegraphy and telephony. A twisted pairs of
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22 gage wire with reasonable insulation on the wires comes out at about 120 ohms for the same mechanical
reasons that the other types of transmission lines have their own characteristic impedances.
Twin lead used in some antenna systema are 300 ohms to match to a folded dipole in free space impedance
(However, when that folded dipole is part of a Yagi (beam) antenna, the impedance is usually quite a bit
lower, in the 100-200 ohm range typically.).
Different impedance values are optimum for different parameters. Maximum power-carrying capability occurs
at a diameter ratio of 1.65 corresponding to 30-ohms impedance. Optimum diameter ratio for voltage
breakdown is 2.7 corresponding to 60-ohms impedance (incidentally, the standard impedance in many
European countries).
Power carrying capacity on breakdown ignores current density which is high at low impedances such as 30
ohms. Attenuation due to conductor losses alone is almost 50% higher at that impedance than at the
minimum attenuation impedance of 77 ohms (diameter ratio 3.6). This ratio, however, is limited to only one
half maximum power of a 30-ohm line.
In the early days, microwave power was hard to come by and lines could not be taxed to capacity. Therefore
low attenuation was the overriding factor leading to the selection of 77 (or 75) ohms as a standard. This
resulted in hardware of certain fixed dimensions. When low-loss dielectric materials made the flexible line
practical, the line dimensions remained unchanged to permit mating with existing equipment.
The dielectric constant of polyethylene is 2.3. Impedance of a 77-ohm air line is reduced to 51 ohms when
filled with polyethylene. Fifty-one ohms is still in use today though the standard for precision is 50 ohms.
The attenuation is minimum at 77 ohms; the breakdown voltage is maximum at 60 ohms and the power-
carrying capacity is maximum at 30 ohms.
Another thing which might have lead to 50 ohm coax is that if you take a reasonable sized center conductor
and put a insulator around that and then put a shield around that and choose all the dimensions so that they
are convenient and mechanically look good, then the impedance will come out at about 50 ohms. In order to
raise the impedance, the center conductor's diameter needs to be tiny with respect to the overall cable's size.
And in order to lower the impedance, the thickness of the insulation between the inner conductor and the
shield must be made very thin. Since almost any coax that *looks* good for mechanical reasons just happens
to come out at close to 50 ohms anyway, there was a natural tendency for standardization at exactly 50
ohms.
It is not infinite (or determined by parasitic resistance anc reactance ) like a "normal capacitor" but it is
determined by the characteristic impedance of the line. If it is 50 ohm line charged to 100V then the current
WILL be 2Amps. (100/50) It will be a square pulse, and temporal width (time duration, pulse width whatever
you choose to call it) will be determined by the length of the line (around 1.5 nS/foot depending on line's
velocity factor).
This method can be used for example to generate current pulses to semicondictor lasers. To get the pulse
lengths longer than easily availabe with practical coaxial lines you can use use lumped impedance near-
equivilant.
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What happens if I use 50 ohm cable for vidoe application which needs
75 ohm cable ?
If 50 ohm cable sees a 75 ohm load (the receiver), a substantial part of the signal will be reflected back to the
transmitter. Since the transmitter is also 75 ohm, this relected signal will be substantially reflected back to the
receiver. Because of the delay, it will show up as a nasty ghost in the picture. Multiple ghosts like this look like
ringing. Also, the reflections cause partial signal cancellations at various frequencies.
In some application it is possible to resistive adapers to convert the cable impedances. Those adapters are
simpler than transformers but typically have a noticable signal loss in them (typically around 6 db for 75 ohm
to 50 ohm conversion).
Where:
The dielectric constant, Er, for typical 0.062" fiberglass board is 4.8. Using a trace thickness of 0.00134" gives
a line width of 109 mils for a 50 ohm microstrip.
When routing circuit board traces, differential pairs should have the same length trace. These trace lines
should also be as short as possible.
Za / (Na^2) = Zb / (Nb^2)
Where:
z Za = input impedance
z Na = number of turns on input coil
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z Zb = output impedance
z Nb = number of turns on output coil
Zb = Za * (Nb/Na)^2
From that equation you can see that Nb/Na is same as the transformer voltage transferrign ratio between
primaty and secondary. This means that when you know that ratio you can use the equation without knowing
the exact turns ratio.
____
----|____|---+---------
R1 |
| |
Z1 | | R2 Z2
|_|
|
-------------+----------
The resistor for this circuit can be calxulated using the following equations:
R1 = Z1 - Z2*R2 / (Z2+R2)
R2 = Z2 * sqrt(Z1) / (Z1-Z2)
The table below will show some precalculated values for some most common interfacing situations:
Z1 Z2 R1 R2 Attenuation
(ohm) (ohm) (ohm) (ohm) (dB)
As you can see from the table the cost of simple resistor based impedance matching is quite large signal level
attenuation in the conversion process.
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