Class06 Transmission Line Basics
Class06 Transmission Line Basics
Signal
Measured
Clk here Switch
Threshold
Agenda
The Transmission Line Concept
Transmission line equivalent circuits
and relevant equations
Reflection diagram & equation
Loading
Termination methods and comparison
Propagation delay
Simple return path ( circuit theory,
network theory come later)
Transmission Lines Class 6
4
Consumer
Home
PCB substrate
Cross section view taken here
Stripline
W
Via
Micro
FR4 Dielectric
Copper Trace
Cross Section of Above PCB
-
Strip
Signal (microstrip)
Ground/Power
T Copper Plane Signal (stripline)
Signal (stripline)
Ground/Power
Signal (microstrip)
W
Transmission Lines Class 6
7
V = f ( z, t )
I1
I = f ( z, t )
V1 V2
dz
The major deviation from circuit theory with
transmission line, distributed networks is this
positional dependence of voltage and current!
Must think in terms of position and time to
understand transmission line behavior
This positional dependence is added when
the assumption of the size of the circuit being
small compared to the signaling wavelength
Transmission Lines Class 6
8
+ -
(a) (b)
-
- + - + -
(c) (d)
Transmission Lines Class 6
9
Electric field
E
V V + ∆V V V + ∆V
H
I I + ∆I I I + ∆I
- - - -
lR0 lL0
lG0 lC0
Ideal T Line
Ideal (lossless) Characteristics of
Transmission Line lL0
Ideal TL assumes:
Uniform line lC0
Perfect (lossless) conductor (R0→ 0)
Perfect (lossless) dielectric (G0→ 0)
We only consider T0, Z0 , C0, and L0.
A transmission line can be represented by a
cascaded network (subsections) of these
equivalent models.
The smaller the subsection the more accurate the model
The delay for each subsection should be
no larger than 1/10th the signal rise time.
Transmission Lines Class 6
Signal Frequency and Edge Rate
15
vs.
Lumped or Tline Models
In theory, all circuits that deliver transient power from
one point to another are transmission lines, but if the
signal frequency(s) is low compared to the size of the
circuit (small), a reasonable approximation can be
used to simplify the circuit for calculation of the circuit
transient (time vs. voltage or time vs. current)
response.
Td < .1 Tx
Td < .4 Tx
Transmission Lines Class 6
Other “Rules of Thumb”
17
Whether it is a
bump or a
mountain depends
on the ratio of its
When do we need to size (tline) to the
use transmission line size of the vehicle
analysis techniques vs. (signal
lumped circuit wavelength)
analysis?
Similarly, whether
or not a line is to
be considered as a
transmission line
depends on the
ratio of length of
the line (delay) to
the wavelength of
Wavelength/edge rate Tline the applied
frequency or the
rise/fall edge of the
Transmission Lines Class 6 signal
Equations & Formulas
Propagation equation
γ = ( R + jωL)(G + jωC ) = α + jβ
α is the attenuation (loss) factor
β is the phase (velocity) factor
Characteristic Impedance equation
( R + j ωL )
Z0 =
(G + jωC )
In class problem: Derive the high frequency, lossless
approximation for Z0
Transmission Lines Class 6
21
Assumptions TC
TEM conditions ε TD
Uniform dielectric (ε )
between conductors WC
TC<< TD; WC>> TD
ε * PlateArea Base
T-line characteristics are C=
function of: d equation
Material electric and WC F WC pF
magnetic properties C0 ε⋅ ⋅ 8.85 ⋅ε r ⋅ ⋅
TD m TD m
Dielectric Thickness (TD)
TD F T D µH
Width of conductor (WC)
L0 µ⋅ ⋅ 0.4 ⋅π ⋅µ r ⋅ ⋅
Trade-off WC m WC m
TD ; C0 , L0 , Z0 TD µr
Z0 377 ⋅ ⋅ ⋅Ω
WC ; C0 , L0 , Z0 WC εr
εr + 1 εr − 1 TC
εe = + + F − 0.217( εr − 1)
2 12TD WCTD
2 1+
WC
2 You can’t
WC
0.02(εr −1)1 −
WC
T
for
TD
<1
beat a field
F= D
0 for
WC
>1 solver
TD
60 4(TD1 + TD1)
Z 0 sym ≈ ln
εr 0. 67π ( 0.8WC + T C )
Valid when WC/(TD1+TD2) < 0.35 and TC/(TD1+TD2) < 0.25
You can’t
Offset (unbalanced) Stripline Case TD1 > TD2 beat a field
solver
Z 0 sym(2 A, WC , TC , εr ) ⋅ Z 0 sym(2 B, WC , TC , εr )
Z 0offset ≈ 2
Z 0 sym(2 A,WC , TC , εr ) + Z 0 sym(2 B,WC , TC , εr )
Refection coefficient
Signal on a transmission line can be analyzed by
keeping track of and adding reflections and
transmissions from the “bumps” (discontinuities)
Refection coefficient
Amount of signal reflected from the “bump”
Frequency domain ρ=sign(S11)*|S11|
If at load or source the reflection may be called gamma (ΓL
or Γs)
Time domain ρ is only defined a location
The “bump”
Time domain analysis is causal.
Frequency domain is for all time.
We use similar terms – be careful
Reflection diagrams – more later
ρ Reflecte
d
Reflection Coeficient Transmission Coeffiecent
Zt − Z0
ρ
Zt − Z0 τ (1 + ρ) "" → "" τ 1+
Zt + Z0
Zt + Z0
2⋅ Zt
τ
Zt + Z0
B: Short Circuit
Zs −
Zo ρ = 0 Zo = −1
Vs 0 + Zo
C: Open Circuit
Zs ∞ − Zo
Zo ρ= =1
Vs ∞ + Zo
Consider the
simple circuit that RS
contains source
voltage VS, source RL
VS VL
resistance RS, and
resistive load RL.
The output
voltage, VL is
RL
easily calculated VL = VS
from the source RL + R S
amplitude and the
values of the two
series resistors.
Why do we care for?
Next page….
Transmission Lines Class 6
31
TD
Rs A B
Vs
Zo
0 Vs Rt
(initial voltage)
t=0, V=Vi
Z0 Rt
Vi = VS Vf = VS
Z 0 + RS Rt + RS
(initial voltage)
t=0, V=Vi
(signal is reflected)
t=2TD,
V=Vi − +Zo
Rt+ ρB(Vi) ρA(ρB)(Vi ) t=TD, V=Vi +ρB(Vi )
Vreflected = ρ Β (Vincident)
ρΒ =
Rt + Zo VB = Vincident + Vreflected
Step 2: Determine VB in the circuit at time t = TD
The transient behavior of transmission line delays the
arrival of launched voltage until time t = TD.
VB at time 0 < t < TD is at quiescent voltage (0 in this case)
Voltage wavefront will be reflected at the end of the t-line
VB = Vincident + Vreflected at time t = TD
Transmission Lines Class 6
34
Rs A B
Vs
Zo
0 Vs ρA ρB Rt
TD
(initial voltage)
t=0, V=Vi
(signal is reflected)
t=2TD,
V=Vi + ρB (Vi) + ρA(ρ B )(Vi ) t=TD, V=Vi + ρB (Vi )
− Zo Vreflected = ρ Α (Vincident)
ρ Α = Rs
Rs + Zo VA = Vlaunch + Vincident + Vreflected
delay = T, RS= Z0 . VS V1
l
V2 RL
Solution
Transmission Lines Class 6
39
Waveshape:
Step-Function into T-Line with Open Ckt
I1
IA
I2
RS I1 I2
Current (A)
0.75IA Z0 ,Τ 0
l
0.5I A VS V1 V2 Open
0.25IA
0 Τ 2Τ 3Τ 4Τ Time (ns)
VA
V1 This is called
V2 “reflected wave
Voltage (V)
0.75VA
switching”
0.5VA
0.25VA
Solution
0 Τ 2Τ 3Τ 4Τ Time (ns)
Transmission Lines Class 6
40
Solution
Transmission Lines Class 6
Waveshapes for Problem 1b
42
I1
IA
I2 I1 I2
RS
0.75IA Z0 ,Τ 0
Current (A)
l
0.5IA VS V1 V2 RL
0.25IA
0 Τ 2Τ 3Τ 4Τ Time (ns)
I1
VA
I2
Note that a
0.75VA properly
Voltage (V)
0.5VA
terminated wave
settle out at 0.5
0.25VA
SolutionV
0 Τ 2Τ 3Τ 4Τ Time (ns)
Solution
Transmission Lines Class 6
Transmission line step response
43
ρ ρ
source load
V(source) V(load)
0 Vlaunch
0
Time Vlaunch N ps
Vlaunch ρload
Vlaunch(1+ρload) Time
2N ps
Vlaunch ρloadρsource
Vlaunch ρ2loadρsource
Vlaunch(1+ρload+ρ2loadρsource+ ρ2loadρ2source)
4N ps
Vlaunch ρ2loadρ2source
V(source) Zo V(load)
Vs Rs 5N ps
0 Vs TD = N ps
Rt
0
2500 ps 0 2 50 500 750 1000 1250
Tim e , ps
Zo 50
Vinitial =Vs = (2) =1.3333
ρsource = −0 . 3333 ρload = 1 +
Zs Zo +
25 50
Time V(source) V(load)
Zs − Zo 25 −50
0 ρsource = = = −0.33333
1.33v +
Zs Zo 25 50+
0v
Zl − Zo ∞ −50
500 ps 1.33v ρload = = =1
1.33v +
Zl Zo ∞ + 50
3
1500 ps 2.22v
-0.443v 2.5
2
Volts
1.77v 1.5
2000 ps
0.148v 1 Source
0.5 Load
2500 ps 1.92 0
0.148v 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 2250
Time, ps
2.07
X X
Rs
Zo1 Zo2 Rt
Vs
TD TD A= a A' = b + e
T3 T2 B = a+c+d B' = b + e + g + i
ρ1 ρ 2 ρ3 ρ4 C = A+ c+ d + f + h C' = b + e + g + i + k + l
a a = vi
Z o1
vi = Vs
TD A c b Rs + Z o1 b = aT2
2TD Rs − Z o1 c = aρ 2
d e ρ1 =
Rs + Z o1
3TD B g
A’ d = cρ 1
f
Z o 2 − Z o1
4TD
ρ2 = e = bρ 4
h i Z o 2 + Z o1
B’ f = dρ 2 + eT3
5TD C j k Z − Zo2
ρ 3 = o1 g = eρ 3 + dT2
Z o1 + Z o 2
l
Rt − Z o 2 h = fρ 1
C’ ρ4 =
Rt + Z o 2 i = gρ 4
T2 = 1 + ρ 2 j = hρ 2 + iT3
T3 = 1 + ρ 3 k = iρ 3 + hT2
Transmission Lines Class 6
49
l l
reflection coefficients at
1 2
V V V 1 V 3 Short
S 2