Physics:Space cloth

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Short description: Hypothetical plane with resistivity of 376.7 ohms per square.
Coaxial cable terminated with space cloth (green).

Space cloth is a hypothetical infinite plane of conductive material having a resistance of η ohms per square, where η is the impedance of free space.[1] η ≈ 376.7 ohms. If a transmission line composed of straight parallel perfect conductors in free space is terminated by space cloth that is normal to the transmission line then that transmission line is terminated by its characteristic impedance.[2][lower-alpha 1] The calculation of the characteristic impedance of a transmission line composed of straight, parallel good conductors may be replaced by the calculation of the D.C. resistance between electrodes placed on a two-dimensional resistive surface. This equivalence can be used in reverse to calculate the resistance between two conductors on a resistive sheet if the arrangement of the conductors is the same as the cross section of a transmission line of known impedance. For example, a pad surrounded by a guard ring on a printed circuit board (PCB) is similar to the cross section of a coaxial cable transmission line.

Examples

Calculating characteristic impedance from the surface resistance

The figure to the right shows a coaxial cable terminated by space cloth. In the case of a closed structure like a coaxial cable, the space cloth may be trimmed to the boundary of the outer conductor. The computation of resistance between the conductors can be computed with 2D electromagnetic field solver methods including the relaxation method and analog methods using resistance paper.

Resistance of an annular ring of material having a surface resistance of η per square. The radius of the outer surface of the inner electrode (yellow) is r1. The radius of the inner surface of the outer electrode (magenta) is r2.

In the case of a coaxial cable, there is a closed-form solution. The resistive surface is considered to be a series of infinitesimal annular rings, each having a width of and a resistance of (η/2πρ). The resistance between the inner electrode and the outer electrode is just the integral over all such rings.

[math]\displaystyle{ R = \int_{r_1}^{r_2} \frac {\eta} {2 \pi \rho} d\rho = \frac {\eta} {2 \pi} \ln \frac {r_2} {r_1} . }[/math]

This is exactly the equation for the characteristic impedance of a coaxial cable in free space.[4][lower-alpha 2]

Calculating surface resistance from characteristic impedance

Transmission line composed of two parallel wires terminated by space cloth.


The characteristic impedance of a two parallel wire transmission line is given by[6][lower-alpha 3]

[math]\displaystyle{ Z_0 = \frac {\eta} { \pi} \ln \frac {2D} {d} , }[/math]

where d is the diameter of the wire and D is the center to center separation between the wires.

Transmission line composed of two parallel wires cross section

If the second figure is taken to be two round pads on a printed circuit board that has surface contamination resulting in a surface resistivity of Rs (50 MΩ per square, for example) then the resistance between the two pads is given by:

[math]\displaystyle{ R = \frac {R_s} { \pi} \ln \frac {2D} {d} }[/math]

Multi-mode transmission line

Cross section of a three conductor transmission line composed of two parallel plates and a rectangular shield.

The figure shows the cross section of a three conductor transmission line. The structure has two transmission eigen-modes which are the differential mode (conductors a and b driven with equal amplitude but opposite phase voltages with respect to conductor c) and the common mode (conductors a and b driven with the same voltages with respect to conductor c). In general, the eigen-modes have different characteristic impedances.

If wh1, h2t, then the field in region IV and V and can be ignored.

The resistance of regions I–III are

[math]\displaystyle{ R_\text{I} = \eta \frac {h_1} {w} }[/math]
[math]\displaystyle{ R_\text{II} = R_\text{III} = \eta \frac {h_2} {w} }[/math]
where η = impedance of space cloth in ohms per square

In the common mode, conductors a and b are at the same voltage so there is no effect from region I. The common mode characteristic impedance is the resistance of region II in parallel with region III.

[math]\displaystyle{ Z_{CM} = \frac {R_\text{II}} {2} = \frac {\eta h_2 } {2 w} }[/math]

In the differential mode, the characteristic impedance is the resistance of region I in parallel with the series combination of regions II and III.

[math]\displaystyle{ Z_{DM} = \frac {(R_\text{I}) ( 2 R_\text{II} )} {R_\text{I} + 2 R_\text{II} } = \frac {\eta} {w} \frac { 2 h_2 h_1 } { h_1 + 2 h_2 } }[/math]

See also

Notes

  1. Crawford is referring to the TEM mode in a transmission line consisting of perfect conductors in free space.[3]
  2. Harrington uses η as the symbol for the impedance of free space.[5]
  3. The equation assumes D >> d.[7]

References

  1. "... a resistive sheet having a resistance of 376.7 ohms per square ... often called space paper or space cloth." Kraus, John D. (1984). Electromagnetics (3rd ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 459. ISBN 0-07-035423-5. https://archive.org/details/electromagnetics00krau/page/459. 
  2. "A sheet of space cloth provides perfect termination for any straight and parallel transmission line" Crawford, Frank S. Jr. (1968). Waves, Berkeley Physics Course Volume 3. McGraw-Hill. p. 230. 
  3. Waves, Berkeley Physics Course Volume 3, p. 230
  4. Harrington, Roger F. (1987). Time-Harmonic Electromagnetic Fields (1st ed.). McGraw-Hill. p. 65. ISBN 0-07-026745-6. https://archive.org/details/timeharmonicelec0000harr. 
  5. Harrington, 1987, p. 65
  6. Harrington, 1987, p. 65
  7. Harrington, 1987, p. 65