Jump to content

Velocity factor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 172.82.46.195 (talk) at 12:28, 8 August 2022 (percentage does not get used elsewhere: changing 100% to 1.0 to match elsewhere). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The velocity factor (VF),[1] also called wave propagation speed or velocity of propagation (VoP or ),[2] of a transmission medium is the ratio of the speed at which a wavefront (of an electromagnetic signal, a radio signal, a light pulse in an optical fibre or a change of the electrical voltage on a copper wire) passes through the medium, to the speed of light in vacuum. For optical signals, the velocity factor is the reciprocal of the refractive index.

The speed of radio signals in vacuum, for example, is the speed of light, and so the velocity factor of a radio wave in vacuum is unity, or 1.0. In electrical cables, the velocity factor mainly depends on the insulating material (see table below).

The use of the terms velocity of propagation and wave propagation speed to mean a ratio of speeds is confined to the computer networking and cable industries. In a general science and engineering context, these terms would be understood to mean a true speed or velocity in units of distance per time,[3] while velocity factor is used for the ratio.

Typical velocity factors

Velocity factor is an important characteristic of communication media such as category 5 cables and radio transmission lines. Plenum data cable typically has a VF between 0.42 and 0.72 (42% to 72% of the speed of light in vacuum) and riser cable around 0.70 (approximately 210,000,000 m/s or 4.76 ns per metre).

Minimum velocity factors for network cables
VF (%) Cable Ethernet physical layer
74–79 Cat-7 twisted pair
77 RG-8/U Minimum for 10BASE5[4]
67 Optical fiber (silica glass) Minimum for 10BASE-FL,[5] 100BASE-FX, ...
67 Plastic optical fiber (PMMA) 1000BASE-RHx
63 Plastic optical fiber (polystyrene)
65 RG-58A/U Minimum for 10BASE2[6]
65 Cat-6A twisted pair 10GBASE-T
64 Cat-5e twisted pair 100BASE-TX, 1000BASE-T
58.5 Cat-3 twisted pair Minimum for 10BASE-T[7]

Some typical velocity factors for radio communications cables provided in handbooks and texts are given in the following table:[8][9]

VF (%) Transmission line
95–99 Open-wire "Ladder" Line
93 HJ8-50B 3 inch Heliax coaxial cable (air dielectric)[10]
86 RG-8 Belden 7810A coaxial cable (gas-injected foam high-density polyethylene)[11]
83 RG-6 Belden 1189A coaxial cable, RG-11 Belden 1523A coaxial cable
82 RG-8X Belden 9258 coaxial cable (foamed polyethylene dielectric)
80 Belden 9085 twin-lead
77 RG-8/U generic (foamed polyethylene)
66 Belden 8723 twin shielded twisted pair stranded (polypropylene insulator)[12]
66 RG-213 CXP213 (solid polyethylene dielectric)

Calculating velocity factor

Electric wave

VF equals the reciprocal of the square root of the dielectric constant (relative permittivity), or , of the material through which the signal passes:

in the usual case where the relative permeability, , is 1. In the most general case:

which includes unusual magnetic conducting materials, such as ferrite.

The velocity factor for a lossless transmission line is given by:

where is the distributed inductance (in henries per unit length), is the capacitance between the two conductors (in farads per unit length), and is the speed of light in vacuum.

Optical wave

VF equals the reciprocal of the refractive index of the medium, usually optical fiber.

See also

References

  1. ^ Gottlieb, I.M., Practical RF power design techniques, TAB Books, 1993, ISBN 0-8306-4129-7, p.251 ('velocity factor')
  2. ^ Velocity of Propagation, General Cable Australia Pty Ltd, retrieved 2010-02-13
  3. ^ "velocity of propagation" in Walker, P.M.B., Chambers Science and Technology Dictionary, Edinburgh, 1991, ISBN 1-85296-150-3
  4. ^ IEEE 802.3 Clause 8.4.1.3
  5. ^ IEEE 802.3 Clause 15.3.1.3
  6. ^ IEEE 802.3 Clause 10.5.1.3
  7. ^ IEEE 802.3 Clause 14.4.2.4
  8. ^ H. Ward Silver, N0AX, ed. (2011). "Chapter 22: Component Data and References". The ARRL Handbook For Radio Communications (88th ed.). ARRL. p. 22.48. ISBN 978-0-87259-096-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link)
  9. ^ Kaiser, Kenneth L. (2005). Transmission Lines, Matching, and Crosstalk. CRC Press. pp. 2–24. ISBN 9780849363627.
  10. ^ "HJ8-50B" (PDF). commscope.com. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  11. ^ "Belden Global Catalog".
  12. ^ "8723 Multi-Conductor - Shielded Twisted Pair Cable" (PDF). Belden.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-01-19. Retrieved 2017-07-06.