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TEM and Plane Waves (Partially A Review) : Homework: From Section 5.10 Exercises - 1, 4 (B, C, D, E), 9, 11, 12

This document provides an overview of plane waves and transverse electromagnetic (TEM) waves. Some key points: 1) Plane waves have constant field vectors across their phase fronts and illustrate wave characteristics like frequency and wavelength. TEM waves are a type of plane wave where the electric and magnetic field vectors are transverse to the propagation direction. 2) TEM waves satisfy Laplace's equation in the transverse plane, meaning their transverse electric and magnetic field distributions obey electrostatic and magnetostatic analysis respectively. 3) In a lossless medium, plane waves can be represented as the sum of traveling waves moving in the positive and negative propagation directions with spatial frequencies given by the wave number. 4) The phase

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views

TEM and Plane Waves (Partially A Review) : Homework: From Section 5.10 Exercises - 1, 4 (B, C, D, E), 9, 11, 12

This document provides an overview of plane waves and transverse electromagnetic (TEM) waves. Some key points: 1) Plane waves have constant field vectors across their phase fronts and illustrate wave characteristics like frequency and wavelength. TEM waves are a type of plane wave where the electric and magnetic field vectors are transverse to the propagation direction. 2) TEM waves satisfy Laplace's equation in the transverse plane, meaning their transverse electric and magnetic field distributions obey electrostatic and magnetostatic analysis respectively. 3) In a lossless medium, plane waves can be represented as the sum of traveling waves moving in the positive and negative propagation directions with spatial frequencies given by the wave number. 4) The phase

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ruikarsachin
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Lecture 3

TEM and Plane Waves


(partially a review)

Homework: From Section 5.10 Exercises – 1, 4(b,c,d,e), 9, 11, 12

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 1


Why Are We Concerned with TEM and Plane Waves?
• plane waves exist in TEM transmission lines (e.g., coaxial cable)
• far from a source (e.g., antenna) the free-space wave is locally plane

• plane waves illustrate best wave characteristics such as frequency,


propagation constant, wavelength, wave vector, phase constant and
wave number, attenuation constant
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 2
Some Definitions
• plane wave – a wave whose phase front is a plane (as opposed to a
cylindrical wave or a spherical wave)
plane-wave animation spherical wave animation
Wikimedia Commons

cylindrical wave animation

• uniform plane wave – a plane wave with field vectors (E,H) which
are constant across the phase front

• TEM (transverse electromagnetic) wave – a wave with field


vectors (E,H) which are transverse to the direction of propagation
E
k  kuˆ
H
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 3
Vector Helmholtz Equation
• assume homogeneous, isotropic and source-free medium
       2 
E   0
E
 
  E   j H Helmholtz’
  j E  or
H  
equations
    H   
2
 H0
Derive the E-field Helmholtz equation from Maxwell’s equations.
• propagation, attenuation and phase constants (wave number)
 2   2 
    j 
    jk

• in a loss-free medium
  0, k    ,   jk
  0 and   H
• since the medium is source-free,   E  0
2    2E
  2E  0
         2
 
H   2 
H0
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 4
Traveling Waves
• assume propagation along z:  ( x, y , z )  E
E  ( x, y )  e   z  z
T
function of x and y only!
• substitute in the Helmholtz equation
 2E  2E   2E  2  2
E  2
E 2 
2
 2
 2
  E  0  2
 2
 ( 2
z   )E  0
x y z x y
  z2 E

 2E
 2E T  2E T
   ( z
T 0
2   2 )E
x 2 y 2
• consider the case of γz = γ (note that it is also possible that γz ≠ γ!)

 T  2E
 2E T  2 E T,  2 E T,
   0 or   0,   x, y , z ()
x 2 y 2 x 2 y 2

 2E
and 2   2 E 
z
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 5
TEM Waves
• consider the 2D Laplace equation for the longitudinal z component
of ET(x,y)  2 E T,z  2 E T,z
 0
x 2 y 2

• in a TL, it is complemented by zero BCs: E T,z  0


C
C2

C1 Ez

Ez  0 C
C  C1  C2
reminder about the mean-value theorem: a non-constant harmonic
function cannot assume its maximum value at an interior point
 E T,z ( x, y )  0, ( x, y )  E z ( x, y , z )  0, ( x, y , z )
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 6
TEM Waves
from Ez = 0 it follows
E E E E E
E x y
 z 0  T, x

T, y
 0 ( )
x y  z x y
0

Using Eqs. () and ( ), prove that H z  0.


 2 E T,x  2 E T,x Hint
 0
x 2 y 2

 2 E T,y  2 E T,y ?E T,y E T,x ?


 0   =0  H T,z  0
x 2 y 2 x y
E T, x E T, y  
 0 ,
x y x y

if the propagation constant of a wave is  z    j 


 , then the
wave is a TEM wave (Hz = Ez = 0) and vice versa
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 7
TEM Waves and Uniform Plane Waves

• TEM waves feature 2D “static” field distributions in the transverse


(xy) plane obeying the 2D Laplace equation:
• ET(x,y) obeys 2D electrostatic analysis
• HT(x,y) obeys 2D magnetostatic analysis
 2 E T,  2 E T,
 0
x 2 y 2
,   x, y ( )
 2 H T,  2 H T,
 0
x 2 y 2

• the uniform plane wave is a special case of the TEM wave: ET and
HT are simply constant with respect to (x,y) – eqns (***) still hold

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 8


Traveling Waves in Loss-free Medium

• in a loss-free medium, α = 0    jk , k   
purely imaginary

• assume waves propagating along +z and −z 


E T  ET e j

E( x, y , z )  E T ( x, y )e  jkz  E
 T ( x, y )e jkz  ET  ET e j
E( x, y , z, t )  ET cos(t  kz    )  ET cos(t  kz    )

radian frequency spatial frequency (wave


(angular frequency) number, phase constant)
units: rad/s units: rad/m

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 9


Plane Wave in Loss-free Medium: Animation
• wave propagating along +z
E x e  jkz  Ex cos(t  kz   x )
z

• wave propagating along –z


E x e jkz  Ex cos(t  kz   x )

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 10


Phase Velocity
velocity of propagation of the phase front
a phase front is defined by any fixed point on the waveform
cos(arg), arg  t  kz     const.

arg  k  t  z      const.
k 
phase velocity vp
  1
vp  ,k     v p 
k vp 
1
in vacuum v p 0  c   2.998... 108 m/s *
 0 0
Express the wavelength λd of a plane wave in a loss-free dielectric
medium of relative permittivity εr in terms of the respective wave-
length in vacuum λ0 and εr.
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 11
Waves in Lossy Medium
 T ( x, y )e  z  E
 ( x, y , z )  E
E  T ( x, y )e z where
  j 
 
  jk
0

  jk  j (    j  )[   j (    /  )]

general solution for attenuation and phase constants

    
   1  tan  m  tan  d  Q tan  m 
2 
       / 
k   1  tan  m  tan  d  Q tan  d 
2 
where Q  1  tan 2  m  tan 2  d  (tan  m  tan  d )2

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 12


Waves in Very Good Conductors
metals are very good conductors for which the following holds
   ,    0

Prove that the attenuation constant α and the wave number k of a


good conductor (assume μ is real) are approximately the same and
equal to

 k 
2
or

  (1  j )
2
j 45
   e

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 13


Waves in Lossy Medium: Penetration (Skin) Depth
• consider x-component only
 
E x ( z )  E x e  z  E x e z , E x  Ex e j x and E x  Ex e j x
 Ex ( z , t )  Ex e  z cos(t  kz   x )  Ex e z cos(t  kz   x )

• skin (or penetration) depth δ: the distance a wave travels into the
lossy medium until its magnitude reduces e times (e ≈ 2.71828… )
1 2 1
 for good conductors:    (m)
   f 
*

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 14


Uniform Plane Wave in Lossy Medium: Animation
WAVE ATTENUATION AS IT TRAVELS INTO A LOSSY MEDIUM

e z

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 15


Attenuation Constant α
• the attenuation constant α is characterized by the ratio of the
signal strength at two points a distance ΔL apart
Em ( z2 )  Em ( z1 )e  ( z2  z1 )  Em ( z1 )e L L  z2  z1 , m
 Em ( z1 ) 
  ln   / L, Np/m
 Em ( z2 ) 

• attenuation is often given in dB/m


 Em ( z1 ) 
 dB  20log10   / L, dB/m
 Em
 ( z
2) 
e
• dB to Np conversion
20
 dB  20log10 e      dB  8.6858896381  *
ln10

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 16


TEM Wave Impedance η
• the E and H field vectors of a traveling TEM wave are related
through Maxwell’s equations
1  z 1

H 
  (E T e )  (e  z )  E
 T  e  z   E
T

 j  j
E T, y   T, x
E    T, y E T, x 
E
E T   xˆ  yˆ    T 0
 zˆ   
E
 z  z x y 
0 0
  conservative
2D field
0
 z
  e     z 1    j 

H zˆ  ET  zˆ  ET e  zˆ  E
 j   

E

• by definition the intrinsic impedance of the



medium is the impedance of a TEM wave in  ()
this medium 
• in a loss-free medium, η is real
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 17
Intrinsic Impedance of a Good Conductor

• assume the conductor has no magnetic loss, µꞌꞌ = 0, (Cu, Al)

    
 
   j / 
 1   f  1 j
   (1  j )  (1  j )  ,
 j 2  

• the Re and Im parts of the intrinsic impedance η of a good conductor


are equal (η has phase of 45°)

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 18


Wave Traveling in a General Direction
• Helmholtz equation in rectangular coordinates

2E 2E  2E  2


2
 2
 2
  E0
x y z 3 scalar equations
 2 E i  2 E i  2 E i 2 
 2
 2
 2
  Ei  0, i  x, y , z
x y z

• each scalar equation solved by separation of variables


2 2 2
 d X d Y d Z
Ex  X ( x)Y ( y ) Z ( z )  YZ 2  XZ 2  XY 2   2 XYZ
dx dy dz
1 d 2 X 1 d 2Y 1 d 2 Z eigenvalue equation:
 2
 2
 2
  2
X
 dx
 Y dy
   Z dz  x2   y2   z2   2
2 2
x  y2 z

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 19


Wave Vector k
1 d2X 2 1 d Y
2
1 d 2Z
  x ,   2
y ,   2
z  x2   y2   z2   2
X dx 2 Y dy 2 Z dz 2
 x x  y y
 X ( x)  e , Y ( y)  e , Z ( z )  e z z
• wave propagates along a direction û such that it advances along +x,
+y, and +z simultaneously:
 (  x x   y y  z z )

Ex  X ( x)Y ( y ) Z ( z )  e  e  γr
 x2   y2   z2   2  γ   uˆ   x xˆ   y yˆ   z zˆ   j 

r  xxˆ  yyˆ  zzˆ propagation vector
position vector
• loss-free case
 j (k xk yk z )
E x  e x y z  e  jk r
k  k x xˆ  k y yˆ  k z zˆ  kuˆ wave vector k    *
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 20
Properties of TEM Wave Field Vectors: Summary
• both field vectors are transverse to the direction of propagation
k  E  0, k  H  0

• the E and H field vectors are mutually orthogonal


H  E, and H  k , E  k

• the E, H and k vectors form a right-hand triplet


E
E H
uˆ  k  kuˆ
| E H | H

• |H| and |E| are related through the intrinsic impedance of the medium
1 |E|
H  uˆ  E  | H |
 
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 21
Time-dependent Poynting Vector of TEM Waves

• consider field components at a given position in space (assume z = 0)


E(t )  eˆ mE cos(t ), V/m   eˆ m
E
 E
  hˆ m e  j
H (t )  hˆ mH cos(t   ), A/m H H

• the time-dependent Poynting vector (power-flow density) is


S(t )  E(t )  H (t )
 S(t )  0.5(eˆ  hˆ ) mE mH  cos   cos(2t   )  , W/m 2
uˆ constant term double-frequency term

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 22


Average Power Flow Density and Complex Poynting Vector
• average power flow density
S(t )  0.5uˆ mE mH  cos   cos(2t   ) , W/m 2
T
1

 S av   S(t )dt  uˆ 0.5mE mH cos(  )  0.5 Re E
T 0
 H 
  , W/m 2

constant in time!

• Sav describes the direction and amount of the average power flux
density carried by the wave

• the complex Poynting vector


S  0.5E    S av  Re S
 H

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 23


Poynting Vector as a Function of Distance
• consider linearly polarized wave propagating along +z

 ( z )  xˆ E 0 e  z E 0
 ( z )  yˆ e  z     jk  j 
• field vectors:E ,H 
 
0
E 
0
H

1 1 | 
E |2
1
   
• Poynting vector: S( z )  E  H  zˆ 0
e 2 z
 ˆ
z  |  |2 e 2 z
H 0
2 2  2
Prove these formulas!
if the medium is loss-free (α = 0, η is real), Poynting’s vector is
real and independent of z: average power is transferred in the +z
direction (Sav,z > 0 and it is the same everywhere along z)

if the medium is dissipative (η is complex), the Poynting vector


is complex and Sav,z decays along z as exp(−2αz)
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 24
Total Power Carried by a Plane Wave
E
a
S
H Vcyl
The region inside the cylinder in the figure does not contain sources
and is loss-free. A plane wave propagates through it as shown. What is
the total power Pav carried by the wave through the cylinder’s cross-
section of radius a = 10 mm, if the E-field magnitude is 1 mV/m and
the medium intrinsic impedance η is 120 Ω?
Note: Pav   S av  ds, W
S

The E-field of a plane wave attenuates in a lossy medium so that its


magnitude drops by a factor of 2 with every meter. How quickly
does the power flow attenuate? What is the attenuation constant α in
Np/m and in dB/m?
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 25
Poynting Vector in a Very Good Conductor: Surface Resistance

 |2 e 2 z where   (1  j )   1  j
S( z )  zˆ 1  | H (see slide 18)
0
2 2 
• since the power entering the conductor is all dissipated, Sav is a
measure of the dissipated power flux density
1   2 2 z 
Re S  Im S  S av ( z )  zˆ | H0 | e  k 
22 2
1  |2 Rs
(see slide 13)
 Sav( z 0)  zˆ Rs | H 0
2
dissipated power per unit area
 1
• surface resistance of a conductor: Rs  Re   ,
2 
• the surface resistance Rs is a measure of the power loss due to the
metallic leads of a transmission line (waveguide)
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 26
Power Loss in a Very Good Conductor
• consider a wave entering a conductor along z and
assume interface is at z = 0
1  |2 e 2 z  S e 2 z
S av ( z )  zˆ Rs | H 0 av,0
2

Sav,0

• apply Poynting’s theorem to the volume vs


total power inflow = loss power

 Sav  ds  P

S on the surface of a very
good conductor
 P    Sav,0  (  zˆ )ds   Sav( z  L )  zˆ ds   nˆ  H

s0 s
 J s 0
0 like on a PEC
1 1
 P  Rs | H0 | s0  Rs | J s |2 s0 , W
 2
2 2
Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 27
Power Loss in a Conductor
• generally the Poynting vector may not be exactly along z
P    Sav,0  (  zˆ )ds   Sav( z  L )  zˆ ds
s0 s 0

 
 P  0.5 Re   H
E    zˆ ds 
s0 0  E  e
 H

zˆ  nˆ

0

zˆ ds
s 0

0
2( zˆ uˆ ) L

 P  0.5 Re   H

  zˆ   E
 ds 
0 0
0
s0

• in very good conductors, the wave tends to propagate along the


interface unit normal regardless of the angle of incidence, in which
case the above reduces to
P  0.5 Re  J s  E
 ds    zˆ  nˆ  H
H    J
0 0 0 s
s0

P  0.5 Re  J s  J s ds  0.5 Rs | J s |2 ds
s0 s0

Nikolova 2012 LECTURE 03: PLANE WAVES: REVIEW 28

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