Data Communication Lecture 7
Data Communication Lecture 7
Transmission Media
7.1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Figure 7.1 Transmission medium and physical layer
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Figure 7.2 Classes of transmission media
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
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Conducted or guided media
✔ use a conductor such as a wire or a fiber optic cable
to transmit the signal from sender to receiver
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7-1 GUIDED MEDIA
Guided media, which are those that provide a conduit from one device to another,
include twisted-pair cable, coaxial cable, and fiber-optic cable.
Topics discussed in this section:
Twisted-Pair Cable
Coaxial Cable
Fiber-Optic Cable
1. Twisted-Pair Cable
A twisted pair consists of two conductors (normally copper), each with its own
plastic insulation, twisted together, as shown in Fig. 7.3
UTP
◦each wire is insulated with plastic wrap, but the pair is
encased in an outer covering.
STP
◦the pair is wrapped with metallic foil or braid to insulate
the pair from electromagnetic interference
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Figure 7.4 UTP and STP cables
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Table 7.1 Categories of unshielded twisted-pair cables
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Figure 7.5 UTP connector
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Attenuation
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Why Twisting?
■ In Flat Wire - Electromagnetic interference can create noise
■ The noise over parallel wires results in an uneven load and a
damaged signal
Noise/Interference Effect on Twisted-Pair
■ Cumulative effect of noise is equal on both sides
■ Twisting does not always eliminate the noise, but does
significantly reduce it
■ The twisting is necessary to minimize electromagnetic radiation and
resist external interference in general. It also helps to limit interference
with other adjacent twisted pairs (cross-talk).
Twisted Pair - Applications
■ Most common medium
■ Telephone network
■ Individual residential telephone sets are connected to the local telephone
exchange (or “end office”) by twisted-pair wire. These are referred to as
subscriber loop.
■ Within an office building
■ Each telephone is connected to a twisted pair, which goes to the in-house
private branch exchange (PBX) system.
■ These twisted-pair installations were designed to support voice traffic using
analog signaling. However, by means of a modem, these facilities can
handle digital data traffic at modest data rates.
■ For digital signaling: connections to a digital data switch or a digital PBX
■ For local area networks (LAN)
■ Data rates can be around 10Mbps, 100Mbps, or even 1Gbps.
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Twisted Pair - Pros and Cons
■ Pros
■ Twisted pair is much less expensive than other commonly
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2. Coaxial Cable
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Table 7.2 Categories of coaxial cables
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Figure 7.9 Coaxial cable performance
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3. Fiber-Optic Cable
A fiber-optic cable is made of glass or plastic and transmits signals
in the form of light.
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Optical Fiber
■ Optical fiber is made of glass or plastic
■ It transmits signals in the form of light
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Figure 7.11 Optical fiber
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Figure 7.14 Fiber construction
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Figure 7.12 Propagation modes
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Figure 7.13 Modes
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Figure 7.16 Optical fiber performance
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Figure 7.15 Fiber-optic cable connectors
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Advantages Fiber-optic cable has several advantages over metallic
cable (twisted- pair or coaxial):
• Higher bandwidth.
• Less signal attenuation.
• Immunity to electromagnetic interference.
• Resistance to corrosive materials.
• Light weight.
• Greater immunity to tapping.
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Disadvantages There are some disadvantages in the use of optical
fiber.
•Cost. The cable and the interfaces are relatively more expensive than
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7-2 UNGUIDED MEDIA: WIRELESS
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✔Unguided media transport electromagnetic waves without using a physical
conductor. This type of communication is often referred to as wireless
communication.
✔ Radio, satellite microwave, Bluetooth, and infrared light are all different
forms of electromagnetic waves that are used to transmit data.
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Unidirectional Antenna
✔transmitting antenna puts out focused beam
✔send out signals in one direction
✔unicast communication such as cellular telephones, satellite
networks, and wireless LANs.
Omnidirectional Antenna
✔signal spreads out in all directions can be received by many
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Figure 7.20 Omnidirectional antenna
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Figure 7.21 Unidirectional antennas
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Figure 7.17 Electromagnetic spectrum for wireless communication
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Figure 7.18 Propagation methods
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Table 7.4 Bands / Frequency
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Figure 7.19 Wireless transmission waves
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Note
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RADIO WAVES:
▪
Between 3 KHz – 1 GHz.
▪
Radio waves use omnidirectional antenna.
▪
Radio waves used for multicast communication, such as radio and television.
MICROWAVES:
▪
Between 1 – 300 GHz.
▪
Microwaves use unidirectional antenna.
▪
Microwaves used for unicast communication, such as telephone, satellite,
INFRARED WAVES:
wireless LAN
▪
Between 300 GHz-400 THz
▪
Used for short-range communication, line-of-sight communication
▪
3.45Very common with remote control devices, but can also be used for
Wireless Channels
7.46
Thank you!!!
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