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![]() On Tue, 8 Jun 2004 17:05:53 -0400, "Jack Painter" wrote: "Gary Schafer" wrote Oh boy! I just got back from vacation and am just now reading this stuff. Jack, Bruce and the others are entirely right. I once had a hard time figuring out why RF would not flow on the inside of a tube too. It would seem logical that it would do as you say but it doesn't. Look up "wave guide beyond cutoff". That will answer your question about why rf dose not flow on the inside of a tube. It will flow on the inside for only a very short distance from the opening. Then it gets canceled. This is how many signal generator attenuater work. They use a tube of 6 or so inches long with a sliding probe inside fed from one end. On the other open end is a fixed pickup probe. When the movable probe is close to the fixed probe on the other end, maximum signal coupling is obtained. As the other probe is moved away inside the tube the signal becomes highly attenuated. It is operating as a wave guide that is much too small for the frequency involved. If the tube diameter was made large enough to be a quarter wave length in diameter then the rf would propagate through it. But that would be in a different mode than the skin effect conduction being discussed. By the way did you know that skin effect even comes into play in 60 hz distribution systems? Regards Gary Hi Gary, welcome back, and thanks for your replies. Right principles, wrong application. Trying to apply high power microwave principles (3-15 gHz) to low power 2-30 mHz) is not the same. Sorry Jack but you are wrong. It has nothing to do with microwave frequencies. A wave guide beyond cutoff is the mode that the tube is operating in and it simply tells you that the frequency is too low for the given size tube to propagate through. The energy inside the tube gets shorted out. Many 2-30 mhz signal generators use that type attenuator. Now at 100 mHz and below, while there would still a small but measurable difference of skin effect at high transmit power, it ain't much and has nothing to do with low power 2-30 mHz where a thin walled copper tube has ZERO measurable difference in skin effect to a copper strap of even slightly smaller gage. It has everything to do with it. Skin effect is ever present in all conductors at ALL frequencies. Note my reference to 60 hz power transmission where it is also important. That has been my never paid attention to point all along, that skin effect involves the entire cross section of thin material, and copper tubing is more than thin enough to carry current in it's entire (that means from outer to inner surface) cross section. That's exactly why copper tube is used so much in AM broadcast components. That is a contradiction to your point. You say that current flows entirely through the walls of copper tubing and then say that is why it is used in AM broadcast components. If that were true then they would not use copper tubing but instead they would use solid copper rod for better conduction. The reason copper tubing is used is that there is no current of any significance past a certain depth and to use solid rod would be a waste of copper. This is not even related to waveguides which must by design AVOID all skin effect which causes great resistance and heating at the current and velocites involved in microwave transmission. Well, microwave transmissions don't travel any faster than HF transmissions. But you might note that most wave guide inner surfaces are silver plated to reduce skin losses. As we eventually got around to research rather than blindly arguing positions of opinion, then the participants hopefully learned something. I've learned that applying the math from formulas for skin effect in conductors of known ohmic value and used with a known frequency can determine the wall thickness of a conductor which has full cross sectional current on it. Guess what? The original poster's question about using copper tubing remains answered. A 1" copper tube has more surface area and carries just as much low power RF on it's entire cross section as a 1" wide piece of copper strap that is nearly the same gage. While skin effect is a gradient and not an absolute barrier, there is current that flows at all levels in a conductor. Even on the inner surface of your copper tube. But the amount of current there is so small that it is immeasurable. It decreases exponentially. One skin depth is defined as the depth at which the current has dropped to about .37 times the current at the surface. (If you notice, this is the same decay rate that a capacitor has when it charges or discharges.) When you go that same distance (deeper) again the remaining current will again drop to .37 times the current that it was at the first skin depth. So you can see that the current never reaches zero as you go deeper but it only takes a few skin depths to decrease the current to a very small value which is insignificant. ..0058" is the skin depth in copper at 200 khz. Skin depth decreases by 10 for each 100 times increase in frequency. So at 20 mhz the skin depth would decrease by 100 from that. It gets pretty thin! Skin effect is the reason coax cable works as it does. None of the RF on the inside of the cable appears on the outside of the cable. Other than leakage between strands of the shield of the cable. Those wire strands on coax cable are pretty thin. Much thinner than your copper pipe. Hard line has no leakage. Regards Gary Best, Jack Painter Virginia Beach Va |
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