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Page Title: WAVEGUIDE ADVANTAGES
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WAVEGUIDE THEORY
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Electronics Technician Volume 07-Antennas and Wave Propagation
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WAVEGUIDE DISADVANTAGES

efficient  way  to  transfer  electromagnetic  energy. WAVEGUIDES  are  essentially  coaxial  lines  without center   conductors. They  are  constructed  from conductive material and may be rectangular, circular, or  elliptical  in  shape,  as  shown  in  figure  3-17. Figure 3-15.—Fields confined in  two directions only. Figure 3-16.—Fields confined in all directions. WAVEGUIDE   ADVANTAGES Waveguides  have  several  advantages  over  two-wire and coaxial transmission lines. For example, the large surface  area  of  waveguides  greatly  reduces  COPPER (12R) LOSSES. Two-wire transmission lines have large copper  losses  because  they  have  a  relatively  small surface area. The surface area of the outer conductor Figure  3-17.—Waveguide  shapes. of a coaxial cable is large, but the surface area of the inner   conductor   is   relatively   small.   At   microwave frequencies, the current-carrying area of the inner con- ductor  is  restricted  to  a  very  small  layer  at  the surface  of  the  conductor  by  an  action  called  SKIN EFFECT. Skin  effect  tends  to  increase  the  effective  resistance of  the  conductor.  Although  energy  transfer  in  coaxial cable  is  caused  by  electromagnetic  field  motion,  the magnitude  of  the  field  is  limited  by  the  size  of  the current-carrying  area  of  the  inner  conductor.  The  small size  of  the  center  conductor  is  even  further  reduced by  skin  effect,  and  energy  transmission  by  coaxial cable  becomes  less  efficient  than  by  waveguides. DIELECTRIC  LOSSES  are  also  lower  in  waveguides than  in  two-wire  and  coaxial  transmission  lines. Dielectric  losses  in  two-wire  and  coaxial  lines  are caused  by  the  heating  of  the  insulation  between  the conductors.  The  insulation  behaves  as  the  dielectric of  a  capacitor  formed  by  the  two  wires  of  the transmission  line.  A  voltage  potential  across  the  two wires  causes  heating  of  the  dielectric  and  results  in a   power   loss.   In   practical   applications,   the   actual breakdown  of  the  insulation  between  the  conductors of  a  transmission  line  is  more  frequently  a  problem than  is  the  dielectric  loss. This  breakdown  is  usually  caused  by  stationary voltage   spikes   or   “nodes,”   which   are   caused   by standing  waves.    Standing  waves  are  stationary  and occur when part of the energy traveling down the line 3-9

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