Telephone lines A common application of loading coils is to improve the
voice-frequency amplitude response characteristics of the
twisted balanced pairs in a telephone cable. Because twisted pair is a
balanced format, half the loading coil must be inserted in each leg of the pair to maintain the balance. It is common for both these windings to be formed on the same core. This increases the
flux linkages, without which the number of turns on the coil would need to be increased. Despite the use of common cores, such loading coils do not comprise
transformers, as they do not provide
coupling to other circuits. Loading coils inserted periodically in series with a pair of wires reduce the
attenuation at the higher voice frequencies up to the
cutoff frequency of the
low-pass filter formed by the inductance of the coils (plus the distributed inductance of the wires) and the distributed capacitance between the wires. Above the cutoff frequency, attenuation increases rapidly. The shorter the distance between the coils, the higher the cut-off frequency. The cutoff effect is an artifact of using
lumped inductors. With loading methods using continuous
distributed inductance there is no cutoff. Without loading coils, the line response is dominated by the resistance and capacitance of the line with the attenuation gently increasing with frequency. With loading coils of exactly the right inductance, neither capacitance nor inductance dominate: the response is flat,
waveforms are undistorted and the
characteristic impedance is resistive up to the cutoff frequency. The coincidental formation of an
audio frequency filter is also beneficial in that noise is reduced.
DSL With loading coils, signal attenuation of a circuit remains low for signals within the
passband of the transmission line but increases rapidly for frequencies above the audio cutoff frequency. If the telephone line is subsequently reused to support applications that require higher frequencies, such as in analog or digital
carrier systems or
digital subscriber line (DSL), loading coils must be removed or replaced. Using coils with parallel capacitors forms a filter with the topology of an
m-derived filter and a band of frequencies above the cut-off is also passed. Without removal, for subscribers at an extended distance, e.g., over 4 miles (6.4 km) from the central office, DSL cannot be supported.
Carrier systems American early and middle 20th century telephone cables had load coils at intervals of a mile (1.61 km), usually in coil cases holding many. The coils had to be removed to pass higher frequencies, but the coil cases provided convenient places for repeaters of digital
T-carrier systems, which could then transmit a 1.5 Mbit/s signal that distance. Due to narrower streets and higher cost of copper, European cables had thinner wires and used closer spacing. Intervals of a kilometer allowed European systems to carry 2 Mbit/s.
Radio antenna radiotelegraph station in New Jersey in 1912 Another type of loading coil is used in radio
antennas.
Monopole and
dipole radio antennas are designed to act as
resonators for radio waves; the power from the transmitter, applied to the antenna through the antenna's
transmission line, excites
standing waves of voltage and current in the antenna element. To be "naturally" resonant, the antenna must have a physical length of one quarter of the
wavelength of the radio waves used (or a multiple of that length, with odd multiples usually preferred). At resonance, the antenna acts electrically as a pure
resistance, absorbing all the power applied to it from the transmitter. In many cases, for practical reasons, it is necessary to make the antenna shorter than the resonant length, this is called an
electrically short antenna. An antenna shorter than a quarter wavelength presents
capacitive reactance to the transmission line. Some of the applied power is reflected back into the transmission line and travels back toward the transmitter . The two currents at the same frequency running in opposite directions causes
standing waves on the transmission line , measured as a
standing wave ratio (SWR) greater than one. The elevated currents waste energy by heating the wire, and can even overheat the transmitter. To make an
electrically short antenna resonant, a loading coil is inserted in series with the antenna. The coil is built to have an
inductive reactance equal and opposite to the capacitive reactance of the short antenna, so the combination of reactances cancels. When so loaded the antenna presents a pure resistance to the transmission line, preventing energy from being reflected. The loading coil is often placed at the base of the antenna, between it and the transmission line (
base loading), but for more efficient radiation, it is sometimes inserted near the midpoint of the antenna element (
center loading). Loading coils for powerful transmitters can have challenging design requirements, especially at low frequencies. The
radiation resistance of short antennas can be very low, as low a few ohms in the
LF or
VLF bands, where antennas are commonly short and inductive loading is most needed. Because resistance in the coil winding is comparable to, or exceeds the radiation resistance, loading coils for extremely electrically short antennas must have extremely low AC
resistance at the operating frequency. To reduce
skin effect losses, the coil is often made of tubing or
Litz wire, with single layer windings, with turns spaced apart to reduce
proximity effect resistance. They must often handle high voltages. To reduce power lost in
dielectric losses, the coil is often suspended in air supported on thin ceramic strips.
Capacitively reactive antennas used at low frequencies have extremely narrow bandwidths, and therefore if the frequency is changed the loading coil must be adjustable to tune the antenna to resonance with the new transmitter frequency.
Variometers are often used.
Bulk power transmission To reduce losses due to high capacitance on long-distance
bulk power transmission lines, inductance can be introduced to the circuit with a
flexible AC transmission system (FACTS), a
static VAR compensator, or a
static synchronous series compensator. Series compensation can be thought of as an inductor connected to the circuit in series if it is supplying inductance to the circuit. ==Campbell equation==