Ideal transmission line An ideal transmission line will have no loss, which implies that the resistive elements are zero. It also results in a purely real (resistive) characteristic impedance. The ideal line cannot be realised in practice, but it is a useful approximation in many circumstances. This is especially true, for instance, when short pieces of line are being used as circuit components such as
stubs. A short line has very little loss and this can then be ignored and treated as an ideal line. The secondary constants in these circumstances are; :\gamma = i \omega \sqrt {LC} :\alpha = 0\, :\beta = \omega \sqrt {LC} :Z_0 = \sqrt \frac{L}{C}
Twisted pair Typically,
twisted pair cable used for audio frequencies or low data rates has line constants dominated by
R and
C. The dielectric loss is usually negligible at these frequencies and
G is close to zero. It is also the case that, at a low enough frequency, \scriptstyle R \gg \omega L which means that
L can also be ignored. In those circumstances the secondary constants become, :\gamma \approx \sqrt {i\omega CR} :\alpha \approx \sqrt \frac{\omega CR}{2} :\beta \approx \sqrt \frac{\omega CR}{2} :Z_0 \approx \sqrt \frac{R}{i\omega C} = \sqrt \frac{R}{2\omega C} - i \sqrt \frac{R}{2\omega C} The attenuation of this cable type increases with frequency, causing distortion of waveforms. Not so obviously, the variation of \scriptstyle \beta with frequency also causes a distortion of a type called
dispersion. To avoid dispersion the requirement is that \scriptstyle \beta is directly proportional to \scriptstyle \omega. However, it is actually proportional to \scriptstyle \sqrt \omega and dispersion results. \scriptstyle Z_0 also varies with frequency and is also partly reactive; both these features will be the cause of
reflections from a resistive line termination. This is another undesirable effect. The
nominal impedance quoted for this type of cable is, in this case, very nominal, being valid at only one spot frequency, usually quoted at 800 Hz or 1 kHz.
Co-axial cable Cable operated at a high enough frequency (
medium wave radio frequency or high data rates) will meet the conditions \scriptstyle R \ll \omega L and \scriptstyle G \ll \omega C. This must eventually be the case as the frequency is increased for any cable. Under those conditions
R and
G can both be ignored (except for the purpose of calculating the cable loss) and the secondary constants become; :\gamma \approx i \omega \sqrt {LC} :\alpha \approx \frac{LG+RC}{2\sqrt{LC}} = \tfrac{1}{2}\left(Z_0 G + \frac{R}{Z_0}\right) \approx \frac{R}{2Z_0} :\beta \approx \omega \sqrt {LC} :Z_0 \approx \sqrt \frac{L}{C}
Loaded line Loaded lines are lines designed with deliberately increased inductance. This is done by adding iron or some other magnetic metal to the cable or adding coils. The purpose is to ensure that the line meets the
Heaviside condition, which eliminates distortion caused by frequency-dependent attenuation and dispersion, and ensures that \scriptstyle Z_0 is constant and resistive. The secondary constants are here related to the primary constants by; :\gamma = \sqrt {RG} + i \omega \sqrt {LC} :\alpha = \sqrt {RG} :\beta = \omega \sqrt {LC} :Z_0 = \sqrt \frac{L}{C} = \sqrt \frac{R}{G} ==Velocity==