
The characteristic impedance or surge impedance (usually written Z
0) of a uniform
transmission line
In electrical engineering, a transmission line is a specialized cable or other structure designed to conduct electromagnetic waves in a contained manner. The term applies when the conductors are long enough that the wave nature of the transmis ...
is the ratio of the amplitudes of
voltage
Voltage, also known as (electrical) potential difference, electric pressure, or electric tension, is the difference in electric potential between two points. In a Electrostatics, static electric field, it corresponds to the Work (electrical), ...
and
current of a wave travelling in one direction along the line in the absence of
reflections in the other direction. Equivalently, it can be defined as the
input impedance of a transmission line when its length is infinite. Characteristic impedance is determined by the geometry and materials of the transmission line and, for a uniform line, is not dependent on its length. The
SI unit of characteristic impedance is the
ohm.
The characteristic impedance of a lossless transmission line is purely
real, with no
reactive component (see
below). Energy supplied by a source at one end of such a line is transmitted through the line without being
dissipated in the line itself. A transmission line of finite length (lossless or lossy) that is terminated at one end with an
impedance equal to the characteristic impedance appears to the source like an infinitely long transmission line and produces no reflections.
Transmission line model
The characteristic impedance
of an infinite transmission line at a given angular frequency
is the ratio of the voltage and current of a pure sinusoidal wave of the same frequency travelling along the line. This relation is also the case for finite transmission lines until the wave reaches the end of the line. Generally, a wave is reflected back along the line in the opposite direction. When the reflected wave reaches the source, it is reflected yet again, adding to the transmitted wave and changing the ratio of the voltage and current at the input, causing the voltage-current ratio to no longer equal the characteristic impedance. This new ratio including the reflected energy is called the
input impedance of that particular transmission line and load.
The input impedance of an infinite line is equal to the characteristic impedance since the transmitted wave is never reflected back from the end. Equivalently: ''The characteristic impedance of a line is that impedance which, when terminating an arbitrary length of line at its output, produces an input impedance of equal value''. This is so because there is no reflection on a line terminated in its own characteristic impedance.

Applying the transmission line model based on the
telegrapher's equations as derived below,
the general expression for the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is:
where
This expression extends to DC by letting
tend to 0.
A surge of energy on a finite transmission line will see an impedance of
prior to any reflections returning; hence ''surge impedance'' is an alternative name for ''characteristic impedance''.
Although an infinite line is assumed, since all quantities are per unit length, the “per length” parts of all the units cancel, and the characteristic impedance is independent of the length of the transmission line.
The voltage and current
phasors on the line are related by the characteristic impedance as:
where the subscripts (+) and (−) mark the separate constants for the waves traveling forward (+) and backward (−). The rightmost expression has a negative sign because the current in the backward wave has the opposite direction to current in the forward wave.
Derivation
Using the telegrapher's equation

The differential equations describing the dependence of the
voltage
Voltage, also known as (electrical) potential difference, electric pressure, or electric tension, is the difference in electric potential between two points. In a Electrostatics, static electric field, it corresponds to the Work (electrical), ...
and
current on time and space are linear, so that a linear combination of solutions is again a solution. This means that we can consider solutions with a time dependence
. Doing so allows to factor out the time dependence, leaving an ordinary differential equation for the coefficients, which will be
phasors, dependent on position (space) only. Moreover, the parameters can be generalized to be frequency-dependent.
Consider a
steady-state problem such that the voltage and current can be written as:
Take the positive direction for
and
in the loop to be clockwise. Substitution in the telegraph equations and factoring out the time dependence
now gives:
with impedance
and
admittance
In electrical engineering, admittance is a measure of how easily a circuit or device will allow a current to flow. It is defined as the multiplicative inverse, reciprocal of Electrical impedance, impedance, analogous to how Electrical resistanc ...
. Derivation and substitution of these two
first-order differential equations results in two uncoupled second-order differential equations:
with
and
called the
propagation constant.
The solution to these types of equations can be written as:
with
,
,
and
the
constants of integration. Substituting these constants in the first-order system gives:
where
It can be seen that the constant
defined in the above equations has the dimensions of impedance (ratio of voltage to current) and is a function of primary constants of the line and operating frequency. It is called the ''characteristic impedance'' of the transmission line.
The general solution of the telegrapher's equations can now be written as:
Both the solution for the voltage and the current can be regarded as a superposition of two travelling waves in the
and
directions.
For typical transmission lines, that are carefully built from wire with low loss resistance
and small insulation leakage conductance
further, used for high frequencies, the inductive reactance
and the capacitive admittance
will both be large. In those cases, the
phase constant and characteristic impedance are typically very close to being real numbers:
Manufacturers make commercial cables to approximate this condition very closely over a wide range of frequencies.
As a limiting case of infinite ladder networks
Intuition
Consider an infinite
ladder network consisting of a series impedance
and a shunt admittance
Let its input impedance be
If a new pair of impedance
and admittance
is added in front of the network, its input impedance
remains unchanged since the network is infinite. Thus, it can be reduced to a finite network with one series impedance
and two parallel impedances
and
Its input impedance is given by the expression
[
:
which is also known as its iterative impedance. Its solution is:
:
For a transmission line, it can be seen as a limiting case of an infinite ladder network with ]infinitesimal
In mathematics, an infinitesimal number is a non-zero quantity that is closer to 0 than any non-zero real number is. The word ''infinitesimal'' comes from a 17th-century Modern Latin coinage ''infinitesimus'', which originally referred to the " ...
impedance and admittance at a constant ratio.[.] Taking the positive root, this equation simplifies to:
:
Derivation
Using this insight, many similar derivations exist in several books[ and are applicable to both lossless and lossy lines.]
Here, we follow an approach posted by Tim Healy. The line is modeled by a series of differential segments with differential series elements and shunt elements (as shown in the figure at the beginning of the article). The characteristic impedance is defined as the ratio of the input voltage to the input current of a semi-infinite length of line. We call this impedance That is, the impedance looking into the line on the left is But, of course, if we go down the line one differential length the impedance into the line is still Hence we can say that the impedance looking into the line on the far left is equal to in parallel with and all of which is in series with and Hence:
The added terms cancel, leaving
The first-power terms are the highest remaining order. Dividing out the common factor of and dividing through by the factor we get
In comparison to the factors whose divided out, the last term, which still carries a remaining factor is infinitesimal relative to the other, now finite terms, so we can drop it. That leads to
Reversing the sign applied to the square root has the effect of reversing the direction of the flow of current.
Lossless line
The analysis of lossless lines provides an accurate approximation for real transmission lines that simplifies the mathematics considered in modeling transmission lines. A lossless line is defined as a transmission line that has no line resistance and no dielectric loss. This would imply that the conductors act like perfect conductors and the dielectric acts like a perfect dielectric. For a lossless line, and are both zero, so the equation for characteristic impedance derived above reduces to:
In particular, does not depend any more upon the frequency. The above expression is wholly real, since the imaginary term has canceled out, implying that is purely resistive. For a lossless line terminated in , there is no loss of current across the line, and so the voltage remains the same along the line. The lossless line model is a useful approximation for many practical cases, such as low-loss transmission lines and transmission lines with high frequency. For both of these cases, and are much smaller than and , respectively, and can thus be ignored.
The solutions to the long line transmission equations include incident and reflected portions of the voltage and current:
When the line is terminated with its characteristic impedance, the reflected portions of these equations are reduced to 0 and the solutions to the voltage and current along the transmission line are wholly incident. Without a reflection of the wave, the load that is being supplied by the line effectively blends into the line making it appear to be an infinite line. In a lossless line this implies that the voltage and current remain the same everywhere along the transmission line. Their magnitudes remain constant along the length of the line and are only rotated by a phase angle.
Surge impedance loading
In electric power transmission, the characteristic impedance of a transmission line is expressed in terms of the surge impedance loading (SIL), or natural loading, being the power loading at which reactive power is neither produced nor absorbed:
in which is the RMS line-to-line voltage
Voltage, also known as (electrical) potential difference, electric pressure, or electric tension, is the difference in electric potential between two points. In a Electrostatics, static electric field, it corresponds to the Work (electrical), ...
in volts.
Loaded below its SIL, the voltage at the load will be greater than the system voltage. Above it, the load voltage is depressed. The Ferranti effect describes the voltage gain towards the remote end of a very lightly loaded (or open ended) transmission line. Underground cables normally have a very low characteristic impedance, resulting in an SIL that is typically in excess of the thermal limit of the cable.
Practical examples
The characteristic impedance of coaxial cable
Coaxial cable, or coax (pronounced ), is a type of electrical cable consisting of an inner Electrical conductor, conductor surrounded by a concentric conducting Electromagnetic shielding, shield, with the two separated by a dielectric (Insulat ...
s (coax) is commonly chosen to be for RF and microwave
Microwave is a form of electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths shorter than other radio waves but longer than infrared waves. Its wavelength ranges from about one meter to one millimeter, corresponding to frequency, frequencies between 300&n ...
applications. Coax for video
Video is an Electronics, electronic medium for the recording, copying, playback, broadcasting, and display of moving picture, moving image, visual Media (communication), media. Video was first developed for mechanical television systems, whi ...
applications is usually for its lower loss.
See also
*
*
* Characteristic admittance – Mathematical inverse of the characteristic impedance
* Iterative impedance – Characteristic impedance is a limiting case of this
*
*
*
*
References
Sources
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External links
{{DEFAULTSORT:Impedance, Characteristic
Electricity
Physical quantities
Distributed element circuits
Transmission lines
de:Leitungstheorie#Die allgemeine L.C3.B6sung der Leitungsgleichungen