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					8. Wave Guides and Cavities 8A. Wave Guides Boundary Conditions at Perfect Conductors • • • • Suppose we have a region bounded by a conductor We want to consider oscillating fields in the non-conducting region  For oscillating fields, changing B would imply non-zero E E   B t But E must vanish in the conductor Ec  Bc  0  Dc  Hc • • • • • On the surface of the conductors,  and J are present Which appear in two of Maxwell’s equations Therefore, D and H|| need not be continuous But E|| and B must be continuous So the correct boundary conditions must be E  S   0, B  S   0 D    H  J  D t Cylindrical Wave Guides • Consider now a hollow infinite cylinder of arbitrary cross-section – We’ll make it along the z-direction • We want to find solutions moving along the cylinder D   E , B  H • Assume it is filled with a linear material: • We will use complex notation D  0  B – Time-dependence will look like e-it  • Maxwell’s equations with no sources E   B t • Use linearity plus time dependence  H  D   E  0    B ,   E  iB ,   B  i E t • Take curl of either of the last two equations: 2  2 E       E   i  B    E 2  2 B       B   i  E    B 2 2  E   E0 • Use the double cross-product rule    V     V    V • And therefore 2B   2B  0 2 Transverse and Longitudinal Dependence • Since we have translation dependence along z, it makes sense to look for  ikz it E  E x , y e ikz   solutions that go like e – Moving in the z direction B  B  x, y  e  ikz it 2E   2E  0 2B   2B  0    • Divide any derivative into   t  zˆ , t  xˆ  yˆ z x y transverse and longitudinal parts • Then we have, for example t2 E    2  k 2  E  0 t2 B    2  k 2  B  0 E  Et  E z , E z  Ez zˆ , Et  Ex xˆ  E y yˆ . • Also break up fields into longitudinal and transverse parts: • We now want to write our Maxwell’s equations broken up this way Breaking Up Some Maxwell’s Equations   t  zˆ    , t  xˆ  yˆ z x y E  Et  E z , E z  Ez zˆ , Et  Ex xˆ  E y yˆ . • Let’s look at some Maxwell’s equations:   E  iB ,   B  i E    E t  iBt    zˆ  Et   t   Ez zˆ   iBt  zˆ   Et  t Ez  zˆ  iBt z z    E  z  i Bz  zˆ     E   i B t t z z • But we assume fields look like E  E  x, y  e  ikz it B  B  x, y  e  ikz it • Therefore the last equation becomes • We similarly have zˆ   ikEt  t Ez   iBt zˆ   ikBt  t Bz   iEt TEM Modes • Can we find solutions with Ez = Bz = 0? zˆ   ikEt  t Ez   iBt • Such modes are called TEM modes zˆ   ikBt  t Bz   iEt – Because both E and B are transverse • Then we kzˆ  Et  Bt and  kzˆ  Bt  Et would have 2 2    zˆ  Bt ˆ ˆ ˆ k z   z  Et   kz  Bt • Multiplying the first by kzˆ  k 2 Et   2 Et • But the left side is • We would therefore have k    – Implies phase velocity equal to free waves • Recall also zˆ   t  Et z  i Bz  0  t  Et  0 • • • •  E  0  t  Et  0 And also This tells us finding Et is a 2D electrostatic problem Recall also that potential is constant on surfaces Only get non-trivial solutions if there are at least two conducting surfaces Sample Problem 8.1 A coaxial cable has inner radius a and outer radius b, and is filled with a material with electric permittivity and magnetic susceptibility . Find exact electric and magnetic field solutions for TEM modes. • We will start by finding the electric t  Et  0  t  Et field, which is transverse and satisfies • Since it has no curl, it is derivable from a potential     0 n 2 • Potential must be constant on the inner and outer surfaces Et  E    ρˆ • Symmetry implies that Et must be radial: 1  • No divergence C  E  C   E   0    E   E   ,    ρˆ t tells us:    C  ikz it • Put back in the z- and t-dependence E  ρˆ e • Where:  k    • The magnetic C   ikz it Bt  kzˆ  Et Bt    zˆ  Et field is then B φˆ e  • Take real part to get actual fields All We Need is the Z-Direction of the Fields zˆ   ikEt  t Ez   iBt • Now consider non-TEM modes zˆ   ikBt  t Bz   iEt – Ez or Bz are non-zero • Multiply second equation by i and substitute the first one zˆ   ikzˆ   ikEt  t Ez   it Bz    2Et • For a transverse vector, • We therefore have • Solve for Et: • Also recall zˆ   zˆ  At   At k 2Et  ik t Ez  i zˆ  t Bz   2Et Et  Bt  i   k 2 2  kt Ez  zˆ t Bz  2  kt Bz  zˆ t Ez  i   k 2 • Normally you have just Bz or Ez – Modes with Ez= 0 are called TE modes (transverse electric) – Modes with Bz = 0 are called TM modes (transverse magnetic) Finding Non-TEM modes Et  i   k 2  k t Ez   zˆ t Bz  2  Bt  i   k • All modes of E and B satisfy t2    2  k 2   0 • Let us define  2   2  k 2 t2   2  0 • Then our equations become Et  i 2   k t Ez   zˆ   t Bz  Bt  i 2   k t Bz   zˆ   t Ez  • We must also satisfy our boundary conditions E S  0, B  S 0 2 2  kt Bz  zˆ t Ez  TE Modes  2  k 2   2 Et  i 2   k t Ez   zˆ   t Bz       0 2 t 2 Bt  i 2   k t Bz   zˆ   t Ez  Case 1: TE modes (transverse electric) • Search for solutions with Ez = 0, so everything comes from Bz t2 Bz   2 Bz  0 • The transverse fields are then Bt  ik 2t Bz , Et  i 2 zˆ  t Bz • We must also satisfy boundary conditions E • These imply tBz must be parallel to the walls of the cylinder  Bz n S S  0  B S 0 • Solve the eigenvalue equation subject to the boundary conditions TM modes  2  k 2   2      0 2 t 2 Et  i 2   k t Ez   zˆ   t Bz  Bt  i 2   k t Bz   zˆ   t Ez  Case 2: TM modes (transverse magnetic) • Search for solutions with Bz = 0, so everything comes from Ez t2 Ez   2 Ez  0 • The transverse fields are then Et  ik 2t Ez , Bt  i 2 zˆ  t Ez • We must also satisfy the boundary conditions E S  0  B S • These imply that Ez must vanish on the walls Ez S  0 • Solve the eigenvalue equation subject to the boundary conditions Sample Problem 8.2 (1) A hollow cylindrical waveguide has circular cross-section of radius a. Find the relationship between the frequency and wave number for the lowest frequency modes for the TE and TM modes. • The frequencies are given by  2  k 2   2 • The 2 values are eigenvalues of the equation  t2   2   0     0 n2 – Where  is Bz (TE) or Ez (TM) modes • Makes sense to work in  2 1  1  2 2      0 cylindrical coordinates 2 2 2      • Rotational symmetry im   ,   R  e     implies solutions of the form • Substitute in: d 2 R 1 dR m2 2   R   R0 • Let x   2 2 d  d  • Then we have d 2 R 1 dR  m2    1  2  R  0 2 dx x dx  x  Sample Problem 8.2 (2) • • • • • A hollow cylindrical waveguide has circular cross-section of radius a. Find the relationship between the frequency and wave number for the lowest frequency modes for the TE and TM modes. 2 2   d R 1 dR m 2 2 2 x     k     1  2  R  0 2 dx x dx  x  This is Bessel’s Equation Solutions are Bessel functions R  x   J m  x   J m       0 n 2 Recall that  represents Bz or Ez  Bz S  0 or Ez S  0 And we have boundary conditions n We therefore must have TE modes: J m  a   0, TM modes: J m  a   0 • Let xmn be the roots of Jm and let ymn the roots of its derivative • Then the formula for 2 2 y x 2 2 mn the frequencies will be: TE:  2  k 2  mn , TM:   k  a2 a2 Sample Problem 8.2 (3) A hollow cylindrical waveguide has circular cross-section of radius a. Find the relationship between the frequency and wave number for the lowest frequency modes for the TE and TM modes. 2 2 y x TE:  2  k 2  mn2 , TM:  2  k 2  mn2 a a • Maple is happy to find roots of Bessel’s equation > for m from 0 to 3 do evalf(BesselJZeros(m,1..3)) end do; x01  2.4048, x11  3.8317,     0 n 2 x21  5.1356, x02  5.5201, x31  6.3802, • With a little coaxing we can also get it to find the y’s > for m from 0 to 3 do seq(fsolve(diff(BesselJ(m,x),x), x=(n+m/2-3/4)*Pi),n=1..3) end do; y11  1.8412, y21  3.0542, y01  3.8317, y31  4.2012, y41  5.3175, Comments on Modes 2 2 y x TE:  2  k 2  mn2 , TM:  2  k 2  mn2 a a y11  1.8412, y21  3.0542, y01  3.8317, y31  4.2012, y41  5.3175, x01  2.4048, x11  3.8317, x21  5.1356, x02  5.5201, x31  6.3802,  ynm a TE modes • Note that for each mode, there min   is a minimum frequency  xnm a TM modes • If you are at a limited , only a finite number of modes are possible – Usually a good thing – Ideally, want only one mode • The lowest mode is usually a TE mode • Note that the lowest modes often have m > 1 – Actually represent two modes because modes can be eim 8B. Rectangular Wave Guides Working out the Modes • Let’s now consider a rectangular wave guide – Dimension a  b with a  b  2  2 2     0 • We will work in Cartesian coordinates 2 2 x y • Boundary conditions:  Bz S  0 or Ez S  0 n   mx    ny  • For TE modes, we Bz  x, y   B0 cos  cos    want waves of the form  a   b  • For TM modes, we   mx    ny  want waves of the form Ez  x, y   E0 sin   sin    a   b  • In each case, we have 2 2   m n 2 2    2  2  b  a b a Restrictions on Modes   mx    ny    mx    ny  Ez  x, y   E0 sin  Bz  x, y   B0 cos   sin    cos   a b a b         2 2   m n 2 2 2 2 2    2  2    k   b  a • For the TM modes (Ez), we must have m > 0 and n > 0 • For the TE modes (Bz), we can’t have m = 0 and n = 0 – Since then Bz has no transverse derivative • Hence TE modes have m > 0 OR n > 0 • Degeneracy between TE mode and TM mode if both positive  • Lowest frequency mode: TE mode  10  a with (m,n) = (1,0) • Second lowest modes: modes with   2 ,    b 20 01 a b a (m,n) = (2,0) or (0,1) • If a  2b, then  factor of two difference between lowest and next lowest modes • Normally make a  2b The TE10 mode • We can work out all the fields for the TE10 mode – Put back in the z and t dependence • We then work out all the other pieces using Bt  ik 2t Bz , Et  i 2 zˆ  t Bz   x   ikz it Bz  B0 cos  e  a  • We therefore have Bt    x   ikz it B0 xˆ sin  e   a  iak   x   ikz it B0 yˆ sin  e   a  • The factors of i represent a phase shift between the various modes Et  ia b a 8C. Cavities Cylindrical Cavities • Let’s now cap off the cylindrical cavity, make the ends conducting • Let it be along z with z from 0 to d • On the end, we must have E  0  B  S S • This means at z = 0 and z = d, we have Et • We have up until now used modes with Bz 0,c  0  Bz 0,c or Ez   x, y  eikz it • We no longer want eikz, instead we want • We will have to take linear combinations of our previous solutions sin  kz   1 2i cos  kz   1 2 d ikz  ikz e  e   e ikz  e ikz  TE Modes in Cavities • For TE modes, we had t2 Bz   2 Bz  0  2  k 2   2 Bz  Bz  x, y  eikz it Bt  ik 2t Bz , Et  i 2 zˆ  t Bz • But we also need Bz  0  Bz  d   0 ikz  ikz • We therefore must have Bz to be like sin  kz   21i  e  e  • To get it to vanish at z = d, must have p k , p  1, 2,3, • So Bz is given by d Bz  Bz  x, y  sin  kz  eit d • To get the transverse components, take same linear combinations: Bt   ik t Bz  x, y  2 1 2i e Et  i zˆ  t Bz  x, y  2 ikz 1 2i e e ikz  ikz e e Bt   2kt Bz  x, y  cos  kz  eit  it  ikz e  it Et  i 2zˆ t Bz  x, y  sin  kz  eit TM Modes in Cavities • For TM modes, we had t2 Ez   2 Ez  0 Ez  Ez  x, y  eikz it • • • • •  2  k 2   2 Et  ik 2t Ez , Bt  i 2 zˆ  t Bz But we also need Et  0  Et  d   0 We have to make the two contributions to Et cancel at z = 0, d This can be done if Ez is like cos  kz   12  eikz  e ikz  To get it to work at z = d, must have p So Ez is given by k , p  0,1, 2, d it Ez  Ez  x, y  cos  kz  e d • To get the transverse components, take same linear combinations: Et   ik t Ez  x, y  2 1 2 e ikz Bt  i zˆ  t Ez  x, y  2 1 2 e e  ikz ikz e e Et   2kt Ez  x, y  sin  kz  eit  it  ikz e  it Bt  i 2 zˆ t Ez  x, y  cos  kz  eit Rules for Cavities Summarized  2  k 2   2 k   p • For both TE and TM modes, we have d – k > 0 for TE, k  0 for TM 2 2 t      0 • We have to solve the equation –  represents Bz for TA and Ez for TM   S 0  S 0 • Boundary conditions for TE: n • Boundary conditions for TM: d Bz    x, y  sin  kz  eit • For TM modes, we then have Bt   2kt  x, y  cos  kz  eit Et  i 2zˆ t  x, y  sin  kz  eit • For TM modes, we then have Ez    x, y  cos  kz  eit Et   2 kt  x, y  sin  kz  eit Bt  i 2 zˆ t Ez  x, y  cos  kz  eit Box-Shaped Cavities • Consider a cavity of dimensions a  b  d • Frequency is given be  2  k 2   2 • Where k is given by p – p = 1, 2, 3, … for TE k d – p = 0, 1, 2, … for TM d 2 2 2 2 • In both cases, we had  m  n 2  mn  2  2 – m > 0 OR n > 0 for TE a b – m > 0 AND n > 0 for TM 2 2 2 m n p • Therefore, our frequencies are: 2 mnp   2 2 2 a b c • At least two of m, n, p must be non-zero – If m = 0 or n = 0, it is a TE mode – If p = 0, it is a TM modes – If all three are non-zero, it can be a TE or TM mode b a Sample Problem 8.2 (1) A conducting box-shaped cavity has dimensions a  b  d. Write explicitly the form of all fields for the TE1,0,1 mode, and find the energy in electric and magnetic fields as a function of time. • For TE modes, we first solve  2   2  0  t  – Where  is Bz n  x   • The 1,0 solution is   B0 cos    a  – I arbitrarily 2 included 2/2  2   2 •  is given by a • Next find Bz: Bz    x, y  sin  kz  e • Where k is given by • So we have   x    z  it Bz  B0 cos   sin  e  a   d  it k S 0 d     0 n 2  d b a Sample Problem 8.2 (2) . . . Write explicitly the form of all fields for the TE modes, and find the energy in electric and magnetic fields as a function of time. x    B0 cos    a  • Now let’s get Bt:   2 2 a2  k d Bt  k 2t  x, y  cos  kz  eit a2  x    z  it a x    z   it Bt  B0 2  t cos  cos e ˆ   B0 x sin  cos  e       d a d     d  a   d  • And finally, let’s go for Et: Et  i 2zˆ t  x, y  sin  kz  eit ia 2 i a   x    z  it   x    z   it ˆ Et   2 B0 z t cos  B0 yˆ sin  sin  e  sin   e        a   d   a   d  • We will also need the 2 2 2 2 2   frequencies, which are given by   k    2  2  2 a d Sample Problem 8.2 (3) . . . find the energy in electric and magnetic fields as a function of time. i a   x    z   it E B0 yˆ sin   sin  e   a   d   2  2 a 2  2 d2 a x  z  • Keep in mind that we need to take ˆ E B0 y sin   sin   sin t    a   d  the real part of these expressions 2 2 • The electric energy  a 2 2 x  2 z  2 2 1 uE  2  E  B0 sin  density is:  sin   sin t  2 2  a   d  • Total electric energy is a2  d 2 2 2 x  2 z  2 U E   u E dx dy dz  B sin sin sin t  dx dy dz 0     2 2 d  a   c  a2  d 2 2 a d 2 UE  B b sin t  0 2 2 d 2 2 UE  a  a2  d 2  b 8 d B02 sin 2 t  Sample Problem 8.2 (4) . . . find the energy in electric and magnetic fields as a function of time. a   x    z  it x    z   it Bz  B0 cos  Bt   B0 xˆ sin   sin  e  cos  e d  a   d   a   d  • Again, take the real part • Now let’s go for the magnetic energy density: 2 1 2  1  x  z a  2  2 2 2 x 2   z  2 uB  B  B cos sin  sin cos cos t  0          2 2 2   a   d  d  a   d  U B   uB dx dy dz 1 2  2   x  2   z  a2 2 x  2   z  2  B0  cos  sin  sin cos cos t  dx dy dz        2 2  a   c  d  a   c   1 2  a d a2 a d  2  B0  b  2 b  cos t  2  2 2 d 2 2  UB  a  a2  d 2  b 8 d B02 cos2 t  Sample Problem 8.2 (5) A conducting box-shaped cavity has dimensions a  b  d. Write explicitly the form of all fields for the TE1,0,1 mode, and find the energy in electric and magnetic fields as a function of time. UE  a  a2  d 2  b 8 d B02 sin 2 t  • It is pretty easy to see that UB  a  a2  d 2  b 2 d UE UB  B02 cos2 t  d a  a2  d 2  b 2 d     0 n 2 B02 b • Of course, this is just conservation of energy a
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            