Hi,
Sorry, yeah I was going off on a bit of a tangent
I could find very little specific info on Skin effect on the inner surface of the outer conductor
Yes, that is correct for a solid outer conductor where it is a solid tube, or a thin metallic film wrap as used in many coax cables between the outer braid and the dielectric
but there are 2 situations where this situation fails and we get
common mode currents flowing along the outside of the outer conductor
1) impedance mismatches between transmitter and transmission line or between transmission line and antenna ... and this is what I was really referring to when I was talking about the use of BALUNS and chokes to stop that current flow
2) a braided outer conductor outer conductor, because of its makeup allows RF currents to be present on the inside and outside surfaces
consider how the braid weaves over itself and at points it's inside and other points it's outside.
I suspect in such a case it would be difficult to study any inner surface skin effect, as the inner surface isn't continuous.
Here is a PDF article that does give some insight into skin effect on the inner surface of the outer conductor ...
http://iet-journals.org/archive/2012/dec_vol_2_no_12/7397481351593914.pdf
if I find anything else I will add it to the thread
The be all and end all of EM, transmissions lines etc is this guy ...
J.D. Kraus, he, in collaboration with others, has written pretty definitive publications on the subject
below is a link to a free copy of the 2nd edition
https://ia600703.us.archive.org/18/items/Electromagnetics_559/KrausCarver-Electromagnetics.pdf
there is at least a 5th edition, behind several different site paywalls
Regards
Dave