Can a Copper Cable Effectively Pick Up Terahertz Signals?

AI Thread Summary
Copper cables can pick up some terahertz signals, but their effectiveness diminishes at higher frequencies due to skin effect and resistance. While a thick copper cable may theoretically transmit signals up to visible light frequencies, practical limitations arise in real-world applications. Waveguides are generally preferred for RF transmission, as they can handle higher frequencies more efficiently and reduce losses. Differential copper lines can be used for terahertz frequencies, but they require careful design and filtering. Overall, while it is possible to work with terahertz signals using copper, specialized methods like waveguides or dielectric materials are often more effective.
konrad109
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Hi, recent EE graduate, I'm working on a project for myself. I dealt with mostly controls, signals, and digital stuff, and not enough electromagnetics or RF so I am pretty clueless here.

If I were to radiate the full electromagnetic spectrum from dc to visible light onto a copper cable, would it pick up all the frequencies or would it kill off the higher frequencies entirely? Mainly I am interested in a few Terahertz (infrared).

I know I'm missing a lot of info here so sorry if sound ignorant but this wasn't my area of study and its hard to pick this stuff up on your own. I know there are such things as waveguides and something with the ground plane when you are at really high frequencies but all I have to work on is what I learned in my electromagnetic interference class.

With skin effect, I calculated that at that frequency a 20 mil copper cable would have

R per meter = 447 ohms
L per meter = 2.4 pH

They both get smaller as the thickness of the cable decreases

I made a lumped circuit approximation (not sure if this is correct to do with a 1meter cable and 3 THz signal) where I put 1 of each in series on each side of a load resistor and do AC analysis in LTSpice, which gives me an LP filter with w_0 of roughly 10 THz. So it seems like a 1m cable like this cable would be able to pass a signal at the frequencies I am interested in, but this doesn't really seem feasible because its saying that a really thick copper cable could pass visible light. I know nothing about antennas so I don't know if it could pick up the signal either. Is it at all possible to pick up a THz signal with a copper wire with proper filtering and gain or am I wasting my time?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
There are modes where a single wire can carry radio frequency but not without a lot of radiation and therefore loss.

RF is normally carried by coaxial cable or waveguide. Coax has a 'cut-off' because when the inner diameter of the outer conductor is greater than half a wavelenth it also behaves like a waveguide and if the frequency is even higher waveguide higher modes start to appear.

Waveguide tend to be used over a limited range of frequencies. ( less than an ocatave). There is a minimum cut-off where the half wavelength is less than the largest dimension of the waveguide cross section (e.g longest side in a rectangular guide). The usually mode is TE10. Using a waveguide at a higher frequencies outside its normal band while result in multiple higher order modes appearing.

You needs to read up on waveguide and modes.. TE10 .. TE11. TM10. Transverse Electric. Transverse Magnetic.

I think in theory light would propagate through plain copper tube if it was slightly bigger than half a wavelength. It might be rather difficult to manufacture.
 
For frequencies in the range 300-1000 GHz it is usually more efficient to use a dilelectric waveguide (basically a plastic pipe) than a copper waveguide.

However, it is actually possible to use differential copper lines for frequencies in the THz regime (there was a talk about numerical simulations of this at a Comsol conference, I have the paper on a CD somewhere).
 
Waveguides also act as receivers/antennas for higher frequencies?

I am very interested in that paper.
 
konrad109 said:
Waveguides also act as receivers/antennas for higher frequencies?

I am very interested in that paper.

The waveguide itself is just a conduit to guide the EM waves; it is not an antenna itself. The waveguide will end in a horn of some sort, which acts as the TX/RX "antenna". It will often be placed at the focus of a parabolic reflector, for example, to increase the gain of the antenna dramatically...
 
I used to be an HVAC technician. One time I had a service call in which there was no power to the thermostat. The thermostat did not have power because the fuse in the air handler was blown. The fuse in the air handler was blown because there was a low voltage short. The rubber coating on one of the thermostat wires was chewed off by a rodent. The exposed metal in the thermostat wire was touching the metal cabinet of the air handler. This was a low voltage short. This low voltage...
Hey guys. I have a question related to electricity and alternating current. Say an alien fictional society developed electricity, and settled on a standard like 73V AC current at 46 Hz. How would appliances be designed, and what impact would the lower frequency and voltage have on transformers, wiring, TVs, computers, LEDs, motors, and heating, assuming the laws of physics and technology are the same as on Earth?
Thread 'How Does Jaguar's 1980s V12 Dual Coil Ignition System Enhance Spark Strength?'
I have come across a dual coil ignition system as used by Jaguar on their V12 in the 1980's. It uses two ignition coils with their primary windings wired in parallel. The primary coil has its secondary winding wired to the distributor and then to the spark plugs as is standard practice. However, the auxiliary coil has it secondary winding output sealed off. The purpose of the system was to provide a stronger spark to the plugs, always a difficult task with the very short dwell time of a...
Back
Top