How can a circuit be unbalanced?

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Unbalanced circuits in RF transmission can occur when there is an alternate path to ground, leading to different current flows on either side of a load, such as an antenna. This imbalance can also arise from other factors, including the presence of metal objects or floating grounds. A properly designed dipole antenna should ideally have equal currents in its elements, but unbalanced conditions can lead to unwanted radiation and interference. Baluns are used to convert unbalanced coaxial feeds to balanced antenna currents, ensuring that current flows only in the antenna elements. Additionally, techniques like wrapping coax around a ferrite ring can help mitigate unbalanced currents.
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I've been trying to understand rf unbalanced circuits.

What I don't understand is how you can have a series circuit in which there is a different current flow on each side of the load?

I read that it occurs when there is another path to ground?

Does it have to be a ground? Can you have imbalance with there is a path to a metal object or a floating ground?

How much difference between currents can there be?
 
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You can't have a series circuit with a current that isn't the same everywhere. You're probably mis-remembering where you heard the concept of an "unbalanced" load.
 
BHY-BK said:
I've been trying to understand rf unbalanced circuits.

What I don't understand is how you can have a series circuit in which there is a different current flow on each side of the load?

I read that it occurs when there is another path to ground?

Does it have to be a ground? Can you have imbalance with there is a path to a metal object or a floating ground?

How much difference between currents can there be?

"Unbalanced" has a different meaning for RF transmission lines. Can you please post links to the reading you have been doing? It is very hard to try to help you with your questions when you are ambiguous in your question. Please help us to help you... :smile:
 
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When it's working properly, a dipole is a ' balanced' radiator, with currents of equal amplitude flowing in each leg. When you design an antenna with dipoles in it, you have to assume that the only currents that will flow will be in the antenna elements themselves. That means you don't want any current flowing down the outside of the (coax ) feeder because those currents would produce radiation and interfere with the desired pattern and impedance. There will, of course, be equal and opposite currents flowing in the inner conductor and the inside of the screen. The current flowing along the inner can split, with some flowing in the 'bottom' dipole element and some current flowing down the outside of the feeder (Kirchoff's first law). A Bal-un will ensure that current will only flow in the legs of the dipoles, eliminating the 'unbalanced' flow of current. It converts the Unbalanced situation in the coax to a Balanced situation in the antenna. At the same time, some balun designs also give you an impedance transformation between the 50Ω coax and the higher impedance of the dipole array. (Other designs exist and the same thing applies to them as well). BTW, one good way to eliminate current flowing back down the outside of the feeder is to wrap several turns of the feeder through a ferrite ring - cheap and cheerful and it doesn't help with the match.
There are unbalanced radiators - e.g. a whip antenna on the ground or on a (big enough) ground plane. Current will flow in the whip and also along the ground. The ground currents produce an 'image' of the whip that is upside down and below the ground (same as an optical image in a mirror).
Why use coax to feed a dipole system? It's convenient, already screened and cheap to buy and to install. Also, most amplifiers have an unbalanced output (Signal and Earth). You can get balanced feeder and it is used, for instance, at HF transmitting stations, where it can run across the aerial field as two open wires or as a two wires inside metal trunking. That's hideously expensive but reduces spurious radiation from bends and switches. The twisted pairs, used for Ethernet etc, are balanced, too. Twisting the wires will reduce the radiation considerably (hence low crosstalk between adjacent lines).
 
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