Title :
A dielectric-free superconducting coaxial cable
Author :
Rose, Christopher ; Gans, Michael J.
Author_Institution :
AT&T Bell Lab., Holmdel, NJ, USA
fDate :
2/1/1990 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The theoretical properties of a dielectric-free superconducting coaxial cable with a magnetically levitated inner conductor are studied. It is found that at 100 GHz the intrinsic attenuation along such a cable is on the order of a 0.1 dB per kilometer. Furthermore, for a given cable, the loss is proportional to the square of the frequency. This low loss, coupled with a generous signal to noise ratio (≈80 dB at 100-GHz bandwidth), provides bit rates of 100 Gb/s over 600 km. At 10 Gb/s the distance increases to over 60000 km. Such a high-bandwidth, extremely-low-loss electronic transmission medium might be of interest for very-long distance repeaterless communications. In addition, since efficient means of tapping coaxial media already exist, local area network applications with an excess of 104 users could be supported. The two properties of superconductors central to this application are very low intrinsic loss and expulsion of magnetic flux. Low loss allows high-bandwidth dispersionless transmission, and magnetic flux expulsion permits magnetic support of the inner conductor, thereby avoiding the large dielectric losses associated with any support material
Keywords :
coaxial cables; high-frequency transmission lines; losses; magnetic levitation; superconducting cables; telecommunication cables; telecommunication transmission lines; 100 GHz; 100 Gbit/s; 600 to 60000 km; 80 dB; EHF; LAN applications; dielectric-free cable; electronic transmission medium; high-bandwidth; intrinsic attenuation; local area network; low loss; magnetic flux expulsion; magnetically levitated inner conductor; superconducting coaxial cable; telecommunication cables; very-long distance repeaterless communications; Coaxial cables; Conducting materials; Dielectric losses; Magnetic flux; Magnetic levitation; Magnetic materials; Magnetic properties; Propagation losses; Superconducting cables; Superconducting magnets;
Journal_Title :
Microwave Theory and Techniques, IEEE Transactions on