Bounded or Guided Transmission Media: Twisted Pair Cable
Bounded or Guided Transmission Media: Twisted Pair Cable
Media
Guided media, which are those that provide a conduit from one device to another,
include Twisted-Pair Cable, Coaxial Cable, and Fibre-Optic Cable.
A signal travelling along any of these media is directed and contained by the physical
limits of the medium. Twisted-pair and coaxial cable use metallic (copper) conductors
that accept and transport signals in the form of electric current. Optical fibre is a cable
that accepts and transports signals in the form of light.
A twisted pair consists of two conductors(normally copper), each with its own plastic
insulation, twisted together. One of these wires is used to carry signals to the receiver,
and the other is used only as ground reference. The receiver uses the difference
between the two. In addition to the signal sent by the sender on one of the wires,
interference(noise) and crosstalk may affect both wires and create unwanted signals. If
the two wires are parallel, the effect of these unwanted signals is not the same in both
wires because they are at different locations relative to the noise or crosstalk sources.
This results in a difference at the receiver.
Twisted Pair is of two types:
Installation is easy
Flexible
Cheap
It has high speed capacity,
100 meter limit
Higher grades of UTP are used in LAN technologies like Ethernet.
It consists of two insulating copper wires (1mm thick). The wires are twisted together in
a helical form to reduce electrical interference from similar pair.
Easy to install
Performance is adequate
Can be used for Analog or Digital transmission
Increases the signalling rate
Higher capacity than unshielded twisted pair
Eliminates crosstalk
Disadvantages of Shielded Twisted Pair Cable
Difficult to manufacture
Heavy
In telephone lines to provide voice and data channels. The DSL lines that are
used by the telephone companies to provide high-data-rate connections also use
the high-bandwidth capability of unshielded twisted-pair cables.
Local Area Network, such as 10Base-T and 100Base-T, also use twisted-pair
cables.
Coaxial Cable
Coaxial is called by this name because it contains two conductors that are parallel to
each other. Copper is used in this as centre conductor which can be a solid wire or a
standard one. It is surrounded by PVC installation, a sheath which is encased in an
outer conductor of metal foil, barid or both.
Outer metallic wrapping is used as a shield against noise and as the second conductor
which completes the circuit. The outer conductor is also encased in an insulating
sheath. The outermost part is the plastic cover which protects the whole cable.
Here the most common coaxial standards.
2. BroadBand
This uses analog transmission on standard cable television cabling. It transmits several
simultaneous signal using different frequencies. It covers large area when compared
with Baseband Coaxial Cable.
Bandwidth is high
Used in long distance telephone lines.
Transmits digital signals at a very high rate of 10Mbps.
Much higher noise immunity
Data transmission without distortion.
The can span to longer distance at higher speeds as they have better shielding
when compared to twisted pair cable
Coaxial cable was widely used in analog telephone networks, where a single
coaxial network could carry 10,000 voice signals.
Cable TV networks also use coaxial cables. In the traditional cable TV network,
the entire network used coaxial cable. Cable TV uses RG-59 coaxial cable.
In traditional Ethernet LANs. Because of it high bandwidth, and consequence
high data rate, coaxial cable was chosen for digital transmission in early Ethernet
LANs. The 10Base-2, or Thin Ethernet, uses RG-58 coaxial cable with BNC
connectors to transmit data at 10Mbps with a range of 185 m.
If the angle of incidence I(the angle the ray makes with the line perpendicular to
the interface between the two substances) is less than the critical angle, the
ray refracts and moves closer to the surface.
If the angle of incidence is greater than the critical angle, the ray reflects(makes
a turn) and travels again in the denser substance.
If the angle of incidence is equal to the critical angle, the ray refracts and moves
parallel to the surface as shown.
Note: The critical angle is a property of the substance, and its value differs from one
substance to another.
Optical fibres use reflection to guide light through a channel. A glass or plastic core is
surrounded by a cladding of less dense glass or plastic. The difference in density of the
two materials must be such that a beam of light moving through the core is reflected off
the cladding instead of being refracted into it.
Single Mode
Single mode uses step-index fibre and a highly focused source of light that limits
beams to a small range of angles, all close to the horizontal. The single-mode fibre itself
is manufactured with a much smaller diameter than that of multimode fibre, and with
substantially lower density.
The decrease in density results in a critical angle that is close enough to 90 degree to
make the propagation of beams almost horizontal.
Higher bandwidth
Less signal attenuation
Immunity to electromagnetic interference
Resistance to corrosive materials
Light weight
Greater immunity to tapping