The wave impedance of an electromagnetic wave is the ratio of the transverse components of the electric and magnetic fields (the transverse components being those at right angles to the direction of propagation). For a transverse-electric-magnetic (TEM) plane wave traveling through a homogeneous medium, the wave impedance is everywhere equal to the intrinsic impedance of the medium. In particular, for a plane wave travelling through empty space, the wave impedance is equal to the impedance of free space. The symbol Z is used to represent it and it is expressed in units of ohms. The symbol η (eta) may be used instead of Z for wave impedance to avoid confusion with electrical impedance.
The wave impedance is given by
Z=
-(x) | |
{E | |
0 |
\over
-(x)} | |
H | |
0 |
-(x) | |
E | |
0 |
-(x) | |
H | |
0 |
In terms of the parameters of an electromagnetic wave and the medium it travels through, the wave impedance is given by
Z=\sqrt{j\omega\mu\over\sigma+j\omega\varepsilon}
Z=\sqrt{\mu\over\varepsilon}.
See main article: Impedance of free space.
In free space the wave impedance of plane waves is:
Z0=\sqrt{
\mu0 | |
\varepsilon0 |
c0=
1 | |
\sqrt{\mu0\varepsilon0 |
Z0=\mu0c0
Hence the value essentially depends on
\mu0
The currently accepted value of
Z0
In an isotropic, homogeneous dielectric with negligible magnetic properties, i.e.
\mu=\mu0
\varepsilon=\varepsilonr\varepsilon0
Z=\sqrt{\mu\over\varepsilon}=\sqrt{\mu0\over\varepsilon0\varepsilonr}={Z0\over\sqrt{\varepsilonr}} ≈ {377\over\sqrt{\varepsilonr}}\Omega
\varepsilonr
For any waveguide in the form of a hollow metal tube, (such as rectangular guide, circular guide, or double-ridge guide), the wave impedance of a travelling wave is dependent on the frequency
f
Z=
Z0 | |||||
|
Z=Z0\sqrt{1-\left(
fc | |
f |
\right)2
Above the cut-off, the impedance is real (resistive) and the wave carries energy. Below cut-off the impedance is imaginary (reactive) and the wave is evanescent. These expressions neglect the effect of resistive loss in the walls of the waveguide. For a waveguide entirely filled with a homogeneous dielectric medium, similar expressions apply, but with the wave impedance of the medium replacing Z0. The presence of the dielectric also modifies the cut-off frequency fc.
For a waveguide or transmission line containing more than one type of dielectric medium (such as microstrip), the wave impedance will in general vary over the cross-section of the line.