Licchavi Lyceum

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Licchavi Lyceum

Standing Wave Ratio

The Standing Wave Ratio (SWR) is a measure of how efficiently power is transmitted from a source to a load through a transmission line. It indicates the presence of standing waves due to impedance mismatch.

Definition

The standing wave ratio (SWR) is defined as  the ratio of the maximum amplitude of the voltage (or current) along a transmission line to the minimum amplitude of the voltage (or current).

Mathematical Expression

Voltage SWR (\(S\)) is given by:

\[
S = \frac{V_\text{max}}{V_\text{min}}
\]

Alternatively, using reflection coefficient (\(\Gamma\)):

\[
S = \frac{1 + |\Gamma|}{1 – |\Gamma|}
\]

  • \(V_\text{max}\) = maximum voltage along the line
  • \(V_\text{min}\) = minimum voltage along the line
  • \(|\Gamma|\) = magnitude of reflection coefficient

Reflection Coefficient

The reflection coefficient is defined as:

\[
\Gamma = \frac{Z_L – Z_0}{Z_L + Z_0}
\]

  • \(Z_L\) = load impedance
  • \(Z_0\) = characteristic impedance of the transmission line

Properties

  • \(S = 1\) → perfect matching, no reflections
  • \(S > 1\) → presence of standing waves, some power is reflected
  • Higher SWR → higher reflection and power loss

Applications

  • Transmission line analysis
  • Antenna matching
  • RF and microwave engineering
  • Power delivery optimization