Transmission line modeling — short, medium-π, long with ABCD
Three lumped models by length, the hyperbolic ABCD form, surge impedance Z_c, SIL = V_LL²/Z_c, and the Ferranti effect on long lightly-loaded lines.
Step 1 — Four distributed parameters: R, L, G, C per km
Reference notes
Use Next → on the narrator to walk through the three transmission-line lumped models (short / nominal-π / long with hyperbolic ABCD), the ABCD-parameter algebra that lets you cascade two-ports, and the surge-impedance / SIL / Ferranti concepts that govern line operation.
The four distributed parameters
Every transmission line is described by four per-unit-length parameters:
- R — series resistance per km (Ω/km). Source of I²R losses.
- L — series inductance per km (H/km). Source of voltage drop V = jωL·I.
- G — shunt conductance per km (S/km). Insulation leakage; usually negligible.
- C — shunt capacitance per km (F/km). Source of charging current and Ferranti rise.
Compact form: series impedance z = R + jωL (Ω/km), shunt admittance y = G + jωC (S/km).
Model choice by line length
Short line (< 80 km / 50 mi)
Shunt admittance is small and neglected. Only series Z = z·ℓ matters.
Medium line (80–250 km)
Use nominal-π: full series Z in middle, total shunt Y = y·ℓ split into Y/2 at each end.
Nominal-T is the alternative — Z/2 at each end, full Y in middle. Both have similar accuracy.
Long line (> 250 km)
Solve the telegrapher equations to get exact ABCD via hyperbolic functions of the propagation constant γ:
For a lossless approximation (drop R, G): γ = jω√(LC) is purely imaginary, and Z_c = √(L/C) is purely real. Useful for surge-impedance / SIL calculations.
ABCD parameters
ABCD are the standard two-port parameters for transmission elements. The matrix equation:
Two key constraints for passive transmission lines:
- Reciprocity: A·D − B·C = 1.
- Symmetry: A = D (if the line looks the same from either end).
Cascaded networks combine by matrix multiplication: [A_total] = [A_1] · [A_2]. That's the whole reason ABCD is the standard tool — chaining transformers, lines, and shunt compensators is just sequential 2×2 multiplication.
Surge impedance, SIL, and the Ferranti effect
The characteristic (surge) impedance is the value that, if used as the load impedance, produces a flat voltage profile along the line.
Typical Z_c values:
- Overhead 3-φ transmission line: 350–450 Ω.
- Underground HV cable: 30–80 Ω (much lower because C/km is much higher).
The surge-impedance loading is the real-power load at which |V_s| = |V_r|:
For a 230 kV line with Z_c = 380 Ω: SIL = 230²/0.380 ≈ 139 MW.
- Loading below SIL → line is capacitively dominant → voltage RISES along the line → Ferranti effect. Worst at no load on a long line.
- Loading above SIL → line is inductively dominant → voltage drops along the line.
Operator response:
- Light load on long lines → connect shunt reactors at the receiving end to absorb excess MVAR and pull voltage down.
- Heavy load → connect shunt capacitors to provide reactive support and prop voltage up.
Voltage regulation
where V_r,NL is the no-load and V_r,FL is the full-load receiving-end voltage with sending-end voltage held constant. On a short line with lagging PF, Reg is dominated by I·X·sin θ. On long lines, the calculation needs the full ABCD.
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