1. Introduction
The problem of guided wave propagation in a wave guide with imperfectly reflecting boundaries arises in several applications, such as propagation in mine tunnels and in screened surface wave guides. In recent years, many studies have been carried out on the propagation characteristic of radio waves in tunnels in UHF band [1-2]. From the theoretical point of view, tunnels can be regarded as hollow waveguides surrounded by a lossy dielectric medium, such as concrete, ground, and so on. The problem of radio communication in tunnels has found solutions using leaky transmission lines as supports for propagation of transverse electromagnetic modes [3-4]. These modes are characterized by the fact that there is no cutoff frequency, and by an attenuation which increases with increasing frequency. However, when the frequency is high enough, natural propagation modes, which are transverse electric or transverse magnetic, can appear and interfere with the transmission line supported transverse electromagnetic modes [5].
Natural propagation can be helpful to solve some specific problems, such as radio communications in mines with rooms and pillars which cannot be solved easily with the help of transmission lines. Natural propagation modes are also useful for short range communications, for example, in some road tunnels. For distances shorter than 200m, these modes can be more suitable the transmission line supported modes [6].
In order to maximize the performance attainable feeding in the interior of tunnels with antenna systems, it is important to estimate the value and the attenuation of the electromagnetic strength inside the tunnel. Investigations concerning radiowave propagation in railways tunnels have been performed [7] and the results confirm the existence of a waveguide effect strongly related to the antenna positions. Recently, Abo-Seida et al. [8] and Abo-Seida [9] studied the electromagnetic field due to vertical magnetic dipole buried in stratified media. Also, Abo-Seida [10] computed the attenuation below and above the cutoff frequency in a rectangular tunnel.
It might be thought that waveguides with circular cross sections would be preferred to guides with rectangular cross sections, just as circular pipes are commonly used for carrying water and fluids in preference to rectangular pipes. However, circular waveguides have the disadvantage that there is only a very narrow range between the cutoff wavelength of the dominant mode and the cutoff wavelength of the next higher mode. As with rectangular guides, the modes may be classified as transverse electric ( TE ) or transverse magnetic ( TM ), according to whether it is the electric or magnetic lines of force that lie in planes perpendicular to the axis of the guide. The different modes are designated by a double subscript system analogous to that for rectangular guides.
2. Geometrical structure and basic equations
The concrete tunnel is practically of finite thickness. At low frequencies, below cutoff frequencies, the skin depth may exceed this thickness and thus the field penetrates to the outside. However, our aim is to check the possibilities of radio communication in tunnels and to replace the tunnel by a circular waveguide. It is possible to make this replacement in practical problems involving conducting walls.
A uniform waveguide of circular cross section is most conveniently described by polar coordinate system
For a circular waveguide with a radius
where
The cutoff wavelengths are given for a circular waveguide by [11]
where
Below the lowest cutoff frequency, propagation is not possible. The attenuation
where
Above its cutoff frequency, the attenuation
and for the
where
3. Determination of the attenuation constant
We consider the circular –waveguide model of the tunnel. In practice, the concrete tunnel wall is of finite thickness. This tunnel is considered to have a radius
The cutoff frequency is
As in the case of
4. Conclusion
The propagation of electromagnetic waves in a circular tunnel have been performed and the results confirm the existence of a waveguide effect strongly related to the antenna positions. The cutoff frequency was calculated and three different types of frequency ranges were characterized. The numerical results presented here indicate that the different values of m and n modes.
This work enable us to distinguish three different ranges of frequency, characterized by three different propagation mechanisms.
References
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