Computer Networks_Chapter 7 Transmission Media (Complete)
Computer Networks_Chapter 7 Transmission Media (Complete)
Transmission Media
Computer Networks
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Transmission Media
Anything that can carry information from a source to a destination.
Two main categories:
Guided ― wires, cables
Unguided ― wireless transmission, e.g. radio, microwave, infrared,
sound etc.
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Guided media
That provide a conduit from one device to another,
include twisted-pair cable, coaxial cable, and fiber-optic
cable.
A signal traveling along guided media is directed and
contained by the physical limits of the medium
Twisted-pair and coaxial cable use metallic (copper)
conductors that accept transport signals in the form of an
electric current
Optical fiber is a glass cable that accepts and transports
signals in the form of light
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Twisted-Pair Cables
If the pair of wires are not twisted, electromagnetic noises
from, e.g., motors, will affect the closer wire more than the
further one, thereby causing errors
Two basic types, STP and unshielded twisted-pair (UTP).
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Twisted Pair (TP) Characteristics
Analog transmission
Amplifiers every 5km to 6km
Digital transmission
Use either analog or digital signals
repeater every 2km or 3km
TP is Limited
Distance
Bandwidth
Data rate
Susceptible to interference and noise
Easy coupling of electromagnetic fields
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Twisted Pair - Applications
Most common medium
Telephone network
Individual residential telephone sets are connected to the local telephone
exchange (or “end office”) by twisted-pair wire. These are referred to as
subscriber loop.
Within an office building
Each telephone is connected to a twisted pair, which goes to the in-house
private branch exchange (PBX) system.
These twisted-pair installations were designed to support voice traffic
using analog signaling. However, by means of a modem, these facilities
can handle digital data traffic at modest data rates.
For digital signaling: connections to a digital data switch or a digital
PBX
For local area networks (LAN)
Data rates can be around 10Mbps, 100Mbps, or even 1Gbps.
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Twisted Pair - Pros and Cons
Pros
Twisted pair is much less expensive than other
commonly used guided transmission media.
Twisted pair is easier to work with.
Cons: limited in distance, bandwidth, and data rate
Short range: not good for long-distance
E.g., the data rate of ADSL depends on the distance
1.5Mbps for 18,000ft
2.0Mbps for 16,000ft
6.0Mbps for 12,000ft
9.0Mbps for 9000ft
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Shielded Twisted-Pair (STP)
STP cables are similar to UTP cables, except there is a metal foil
or braided-metal-mesh cover that encases each pair of insulated
wires
An extra metallic sheath on each pair
Relatively more expensive
Provide better performance than UTP
Increased Data rate
Increased Bandwidth
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Unshielded Twisted-Pair (UTP)
Typically wrapped inside a plastic cover (for mechanical protection)
Consists of 5 pairs (10 wires) of insulated copper wires typically about
1 mm thick.
The wires are twisted together in a helical form.
Twisting reduces the interference between pairs of wires.
Flexible and cheap cable.
Ordinary telephone wire
Easiest to install
Suffers from external electromagnetic interference
Category rating based on number of twists per inch and the material
used
CAT 3, CAT 4, CAT 5, Enhanced CAT 5 and now CAT 6.
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Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP)
A sample UTP cable with 5 unshielded twisted
pairs of wires.
Insulator Metal
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Categories of UTP
UTP comes in several categories that are based on the
number of twists in the wires,
the diameter of the wires and the
material used in the wires.
Category 3 is the wiring used primarily for telephone
connections.
Category 5e and Category 6 are currently the most common
Ethernet cables used.
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Categories of UTP : CAT 3
The transmission characteristics are specified up to 16MHz
(Bandwidth 16 Mhz)
E.g., the attenuation at 16MHz is about 13db per 100m
11.5 dB Attenuation
100 ohms Impedance
Used in voice applications and 10baseT (10Mbps) Ethernet
Twist length: 7.5 cm to 10 cm
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Categories of UTP : CAT 4
20 MHz Bandwidth
7.5 dB Attenuation
100 ohms Impedance
Used in 10baseT (10Mbps) Ethernet
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Categories of UTP : CAT 5
The transmission characteristics are specified up to 100MHz
(100 MHz Bandwidth)
E.g., the attenuation at 16MHz is about 8db per 100m, the
attenuation at 100MHz is about 22db per 100m
24.0 dB Attenuation
100 ohms Impedance
Used for high-speed data transmission
Used in 10BaseT (10 Mbps) Ethernet & Fast Ethernet (100
Mbps)
Twist length: 0.6 cm to 0.85 cm
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Categories of UTP : CAT 5e
150 MHz Bandwidth
24.0 dB Attenuation
100 ohms Impedance
Transmits high-speed data
Used in Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps), Gigabit Ethernet (1000
Mbps) & 155 Mbps ATM
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Categories of UTP : CAT 6
250 MHz Bandwidth
19.8 dB Attenuation
100 ohms Impedance
Transmits high-speed data
Used in Gigabit Ethernet (1000 Mbps) & 10 Gig Ethernet
(10000 Mbps)
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Categories of UTP Cables
EIA classifies UTP cables according to the quality:
Category 1 ― the lowest quality, only good for voice, mainly found
in very old buildings, not recommended now
Category 2 ― good for voice and low data rates (up to 4Mbps for
low-speed token ring networks)
Category 3 ― at least 3 twists per foot, for up to 10 Mbps (common
in phone networks in residential buildings)
Category 4 ― up to 16 Mbps (mainly for token rings)
Category 5― up to 100 Mbps (common for networks targeted for
high-speed data communications)
Category 6 ― more twists than Cat 5, up to 1
Gbps
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Connectors
Most common UTP connector is RJ45
R J stands for Registered Jack
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Coaxial Cables
In general, coaxial cables, or coax, carry signals of
higher freq (100KHz–500MHz) than UTP cables
Outer metallic wrapping serves both as a shield
against noise and as the second conductor that
completes the circuit
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Coaxial Cable Applications
Television (TV) signals distribution
Ariel to TV
Cable TV
Digital
Repeater every 1km
Closer for higher data rates
Problem
Inter-modulation noise
Thermal noise
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Categories of coaxial cables
Coaxial cables are categorized by their radio government (RG)
ratings
Each RG number denotes a unique set of physical specifications
Wire gauge of the inner conductor
Thickness and type of the inner insulator
Construction of the shield
Size and type of the outer casing
Each RG ratings is adapted for a specialized function
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Coaxial Cable Connectors
Coaxial cable connector is BNC (Bayone-Neill-
Concelman)
Figure shows the BNC connector, the BNC T
connector, and the BNC terminator
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Fiber Optic Cable
Use light to send information through the optical medium.
Uses the principal of total internal reflection.
Modulated light transmissions are used to transmit the signal.
FO Cable may have 1 to over 1000 fibers
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The Nature of Light
Light travels at 3108 ms-1 in free space and
is the fastest possible speed in the Universe
The speed of light
300,000 Km/sec in a vacuum
Depends on the density of the medium through
which it is traveling
The higher the density, the slower the speed
Light slows down in denser media, e.g. glass
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Fiber-Optic Cables
An optical fiber consists of a core (denser material) and a
cladding (less dense material)
Contains one or several glass fibers at its core
Surrounding the fibers is a layer called cladding
62.5/125 µm multimode fiber
50/125 µm multimode fiber
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Propagation Modes
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Fiber-Optic Cables Types
Two types of Fiber Optic media :
Multimode
Single mode
Single mode OF:
10 µm single-mode fiber
Carries light pulses along single path
Uses Laser Light Source
Single mode Fiber has a very small core and carry only one beam of
light. It can support Gbps data rates over > 100 Km without using
repeaters.
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Optical Fiber - Applications
Long-haul trunks
thousands of km
Metropolitan trunks
hundreds of km
Rural exchange trunks
tens of km
Subscriber loops
To replace twisted pair and coaxial cable
LANs: very high data rate, 100Mbps to 10Gbps
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Fiber Sizes
By the ratio of the diameter of their core to the diameter
of their cladding [micrometers]
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Fiber-Optic Connections
Fiber-optic use three different type of connectors
1. Subscriber Channel (SC) connector
Used in cable TV and it uses a push/pull locking system
2. The Straight-Tip (ST) connector
Used for connecting cable to networking devices
3. MT-RJ in new connector with the same size as RJ45
Applications
It used in backbone networks
For cable TV with coaxial cable (a hybrid network)
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Fiber-Optic Advantages and Disadvantages
Noise resistance ― external light is blocked by outer jacket
Less signal attenuation ― a signal can run for miles without regeneration
(currently, the lowest measured loss is about ~4% or 0.16dB per km)
Higher bandwidth ― currently, limits on data rates come from the signal
generation/reception technology, not the fiber itself
Light weight
Less Immunity to electromagnetic interference:
Electromagnetic noise cannot affect fiber-optic cables
Disadvantages:
Cost ― Optical fibers are expensive
Installation/maintenance ― any crack in the core will degrade the signal, and all
connections must be perfectly aligned
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Guided Media Comparison
Point-to-Point Characteristics
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Transmission Characteristics of
Guided Media
Frequency Typical Typical Repeater
Range Attenuation Delay Spacing
Twisted pair 0 to 3.5 kHz 0.2 dB/km 50 µs/km 2 To 3 Km
(with @ 1 kHz
loading)
Twisted 0 to 1 MHz 0.7 dB/km 5 µs/km 2 To 3 Km
pairs (multi- @ 1 kHz
pair cables)
Coaxial 0 to 500 7 dB/km @ 4 µs/km 1 to 9 km
cable MHz 10 MHz
Optical fiber 186 to 370 0.2 to 0.5 5 µs/km 40 km
THz dB/km
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Wireless Media
Very useful in difficult terrain where cable laying is not
possible.
Provides mobility to communication nodes.
Right of way and cable laying costs can be reduced.
Susceptible to rain, atmospheric variations and Objects in
transmission path.
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Wireless Media Applications
Indoor : 10 – 50m : Bluetooth, WLAN
Short range Outdoor : 50 – 200m: WLAN
Mid Range Outdoor : 200m – 5 Km : GSM, CDMA,
WLAN Point-to-Point, Wi-Max
Long Range Outdoor : 5 Km – 100 Km : Microwave
Point-to-Point
Long Distance Communication : Across Continents :
Satellite Communication
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UNGUIDED MEDIA: WIRELESS
Wireless transmission can be divided into:
Radio waves
Microwaves
Infrared waves
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UNGUIDED MEDIA: Radio waves
Radio waves: waves range in frequencies between 3 KHz and 1 GHz
Microwaves: waves ranging in frequencies between 1 and 300 GHz
Radio waves are omnidirectional (propagated in all directions)
The sending and receiving antennas do not have to be aligned
Disadvantage
One antenna interferences another antenna when they using same
frequency
Radio waves that propagate in the sky mode, can travel long distance [AM radio]
Radio waves [low and medium frequencies] can penetrate walls inside a building
Advantage: an AM radio can be received inside a building
Disadvantage: we cannot isolate a communication to just inside or outside a
building
Applications
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Useful for multicasting: Radio, television. Cordless phones and paging system
Unguided Media – Radio Waves
Omni directional Antenna
Frequencies between 3 KHz and
1 GHz.
are used for multicasts
communications, such as radio
and television, and paging system.
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UNGUIDED MEDIA: Microwaves
Microwaves: waves ranging in frequencies between 1 and 300 GHz
Microwaves are unidirectional
Antenna need to be aligned
Advantage: pair of antenna can be aligned without interfering
with another pair
Microwave propagation is line-of-sight
For long distance communication
Very tall towers
Repeater
Very high-frequency microwaves cannot penetrate walls
Disadvantage if receiver inside a building
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UNGUIDED MEDIA: Microwaves
Applications
Due to unidirectional properties, microwaves useful when unicast
(one-to-one) communication
Cellular phones
Satellite networks
Wireless LANs
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UNGUIDED MEDIA: Infrared
From 300 GHz to 400 THz (wavelengths from 1 mm to 770
nm)
Use for short-range communication
It has high frequency, cannot penetrate walls
Prevents interference between one system and another
Remote control not interfere with our neighbours
Can not be used outside because sun’s rays contain infrared
waves (interference)
(IrDA) Infrared Data Association established standards for
communicating between devices:
Keyboards, mice, PCs and printers
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Antennas
electrical conductor used to radiate or collect electromagnetic
energy
Transmission antenna
radio frequency energy from transmitter
converted to electromagnetic energy by antenna
radiated into surrounding environment
Reception antenna
electromagnetic energy impinging on antenna
converted to radio frequency electrical energy
fed to receiver
same antenna is often used for both purposes
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Radiation Pattern
power radiated in all directions
not same performance in all directions
as seen in a radiation pattern diagram
an isotropic antenna is a (theoretical) point in space
radiates in all directions equally
with a spherical radiation pattern
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Antenna Gain
measure of directionality of antenna
power output in particular direction verses that
produced by an isotropic antenna
measured in decibels (dB)
results in loss in power in another direction
effective area relates to size and shape
related to gain
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Satellite Point to Point Link
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Satellite Broadcast Link
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Wireless Propagation
Signal travels along three routes
1. Ground wave
Follows contour of earth
Up to 2MHz
AM radio
2. Sky wave
Signal reflected from ionize layer of upper atmosphere
2-30 MHz
BBC world service, Voice of America
3. Line of sight
Above 30Mhz
Antennas must be physically aligned
Atmosphere can reflect the microwave signal
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Sky Wave Propagation
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Ground Wave Propagation
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Line of Sight Propagation
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UNGUIDED MEDIA: WIRELESS
Electromagnetic spectrum defined as radio waves and
microwaves is divided into eight ranges, called bands:
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Line of Sight Transmission
Free space loss
loss of signal with distance
Atmospheric Absorption
from water vapour and oxygen absorption
Multipath
multiple interfering signals from reflections
Refraction
bending signal away from receiver
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Multipath Interference
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Comparison of Media
Medium Cost Speed Attenuation Interfere Security
UTP Low 1-100M High High Low
STP Medium 1-150M High Medium Low
Coax Medium 1M–1G Medium Medium Low
Fiber High 10M–2G Low Low High
Radio Medium 1-10M Varies High Low
Microwave High 1M–10G Varies High Medium
Satellite High 1 M–10G Varies High Medium
Cellular High 9.6–19.2K Low Medium Low
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