The invention relates to a multi-layer, strip-type screening sheet for electric lines, in particular for multi-core data transmission cables, comprising at least one substrate layer of plastic material and at least one screening layer, connected with the substrate layer, of electrically conductive material, in particular of metal. The invention further relates to an electric cable, in particular a data transmission cable, having at least one line, in particular several intertwisted pairs of lines, so-called twisted pairs, in which is used the screening sheet mentioned at the outset.
The problems the invention deals with can be explained most obviously in conjunction with high-speed data transmission cables, which does however not restrict the use of the invention to this purpose.
Customary data transmission cables use several of the above twisted pairs, for example four, which must be screened as the category of transmission bandwidth and transmission quality rises. External screening of the twisted pairs as well as screening of the twisted pairs one in relation to the other in a cable are important in this case.
For corresponding specifications of transmission bandwidth and transmission quality to be obtained, U.S. Pat. No. 6,624,359 B2 teaches to provide the twisted pairs with a screening sheet which is comprised of a laminate of a plastic-material substrate layer lined with a screening layer of metal. This document further shows the most varying configurations of how to fold this laminated sheet so that it forms an external screening envelope placed around several twisted pairs and for instance an internal separating and supporting structure of star configuration. Fundamentally, the screening sheet is designed as a strip of material having a continuous screening layer, for example of aluminum or copper, in the longitudinal direction of the strip.
The above design of an electrically conductive screening layer that is continuous in the longitudinal direction of the cable gives rise to problems of grounding because, given varying potentials at the ends of a line, high potential compensation currents can flow through the screening. They cause malfunction and possibly even damages of equipment connected to such a data transmission cable.
Proceeding from these problems, it is an object of the invention to embody a screening sheet for electric lines and in particular for multi-core data transmission cables in such a way that the sheet keeps its screening properties substantially unimpeded while the above-mentioned problems of grounding are entirely avoided.
This object is attained by the strip-type screening sheet comprising spacing gaps in the screening layer which extend crosswise of the longitudinal direction of the strip, longitudinally recurring at intervals; they serve for electrical interruption of the screening layer in the longitudinal direction of the strip. Consequently, there is no continuous electrically conductive connection in the longitudinal direction of the screening sheet, which completely precludes any flow of potential compensation currents. But with the gaps being small as compared to the rest of the screening surface of the pieces of foil that lie between the spacing gaps, there will be no significant deterioration in the screening behaviour of the screening sheet.
In keeping with a preferred embodiment of the invention, the spacing gaps recur periodically. The ratio that the spacing-gap width bears to the length of the pieces of foil between the spacing gaps preferably ranges between 1:5 and 1:25, with typical lengths of the pieces of foil being in the range of 60 to 120 mm and typical widths of the spacing gaps being in the range of 5 to 10 mm. In practice, the corresponding geometric values must be chosen such that no peaks of impedance or return loss, owing to the periodicity of the structure, will occur in the range of transmission frequency of the data transmission cable.
In keeping with another preferred embodiment of the invention, successive spacing gaps are arranged at a preferably small, acute angle relative to the transverse direction of the strip. Upon alternating angular position, the pieces of foil between the spacing gaps will be trapezoidal. This configuration has the advantage that, with these strips of screening sheet being wound about their longitudinal axis for a tubular envelope to form, the spacing gaps run helically, which, upon interruption of the path of the current in the longitudinal direction, is accompanied with advantages in the screening behaviour as opposed to the gaps that are strictly rectangular in relation of the longitudinal direction of the strip.
With the spacing gaps positioned in parallel at an angle to the transverse direction of the strip, the pieces of foil there-between have the form of a parallelogram. Upon application of the screening sheet in the longitudinal direction of the axis of the cable, this embodiment allows a gap to form that rotates in the way of a helix around the axis of the cable. Upon application of the sheet by a so-called banding system or when the cable is stranded, the acute angle of the spacing gaps relative to the transverse direction of the strip can be designed for compensation by the angle of stranding, resulting in a cylindrical gap free of metal.
An especially solid embodiment with high protection of the susceptible metal screening layer results when the screening layer is placed between, and lined with, two substrate layers. The protective effect is still improved when these substrate layers project over the longitudinal edges of the screening layer, there being united.
The invention also relates to an electric cable and in particular a data transmission cable, with the external envelope and/or an internal supporting and separating structure being comprised of the screening sheet of one of the above mentioned designs. The external envelope, as an overall screen, protects the surroundings against any energies that may radiate from the cable and it protects the transmission elements inside the cable, for example in the form of several twisted pairs, against irradiated interfering energy. In particular this aspect is of special importance in the application of the 10 GB-Ethernet on copper data transmission cables. The external envelope drastically reduces so-called cable crosstalk—also termed Alien-NEXT and Alien-EL-FEXT.
Internal cable crosstalk between the individual twisted pairs is strictly reduced by the screening sheet being integrated into an internal supporting and separating structure, for example by the screening sheet being folded in the way of a four-arm star-configuration profile. Owing to its flexibility, the screening sheet can be applied in virtually any configuration and adapted to the most varying groupings of lines inside the cable. A variety of examples can be seen in U.S. Pat. No. 6,624,359 B2, US 2003/0217863 A1 or EP 0 915 486 A1, without however a screening sheet with a screening layer that is interrupted in the longitudinal direction being employed in any of them.
Further features, details and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the ensuing description of exemplary embodiments, taken in conjunction with the drawings.
The screening layer 3 is lined with another substrate layer 8 so that a kind of sandwich sheeting is produced. The substrate layer 8 consists of the same material as the substrate layer 2 and is tightly united with the bottom substrate layer 2 in the vicinity of the longitudinal edges that project laterally over the screening layer 3. Thus the screening layer 3 is hermetically insulated outwards.
Durably uniting the three layers 2, 3, 8 takes place by suitable adhesives customary in the field of laminated sheeting. For reasons of manufacture and stability, the substrate layer 2 can be comprised of several layers of uniform material.
In keeping with another embodiment of a screening sheet 1″ seen in
The embodiment of the screening sheet 1′ seen in
In keeping with another embodiment according to
As regards any further details of the embodiments according to
The screening sheets 1, 1′, 1″, 1′″ described above can be used in the most varying configurations in electric cables and in particular in high-speed data transmission cables 15.
As seen in
In the embodiment seen in
In keeping with another variation of design, provision may be made for an internal protecting jacket 19 which is applied to the basic cable element comprised of the cruciform section 16 and the four pairs of twisted-pair lines 13, to which is applied the screening sheet 1″ in longitudinal extension of wound structure and completed by the protecting jacket 17 with the adhesive layer 18.
In the embodiment of a data transmission cable 15″ seen in
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 042 626 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2796463 | Mallinckrodt | Jun 1957 | A |
3090825 | Volk | May 1963 | A |
3312774 | Drinko et al. | Apr 1967 | A |
4788088 | Kohl | Nov 1988 | A |
6624359 | Bahlmann et al. | Sep 2003 | B2 |
20030111241 | Bahlmann et al. | Jun 2003 | A1 |
20030217863 | Clark et al. | Nov 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2 419 843 | Nov 1874 | DE |
14 40 919 | Jan 1969 | DE |
93 18 420.4 | Mar 1994 | DE |
198 09 808 | Oct 1998 | DE |
0 915 486 | May 1999 | DE |
199 26 304 | Dec 2000 | DE |
102 05 937 | Aug 2002 | DE |
0 301 859 | Feb 1989 | EP |
0 915 486 | May 1999 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060048961 A1 | Mar 2006 | US |