NAME
atlc - an Arbitrary Transmission Line Calculator
SYNOPSIS
atlc [-C] [-s] [-S] [-v] [-c cutoff] [-d rrggbb=Er] [-i
factor] [-t threads] [-r rate_multiplier] bitmapfile
WARNING
This man page is not a complete set of documentation. See
the html files for more complete information. So far, I've
not managed to install the html files into /usr/local, so
you will have to look into the atlc-X.Y.Z/docs/html-docs
directory for them.
DESCRIPTION
atlc is a finite difference programme that is used to calcu-
late the properties of a two-conductor electrical transmis-
sion line of arbitrary cross section. It is used whenever
there are no analytical formula known, yet you still require
an answer. It can calculate:
The impedance Zo (in Ohms)
The capacitance per unit length (pF/m)
The inductance per unit length (nF/m)
The velocity of propogation v (m/s)
The velocity factor, v/c, which is dimensionless.
A bitmap file (usually with the extension .bmp or .BMP) is
drawn in a graphics package such as Gimp available from
http://www.gimp.org. The bitmap file must be saved as a 24-
bit (16 million colour) uncompressed file. The colours used
in the bitmap indicate whether the region is a conductor
(pure red, pure green or pure blue) or a dielectric (any-
thing else). Pure white is assumed to be a vacuum dielec-
tric, but other colours have diferent meanings. See COLOURS
below for precise definitions of the colours.
OPTIONS
-C
print copyright, licencing and copying information.
-s
Skip writing the Ex, Ey, E, V, U and Er bitmap (.bmp) files
-S
Skip writing the Ex, Ey, E, V, U and Er binary (.bin) files
-v
makes the output more verbose/talkative.
-c cutoff
Sets the convergence criteria of the finite difference pro-
gramme. The default is 0.0001, meaning two separate itera-
tions must be within 01% for the programme to stop iterat-
ing. Setting to a smaller positive number gives more accu-
racy, but takes longer.
-d rrggbb=Er
is used to indicate the colour 0xrrggbb in the bitmap is
used to represent a material with permittivity Er. See also
COLOURS below
-i factor
is used to lighten or darken the .bmp electric field profile
images produced by atlc. Set factor > 2 to lighten or
between 1 and 2 to darken.
-r ratemultiplier
Sets the parameter 'r' used internally when computing the
voltage at a point w,h. The default, which is (as of ver-
sion 3.0.0) 1.95, results in what is belived to be optimal
results. Setting to 1.0 will avoid the use of the fast con-
vergence method, which is generally not a good idea.
-t threads
tells atlc to run using that number of threads, to speed
calculation. This option is only valid if atlc was compiled
with the --with-threads option to configure. The pthreads
library (or similar) must be installed in order to compile
with support for more than one CPU. Generally, setting the
number of threads to the number of cpus is a good idea, but
it is worth experimenting. The number can be changed per-
manently by editing the parameter MAX_THREADS in
definitions.h.
COLOURS
The 24-bitmaps that atlc uses have 8 bits assigned to
represent the amount of red, 8 for blue and 8 for green.
Hence there are 256 levels of red, green and blue, making a
total of 256*256*256=16777216 colours. Every one of the pos-
sible i16777216 colours can be defined precisely by the
stating the exact amount of red, green and blue, as in:
red = 255,000,000 or 0xff0000
green = 000,255,000 or 0x00ff00
blue = 000,000,255 or 0x0000ff
black = 000,000,000 or 0x000000
white = 255,255,255 or 0xffffff
Brown = 255,000,255 or 0xff00ff
gray = 142,142,142 or 0x8e8e8e
Some colours, such as pink, terquiose, sandy, brown, gray
etc may mean slightly different things to different prople.
This is not so with atlc, as the programme expects the
colours below to be exactly defined as given. Whether you
feel the colour is sandy or yellow is up to you, but if you
use it in your bitmap, then it either needs to be a colour
reconised by atlc, or you must define it with a command line
option (see OPTIONS).
red = 255,000,000 or 0xFF0000 is the live conductor.
green = 000,255,000 or 0x00FF00 is the grounded conductor.
blue = 000,000,255 or 0x0000FF is the negative conductor
All bitmaps must have the live (red) and grounded (green)
conductor. The blue conductor is used to indicate a negative
conductor, is needed when the programme is used to analyse
directional couplers.
The following dielectrics are recognised by atlc:
white 255,255,255 or 0xFFFFFF as Er=1.0 (vacuum)
pink 255,202,202 or 0xFFCACA as Er=1.0006 (air)
L. blue 130,052,255 or 0x8235EF as Er=2.1 (PTFE)
Mid gray 142,242,142 or 0x8E8E8E as Er=2.2 (duroid 5880)
mauve 255.000,255 or 0xFF00FF as Er=2.33 (polyethylene)
yellow 255,255,000 or 0xFFFF00 as Er=2.5 (polystyrene)
sandy 239,203,027 or 0xEFCC1A as Er=3.3 (PVC)
brown 188,127,096 or 0xBC7F60 as Er=3.335 (epoxy resin)
L. yellow 223,247,136 or 0xDFF788 as Er=3.7 (FR4 PCB)
Terquoise 026,239,179 or 0x1AEFB3 as Er=4.8 (glass PCB)
Dark gray 142,142,142 or 0x696969 as Er=6.15 (duroid 6006)
L. gray 240,240,240 or 0xDCDCDC as Er=10.2 (duroid 6010)
D. orange 213,160,067 or 0xD5A04D as Er=100.0 (mainly for
test purposes)
EXAMPLES
Here are a few examples of the use of atlc. Again, see the
html documentation in atlc-X.Y.Z9ocsl-docs for for examples.
ex_1 % atlc coax2.bmp
This is a simple example (ex_1), in which the geometry of a
transmission line is defined in coax2.bmp. In this example,
only the predefined dielectrics (Er =1.0, 1.0006, 2.1, 2.2,
2.33, 2.5, 3.3, 3.335, 3.7, 4.8, 6.15 or 10.2) could have
been used in the bitmap, which would have been done with one
of 13 different colours. white (0xFFFFFF) for Er=1.0, pink
(0xFFCACA) for 1.0006 etc. No other colour(dilectric) could
have been used, since it was not specified with the -d
option.
ex_2 % atlc -d f9e77d=2.43 somefile.bmp
In ex_2, a dielectic with Er=2.43 was wanted. A colour with
the RGB values of 0xF9E7&d was used. The -d option tells
atlc what Er this colour refers to.
ex_3 % atlc -v .bmp coax2.bmp
In ex_3, atlc has been instructed to print the results of
intermediate calculations to stdout. Normally, only the
final result is printed.
FILES
bitmapfile.bmp
Original bitmap file. Must be 24-bit colour uncompressed.
bitmapfile.Ex.bmp
X-component of E-field as a bitmap. Red=+dV/dx, blue =-
dV/dx
bitmapfile.Ey.bmp
y-component of E-field as a bitmap. Red=+y, blue =-y
bitmapfile.E.bmp
E-field, as E=sqrt(Ex^2+Ey^2).
bitmapfile.V.bin
Voltage as a bitmap, red= positive, blue =negative.
bitmapfile.Er.bin
Bitmap showing the permittivity as a grayscale. Lighter
is a higher
permittivity.
bitmapfile.U.bmp
Energy.
In addition to the bitmaps, the data is also saved in binary
files.
All the saved binary files (.bin's) are saved as a double
precision number for each of the pixels. The first double is
the top left, the last the bottom right. If the original
image has width W and height H, the saved binary files will
be W-1 by H-1.
All the saved bitmap files are 24-bit uncompressed, just
like the input files.
SEE ALSO
atlc(1) create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ(1)
create_bmp_for_circ_in_rect(1)
create_bmp_for_microstrip_coupler(1)
create_bmp_for_rect_cen_in_rect(1)
create_bmp_for_rect_cen_in_rect_coupler(1)
create_bmp_for_rect_in_circ(1)
create_bmp_for_rect_in_rect(1)
create_bmp_for_stripline_coupler(1)
create_bmp_for_symmetrical_stripline(1) design_coupler(1)
find_optimal_dimensions_for_microstrip_coupler(1) readbin(1)
http://atlc.sourceforge.net - Home page
http://sourceforge.net/projects/atlc - Download area
atlc-X.Y.Z/docs/html-docs/index.html - HTML docs
atlc-X.Y.Z/docs/qex-december-1996/atlc.pdf - theory paper
atlc-X.Y.Z/examples - examples
http://www.david-kirkby.co.uk - my home page
http://www.david-kirkby.co.uk/ham - ham radio pages
Man(1) output converted with
man2html