1. Field of the Invention
[0001] This invention relates to the control of capacitance unbalance-to-ground in cables
and, more particularly, to methods of and apparatus for the control of capacitance
unbalance-to-ground of twisted conductor pairs in cables having conductors covered
with at least a layer of cellular insulation.
2. Prior Art
[0002] Recently, interstices among a plurality of twisted pairs of solid-plastic insulated
conductors which comprise a core of a multipair telephone cable have been filled with
a waterproofing compound to prevent the ingress of water which affects the electrical
characteristics of the cable. Since the replacement of the air in the interstices
with waterproofing compound results in poorer insulating properties, the amount of
insulation about each conductor must be increased for better insulating properties.
This results in an increase in cross-sectional area of each of the insulated conductors,
as well as that of the core, thereby requiring additional plastic compound to form
a jacket about the core, all of which represents increased cost of manufacture. In
order to realize the advantages of filled cable and, at the same time, to maintain
the cost comparable to that of unfilled cable by reducing the size of the insulated
conductors, individual conductors are insulated with a cellular plastic which may
be coveredwith an outer skin of a solid abrasion-resistant plastic material. Because
cellular plastic has a lower dielectric constant and hence, better insulating properties
than solid plastic, a reduced wall thickness of cellular plastic insulation may be
used with the result that the total thickness of the cellular plastic insulation plus
the skin layer of solid plastic is equivalent to that for solid plastic insulation
in an unfilled, air-core cable.
[0003] Although cellular plastic insulation is well known in the art, problems occur in
the control of parameters, such as, for example, coaxial capacitance and outside diameter,
of the insulated conductor, which are indicative of the quality of the insulated conductors.
Coaxial capacitance is defined as the capacitance between the conductor and a probe
which are separated by the insulation. Methods and apparatus which are used to control
the application of cellular plastic to conductors and the amount of expansion in the
cellular plastic to maintain these parameters within acceptable limits are disclosed
in U.S. patents 3,914,357, 3,973,187 and 4,017,228 issued October 21, 1975, August
3, 1976 and April 12, 1977, respectively, all in the names of M. R. Cereijo and T.
S. Dougherty. Lack of control of the amount of expansion which is a parameter not
generally encountered in solid plastic insulation can result in random variations
in the dielectric constant of the cellular insulation. Random variations in the dielectric
constant affects capacitance-to-ground, which is defined as the grounded capacitance
of one insulated conductor of a twisted pair and is a measure of the quality of the
conductor in its ability to resist the pick-up of energy from external sources, such
as, for example, power transmission lines. See, for example, Horn, Y. W., "ABC of
the Telephone Cable, Inside and Out, Vol. 5, 1974 Lee's ABC of the Telephone.
[0004] After the conductors are insulated with the cellular insulation, they are twisted
together in pairs and subsequently formed into a cable. In order to be acceptable,
twisted pairs of conductors must exhibit a difference or unbalance in capacitance-to-ground
which is less than a predetermined value. Test results show that while the two conductors
of any pair may each have acceptable coaxial capacitance and outside diameter values,
when twisted together, the pair has unacceptable capacitance unbalance-to-ground values.
It had been thought that if measured values of coaxial capacitance and outside diameter
of each insulated conductor of a pair fell within acceptable limits, the capacitance
unbalance-to-ground would also be acceptable. See Windeler, A. J., Polyethylene Insulated
Telephone Cable, 4th Annual Wire and Cable Symposium, December 7, 1955. This seeming
anomaly may be overcome by twisting conductors having equal capacitance-to-ground
values; however, this requires costly shop control.
Summary of the Invention
[0005] The problem of being able to maintain the capacitance unbalance-to-ground value of
a pair of insulated conductors at less than a predetermined value has been solved
by the present invention wherein the application of insulation to conductors is monitored
to control the capacitance unbalance-to-ground of each insulated conductor relative
to a conductor having preselected values of coaxial capacitance and outside diameter
to make it fall within a predeterminec range of values.
[0006] A method embodying the principles of the invention includes the steps of covering
conductors with a plastic insulation material to form insulated conductors, measuring
the coaxial capacitance and associated outside diameter of the insulated conductors,
generating electrical signals which correspond to the measured capacitance and associated
diameter of each of the insulated conductors, and relating these signals to the capacitance
unbalance-to-ground between each of said conductors and a reference insulated conductor
having preselected values of coaxial capacitance and outside diameter, and controlling
the covering of the conductors to maintain the capacitance unbalance-to-ground value
between each said conductor and the reference conductor within a predetermined range.
In one embodiments the generated signals of coaxial capacitance and outside diameter
are displayed on a coordinate trace of a continuous recorder with lines of constant
percent expansion and constant difference in capacitance-to-ground between insulated
conductors and the reference conductor superimposed thereon and related to the values
of coaxial capacitance and outside diameter. It has been found that if conductors
which are insulated with coordinate values of coaxial capacitance and outside diameter
falling within a defined portion of the trace having a predetermined range of capacitance
unbalance-to-ground values relative to the reference conductor are twisted together,
the capacitance unbalance-to-ground value of the pair is acceptable.
[0007] An apparatus for controlling capacitance unbalance-to-ground between conductors of
a pair includes facilities for extruding cellular insulation over conductors to form
insulated conductors, facilities for measuring capacitance and associated outside
diameter of the insulated conductors, facilities for displaying measured capacitance
and associated diameter with respect to corresponding lines of constant percent expansion
and a region defined by spaced lines of constant capacitance unbalance-to-ground values,
and facilities for generating a continuous indication of the measured capacitance
and associated diameter of the conductors on the displaying facilities, and facilities
for controlling at least the percent expansion of the cellular insulation to maintain
the coordinate values of coaxial capacitance and diameter within the defined region.
In one embodiment, the apparatus also includes facilities for twisting together conductors
having an insulation identified by capacitance and diameter values falling within
the defined region of the trace.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0008] Other objects and features of the present invention will be more readily understood
from the following detailed description of specific embodiments thereof when read
in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a view of a conductive element having a single layer of cellular plastic
insulation extruded thereabout;
FIG. 2 is a view of a conductive element insulated with an inner layer of cellular
plastic insulation and an outer skin layer of solid plastic insulation;
FIG. 3 is a cross-section view of a twisted insulated conductor pair within a shielded
cable and illustrating in schematic form how capacitance values for the insulated
conductors are measured;
FIG. 4 is a view of an apparatus partially in section and in elevation and partially
in schematic embodying the principles of this invention for covering the conductive
element with cellular plastic insulation together with facilities for monitoring the
covering;
FIG. 5 is a graph of coaxial capacitance versus outside diameter with coordinate values
for five insulated conductors thereon and showing corresponding capacitance unbalance-to-ground
values between each one of four of the conductors and a fifth conductor having nominal
properties;
FIG. 6 is a graph of coaxial capacitance versus outside diameter of insulated conductors
with lines of constant capacitance unbalance-to-ground and constant mutual capacitance
superimposed thereon and related mathematically to the coaxial capacitance and outside
diameter;
FIG. 7 is a graph of coaxial capacitance versus outside diameter of insulated conductors
with two different operating windows superimposed thereon; and
FIG. 8 is a schematic view of a feedback control system for the apparatus of FIG.
4.
Detailed Description
[0009] A cellular plastic insulation 21 for covering a conductor 22, typically copper or
aluminum wire ranging from 0.4064 to 1.1430mm in diameter (see FIG. 1) is well known
and is formed from a solid plastic material containing an admixed expanding medium
which is extruded about the conductor. Referring now to FIG. 2, there is shown a dual
insulated conductor 23 which includes the conductive element 22 having the cellular
insulation 21 and a concentric layer 24 of solid plastic insulation thereabout. The
outer layer 24 is comprised, for example, of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) or polyethylene,
which forms a thin outer skin 24 that imparts tough mechanical properties to the insulation,
that possesses improved voltage breakdown characteristics, and that provides a suitable
material for color coding as well as reducing the permeability of the insulation to
a filling compound if used. The outside diameter of the insulated conductor 23 varies
between 0.7620 and 2.0320mm while the wall thickness of the outer layer 24 ranges
between 0.0508 and 0.1270mm.
[0010] Referring now to FIG. 3, there is shown in schematic a view of two insulated conductors
26 and 27 enclosed in a cable shield 28 for purposes of illustrating capacitance measurements.
In order to conduct a test for the conductor 26, all the other conductors (not shown)
in the cable including the conductor 27 which is twisted together with the conductor
26 are grounded and the capacitance-to-ground of the conductor 26 is measured and
designated Cg
l. The capacitance-to-ground of a conductor 27, Cg
2, is measured in a similar manner and the difference (Cg
l -C
92) calculated. This difference is designated as the capacitance unbalance-to-ground.
Direct capacitance between the two conductors 26 and 27 is designated C
12 and is added to the parallel combination of Cg
l and C
92 to obtain a characteristic referred to as mutual capacitance. The capacitance-to-ground
characteristic of an insulated conductor is a function of the thickness of the insulation,
of the dielectric constant and of the distance of the conductor to the shield. Since,
as disclosed by the priorly identified Windeler article, Polyethylene Insulated Cable,
the dielectric constant of insulation decreases as the percent voids increase, the
capacitance-to-ground value of cellular insulated conductors also varies.
[0011] It should be understood that the term "cellular insulation" includes not only that
formed from a solid plastic containing an admixed expanding medium, but also some
types of solid insulation, e.g. high density polyethylene (HDPE), where contraction
voids occur, generally adjacent to the conductor 22. While the methods and apparatus
of this invention will be described with respect to controlling capacitance-to-ground
unbalance in expanded cellular insulation, it should be understood that they are equally
applicable to a conductor 22 insulated with a solid plastic insulation which may for
example, develop contraction voids and hence acts as an expanded cellular insulation.
[0012] The insulation 21 may be extruded about the conductor 22 by an apparatus designated
generally by the numeral 30, such as that shown in FIG. 4. The following description
of the methods and apparatus of this invention will assume that the conductor 23 is
being covered with either cellular plastic material 21 or with dual insulating layers
24 and 21 comprising a solid plastic over expanded polyethylene, for example. It should
be understood that term "plastic" is intended to include both thermoplastic and thermosetting
materials including rubber aand rubber-like materials.
[0013] The conductor 22 is advanced by a capstan 32 through an extruder 31 where the insulation
21 or the dual insulation layers 21 and 24 are applied by a die (not shown) which
may be that disclosed and claimed in U.S. patents 3,947,173 and 3,903,233. Then the
insulated conductor 23 is advanced out of the extruder 31 and after a predetermined
amount of travel through an air-gap distance designated "x", is moved into a cooling
trough 33. As can be seen in FIG. 4, the cooling trough 33 is mounted on a gear and
rack mechanism 34 for movement reciprocally longitudinally of the path of travel of
the conductor 23 so that the air-gap may be adjusted to control the percent expansion
of the cellular layer 21.
[0014] Two in-line measurements of the dual insulated conductor 26 are made near the downstream
end of the cooling trough 33. A capacitance monitor 36 measures the coaxial capacitance
of the insulation 21 or of the insulation layers 21 and 24 covering the conductive
element 22. The capacitance monitor 36 may be of the type shown in U.S. patents 2,765,441
or 2,908,861 or that shown in U.S. patent 2,804,592. The overall diameter do, or diameter-over-dielectric
and hereinafter referred to as DOD, (see FIGS. 1 and 2) of the insulated conductor
23 is monitored continuously by a gauge 37, such as, for example, an underwater diameter
gauge that is manufactured by the Beta Instrument Company and designated model no.
TG1000 or TI500. Typical traces of the overall capacitance C
o and the DOD are recorded on a strip chart (not shown).
[0015] In order to provide a meaningful display of process variables, a coordinate chart-recording
instrument 50 (see FIG. 4) of the type which is available commercially from the Hewlett-Packard
Company, under the description, Model No. 7004B, is used. The instrument 50 has a
continuous recorder printer (not shown) which is moved up and down by a current signal
from the capacitance monitor 36 and from side to side by a current signal from the
DOD gauge 37. A chart 53 is inserted into the instrument 50 for each reel (not shown)
of the insulated conductor 23 such that changes in coaxial capacitance and
DO
D indicated by the position of the recorder printer (not shown) are in direct correspondence
with the incremental changes in coaxial capacitance and DOD indicated by the respective
monitoring instruments 36 and 37. Superimposed upon the chart 53 is an operating window
or target area 54 which represents acceptable values of coaxial capacitance and DOD
for the insulated conductor 23.
[0016] Although it is desirable to use cellular insulation in filled cables, there are problems
peculiar to cellular insulation which must be overcome. While the use of solid plastic
insulation to cover the conductor 22 requires an operator to look only at a trace
of DOD or coaxial capacitance, and to adjust only one parameter, such as, for example,
extruder screw speed or line speed, additional parameters must be taken into account
in dealing with cellular plastic insulation. In order to maintain a coaxial capacitance-DOD
trace for cellular plastic insulation within the operating window 54, the trace must
be made with respect to product parameters which may be changed by known process parameters.
As disclosed in hereinbefore-identified U.S. patents 3,914,357, 3,973,187 and 4,017,228
it has been determined that two product parameters related to coaxial capacitance
and DOD which may be used for this purpose are weight of insulation per unit length
of the conductor 23 and the percent expansion. It should be understood that "percent
expansion" or percent voids is interpreted to mean the percent of the cross sectional
area which is comprised of voids.
[0017] The weight of insulation per unit length of dual expanded plastic insulation, the
dielectric constants for single layer cellular insulation and for dual insulated conductors,
and the percent expansion may be calculated from equations set forth in priorly identified
U.S. patents 3,914,352, 3,973,187 and 4,017,228. From these equations, values of coaxial
capacitance and DOD may be calculated for weight of insulation and for percent expansion
and parallel lines 56-56 of constant weight of insulation, expressed in grams-per-meter
for example, of the conductor 23, and parallel lines 57-57 of constant percent expansion
are superimposed on the operating window 54. The display of FIG. 4 depicts constant
output and constant percent expansion lines superimposed on and in mathematical relationship
to a plot of coaxial capacitance versus DOD for cellular plastic insulation.
[0018] typically, the coaxial capacitance C
o and the DOD (see FIGS. 1 and 2) of an insulated conductor are monitored with a continuous
indication thereof being conveniently displayed. The display is made in such a way
that there is a continuous indication not only of coaxial capacitance and DOD, but
also of percent expansion and weight of insulation per foot of the conductor 23. By
using the principles of the hereinbefore-identified U.S. patents, guides are provided
so that an operator viewing the trace on the composite recorder instrument 50 may
make those adjustments required for correction.
[0019] It should be realized that the output of the extruder 31 for the skin layer 24, if
used, does not affect the output for the inner cellular layer 21 and that the thickness
of the outer layer 24 is essentially constant. When using the present invention for
dual insulation, solid plastic over cellular plastic, it is assumed that the skin
thickness (do - d
i)/2 is constant and known and may be measured off-line or by a separate in-line monitor.
Also the composite dielectric constant of the plastic insulation material may be determined,
and the total weight includes the weight of the cellular insulation together with
the weight of the solid insulation. From instrumentation on the line, the overall
coaxial capacitance of the dual insulation and the DOD of the successive sections
of the dual insulated conductor 23 are measured.
[0020] Referring now to FIG. 5, there are shown coordinate values of coaxial capacitance
and DOD for several example conductors 61-65 and, superimposed thereon, the values
of capacitance-to-ground differences when two of the conductors, as indicated by a
line therebetween, are twisted together. If the conductors 61 and 65 or 61 and 62
which are at the upper left and center or at the upper left and lower right hand corners,
respectively, of the graph, are twisted together, the capacitance-to-ground differences
are 0.157 and 0.174 pf/m. However, if the conductors 63 and 64, which have coordinate
values at the upper right and lower left corners of the display the difference in
capacitance-to-ground is significantly higher, i.e. 1.78 pf/m. The higher capacitance-to-ground
unbalance, which causes interference between conductors and adjacent power lines as
well as crosstalk loss of pairs at presently used carrier frequencies, occurs notwithstanding
the acceptable coaxial capacitance and DOD values of each of the conductors 63 and
64 falling within the operating window 54.
[0021] It has been stated in the prior art that in order to insure that two insulated conductors
of a pair have nearly equal capacitance to the surrounding pairs and to its shield,
the cylinders of insulation on the two conductors of a pair must be alike in size
and dielectric constant. It has also been stated that coaxial capacitance and capacitance-to-ground
in a cable are not the same but are related in a linear fashion and that control of
one is effectively a control of the other. As should be apparent from the discussion
hereinbefore and especially from a study of FIG. 5, the control of coaxial capacitance
of each conductor of a pair does not necessarily result in the control of capacitance
unbalance-to-ground values of the pair.
[0022] The determination of the capacitance unbalance-to-ground values between insulated
conductors 23-23 may be made graphically. It has been found that the capacitance unbalance-to-ground
between an insulated conductor 23 manufactured as described hereinbefore and the reference
insulated conductor 65 having nominal values of coaxial capacitance and DOD may be
calculated from the following equation:
where Cub = capacitance unbalance-to-ground, A and B are constants which may be determined
by a regression analysis from experimental data,
DOD = diameter-over-dielectric of an insulated conductor,
DODo = diameter-over-dielectric of reference insulated conductor at nominal condition,
Cc = coaxial capacitance of the insulated conductor; and
CCo = coaxial capacitance of reference insulated conductor at nominal condition.
The above equation is used to plot a family of curves of constant capacitance unbalance-to-ground
values as between an insulated conductor 23 and the reference insulated conductor
65 on a display of coaxial capacitance versus DOD, which may be, for example, linear
and shown as lines 71-71 (see FIG. 6).
[0023] The difference in capacitance-to-ground of two insulated conductors which are to
be twisted together is obtained by subtracting algebraically the values of the capacitance
unbalance-to-ground lines 71-71 or interpolated values between the lines on which
the coordinate values of coaxial capacitance and DOD fall. For example, the capacitance
unbalance-to-ground between a twisted pair comprising an insulated conductor having
coaxial capacitance and DOD values which fall along the line 71 having a scale value
of -1.64 pf/m in FIG. 6 and an insulated conductor 65 having nominal values is -1.64
pf/m. A twisted pair of conductors 23-23 each having coordinate values of coaxial
capacitance and DOD located along the same one of the lines 71-71 have a zero difference
or zero capacitance unbalance-to-ground value.
[0024] For each conductor pair representeed by coordinate values of coaxial capacitance
and DOD, empirically derived equations may be used to calculate mutual capacitance.
A curve fitting procedure is used to form a family of curves of constant mutual capacitance
which in FIG. 6 are shown as a family of straight lines 72-72. Two insulated conductors
23-23 having coaxial capacitance and DOD values which fall along the same one of the
lines 72-72 have a mutual capacitance therebetween of the value indicated on the scale
to the left in FIG. 6.
[0025] In the preferred approach for minimizing the difference in capacitance-to-ground
values, which embodies the principles of this invention, the graph is provided with
an operating window 81 which is defined laterally, as viewed in FIG. 7, by two spaced
lines 71-71 of constant capacitance unbalance-to-ground values. The lateral boundaries
are selected so that if the two insulated 23-23 conductors which are twisted together
have coaxial capacitance-DOD coordinate values which fall on the boundary lines, the
resulting capacitance unbalance-to-ground of the twisted pair is acceptable. The upper
and lower boundaries of the operating window 81 as viewed in FIG. 7 are established
to control the mutual capacitance between the two conductors. If all conductors which
are insulated have values of coaxial capacitance and DOD such that their coordinate
values fall within the operating window 81, the difference in capacitance unbalance-to-ground
values of any two conductors when twisted together will be acceptable. An operating
window 82 with narrow tolerances and defined in part by spaced lines 56-56 of constant
weight of insulation is also shown in FIG. 7 and insures not only that the maximum
unbalance is not exceeded but also that the average unbalance is acceptable.
[0026] A second approach which while being somewhat less stringent on the manufacturing
requirements requires an inventory control system. Each insulated conductor 23 is
required to have insulation characteristics such that its coaxial capacitance and
DOD fall within the larger rectangular operating window 54 and not necessarily within
the precisely defined operating window 81 or 82. hence, the requirements on operating
parameters are relaxed somewhat over the preferred system. Each conductor reel is
identified with a capacitance unbalance-to-ground value between it and the reference
conductor having the preselected nominal values of coaxial capacitance and outside
diameter and at twisting, an operator uses an inventory control system to insure that
any two conductors which are twisted together have a minimum difference in capacitance-to-ground.
This precaution need not be taken in the preferred system in which any two conductors
which pass the operating window test necessarily will have an acceptable capacitance
unbalance-to-ground value when twisted together.
[0027] It should be understood that the control exercised by practicing the principles of
this invention is a two fold control. Not only is the maximum capacitance unbalance-to-ground
value controlled to be within acceptable limits, but also the average capacitance
unbalance-to-ground, which has a lower value than the maximum. This is especially
important in the use of insulation such as HDPE where the maximum unbalance is not
great but where if unchecked, the average is intolerable.
[0028] Referring now to FIG. 8, it is seen how the principles of this invention may be extended
to a feedback control system to automatically control process variables. As before,
the coaxial capacitance and the DOD are measured by the capacitance monitor 36 and
the gauge 37, respectively. The measurements are supplied as inputs to the x-y recorder
50 and as inputs to a process control computer, designated generally by the numeral
100. The inputs to the computer 100 which are proportional to the deviation from the
nominal values as determined by process specifications cause built-in logic of the
computer 100 to establish required correctional signals. These correctional signals
are used to vary, for example, the extruder screw speed or to control the mechanism
34 to move the cooling trough 33 and adjust the air gap.
[0029] The process control computer 100 includes a built-in coordinate plotter which may
be in terms of a Cartesian or other convenient coordinate system. In this way, a trace
of coaxial capacitance and DOD is reviewed with respect to lines of constant percent
expansion, lines of constant insulation weight, and lines of constant capacitance
unbalance-to-ground which are programmed into the computer by using the equations
referred to hereinbefore. Once the range widths for the capacitance unbalance-to-ground
values are set, measurements which are determined to correspond to coaxial capacitance
values outside the range cause the computer to control the apparatuus 30 to adjust
these variables which will change the percent expansion and insulation weight per
meter and hence change the coaxial capacitance and DOD. The use of the x-y chart-recording
instrument 50 in conjunction with the process control computer 100 permits an operator
to observe visually the process conditions and correctional moves made by the computer
100.