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create_bmp...irc_in_circ(1) General Commands Manualcreate_bmp...irc_in_circ(1)

NAME
       create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ  -  bitmap generator	for circular conductor
       inside circular conductor (part of atlc)

SYNOPSIS
       create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ [options... ] D d O Er filename.bmp

WARNING
       This man	page is	not a complete set of documentation -  the  complexity
       of  the	atlc  project makes man	pages not an ideal way to document it,
       although	out of completeness, man pages are produced.  The  best	 docu-
       mentation  that was current at the time the version was produced	should
       be found	on your	hard drive, usually at
       /usr/local/share/atlc/docs/html-docs/index.html
       although	it might be elsewhere if your system  administrator  chose  to
       install	the  package elsewhere.	Sometimes, errors are corrected	in the
       documentation and placed	at http://atlc.sourceforge.net/	before	a  new
       release	of atlc	is released.  Please, if you notice a problem with the
       documentation - even spelling errors and	typos, please let me know.

DESCRIPTION
       create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ is a	pre-processor  for  atlc,  the	finite
       difference  program  that  is used to calculate the properties of a two
       and three conductor electrical transmission  line  of  arbitrary	 cross
       section.	 The program create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ is used as a fast way
       of generating bitmaps (there is no need to use a	graphics program), for
       a circular conductor inside a circular conductor	(coaxial  conductors),
       like this:

			   *****************
		       ****		    ****
		    ****    <-----d------>     ****
		  ***		 *****		  ***
		***	      ***********	    ***
	      ***	     *************	      ***
	     ***	    ***************	       ***
	    ***	     ^	    ***************		***
	   ***	     |	    ***************		 ***
	  ***	     |	     *************		  ***
	  **	     O	      ***********		   **
	 ***	     |		  ***			   ***
	 **	     |					    **
	 *<------------------------D------------------------>*
	 **						    **
	 **						    **
	 **						    **
	 ***						   ***
	  **						   **
	  ***						  ***
	   **						  **
	    **						 **
	     **						**
	      ***				      ***
	       ****				    ****
		 ****				  ****
		   *****		       *****
		      ******		   ******
			  *******************
				  ***

       The  parameter  'D'  is the inner dimensions of the outer conductor and
       'd' is the outer	diameter of the	inner conductor.  The inner  conductor
       is  offset 'h' from the centre of the outer conductor. The whole	region
       is surrounded by	a dielectric of	relative permittivity 'Er'.

       The bitmap is printed to	'outfile.bmp' -	the last  command  line	 argu-
       ment.

       The  bitmaps  produced  by  create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ	are 24-bit bit
       colour bitmaps, as are required by atlc.

       The permittivities of the dielectric 'Er' determines the	colours	in the
       bitmap. If Er is	1.0, 1.006, 2.1, 2.2, 2.33, 2.5, 3.3, 3.335, 3,7, 4.8,
       10.2 or 100, then the colour corresponding to that permittivity will be
       set according to	the colours defined in COLOURS below. If Er is not one
       of those	permittivities,	the region of permittivity Er will be  set  to
       the  colour  0xCAFF00. The program atlc does not	know what this permit-
       tivity is, so atlc, must	be told	with the command line option -d, as in
       example 4 below.

OPTIONS
       -b bitmapsize
       is used to set the size of the bitmap, and so  the  accuracy  to	 which
       atlc  is	 able to calculate the transmission line's properties. The de-
       fault value for 'bitmapsize' is normally	4, although  this  is  set  at
       compile time. The value can be set anywhere from	1 to 15, but more than
       8 is probably not sensible.

       -f outfile
       Set  the	output filename. By default, the bitmap	is sent	to stdout, but
       it *must* be sent to a file, with this option, or as described above.

       -v
       Causes create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ to print some	data to	stderr.	 Note,
       nothing	extra goes to standard output, as that is expected to be redi-
       rected to a bitmap file.

COLOURS
       The 24-bit bitmaps that atlc expects, have 8 bits assigned to represent
       the amount of red, 8 for	blue and 8 for green. Hence there are 256 lev-
       els of red, green and blue,  making  a  total  of  256*256*256=16777216
       colours.	  Every	 one  of  the possible 16777216	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, turquoise, sandy, brown, gray etc may mean
       slightly	different things to different people.  This  is	 not  so  with
       atlc, as	the program 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 re-
       conised by atlc,	or you must define it with a command line option  (see
       OPTIONS and example 5 below).
       The following conductors	are reconised by atlc:
       red    =	255,000,000 or 0xff0000	is the live conductor.
       green  =	000,255,000 or 0x00ff00	is the grounded	conductor.
       blue   =	000,000,000 or 0x000000	is the negative	conductor

       All  bitmaps  must  have	the live (red) and grounded (green) conductor.
       The blue	conductor is not currently supported, but it will be  used  to
       indicate	a negative conductor, which will be needed if/when the program
       gets extended to	analyse	directional couplers.

       The  following dielectrics are reconised	by atlc	and so are produced by
       create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ.

       white	 255,255,255 or	0xFFFFFF as Er=1.0   (vacuum)
       pink	 255,202,202 or	0xFFCACA as Er=1.0006 (air)
       blue	 000,000,255 or	0x0000FF 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)
       Turquoise 026,239,179 or	0x1AEFB3 as Er=4.8   (glass PCB)
       Dark gray 142,142,142 or	ox696969 as Er=6.15  (duroid 6006)
       L. gray	 240,240,240 or	0xDCDCDC as Er=10.2  (duroid 6010)

NOTE
       Although	create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ is used  for  circular  inner  and
       outer  conductors,  the	outside	 of  the outer conductor is drawn as a
       square. This is for convenience and makes no difference to the calcula-
       tions. The inside is of the outer conductor is drawn as a circle.

EXAMPLES
       Here are	a few examples	of  the	 use  of  create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ.
       Again,  see  the	 html  documentation  in atlc-X.Y.Z/docs/html-docs/in-
       dex.html	for more examples.

       1) In the first example,	the outer conductor has	an inside diameter  of
       12  units (inches, mm, feet etc.), the inner has	an outside diameter of
       3.9 units.  The inner is	placed centrally (h=0) and the	dielectric  is
       vacuum (Er=1.0).
       % create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ 12	3.9 0 1.0 coaxial_1.bmp
       % atlc coaxial_1.bmp
       atlc  will  indicate the	correct	value of impedance to be 67.3667 Ohms,
       whereas an exact	analysis will show the true value to be	67.4358	 Ohms,
       so atlc has an error of 0.102%.

       2)  In this second example, the conductor sizes are the sames as	in ex-
       ample 1,	but the	inner is located 3.5 units off-centre and the  dielec-
       tric has	a relative permittivity	of 2.1 (Er of PTFE) The	output is sent
       to a file not_in_centre.bmp which is then processed by atlc
       % create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ 12	3.9 3.5	2.1 not_in_centre.bmp
       % atlc not_in_centre.bmp
       The  impedance  of  this	 is  theoretically  24.315342  Ohms,  as  cre-
       ate_bmp_for_circ_in_circ	will calculate for  you.  atlc's  estimate  is
       24.2493 Ohms, an	error of only -0.271 %.

       3)  In  the  third example the bitmap is	made larger, to	increase accu-
       racy, but otherwise this	is identical to	the previous one.
       % create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ -b8 12  3.9  3.5  2.1  bigger_not_in_cen-
       tre.bmp
       % atlc bigger_not_in_centre.bmp
       This  time atlc will take much longer to	calculate Zo, since the	bitmap
       is larger and so	it needs to do more calculations. However,  the	 final
       result  should  be  more	accurate. In this case,	the result reported is
       24.2461 Ohms, an	error that's marginally	smaller	than before  at	 0.285
       %.   It	is  possible there may be something to be gained by decreasing
       the cutoff at larger grids, so this is being investigated. However, er-
       rors almost always below	0.25 %,	no matter what is being	analysed.

       In the fourth example, a	material with a	relativity  permittivity  7.89
       of   is	 used.	 There	 is   no   change   in	 how   to   use	  cre-
       ate_bmp_for_circ_in_circ, but since this	permittivity is	not one	of the
       pre-defined values (see COLOURS), we must tell atlc what	 it  is.   The
       colour will be set an olive green one, with a hexacidcal	representation
       of  red=0xCA,  blue=OxFF	 and green = 0x00. This	just happens to	be the
       default colour  used when the permittivity is unknown. So atlc must  be
       given this information, like thisL
       % create_bmp_for_circ_in_circ 23	9 0 7.89 an_odd_er.bmp
       % atlc -d CAFF00=7.89 an_odd_er.bmp This	has a theoretical impedance of
       20.041970 Ohms, but atlc	version	3.0.1 will calculate it	to be 20.0300,
       an  error  of -0.058 % !!! If you look at the file an_odd_er.bmp	with a
       graphics	package, you will see there are	3 colours in it	- the red  in-
       ner conductor, the green	outer and an olive-green dielectric.

SEE ALSO
       atlc(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

Dr. David Kirkby	   atlc-4.4.2 10th Sept	200create_bmp...irc_in_circ(1)

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