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Coaxial vs Triaxial vs Twinaxial Cables

3 min read

For RF (Radio Frequency) transmission, energy does not merely travel through wire like conventional direct current, it propegates as EM (ElectroMagnetic) waves surrounding the conductor. Hence, it requires special type of cables which maintain signal integrity and prevent interference in harsh environments.

Based on principles of RF transmission, there are three main types of cables viz. coaxialm triaxial and twinaxial.

What is a Coaxial Cable?

It is the most common configuration for RF signal transmission. It consists of single center conductor, insulating dielectric material, conductive braided shield and protective outer jacket. The center conductor carries the signal, while the outer shield confines the electric and magnetic fields within the dielectric space and protects against external electromagnetic interference (EMI).

Following are the applications of a coaxial cable -

  • High frequency, broadband signal transmission where cost, size and weight are primary considerations
  • It is the go to choice for everything from telecommunications and TV broadcasting to short haul data center links

Advantages of Coaxial Cable

  • Lowest cost, widest connector ecosystem, lightweight, excellent high frequency broadband performance.

Disadvantages of Coaxial Cable

  • Susceptible to ground loops and minute leakage currents in highly sensitive applications.

What is a Triaxial Cable?

In highly sensitive environments, the standard protection of a coaxial cable may not be enough. Even the best dielectric insulators have finite resistance, which can allow microscopic leakage currents between the center conductor and the shield, burying low level signals. A Triaxial cable solves this by adding a second, independent shield isolated by an additional dielectric layer.

Following are the applications of a triaxial cable -

  • Pico-amp lab instruments
  • Medical sensors
  • HD broadcast cameras
  • Ordnance systems

Advantages of Triaxial Cable

Eliminates ground loop currents, reduces leakage current to zero, ultimate noise rejection.

Disadvantages of Triaxial Cable

More expensive, thicker, heavier and introduces slightly more signal loss than coax.

What is a Twinaxial Cable?

Instead of a single center conductor, Twinaxial cable utilizes two balanced conductors twisted together, completely surrounded by a shared dielectric and a single outer conductive shield.

Twinax relies on balanced, differential signaling. The twisting of the internal wires naturally cancels out low frequency magnetic field pickup, while the outer braid manages capacitive coupling and ground loop interference. The geometry perfectly cancels common mode noise.

Following are the applications of a twinaxial cable -

  • MIL-STD-1553 data buses
  • 10 to 100 Gb Ethernet Direct Attach Cables (DACs)
  • Video distribution

Advantages of Twinaxial Cable

Exceptional low frequency magnetic noise immunity, cancels common mode noise.

Disadvantages of Twinaxial Cable

Transmission losses rise faster with frequency; trades long transmission reach for differential bandwidth

Difference between Coaxial, Triaxial, Twinaxial Cables

FeatureCoaxialTriaxialTwinaxial
Basic structure1 center conductor + 1 dielectric + 1 shield1 center conductor + 2 dielectrics + 2 shields2 twisted conductors + 1 shared dielectric + 1 shield
Primary mechanismSingle ended signaling with a controlled impedance pathDriven shield/guarded signaling for extreme isolationBalanced, differential signaling for common mode noise cancellation
Cost and sizeLowest cost, most compact profileHighest cost, widest profileModerate cost, slightly wider than standard coax.

Conclusion

By understanding the unique structural advantages and limitations of coax, triax and twinax cables, engineers can confidently specify the most reliable and efficient interconnect solution for any demanding application.

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