Originally posted by Sergey_P
View Post
First thing to think about any VLF is what reference you take for a phase 0°. In case we use Tx voltage, and I think we do, then it is all the same what Q is the Tx tank: it provides sine voltage. di/dt is the driving force of any detector, and with constant L gives you a voltage u quite near 90° to the coil i, regardless of the way you apply it. Whatever the phase of the current, your voltage across the coil will still be the phase reference. High Q or low Q, same voltage -> same di/dt with constant L. The current change di/dt, is transformed to the target, and phase shifted according to the target tau, and again picked by the Rx coil. Now, Rx processes a phase shift with phase reference to the Tx coil voltage. Rx coil can work in detuned quasi resonant regime which is phase critical or in an aperiodic regime which is not. In case of a quasi resonant coil operation, it is BENEFICIAL if Tx frequency is adjusted according to the ground influenced Δμ change. This is why I prefer Tx tank being a part of an oscillator - it self-adjusts frequency to the Δμ change. It also does not in any way influence the phase change due to the target tau.
In my understanding, with any kind of voltage applied to a coil, you'll have exactly that voltage across the coil, and a current at 90° ... unless your Q is very bad.
So, where am I wrong in your vision?
Comment