1. Trang chủ
  2. » Kỹ Thuật - Công Nghệ

Electric Circuits, 9th Edition P56 pdf

10 432 0
Tài liệu đã được kiểm tra trùng lặp

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 10
Dung lượng 323,66 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

The largest output amplitude such filters can achieve is usually 1, and placing an impedance in series with the source or in parallel with the load will decrease this amplitude.. 14.2 Lo

Trang 1

526 Introduction to Frequency Selective Circuits

elements: resistors, capacitors, and inductors The largest output amplitude such filters can achieve is usually 1, and placing an impedance in series with the source or in parallel with the load will decrease this amplitude Because many practical filter applications require increasing the amplitude of the output, passive filters have some significant disadvantages The only pas-sive filter described in this chapter that can amplify its output is the series

RLC resonant filter A much greater selection of amplifying filters is found

among the active filter circuits, the subject of Chapter 15

14.2 Low-Pass Filters

Here, we examine two circuits that behave as low-pass filters, the series

RL circuit and the series RC circuit, and discover what characteristics of

these circuits determine the cutoff frequency

The Series RL Circuit—Qualitative Analysis

A series RL circuit is shown in Fig 14.4(a) The circuit's input is a

sinu-soidal voltage source with varying frequency The circuit's output is defined as the voltage across the resistor Suppose the frequency of the source starts very low and increases gradually We know that the behavior

of the ideal resistor will not change, because its impedance is independent

of frequency But consider how the behavior of the inductor changes

Recall that the impedance of an inductor is jooL At low frequencies,

the inductor's impedance is very small compared with the resistor's impedance, and the inductor effectively functions as a short circuit The

term low frequencies thus refers to any frequencies for which coL <<c R

The equivalent circuit for w = 0 is shown in Fig 14.4(b) In this equivalent circuit, the output voltage and the input voltage are equal both in magni-tude and in phase angle

As the frequency increases, the impedance of the inductor increases rel-ative to that of the resistor Increasing the inductor's impedance causes a corresponding increase in the magnitude of the voltage drop across the inductor and a corresponding decrease in the output voltage magnitude Increasing the inductor's impedance also introduces a shift in phase angle between the inductor's voltage and current This results in a phase angle dif-ference between the input and output voltage The output voltage lags the input voltage, and as the frequency increases, this phase lag approaches 90°

At high frequencies, the inductor's impedance is very large compared with the resistor's impedance, and the inductor thus functions as an open

circuit, effectively blocking the flow of current in the circuit The term high frequencies thus refers to any frequencies for which coL » R The

equiv-alent circuit for w = oo is shown in Fig 14.4(c), where the output voltage magnitude is zero The phase angle of the output voltage is 90° more neg-ative than that of the input voltage

Based on the behavior of the output voltage magnitude, this series RL

circuit selectively passes low-frequency inputs to the output, and it blocks high-frequency inputs from reaching the output This circuit's response to varying input frequency thus has the shape shown in Fig 14.5 These two

plots comprise the frequency response plots of the series RL circuit in Fig 14.4(a) The upper plot shows how \H(jo))\ varies with frequency The lower plot shows how B(jco) varies as a function of frequency We present a

more formal method for constructing these plots in Appendix E

We have also superimposed the ideal magnitude plot for a low-pass

filter from Fig 14.3(a) on the magnitude plot of the RL filter in Fig 14.5

There is obviously a difference between the magnitude plots of an ideal

+

RI v<,

(b)

Figure 14.4 A (a) A series RL low-pass filter, (b) The

equivalent circuit at w = 0 and (c) The equivalent

circuit at to = oo

Trang 2

filter and the frequency response of an actual RL filter The ideal filter

exhibits a discontinuity in magnitude at the cutoff frequency, a>c, which

creates an abrupt transition into and out of the passband While this is,

ide-ally, how we would like our filters to perform, it is not possible to use real

components to construct a circuit that has this abrupt transition in

magni-tude Circuits acting as low-pass filters have a magnitude response that

changes gradually from the passband to the stopband Hence the

magni-tude plot of a real circuit requires us to define what we mean by the cutoff

frequency, ooc

Defining the Cutoff Frequency

We need to define the cutoff frequency, a>t., for realistic filter circuits

when the magnitude plot does not allow us to identify a single frequency

that divides the passband and the stopband The definition for cutoff

fre-quency widely used by electrical engineers is the frefre-quency for which the

transfer function magnitude is decreased by the factor 1/V2 from its

maximum value:

W{jto)\

1.0

0

-90°

Figure 14.5 A The frequency response plot for the

series RL circuit in Fig 14.4(a)

1

(14.1) ^ Cutoff frequency d e f i n i t i o n

where H miXX is the maximum magnitude of the transfer function It follows

from Eq 14.1 that the passband of a realizable filter is defined as the

range of frequencies in which the amplitude of the output voltage is at

least 70.7% of the maximum possible amplitude

The constant 1/ V2 used in defining the cutoff frequency may seem like

an arbitrary choice Examining another consequence of the cutoff frequency

will make this choice seem more reasonable Recall from Section 10.5 that

the average power delivered by any circuit to a load is proportional to V 2L ,

where V L is the amplitude of the voltage drop across the load:

If the circuit has a sinusoidal voltage source, V/(/&>), then the load voltage

is also a sinusoid, and its amplitude is a function of the frequency w

Define Pmax as the value of the average power delivered to a load when

the magnitude of the load voltage is maximum:

1 VLax

If we vary the frequency of the sinusoidal voltage source, V,{jo)), the load

voltage is a maximum when the magnitude of the circuit's transfer

func-tion is also a maximum:

Now consider what happens to the average power when the frequency of

the voltage source is o)c Using Eq 14.1, we determine the magnitude of

the load voltage at (o c to be

|Vz.(M)l |tf(M)IM

~ i s "maxlvi\

1

Trang 3

528 Introduction to Frequency Selective Circuits

Substituting Eq 14.5 into Eq 14.2,

p( . l m(K)i

1 VV2

2

*Lmax

R

1 ^Jmax/2

2 #

(14.6)

Equation 14.6 shows that at the cutoff frequency <yc, the average power

delivered by the circuit is one half the maximum average power Thus, a)c is

also called the half-power frequency Therefore, in the passband, the average

power delivered to a load is at least 50% of the maximum average power

RfV0(s)

Figure 14.6 A The s-domain equivalent for the circuit

in Fig 14.4(a)

The Series RL Circuit—Quantitative Analysis

Now that we have defined the cutoff frequency for real filter circuits, we can

analyze the series RL circuit to discover the relationship between the

com-ponent values and the cutoff frequency for this low-pass filter We begin by constructing the s-domain equivalent of the circuit in Fig 14.4(a), assuming initial conditions of zero Trie resulting equivalent circuit is shown in Fig 14.6 The voltage transfer function for this circuit is

5 + R/L'

To study the frequency response, we make the substitution s - /&> in Eq 14.7:

R/L

jo> + R/L'

We can now separate Eq 14.8 into two equations The first defines the transfer function magnitude as a function of frequency; the second defines the transfer function phase angle as a function of frequency:

1//(/0,)1 = R/L

V<o2 + (R/L)2'

e(jco) = - t a n "1^ )

(14.9)

(14.10)

Close examination of Eq 14.9 provides the quantitative support for the magnitude plot shown in Fig 14.5 When o> = 0, the denominator and the numerator are equal and |//(/0)| = 1 This means that at o> = 0, the input voltage is passed to the output terminals without a change in the voltage magnitude

As the frequency increases, the numerator of Eq 14.9 is unchanged,

but the denominator gets larger Thus \H(jco)\ decreases as the frequency

increases, as shown in the plot in Fig 14.5 Likewise, as the frequency increases, the phase angle changes from its dc value of 0°, becoming more negative, as seen from Eq 14.10

When o) = oo, the denominator of Eq 14.9 is infinite and

\H(joo)\ = 0, as seen in Fig 14.5 At <o = oo, the phase angle reaches a

limit of —90°, as seen from Eq 14.10 and the phase angle plot in Fig 14.5

Using Eq 14.9, we can compute the cutoff frequency, coc Remember that u)c is defined as the frequency at which \H(jcoc)\ = ( 1 / V 2 ) / / For

Trang 4

the low-pass filter, //m a x = \H(jO)\, as seen in Fig 14.5.Thus,for the circuit

in Fig 14.4(a),

\H(M\ 1 111 = R/L

V 5 Vo>(2 + (R/L) 2 Solving Eq 14.11 for a)c, we get

R

L

(14.11)

(14.12) ^ Cutoff frequency for RL filters

Equation 14.12 provides an important result The cutoff frequency, <o c ,

can be set to any desired value by appropriately selecting values for R and

L We can therefore design a low-pass filter with whatever cutoff frequency

is needed Example 14.1 demonstrates the design potential of Eq 14.12

Example 14.1 Designing a Low-Pass Filter

Electrocardiology is the study of the electric signals

produced by the heart These signals maintain the

heart's rhythmic beat, and they are measured by an

instrument called an electrocardiograph This

instru-ment must be capable of detecting periodic signals

whose frequency is about 1 Hz (the normal heart

rate is 72 beats per minute) The instrument must

operate in the presence of sinusoidal noise consisting

of signals from the surrounding electrical

environ-ment, whose fundamental frequency is 60 Hz—the

frequency at which electric power is supplied

Choose values for R and L in the circuit of

Fig 14.4(a) such that the resulting circuit could be

used in an electrocardiograph to filter out any

noise above 10 Hz and pass the electric signals

from the heart at or near 1 Hz Then compute the

magnitude of V0 at 1 Hz, 10 Hz, and 60 Hz to see

how well the filter performs

Solution

The problem is to select values for R and L that

yield a low-pass filter with a cutoff frequency of

10 Hz From Eq 14.12, we see that R and L cannot

be specified independently to generate a value for

a) c Therefore, let's choose a commonly available

value of L, 100 mH Before we use Eq 14.12 to

compute the value of R needed to obtain the

desired cutoff frequency, we need to convert the

cutoff frequency from hertz to radians per second:

wc = 2TT(10) = 20TT rad/s

Now, solve for the value of R which, together with

L = 100 mH, will yield a low-pass filter with a

cut-off frequency of 10 Hz:

R = cocL

= (20TT)(100 X 10-3 )

= 6.28 H

We can compute the magnitude of V0 using the equation \V 0 \ = \H(j*>)\' \V&:

Veer + (R/L) 2

20TT

V a r + 400TT 2

Table 14.1 summarizes the computed magnitude values for the frequencies 1 Hz, 10 Hz, and 60 Hz

As expected, the input and output voltages have the same magnitudes at the low frequency, because the circuit is a low-pass filter At the cutoff frequency, the output voltage magnitude has been reduced by 1/V2~ from the unity passband magnitude At

60 Hz, the output voltage magnitude has been reduced by a factor of about 6, achieving the desired attenuation of the noise that could corrupt the signal the electrocardiograph is designed to measure.v

TABLE 14.1 Input and Output Voltage Magnitudes for Several Frequencies

f(Hz)

1

10

60

\V,\(V)

1.0 1.0 1.0

\Vo\(V)

0.995 0.707 0.164

Trang 5

530 Introduction to Frequency Selective Circuits

Figure 14.7 A A series RC low-pass filter

A Series RC Circuit

The series RC circuit shown in Fig 14.7 also behaves as a low-pass filter

We can verify this via the same qualitative analysis we used previously In fact, such a qualitative examination is an important problem-solving step that you should get in the habit of performing when analyzing filters Doing

so will enable you to predict the filtering characteristics (low pass, high pass, etc.) and thus also predict the general form of the transfer function If the calculated transfer function matches the qualitatively predicted form, you have an important accuracy check

Note that the circuit's output is defined as the output across the capacitor As we did in the previous qualitative analysis, we use three

frequency regions to develop the behavior of the series RC circuit in

Fig 14.7:

1 Zero frequency (oo = 0): The impedance of the capacitor is infinite,

and the capacitor acts as an open circuit The input and output volt-ages are thus the same

2 Frequencies increasing from zero: The impedance of the capacitor

decreases relative to the impedance of the resistor, and the source voltage divides between the resistive impedance and the capaci-tive impedance The output voltage is thus smaller than the source voltage

3 Infinite frequency (to = oo): The impedance of the capacitor is

zero, and the capacitor acts as a short circuit The output voltage

is thus zero

Based on this analysis of how the output voltage changes as a function of

frequency, the series RC circuit functions as a low-pass filter Example 14.2

explores this circuit quantitatively

Example 14.2 Designing a Series RC Low-Pass Filter

For the series RC circuit in Fig 14.7:

a) Find the transfer function between the source

voltage and the output voltage

b) Determine an equation for the cutoff frequency

in the series RC circuit

c) Choose values for R and C that will yield a

low-pass filter with a cutoff frequency of 3 kHz

Solution

a) To derive an expression for the transfer function,

we first construct the s-domain equivalent of the

circuit in Fig 14.7, as shown in Fig 14.8

Using v-domain voltage division on the

equivalent circuit, we find

s + 1

RC

Now, substitute s = jco and compute the

magni-tude of the resulting complex expression:

1

\H(jco)\

-1 /

RC,

Figure 14.8 • The s-domain equivalent for the circuit

in Fig 14.7

b) At the cutoff frequency wc, \H(ja>)\ is equal

to ( l / V 2 ) / 7m a x For a low-pass filter,

Trang 6

#max = HUty-> a nd f °r t n e circuit in Fig 14.8,

/ / ( / 0 ) = 1 We can then describe the

relation-ship among the quantities R, C, and <oc:

\H{J«>c)\ = ^ ( D a

1

RC

(of, +

RC

Solving this equation for G>C, we get

1

• Cutoff frequency of RC filters

c) From the results in (b), we see that the cutoff

fre-quency is determined by the values of R and C Because R and C cannot be computed independ-ently, let's choose C = X (JLF Given a choice, we

will usually specify a value for C first, rather than

for R or L, because the number of available

capacitor values is much smaller than the num-ber of resistor or inductor values Rememnum-ber that we have to convert the specified cutoff fre-quency from 3 kHz to (2-77-)(3) krad/s:

R = 1

oi r C

\

(2<n-)(3 X 103)(1 X 10-6)

53.05 ft

Figure 14.9 summarizes the two low-pass filter circuits we have examined

Look carefully at the transfer functions Notice how similar in form they

are—they differ only in the terms that specify the cutoff frequency In fact,

we can state a general form for the transfer functions of these two

low-pass filters:

H(s) =

Any circuit with the voltage ratio in Eq 14.13 would behave as a low-pass

filter with a cutoff frequency of o)c The problems at the end of the chapter

give you other examples of circuits with this voltage ratio

Relating the Frequency Domain to the Time Domain

Finally, you might have noticed one other important relationship

Remember our discussion of the natural responses of the first-order RL

and RC circuits in Chapter 6 An important parameter for these circuits is

the time constant, r, which characterizes the shape of the time response

For the RL circuit, the time constant has the value L/R (Eq 7.14); for the

RC circuit, the time constant is RC (Eq.7.24) Compare the time constants

to the cutoff frequencies for these circuits and notice that

l/(O c (14.14)

This result is a direct consequence of the relationship between the

time response of a circuit and its frequency response, as revealed by the

Laplace transform The discussion of memory and weighting as

repre-sented in the convolution integral of Section 13.6 shows that as coc—* oo,

the filter has no memory, and the output approaches a scaled replica of the

input; that is, no filtering has occurred As <o c —> 0, the filter has increased

memory and the output voltage is a distortion of the input, because

filter-ing has occurred

<o c =R/L

H(s) I IRC

s + 1/RC cov= l/RC

Figure 14.9 A Two low-pass filters, the series RL and

the series RC, together with their transfer functions and

cutoff frequencies

Trang 7

532 Introduction to Frequency Selective Circuits

I / A S S E S S M E N T PROBLEMS

Objective 1—Know the RL and RC circuit configurations t h a t act as low-pass filters

14.1 A series RC low-pass filter requires a cutoff

frequency of 8 kHz Use R = 10 kfl and

com-pute the value of C required

Answer: 1.99 nF

NOTE: Also try ChapterProblems 14.1 and 14.2

14.2 A series RL low-pass filter with a cutoff

fre-quency of 2 kHz is needed Using R = 5 kft, compute (a) L; (b) \H(joi)\ at 50 kHz; and (c) 8(ja>) at 50 kHz

Answer: (a) 0.40 H ;

(b) 0.04;

(c) -87.71°

14.3 High-Pass Filters

We next examine two circuits that function as high-pass filters Once

again, they are the series RL circuit and the series RC circuit We will see

that the same series circuit can act as either a low-pass or a high-pass filter, depending on where the output voltage is defined We will also determine the relationship between the component values and the cutoff frequency

of these filters

C

R \ o

(c)

Figure 14.10 • (a) A series RC high-pass filter; (b) the

equivalent circuit at co = 0; and (c) the equivalent

circuit at a) = oo

The Series RC Circuit—Qualitative Analysis

A series RC circuit is shown in Fig 14.10(a) In contrast to its low-pass

counterpart in Fig 14.7, the output voltage here is defined across the resis-tor, not the capacitor Because of this, the effect of the changing capacitive impedance is different than it was in the low-pass configuration

At co = 0, the capacitor behaves like an open circuit, so there is no

current flowing in the resistor This is illustrated in the equivalent circuit in Fig 14.10(b) In this circuit, there is no voltage across the resistor, and the circuit filters out the low-frequency source voltage before it reaches the circuit's output

As the frequency of the voltage source increases, the impedance of the capacitor decreases relative to the impedance of the resistor, and the source voltage is now divided between the capacitor and the resistor The output voltage magnitude thus begins to increase

When the frequency of the source is infinite (oo = oo), the capacitor

behaves as a short circuit, and thus there is no voltage across the capacitor This is illustrated in the equivalent circuit in Fig 14.10(c) In this circuit, the input voltage and output voltage are the same

The phase angle difference between the source and output voltages

also varies as the frequency of the source changes For oo = co, the output

voltage is the same as the input voltage, so the phase angle difference is zero As the frequency of the source decreases and the impedance of the capacitor increases, a phase shift is introduced between the voltage and the current in the capacitor This creates a phase difference between the source and output voltages The phase angle of the output voltage leads

that of the source voltage When oo = 0, this phase angle difference

reaches its maximum of +90°

Trang 8

Based on our qualitative analysis, we see that when the output is

defined as the voltage across the resistor, the series RC circuit behaves as

a high-pass filter The components and connections are identical to the

low-pass series RC circuit, but the choice of output is different Thus, we

have confirmed the earlier observation that the filtering characteristics of

a circuit depend on the definition of the output as well as on circuit

com-ponents, values, and connections

Figure 14.11 shows the frequency response plot for the series RC

high-pass filter For reference, the dashed lines indicate the magnitude

plot for an ideal high-pass filter We now turn to a quantitative analysis of

this same circuit

The Series RC Circuit—Quantitative Analysis

To begin, we construct the ^-domain equivalent of the circuit in

Fig 14.10(a) This equivalent is shown in Fig 14.12 Applying s-domain

voltage division to the circuit, we write the transfer function:

H(s)

l«0)|

s + IjRC Making the substitution s = j(o results in

Figure 14.11 • The frequency response plot for the

series RC circuit in Fig 14.10(a)

H(jo>) = )<»

Next, we separate Eq 14.15 into two equations The first is the equation

describing the magnitude of the transfer function; the second is the

equa-tion describing the phase angle of the transfer funcequa-tion:

Vcv2 + ( l / i ? C )2'

6(jco) = 90° - tan ~ l cvRC

(14.16)

(14.17)

A close look at Eqs 14.16 and 14.17 confirms the shape of the frequency

response plot in Fig 14.11 Using Eq 14.16, we can calculate the cutoff

fre-quency for the series RC high-pass filter Recall that at the cutoff frefre-quency,

the magnitude of the transfer function is ( 1 / V 2 ) / /m a x For a high-pass filter,

#max = l#(yw)|w=oo = \H(joo)\, as seen from Fig 14.11 We can construct

an equation for (o c by setting the left-hand side of Eq 14.16 to

(l/y/2)\H(joo)\, noting that for this series RC circuit, \H(joo)\ = 1:

J_

sC

Vi(s)

+

Figure 14.12 A The s-domain equivalent of the circuit

in Fig 14.10(a)

V2 Vco? + (l/RC)2

(14.18)

Solving Eq 14.18 for o)c, we get

1

Equation 14.19 presents a familiar result The cutoff frequency for the

series RC circuit has the value l/RC, whether the circuit is configured as a

low-pass filter in Fig 14.7 or as a high-pass filter in Fig 14.10(a) This is

perhaps not a surprising result, as we have already discovered a

connec-tion between the cutoff frequency, coc, and the time constant, T, of a circuit

Example 14.3 analyzes a series RL circuit, this time configured as a

high-pass filter Example 14.4 examines the effect of adding a load resistor

in parallel with the inductor

Trang 9

534 Introduction to Frequency Selective Circuits

Example 14.3 Designing a Series RL High-Pass Filter

Show that the series RL circuit in Fig 14.13 also

acts like a high-pass filter:

a) Derive an expression for the circuit's transfer

function

b) Use the result from (a) to determine an equation

for the cutoff frequency in the series RL circuit

c) Choose values for R and L that will yield a

high-pass filter with a cutoff frequency of 15 kHz

Figure 14.14 • The s-domain equivalent of the circuit in Fig 14.13

Figure 14.13 • The circuit for Example 14.3

Solution

a) Begin by constructing the v-domain equivalent

of the series RL circuit, as shown in Fig 14.14

Then use v-domain voltage division on the

equiv-alent circuit to construct the transfer function:

H(s) =

s + R/L Making the substitution s = ja>, we get

H(jco) =

jco + R/L'

Notice that this equation has the same form as

Eq 14.15 for the series RC high-pass filter

b) To find an equation for the cutoff frequency, first

compute the magnitude of H(jco):

|//{/a,)| = CO

V o r + (R/L) 2

Then, as before, we set the left-hand side of this equation to ( l / V 2 ) / /m a x, based on the

defini-tion of the cutoff frequency coc Remember that

#max ~ IHQ 0 0 )1 f °r a high-pass filter, and for

the series RL circuit, |//(j'oo)| = 1 We solve the

resulting equation for the cutoff frequency:

1

V2 Vto; + (R/L)2 ' co, =

R

L

This is the same cutoff frequency we computed

for the series RL low-pass filter

c) Using the equation for co c computed in (b), we recognize that it is not possible to specify values

for R and L independently Therefore, let's

arbi-trarily select a value of 500 O for JR Remember

to convert the cutoff frequency to radians per second:

CO,

500

(2TT)(15,000) 5.31 mH

Example 14.4 Loading the Series RL High-Pass Filter

Examine the effect of placing a load resistor in

par-allel with the inductor in the RL high-pass filter

shown in Fig 14.15:

a) Determine the transfer function for the circuit in

Fig 14.15

b) Sketch the magnitude plot for the loaded RL

high-pass filter, using the values for R and L

from the circuit in Example 14.3(c) and letting

R L = R On the same graph, sketch the

magni-tude plot for the unloaded RL high-pass filter of

Example 14.3(c)

Solution

a) Begin by transforming the circuit in Fig 14.15 to the i-domain, as shown in Fig 14.16 Use voltage division across the parallel combination of inductor and load resistor to compute the trans-fer function:

H(s)

R L sL

R L + sL

R,

R + R L sL

R r + sL s +

RL \R s + tot

R + RrjL

Trang 10

where

K = i?i

R + RL' u> c = KR/L

Note that a) c is the cutoff frequency of the

loaded filter

b) For the unloaded RL high-pass filter from

Example 14.3(c), the passband magnitude is 1,

and the cutoff frequency is 15 kHz For the

loaded RL high-pass filter, R = R L = 500 H, so

K - 1/2 Thus, for the loaded filter, the passband

magnitude is (1)(1/2) = 1/2, and the cutoff

fre-quency is (15,000)(1/2) = 7.5 kHz A sketch of

the magnitude plots of the loaded and unloaded

circuits is shown in Fig 14.17

RL

Figure 14.15 A The circuit for Example 14.4

Vfa)

Figure 14.16 • The 5-domain equivalent of the circuit in

Fig 14.15

0 £.10 /; 20 30 40 50

Frequency (kHz)

Figure 14.17 • The magnitude plots for the unloaded

RL high-pass filter of Fig 14.13 and the loaded RL high-pass filter

of Fig 14.15

Comparing the transfer functions of the unloaded filter in Example 14.3

and the loaded filter in Example 14.4 is useful at this point Both transfer

functions are in the form:

s + K{R/LY with K = 1 for the unloaded filter and K = R L /(R + R L ) for the loaded

filter Note that the value of K for the loaded circuit reduces to the value

of K for the unloaded circuit when RL = oo; that is, when there is no load

resistor The cutoff frequencies for both filters can be seen directly from

their transfer functions In both cases, co c = K(R/L), where K = 1 for the

unloaded circuit, and K = RJ{R + RfJ for the loaded circuit Again, the

cutoff frequency for the loaded circuit reduces to that of the unloaded

cir-cuit when RL = oo Because RL/(R + RL) < h the effect of the load

resistor is to reduce the passband magnitude by the factor K and to lower

the cutoff frequency by the same factor We predicted these results at the

beginning of this chapter The largest output amplitude a passive high-pass

filter can achieve is 1, and placing a load across the filter, as we did in

Example 14.4, has served to decrease the amplitude When we need to

amplify signals in the passband, we must turn to active filters, such as those

discussed in Chapter 15

The effect of a load on a filter's transfer function poses another

dilemma in circuit design We typically begin with a transfer function

spec-ification and then design a filter to produce that function We may or may

not know what the load on the filter will be, but in any event, we usually

want the filter's transfer function to remain the same regardless of the

load on it This desired behavior cannot be achieved with the passive

fil-ters presented in this chapter

ff(s)

s + R/L R/L

Figure 14.18 • Two high-pass filters, the series RC and

the series RL, together with their transfer functions and

cutoff frequencies

Ngày đăng: 06/07/2014, 16:20

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN