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Fundamentals of Electric Circuits Chapter 14 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Overview • This chapter will introduce the idea of the transfer function: a means of describing the relationship between the input and output of a circuit. • Bode plots and their utility in describing the frequency response of a circuit will also be introduced. • The concept of resonance as applied to LRC circuits will be covered as well • Finally, frequency filters will be discussed. 2 Frequency Response • Frequency response is the variation in a circuit’s behavior with change in signal frequency. • This is significant for applications involving filters. • Filters play critical roles in blocking or passing specific frequencies or ranges of frequencies. • Without them, it would be impossible to have multiple channels of data in radio communications. 3 Transfer Function • One useful way to analyze the frequency response of a circuit is the concept of the transfer function H(ω). • It is the frequency dependent ratio of a forced function Y(ω) to the forcing function X(ω). H Y X 4 Transfer Function • There are four possible input/output combinations: H Voltage gain H Current gain Vo Vi I o I i H Transfer impedance H Transfer admittance Vo I i I o Vi 5 Zeros and Poles • To obtain H(ω), we first convert to frequency domain equivalent components in the circuit. • H(ω) can be expressed as the ratio of numerator N(ω) and denominator D(ω) polynomials. N H D • Zeros are where the transfer function goes to zero. • Poles are where it goes to infinity. • They can be related to the roots of N(ω) and D(ω) 6 Resonance • The most prominent feature of the frequency response of a circuit may be the sharp peak in the amplitude characteristics. • Resonance occurs in any system that has a complex conjugate pair of poles. • It enables energy storage in the firm of oscillations • It allows frequency discrimination. • It requires at least one capacitor and inductor. 7 Series Resonance • A series resonant circuit consists of an inductor and capacitor in series. • Consider the circuit shown. • Resonance occurs when the imaginary part of Z is zero. • The value of ω that satisfies this is called the resonant frequency 0 1 rad/s LC 8 Series Resonance • At resonance: – – – – The impedance is purely resistive The voltage Vs and the current I are in phase The magnitude of the transfer function is minimum. The inductor and capacitor voltages can be much more than the source. • There are two frequencies above and below resonance where the dissipated power is half the max: 2 R 1 R 1 2L 2 L LC 2 R 1 R 2 2L 2 L LC 9 Quality Factor • The “sharpness” of the resonance is measured quantitatively by the quality factor, Q. • It is a measure of the peak energy stored divided by the energy dissipated in one period at resonance. Q 0 L R 1 0CR • It is also a measure of the ratio of the resonant frequency to its bandwidth, B B R 0 L Q 10 Parallel Resonance • The parallel RLC circuit shown here is the dual of the series circuit shown previously. • Resonance here occurs when the imaginary part of the admittance is zero. • This results in the same resonant frequency as in the series circuit. 11 Parallel Resonance • The relevant equations for the parallel resonant circuit are: 12 Table 13 Passive Filters • A filter is a circuit that is designed to pass signals with desired frequencies and reject or attenuate others. • A filter is passive if it consists only of passive elements, R, L, and C. • They are very important circuits in that many technological advances would not have been possible without the development of filters. 14 Passive Filters • There are four types of filters: – Lowpass passes only low frequencies and blocks high frequencies. – Highpass does the opposite of lowpass – Bandpass only allows a range of frequencies to pass through. – Bandstop does the opposite of bandpass 15 Lowpass Filter • A typical lowpass filter is formed when the output of a RC circuit is taken off the capacitor. • The half power frequency is: c 1 RC • This is also referred to as the cutoff frequency. • The filter is designed to pass from DC up to ωc 16 Highpass Filter • A highpass filter is also made of a RC circuit, with the output taken off the resistor. • The cutoff frequency will be the same as the lowpass filter. • The difference being that the frequencies passed go from ωc to infinity. 17 Bandpass Filter • The RLC series resonant circuit provides a bandpass filter when the output is taken off the resistor. • The center frequency is: 0 1 LC • The filter will pass frequencies from ω1 to ω2. • It can also be made by feeding the output from a lowpass to a highpass filter. 18 Bandstop Filter • A bandstop filter can be created from a RLC circuit by taking the output from the LC series combination. • The range of blocked frequencies will be the same as the range of passed frequencies for the bandpass filter. 19 Active Filters • Passive filters have a few drawbacks. – They cannot create gain greater than 1. – They do not work well for frequencies below the audio range. – They require inductors, which tend to be bulky and more expensive than other components. • It is possible, using op-amps, to create all the common filters. • Their ability to isolate input and output also makes them very desirable. 20 First Order Lowpass • If the input and feedback elements in an inverting amplifier are selectively replaced with capacitors, the amplifier can act as a filter. • If the feedback resistor is replaced with a parallel RL element, the amplifier becomes a lowpass filter. • The corner frequency will be: c 1 Rf C f 21 First Order Highpass • Placing a series RL combination in place of the input resistor yields a highpass filter. • The corner frequency of the filter will be: c 1 Ri Ci 22 Bandpass • To avoid the use of an inductor, it is possible to use a cascaded series of lowpass active filter into a highpass active filter. • To prevent unwanted signals passing, their gains are set to unity, with a final stage for amplification. 23 Bandreject • Creating a bandstop filter requires using a lowpass and highpass filter in parallel. • Both output are fed into a summing amplifier. • It will function by amplifying the desired signals compared to the signal to be rejected. 24