E-COMMS (Chapter 2)
Types of inductors
(a) Heavy self-supporting wire coil. (b) Inductor made as copper pattern. (c) Insulating form. (d) Toroidal inductor. (e) Ferrite bead inductor. (f ) Chip inductor.
Inductance
causes a voltage to be self-induced into the coil winding, which has the effect of opposing current changes in the coil
tank circuit
circuit acts as a kind of storage vessel for electric energy
tuned circuits
circuits made up of inductors and capacitors that resonate at specific frequencies
tank current
circulating current
Resonant frequency
is inversely proportional to inductance and capacitance.
Insertion loss
is the loss the filter introduces to the signals in the passband. Passive filters introduce attenuation because of the resistive losses in the components. Insertion loss is typically given in decibels
capacitor
it is used in an ac circuit continually charges and discharges. It tends to oppose voltage changes across it
decade
represents a one-tenth or times-10 relationship
Crystal filters
made from the same type of quartz crystals normally used in crystal oscillator
series resonant circuit
made up of inductance, capacitance, and resistance, such circuits are often referred to as LCR circuits or RLC circuits.
Impedance
resistive value of the load and source terminations of the fi lter. Filters are usually designed for specific driving source and load that must be present for proper operation
Skin Effect
tendency of electrons flowing in a conductor to fl ow near and on the outer surface of the conductor frequencies
Antilog
the number obtained when the base is raised to the logarithm
decibels (dB)
, a unit of measurement that was originally created as a way of expressing the hearing response of the human ear to various sound levels.
quality factor/Q factor
the ratio of inductive power to resistive power (xL/R)
decibels (dB)
It is is one-tenth of a bel.
reactance
Both coils and capacitors offer an opposition to alternating current flow (ohms)
parallel-T or twin-T notch filter
A simple notch filter that is implemented with resistors and capacitors
Ripple
Amplitude variation with frequency in the passband, or the repetitive rise and fall of the signal level in the passband of some types of fi lters, is known as ripple. It is usually stated in decibels.
Types of LC filters
Butterworth,Cauer,Chebyshev,Bessel
half-power points
Current levels at which the response is down 70.7 percent, and the power at the cutoff frequencies is one-half the power peak of the curve
inductive reactance
Opposition to alternating current offered by inductors is continuous and constant
All-pass filter
Passes all frequencies equally well over its design range but has a fixed or predictable phase shift characteristic
High-pass filter
Passes frequencies above the cutoff but rejects those below it
Low-pass filter
Passes frequencies below a critical frequency called the cutoff frequency and greatly attenuates those above the cutoff frequency
Bandpass filter
Passes frequencies over a narrow range between lower and upper cutoff frequencies
Band-reject filter
Rejects or stops frequencies over a narrow range but allows frequencies above and below to pass
Gain
amplification. It is simply the ratio of the output to the input
bandwidth
The narrow frequency range over which the current is highest
Attenuation
This is the amount by which undesired frequencies in the stop band are reduced. It can be expressed as a power ratio or voltage ratio of the output to the input. Attenuation is usually given in decibels.
Passband
This is the frequency range over which the fi lter passes signals. It is the frequency range between the cutoff frequencies or between the cutoff frequency and zero (for low-pass) or between the cutoff frequency and infi nity (for high-pass)
Stop band
This is the range of frequencies outside the passband, i.e., the range of frequencies that is greatly attenuated by the fi lter. Frequencies in this range are rejected.
Zero
This term refers to a frequency at which there is zero impedance in the circuit.
cascaded
When two or more stages of amplifi cation or other forms of signal processing
pole
a frequency at which there is a high impedance in the circuit. It is also used to describe one RC section of a filter
Ceramic
a manufactured crystallike compound that has the same piezoelectric qualities as quar
bandpass filter
allows a narrow range of frequencies around a center frequency fc to pass with minimum attenuation but rejects frequencies above and below this range
Bessel
also called Thomson filters, provide the desired frequency response (i.e., low-pass, bandpass, etc.) but have a constant time delay in the passband
Inductor
also called a coil or choke, is simply a winding of multiple turns of wire
Roll-off
also called the attenuation rate, roll-off is the rate of change of amplitude with frequency in a fi lter
Band-reject filters
also known as bandstop fi lters, reject a narrow band of frequencies around a center or notch frequency
Shape factor
also known as bandwidth ratio, is the ratio of the stop bandwidth to the pass bandwidth of a bandpass filter.
Capacitive Reactance (Xc)
an opposition to alternating current
Notch fi lters
are also referred to as bandstop or band-reject filters
Stray capacitances
are typically small, but they cannot be ignored, especially at the high frequencies used in communication. Stray and distributed capacitances can signifi cantly affect the performance of a circuit
Twin-T notch filters
are used at low frequencies to eliminate power line hum from audio circuits and medical equipment amplifiers.
Band-reject fi lters
are used to greatly attenuate a narrow range of frequencies around a center point
Ceramic filters
are very small and inexpensive and are, therefore, widely used in transmitters and receivers
Henry
basic unit of inductance
octave
defined as a doubling or halving of frequency
Inductance
directly affected by the physical characteristics of the coil, including the number of turns of wire in the inductor, the spacing of the turns, the length of the coil, the diameter of the coil, and the type of magnetic core material.
passive filters
do not amplify
parallel resonant circuit
formed when the inductor and capacitor are connected in parallel with the applied voltage
filter
frequency-selective circuit
Capacitance
generally added to a circuit by a capacitor of a specific value, but it can occur between any two conductors separated by an insulator
Butterworth
has maximum fl atness in response in the pass band and a uniform attenuation with frequency
Chebyshev
have extremely good selectivity; i.e., their attenuation rate or roll-off is high, much higher than that of the Butterworth fi lter.
selectivity
how the circuit responds to varying frequencies
Resonance
occurs when the inductive and capacitive reactances are equal
Cauer filters
produce an even greater attenuation or roll-off rate than do Chebyshev fi lters and greater attenuation out of the passband.
Attenuation
refers to a loss introduced by a circuit or component. Many electronic circuits, sometimes called stages, reduce the amplitude of a signal rather than increase it.
insertion loss
signal attenuation in the passband
Low-pass filter
sometimes referred to as high cut filters
Envelope delay
time it takes for a specifi c point on an input waveform to pass through the fi lter
active filters
use amplifying devices such as transistors and operational amplifiers.
RC filters
use combinations of resistors and capacitors to achieve a desired frequency response
Mechanical Filters
uses resonant vibrations of mechanical disks to provide the selectivity