Accedi

Active filters are electronic circuits that use operational amplifiers (op-amps), resistors, and capacitors to filter out unwanted frequency components from a signal. A first-order low-pass active filter is designed to pass signals with a frequency lower than a certain cutoff frequency and attenuate frequencies higher than that cutoff frequency. The transfer function for a first-order low-pass active filter is:

Equation 1

Where Af is the gain at low frequencies also known as the dc gain, s is the complex frequency, and ωc is the corner or cutoff frequency. A first-order high-pass active filter allows signals above a certain cutoff frequency to pass while attenuating signals below this frequency. Its transfer function can be expressed as:

Equation 2

Where Af represents the gain at high frequencies, and ωc is the cutoff frequency below which the output is significantly reduced. A band-pass filter has combined properties of low-pass and high-pass filters. It permits only a certain range of frequencies to pass through while attenuating frequencies outside this range. The transfer function of a band-pass filter has the form:

Equation 3

Here ω0 is the center frequency, and Q is the quality factor. A band-reject filter, also known as a notch filter, does the opposite by allowing most frequencies to pass, except for a specific range that it attenuates. The standard transfer function for a band-reject filter is:

Equation 4

In active filters, the gain within the passband can be set independently of the cutoff frequency, the gain is determined by the ratio of the feedback resistor to the input resistor, and the design parameters, such as resistor and capacitor values are chosen to set the cutoff frequencies and to shape the overall frequency response of the filter to meet specific requirements.

Tags
Active FiltersElectronic CircuitsOperational AmplifiersLow pass FilterHigh pass FilterBand pass FilterBand reject FilterCutoff FrequencyTransfer FunctionGainQuality FactorFrequency ResponseFeedback ResistorInput Resistor

Dal capitolo 9:

article

Now Playing

9.13 : Active Filters

Frequency Response

249 Visualizzazioni

article

9.1 : Network Function of a Circuit

Frequency Response

221 Visualizzazioni

article

9.2 : Frequency Response of a Circuit

Frequency Response

194 Visualizzazioni

article

9.3 : Gain

Frequency Response

147 Visualizzazioni

article

9.4 : Bode Plots

Frequency Response

265 Visualizzazioni

article

9.5 : Transfer function and Bode Plots-I

Frequency Response

264 Visualizzazioni

article

9.6 : Transfer function and Bode Plots-II

Frequency Response

251 Visualizzazioni

article

9.7 : Bode Plots Construction

Frequency Response

241 Visualizzazioni

article

9.8 : Series Resonance

Frequency Response

127 Visualizzazioni

article

9.9 : Characteristics of Series Resonant Circuit

Frequency Response

176 Visualizzazioni

article

9.10 : Parallel Resonance

Frequency Response

154 Visualizzazioni

article

9.11 : Frequency Response of Op Amp Circuits

Frequency Response

213 Visualizzazioni

article

9.12 : Passive Filters

Frequency Response

228 Visualizzazioni

article

9.14 : Scaling

Frequency Response

208 Visualizzazioni

article

9.15 : Design Example

Frequency Response

129 Visualizzazioni

JoVE Logo

Riservatezza

Condizioni di utilizzo

Politiche

Ricerca

Didattica

CHI SIAMO

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tutti i diritti riservati