What is a filter?
It is sometimes desirable to have circuits
capable of selectively filtering one frequency or range of
frequencies out of a mix of different frequencies in a
circuit. A circuit designed to perform this frequency
selection is called a filter circuit, or simply a
filter. A common need for filter circuits is in
high-performance stereo systems, where certain ranges of
audio frequencies need to be amplified or suppressed for
best sound quality and power efficiency. You may be familiar
with equalizers, which allow the amplitudes of
several frequency ranges to be adjusted to suit the
listener's taste and acoustic properties of the listening
area. You may also be familiar with crossover networks,
which block certain ranges of frequencies from reaching
speakers. A tweeter (high-frequency speaker) is inefficient
at reproducing low-frequency signals such as drum beats, so
a crossover circuit is connected between the tweeter and the
stereo's output terminals to block low-frequency signals,
only passing high-frequency signals to the speaker's
connection terminals. This gives better audio system
efficiency and thus better performance. Both equalizers and
crossover networks are examples of filters, designed to
accomplish filtering of certain frequencies.
Another practical application of filter
circuits is in the "conditioning" of non-sinusoidal voltage
waveforms in power circuits. Some electronic devices are
sensitive to the presence of harmonics in the power supply
voltage, and so require power conditioning for proper
operation. If a distorted sine-wave voltage behaves like a
series of harmonic waveforms added to the fundamental
frequency, then it should be possible to construct a filter
circuit that only allows the fundamental waveform frequency
to pass through, blocking all (higher-frequency) harmonics.
We will be studying the design of several
elementary filter circuits in this lesson. To reduce the
load of math on the reader, I will make extensive use of
SPICE as an analysis tool, displaying Bode plots (amplitude
versus frequency) for the various kinds of filters. Bear in
mind, though, that these circuits can be analyzed over
several points of frequency by repeated series-parallel
analysis, much like the previous example with two sources
(60 and 90 Hz), if the student is willing to invest a lot of
time working and re-working circuit calculations for each
frequency.
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REVIEW:
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A filter is an AC circuit that
separates some frequencies from others in within
mixed-frequency signals.
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Audio equalizers and crossover
networks are two well-known applications of filter
circuits.
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A Bode plot is a graph plotting
waveform amplitude or phase on one axis and frequency on
the other.
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