( s) N( s) ( ) The transfer function will take the form. = s = 2. giving ωo = sqrt(1/lc) = 1E7 [rad/s] ω 01 := R 1. α 1 2 L 1.

Similar documents
( ) 2. 1) Bode plots/transfer functions. a. Draw magnitude and phase bode plots for the transfer function

Today. 1/25/11 Physics 262 Lecture 2 Filters. Active Components and Filters. Homework. Lab 2 this week

Electronic Circuits EE359A

Homework Assignment 11

H(s) = 2(s+10)(s+100) (s+1)(s+1000)

EE221 Circuits II. Chapter 14 Frequency Response

Filters and Tuned Amplifiers

EE221 Circuits II. Chapter 14 Frequency Response

Electronic Circuits EE359A

Op-Amp Circuits: Part 3

2nd-order filters. EE 230 second-order filters 1

Designing Information Devices and Systems II Fall 2018 Elad Alon and Miki Lustig Discussion 5A

Second-order filters. EE 230 second-order filters 1

EECE 2150 Circuits and Signals Final Exam Fall 2016 Dec 16

EECE 2150 Circuits and Signals Final Exam Fall 2016 Dec 9

R. W. Erickson. Department of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering University of Colorado, Boulder

First and Second Order Circuits. Claudio Talarico, Gonzaga University Spring 2015

ENGR-4300 Spring 2009 Test 2. Name: SOLUTION. Section: 1(MR 8:00) 2(TF 2:00) 3(MR 6:00) (circle one) Question I (20 points): Question II (20 points):

ECE3050 Assignment 7

Dynamic circuits: Frequency domain analysis

Chapter 8: Converter Transfer Functions

University of Illinois at Chicago Spring ECE 412 Introduction to Filter Synthesis Homework #4 Solutions

1. Design a 3rd order Butterworth low-pass filters having a dc gain of unity and a cutoff frequency, fc, of khz.

8.1.6 Quadratic pole response: resonance

Single-Time-Constant (STC) Circuits This lecture is given as a background that will be needed to determine the frequency response of the amplifiers.

'XNH8QLYHUVLW\ (GPXQG73UDWW-U6FKRRORI(QJLQHHULQJ. EGR 224 Spring Test II. Michael R. Gustafson II

EECE 2150 Circuits and Signals Final Exam Fall 2016 Dec 12

Switched-Capacitor Circuits David Johns and Ken Martin University of Toronto

Frequency Response. Re ve jφ e jωt ( ) where v is the amplitude and φ is the phase of the sinusoidal signal v(t). ve jφ

Basic RL and RC Circuits R-L TRANSIENTS: STORAGE CYCLE. Engineering Collage Electrical Engineering Dep. Dr. Ibrahim Aljubouri

Time Varying Circuit Analysis

Start with the transfer function for a second-order high-pass. s 2. ω o. Q P s + ω2 o. = G o V i

Solution: K m = R 1 = 10. From the original circuit, Z L1 = jωl 1 = j10 Ω. For the scaled circuit, L 1 = jk m ωl 1 = j10 10 = j100 Ω, Z L

OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER APPLICATIONS

Steady State Frequency Response Using Bode Plots

ECE137B Final Exam. There are 5 problems on this exam and you have 3 hours There are pages 1-19 in the exam: please make sure all are there.

'XNH8QLYHUVLW\ (GPXQG73UDWW-U6FKRRORI(QJLQHHULQJ. EGR 224 Spring Test II. Michael R. Gustafson II

R. W. Erickson. Department of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering University of Colorado, Boulder

Test II Michael R. Gustafson II

Alternating Current Circuits. Home Work Solutions

Figure Circuit for Question 1. Figure Circuit for Question 2

Exercise s = 1. cos 60 ± j sin 60 = 0.5 ± j 3/2. = s 2 + s + 1. (s + 1)(s 2 + s + 1) T(jω) = (1 + ω2 )(1 ω 2 ) 2 + ω 2 (1 + ω 2 )

Texas A&M University Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

Input and Output Impedances with Feedback

EE40 Midterm Review Prof. Nathan Cheung

EE C245 / ME C218 INTRODUCTION TO MEMS DESIGN FALL 2011 C. Nguyen PROBLEM SET #7. Table 1: Gyroscope Modeling Parameters

ENGN3227 Analogue Electronics. Problem Sets V1.0. Dr. Salman Durrani

The general form for the transform function of a second order filter is that of a biquadratic (or biquad to the cool kids).

Source-Free RC Circuit

Lecture 4: R-L-C Circuits and Resonant Circuits

Sophomore Physics Laboratory (PH005/105)

Lectures on APPLICATIONS

8 sin 3 V. For the circuit given, determine the voltage v for all time t. Assume that no energy is stored in the circuit before t = 0.

ECSE First order low pass filter First order high pass filter. As ω : Z 0; v = 0. Let's look at this in the s-domain. V (s) Find H(s) = + AC + C

Case Study: Parallel Coupled- Line Combline Filter

EECE 2150 Circuits and Signals, Biomedical Applications Final Exam Section 3

ESE319 Introduction to Microelectronics Common Emitter BJT Amplifier

ELECTRONIC SYSTEMS. Basic operational amplifier circuits. Electronic Systems - C3 13/05/ DDC Storey 1

Problem Weight Score Total 100

R-L-C Circuits and Resonant Circuits

Estimation of Circuit Component Values in Buck Converter using Efficiency Curve

Inductance, Inductors, RL Circuits & RC Circuits, LC, and RLC Circuits

Homework 7 - Solutions

Laplace Transform Analysis of Signals and Systems

Miller Pole Splitting and Zero

EECE 301 Signals & Systems Prof. Mark Fowler

D is the voltage difference = (V + - V - ).

Chapter 33. Alternating Current Circuits

EE247 Analog-Digital Interface Integrated Circuits

Chapter 7: IIR Filter Design Techniques

Frequency Response part 2 (I&N Chap 12)

Quick Review. ESE319 Introduction to Microelectronics. and Q1 = Q2, what is the value of V O-dm. If R C1 = R C2. s.t. R C1. Let Q1 = Q2 and R C1

As an example of the parameter sweeping capabilities of LTSPICE, consider the following elementary high-pass filter circuit:

Feedback design for the Buck Converter

NAME SID EE42/100 Spring 2013 Final Exam 1

EE 205 Dr. A. Zidouri. Electric Circuits II. Frequency Selective Circuits (Filters) Bode Plots: Complex Poles and Zeros.

B. T(s) Modification Design Example 1. DC Conditions 2. Open Loop AC Conditions 3. Closed Loop Conditions

EE100Su08 Lecture #9 (July 16 th 2008)

To find the step response of an RC circuit

ECE 255, Frequency Response

MODULE-4 RESONANCE CIRCUITS

'XNH8QLYHUVLW\ (GPXQG73UDWW-U6FKRRORI(QJLQHHULQJ. ECE 110 Fall Test II. Michael R. Gustafson II

The RLC circuits have a wide range of applications, including oscillators and frequency filters

EE105 Fall 2014 Microelectronic Devices and Circuits

EE40 Lec 13. Prof. Nathan Cheung 10/13/2009. Reading: Hambley Chapter Chapter 14.10,14.5

Ver 3537 E1.1 Analysis of Circuits (2014) E1.1 Circuit Analysis. Problem Sheet 1 (Lectures 1 & 2)

Response of Second-Order Systems

LECTURE 25 and MORE: Basic Ingredients of Butterworth Filtering. Objective: Design a second order low pass filter whose 3dB down point is f c,min

Bandwidth of op amps. R 1 R 2 1 k! 250 k!

FEEDBACK, STABILITY and OSCILLATORS

EE 205 Dr. A. Zidouri. Electric Circuits II. Frequency Selective Circuits (Filters) Low Pass Filter. Lecture #36

Appendix A Butterworth Filtering Transfer Function

BIOEN 302, Section 3: AC electronics

Homwork AC circuits. due Friday Oct 8, 2017

Overview of Bode Plots Transfer function review Piece-wise linear approximations First-order terms Second-order terms (complex poles & zeros)

Mod. Sim. Dyn. Sys. Amplifiers page 1

Electronics II. Midterm II

Master Degree in Electronic Engineering. Analog and Telecommunication Electronics course Prof. Del Corso Dante A.Y Switched Capacitor

Switched Capacitor: Sampled Data Systems

University of Toronto Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering. ECE212H1F - Circuit Analysis. Final Examination December 16, :30am - noon

Transcription:

Problem ) RLC Parallel Circuit R L C E-4 E-0 V a. What is the resonant frequency of the circuit? The transfer function will take the form N ( ) ( s) N( s) H s R s + α s + ω s + s + o L LC giving ωo sqrt(/lc) E7 [rad/s] ω 0 : 0 7 b. When R 00.0 kω, R : 00.0kΩ L : 0 4 H. What is the damping ratio, ζ? Sketch the Bode plot of the magnitude (db-log) when Vout is the voltage across the inductor H(s) VL(s)/V(s). R α : L α 5 0 8 s db α ζ : ω 0 ζ 50.005 s ζ 50 > α R C 49.875 0 9.003 0 7 ω (rad/s)

α δ 0 overdamped ω o d. Sketch the Bode plot of the magnitude (db-log) when Vout is the voltage across the resistor H(s) VR(s)/V(s) db ω (rad/s)

(Answer check: 0log( H ) -0dB at s E4) (Answer check: 0log( H ) 0dB at s E7) ( s) H s Zeros: 0 Poles: E5,E9.000E9s +.000E9s + E4 e. When R 000 Ω, what is the damping ratio? Sketch an approximate Bode (db-log) of the magnitude when Voiut across the inductor H(s) VL(s)/V(s) 3

db α R/(L) 000/(*E-4) E7 [rad/s] δ E7/E7 ~ ω (rad/s) (Answer check: 0log( H ) -0dB at s E4) (Answer check: 0log( H ) -6dB at s E7, with correction) s H ( s) s + E7s + E4 Zeros: 0 (double) Poles: E7 (double The asymptotes are shown as the dashed red line. The correction to the straight line approximate at the resonant frequency is 0log(/δ) -6dB 4

f. Sketch an approximate Bode (db-log) of the magnitude when Vout is the voltage across the resistor H(s)VR(s)/V(s) db ω (rad/s) (Answer check: 0log( H ) -54dB at s E4) (Answer check: 0log( H ) 0dB at s E7) 5

E7s H ( s) s + E7s + E4 Zeros: 0 Poles: E7 (double) Applying HW8 concepts to the overdamped circuit The asymptotes are shown as the dashed red line. Additionally, we locate the vertex as 0-0log(/δ)0-(-6dB) 6dB g. When R 00Ω, what is the damping ratio, ζ? Sketch the Bode plot of the magnitude (db-log) when Vout is the voltage across the inductor, H(s) VL(s)/V(s). (Answer check: 0log( H ) -0dB at s E4) (Answer check: 0log( H ) 0dB at s E7) 6

db s H ( s) s + E6s + E4 Zeros: 0 (double) Resonant frequency at E7 rad/s Applying HW8 concepts to the overdamped circuit The asymptotes are shown as the dashed red line. The correction to the straight line approximate at the resonant frequency is 0log(/δ) 0dB ω (rad/s) 7

H. Sketch the Bode plot of the magnitude (db-log) when Vout is the voltage across the resistor, H(s) VR(s)/V(s) (Answer check: 0log( H ) -80dB at s E4) (Answer check: 0log( H ) 0dB at s E7) E6s H ( s) s + E6s + E4 Zeros: 0 Resonant frequency E7 [rad/s] The asymptotes are shown as the dashed red line. Additionally, we locate the vertex as 0-0log(/δ)0-(0dB) -0dB db 8

ω (rad/s) Problem ) RLC Circuit R R Aac 0Adc I L E- C a. Symbolically, determine the transfer function IC(s) / I(s). H ( s) IC I ( s) R + sl ( s) ( R + R) R + + R + sl sc s + R s + s L s + L LC b. Detemine values for the resistors R and R, and the capacitor C, such that the resonant frequency is 0 5 rad/s, a double pole exists at ω 0 5 rad/s and a zero exists at 500 rad/s. double pole: L C α ω o p, p ( ) R + R 0 5 L 9

Electric Circuits R Prof. Shayla Sawyer Spring 06 zero: 500 L L 0 ( ) C : 0 5 0 R : 0 500 5 0 8 from resonant frequency from zero R : 0 5 0 5.995 0 3 from alpha c. What type of filter is represented by this transfer function (lowpass, highpass, bandpass, notch?) Bandpass Problem 3) Design problems - Transfer functions For the problem design specifications, determine the transfer funciton that meets the requirements. (There are many designs that may fit the requirements) You should provide a plot that verifies that your transfer function meets the specifications.. Design a. Bandpass filter with a passband of 00 Hz to 00kHz b. In the passband, the gain should be 0<gain<0dB c. The rolloff (slope) in the stopbands should have a magnitude of 40 db/dec a. ω : π 00 68.39 ω : π 00000 6.83 0 5 b. add > 6dB gain term to get the required passband range, a gain of meets the requirement c. The rolloff (slope) in the stopbands should have a magnitude of 40 db/dec One second order critically damped HPF and one second order critically damped LPF with an amplifier gain of. H( s) ( 68 0 3 ) ( ) s + 56 0 3 s + 68 0 3 s 68 s + 56 0 3 s + 68 0

Problem 4) Design Problem Design a filter that meets the specifications below (draw/show circuit). You need to pick values for any resistors, capacitors or inductors in your circuit. Simulate the circuit in PSpice to verify that your design meets specification. (also show/copy&paste PSpice output). Note, small deviations from the design specifications are allowed and in a real circuit always exist, but they need to be small. Show calculations to justify your design. ω [rad/s] H(s) in db 0-40 00-0 000 0 E4 7 E5 0 E6 0 High pass filter with a cutoff frequency at E4 rad/s. 0dB gain in the passband K0. C 0 6 R 00Ω

Vac 0Vdc V C E-6 R 00 U + OUT - OPAMP V 0 R3 R k 9k 0 0V.0V 00mV 00Hz.0KHz 0KHz 00KHz.0MHz 0MHz V(R3:) *pi*frequency Problem 5) Design Problem - Multiple Stages Using only first order filters and op amp circuits for each stage, design a filter than meets the specifications below. You need to pick values for any resistors, capacitors, or inductors in your circuit. Simulate the circuit in PSpice to verify

that your design meets specifications. Use hte ideal amplifier component called OPAMP in your simulations. Note, small deviations from the design specifications are allowed and in a real circuit always exist, but they need to be small. Show calculations to justify your design. a. Low pass filter with a cutoff frequency of 00 MHz b. In the passband, the gain must be > 0 db c. The asymptotic slope of the stopband should be -60dB/decade -60dB rolloff indicates third order filter, cutoff frequency at 68*0^6 rad/s. Using first order components gives a -9dB correction at the cutoff frequency. Need to add 9dB to meet passband specificaitons, giving a gain of ~0 Using first order RC stages C 0 R.59kΩ R4 Vac 0Vdc V.59k 0 C E- U + OUT - OPAMP R3 R5.59k C E- U + OUT - OPAMP R6.59k C3 E- R k 0k 0 0 0KV.0V 00uV 0nV 0pV.0MHz 0MHz 00MHz.0GHz 0GHz 00GHz.0THz 0THz V(C3:) *pi*frequency 3