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"Chapter 1 - The Op Amp's Place in the World" - HTL Wien 10

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Fundamentals of Low-Pass Filters<br />

16-6<br />

sive components is <strong>the</strong> application of LRC filters. However, <strong>the</strong>se filters are ma<strong>in</strong>ly used<br />

at high frequencies. In <strong>the</strong> lower frequency range (< <strong>10</strong> MHz) <strong>the</strong> <strong>in</strong>ductor values become<br />

very large and <strong>the</strong> filter becomes uneconomical to manufacture. In <strong>the</strong>se cases active filters<br />

are used.<br />

Active filters are RC networks that <strong>in</strong>clude an active device, such as an operational amplifier<br />

(op amp).<br />

Section 16.3 shows that <strong>the</strong> products of <strong>the</strong> RC values and <strong>the</strong> corner frequency must<br />

yield <strong>the</strong> predeterm<strong>in</strong>ed filter coefficients a i and b i, to generate <strong>the</strong> desired transfer function.<br />

<strong>The</strong> follow<strong>in</strong>g paragraphs <strong>in</strong>troduce <strong>the</strong> most commonly used filter optimizations.<br />

16.2.1 Butterworth Low-Pass FIlters<br />

<strong>The</strong> Butterworth low-pass filter provides maximum passband flatness. <strong>The</strong>refore, a Butterworth<br />

low-pass is often used as anti-alias<strong>in</strong>g filter <strong>in</strong> data converter applications where<br />

precise signal levels are required across <strong>the</strong> entire passband.<br />

Figure 16–5 plots <strong>the</strong> ga<strong>in</strong> response of different orders of Butterworth low-pass filters versus<br />

<strong>the</strong> normalized frequency axis, Ω (Ω = f / f C); <strong>the</strong> higher <strong>the</strong> filter order, <strong>the</strong> longer <strong>the</strong><br />

passband flatness.<br />

|A| — Ga<strong>in</strong> — dB<br />

<strong>10</strong><br />

0<br />

–<strong>10</strong><br />

–20<br />

–30<br />

–40<br />

–50<br />

1st Order<br />

2nd Order<br />

4th Order<br />

<strong>10</strong>th Order<br />

–60<br />

0.01 0.1 1<br />

Frequency — Ω<br />

<strong>10</strong><br />

Figure 16–5. Amplitude Responses of Butterworth Low-Pass Filters<br />

<strong>10</strong>0

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