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Esc201t l17 LCR Filter

1) LCR filters use the resonance properties of inductors, capacitors, and resistors in combination to filter signals at specific frequencies. 2) In a series resonant circuit, the inductive and capacitive reactances cancel out at the resonant frequency, resulting in a purely resistive circuit with maximum current. 3) The quality factor Q represents the sharpness of resonance, with higher Q circuits having a very large change in impedance near the resonant frequency.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views36 pages

Esc201t l17 LCR Filter

1) LCR filters use the resonance properties of inductors, capacitors, and resistors in combination to filter signals at specific frequencies. 2) In a series resonant circuit, the inductive and capacitive reactances cancel out at the resonant frequency, resulting in a purely resistive circuit with maximum current. 3) The quality factor Q represents the sharpness of resonance, with higher Q circuits having a very large change in impedance near the resonant frequency.

Uploaded by

Rachit Mahajan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ESC201T : Introduction to

Electronics

Lecture 17: LCR Filters (Resonance)

B. Mazhari
Dept. of EE, IIT Kanpur
Wireless Transmission of Speech signal

A B

A B

A B Modulation De-Modulation

A B
Carrier wave
Z C
Amplitude Modulated (AM) Radio

Different radio channels are separated by very narrow frequency interval.

For example, one may want to receive a 450KHz signal but reject 460KHz or
440KHz
H ( ) (dB) 450KHz


460KHz

-20dB
460
log( ) ≅ 9.5 × 10 𝑑𝑒𝑐𝑎𝑑𝑒𝑠
450

This implies an attenuation of ~ -2000 dB/decade


|H(f)| |H(f)|

f f

|H(f)| |H(f)|

f f
10 1
Second Order System H ( ) 



1 j 1 j
103 104

 
20Log10 ( H ( ) )  20  10 Log10 (1  ( 3 ) )  10 Log10 (1  ( 4 ) 2 )
2

10 10

40

20

0
20 log(H())

-20dB/decade
-20

-40

-60
-40dB/decade
-80

-100
100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107

 (rad/s)
10 1 1
Third Order System H ( )   
  
1 j 1 j 1 j
103 104 105

  
20Log10 ( H ( ) )  20  10 Log10 (1  ( 3 ) 2 )  10 Log10 (1  ( 4 ) 2 )  10 Log10 (1  ( 5 ) 2 )
10 10 10

40

20

0
20log(H())

-20 -40dB/decade

-40

-60 -60dB/decade

-80

-100
100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107

 (rad/s)
Resonance

A small disturbance leads to oscillatory behavior


T = 1.1s
T = 0.9s
T = 1s

The amplitude is 10 times larger even though input magnitude is same !


T = 0.9s

T = 1s

T = 0.9s
Series Resonant Circuit
In this series resonant circuit, current reaches a peak at a condition in which capacitive and
inductive reactance cancel each other to give rise to a purely resistive circuit

R L

1
i(t) Z eq  R  j L  j
vS C C

1 1
Resonant frequency: jO L  j  0  O 
O C LC

1
fO  Z eq  R
2 LC

Current and voltage are in phase (power factor is unity) and current is
maximum !
R L
Vm
I ( ) 
1 2
i(t) R  ( L 
2
)
vS C C

0.707
Vm Vm
I (1 )  
1 2 2R
R 2  (1 L  )
1C

Vm Vm
I (2 )  
1 2 2R
R 2  (2 L  )
2 C
R
O  12 B  2  1 
L

Quality (Q) factor: Sharpness of resonance

Peak Stored Energy


Q  2
Energy dissipated in one period at resonance
1
L  I m2
2 O L O 
1
Q
1
Q  2  
1 2 R LC O CR
I m R  TO
2
j0.9K
0.1K
R L

Z=0.1K-j0.1K
vS C -j1.1K

0.1K
R L j1K

Z=0.1K
vS C -j1K

Not very large change in impedance as we approach resonance !


j0.9meg
0.1K
R L

Z=0.1K-j0.1meg
vS C -j1.1meg

0.1K
R L j1meg

Z=0.1K
vS C -j1meg

very large change in impedance as we approach resonance ! Implying high


quality factor
Quality factor Q

0.1K
R L j1K

Z=0.1K
vS C -j1K

0.1K
R L j1meg

Z=0.1K
vS C -j1meg

O L 1 O C
Q or Q 
R R
O L R
Q B  2  1 
R L

O
O
Q 
B 

Hence Q represents sharpness of resonance

For high Q circuits:


R-L-C filters
|H(f)| |H(f)|

f f

|H(f)| |H(f)|

f f

C
L R
R
vO(t) vO(t)
j L vS  j C L
vS C
 j C j L
R
C L vO(t)
vO(t)
j L vS j L L
vS  j C R
 j C C
C L
vO(t)
j L
vS  j C R

How much Q do we need to pass 450KHz but reject 460KHz by 20dB?

VO ( ) R
H ( )  
VIN ( ) 1 2
R 2  ( L  )
C
Assuming VIN = 1V and noting that Q = OL/R

1 For =O, VO = 1 so the signal simply passes


VO ( ) 
O2 2  2 through !
1  2 Q ( 2  1) 2
 O O  2    450 103  2.8 106 rad / s
1
VO ( )  O2 O
 2 
2 2
VO ( )  VO ( ) 
1 O
Q ( 2  1) 2 Q  ( 2  O2 ) 2Q  (  O )
2
O

For an attenuation of -20dB or 10-1 at -o = 62.8 Krad/s

Example: for Q = 226.3 at 450KHz

o L
Q
R
Parallel Resonance

IM 0 R C L L
vS C

1 1
Yeq   jC  j
R L

1 1
Resonant frequency: jO C  j  0  O 
O L LC

1
fO  Z eq  R
2 LC
+ L
IM 0 V R
- C

Im R
V ( ) 
R 2C 2 1 2
1  2 ( L  )
L C

For high Q:
R
Why is Q  for parallel resonance ?
L

100K
+ L j9K
IM 0 V R
- -j11K C

~50K

1000K
+ L j9K
IM 0 V R
- -j11K C

~50K
Piezoelectric Quartz Crystal

Inductive over a very narrow range

fP
fS

CS >>CP

Q can be very high ~104 -106


Resonant Frequency

1
fO 
2 LC
What is the resonant frequency (unity power factor) ?

For unity power factor, imaginary part = 0


Resonance Allows Highly Efficient Implementation Of Highly Selective Filters

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