Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?

[Ideas For Design]

Wideband Filter Only Has Two Different Components



Richard M. Kurzrok  |   ED Online ID #1481  |   January 21, 2002

Article Rating:

Wideband filters with bandwidths in excess of an octave can be created by cascading a high-pass filter and a low-pass filter. In this design idea, nine-pole high-pass and low-pass filters have been constructed using a modified equal-element design. A new, low-cost wideband filter has been created using a minimum number of different components.

The new wideband filter is realized using a high-pass filter with 3-dB cutoffs of 3.56 MHz. The high-pass filter is followed by a low-pass filter with 3-dB cutoffs of 12.88 MHz. Both of these filters have a design reference frequency of 6.77 MHz. The wideband filter uses only a single value of capacitance and a single value of inductance (see the figure).

This is achieved by judicious use of series and parallel combinations. While all filter capacitors have a value of 470 pF ±5%, all inductors feature a value of 1.175 µH. The inductors are formed using 15 turns of #26 magnet wire on a Micro Metals T37-2 toroid. The high-pass and low-pass filters are designed for 50-Ω impedance. Type BNC connectors are used at the inputs and outputs. The two filters are interconnected using a male-male BNC adapter.

The measured amplitude response data for the wideband filter is shown in the table. The modified, low-pass, equal-element filter features reasonably good responses below the design reference frequency. By using a common design reference frequency for both filters, the pass-band regions with non-optimal responses are staggered in frequency. This avoids excessive interactions between the two filters.

With modified equal-element units, the wideband filter provides design simplicity that reduces manufacturing costs. Wideband-filter-response shapes are not optimal. They may suit situations where cost reduction is necessary and filter-response shape specifications are not too stringent. This design methodology can be extended readily to eleven-pole and thirteen-pole filters.




Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?


  • A Mid-Year Check On The Optimism Meter
  • Cadence’s Grab For Mentor In Flux
  • “Turbo” Technology Enhances RF Verification
  • Partnership Yields Concurrent Mechanical and PCB Design
  • Testbench Tool Exploits Distributed Compute Environments
  • Hardware/Software Co-Design Comes Of Age
  • Show Videos Take Center Stage On ElectronicDesign.com
  • Formal Verification Suite Takes In Wider View Of Designs
    1) Build A Smart Battery Charger Using A Single-Transistor Circuit
    (242 views today)
    2) Bob's Mailbox
    (120 views today)
    3) Smart Optics Push Camera Phones Out Of The “Dark” Ages
    (108 views today)
    4) Easily Convert Decimal Numbers To Their Binary And BCD Formats
    (101 views today)
    5) Trick A BJT-Based Converter Into Starting At Only 250 mV DC
    (89 views today)
    ALL TOP 20







    Reader Comments

    Plz provide me the idea of design of wideband band pass filter for wireless system in matlab

    Anonymous -January 04, 2008   (Article Rating: )

    pleas can give book for design lik reciever light 90khz or filter start from 0hz- 200hz

    yousef alsane -November 28, 2005

    pleas can give book for design

    yousef alsane -November 28, 2005
    Read more comments...

    POST YOUR COMMENTS HERE

    Name:

    Email:
    Rate this article:

     less useful more useful 
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    Your Comments:

    Enter the text from the image below




    Please refresh the page if you have trouble reading this text.
     
     

    PartFinder

    Find real-time pricing, stock status, same-day/next-day shipping options and more. Brought to you by Digi-Key. Go to PartFinder.    
    GlobalSpec

    PART SEARCH :
    Powered by: GlobalSpec - The Engineering Search Engine
    Sponsored Links

    Electronic Design Europe Electronic Design China EEPN Power Electronics Auto Electronics Microwaves & RF RF Design
    Schematics Find Power Products Military Electronics Featured Vendors EE Events Free Design Resources