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ELCT564 Spring 2012. Chapter 8: Microwave Filters. Filters. Two-port circuits that exhibit selectivity to frequency: allow some frequencies to go through while block the remaining. In receivers, the system filters the incoming signal right after reception.
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ELCT564 Spring 2012 Chapter 8: Microwave Filters ELCT564
Filters • Two-port circuits that exhibit selectivity to frequency: allow some frequencies to go through while block the remaining • In receivers, the system filters the incoming signal right after reception • Filters which direct the received frequencies to different channels are called multiplexers • In many communication systems, the various frequency channels are very close, thus requiring filters with very narrow bandwidth & high out-of band rejection • In some systems, the receive/transmit functions employ different frequencies to achieve high isolation between the R/T channels. • In detector, mixer and multiplier applications, the filters are used to block unwanted high frequency products • Two techniques for filter design: the image parameter method and the insertion loss method. The first is the simplest but the second is the most accurate ELCT564
Periodic Structures Passband Stopband Bloch Impedance ELCT564
Terminated Periodic Structures Symmetrical network ELCT564
Analysis of a Periodic Structure Consider a periodic capacitively loaded line, as shown below. If Zo=50 Ω, d=1.0 cm, and Co=2.666 pF, compute the propagation constant, phase velocity, and Bloch impedance at f=3.0 GHz. Assume k=k0. ELCT564
Image Parameter Method ELCT564
Constant-k Filter m-derived section ELCT564
Composite Filter ELCT564
Example of Composite Filter Design Design a low-pass composite filter with a cutoff frequency of 2MHz and impedance of 75 Ω, place the infinite attenuation pole at 2.05 MHz, and plot the frequency response from 0 to 4 MHz. ELCT564
Insertion Loss Method Filter response is characterized by the power loss ratio defined as: Where Γ(ω) is the reflection coefficient at the input port of the filter, assuming the the output port is matched. Low-pass & Band-pass filter Insertion Loss: ELCT564
Filter Responses Maximally Flat, Equal Ripple, and Linear Phase Maximally Flat: Provides the flattest possible pass band response for a given complexity. Cutoff frequency is the freqeuncy point which determines the end of the pass band. Usually, where half available power makes it through. Cut-off frequency is called the 3dB point Equal Ripple or Chebyshev Filter: Power loss is expressed as Nth order Chebyshev polynomial TN(ω) TN(x)= cos (Ncos-1x), |X| ≤1 TN(x)= cosh (Ncosh-1x), |X|≥ 1 Much better out-of-band rejection than maximally flat response of the same order. Chebyshev filters are preferred a lot of times. ELCT564
Filter Responses Linear Phase Filters • Need linear phase response to reduce signal distortion (very important in multiplexing) • Sharp cut-off incompatible with linear phase– design specifically for phase linearity • Inferior amplitude performance • If φ(ω) is the phase response then filter group delay ELCT564
Filter Design Method • Development of a prototype (low-pass filter with fc=1Hz and is made of generic lumped elements) • Specify prototype by choice of the order of the filter N and the type of its response • Same prototype used for any low-pass, band pass or band stop filter of a given order. • Use appropriate filter transformations to enter specific characteristics • Through these transformations prototype changes – low-pass, band-pass or band-stop • Filter implementation in a desired from (microstrip or CPW) • use implementation transformations. ELCT564
Maximally Flat Low-Pass Filter g0=1,ωc=1, N=1 to 10 ELCT564
Equal-Ripple Low-Pass Filter g0=1,ωc=1, N=1 to 10 ELCT564
Maximally-Flat Time Delay Low-Pass Filter g0=1,ωc=1, N=1 to 10 ELCT564
Filter Transformations • Impedance Scaling • Frequency Scaling for Low-Pass Filters • Low-Pass to High-Pass Transformation ELCT564
Filter Implementation • Richards’ Transformation • Kuroda’s Identities • Physically separate transmission line stubs • Transform series stubs into shunt stubs, or vice versa • Change impractical characteristic impedances into more realizable ones ELCT564
Design Steps • Lumped element low pass prototype (from tables, typically) • Convert series inductors to series stubs, shunt capacitors to shunt stubs • Add λ/8 lines of Zo = 1 at input and output • Apply Kuroda identity for series inductors to obtain equivalent with shunt open stubs with λ/8 lines between them • Transform design to 50Ω and fc to obtain physical dimensions (all elements are λ/8). ELCT564
Low-pass Filters Using Stubs Design a low-pass filter for fabrication using microstrip lines. The specifications include a cutoff frequency of 4GHz, and impedance of 50 Ω, and a third-order 3dB equal-ripple passband response. • Distributed elements—sharper cut-off • Response repeats due to the periodic nature of stubs ELCT564
Bandpass and Bandstop Filters A useful form of bandpass and bandstop filter consists of λ/4 stubs connected by λ/4 transmission lines. Bandpass filter ELCT564
Stepped Impedance Low-pass Filters • Use alternating sections of very high and very low characteristics impedances • Easy to design and takes-up less space than low-pass filters with stubs • Due to approximations, electrical performance not as good – applications where sharp cut-off is not required ELCT564
Stepped Impedance Low-pass Filter Example Design a stepped-impedance low-pass filter having a maximally flat response and a cutoff frequency of 2.5 GHz. It is necessary to have more than 20 dB insertion loss at 4 GHz. The filter impedance is 50 Ω; the highest practical line impedance is 120 Ω, and the lowest is 20 Ω. Consider the effect of losses when this filter is implemented with a microstrip substrate having d = 0.158 cm, εr =4.2, tanδ=0.02, and copper conductors of 0.5 mil thickness. ELCT564
Coupled Line Theory ELCT564
Coupled Line Bandpass Filters • This filter is made of N resonators and includes N+1coupled line sections • dn ≈ λg/4 = (λge + λgo)/8 • Find Zoe, Zoo from prototype values and fractional bandwidth • From Zoe, Zoo Calculate conductor and slot width • N-order coupled resonator filter N+1 coupled line sections •Use 2 modes to represent line operation ELCT564
Coupled Line Bandpass Filters 1. Compute Zoe, Zoo of 1st coupled line section from 2. Compute eve/odd impedances of nth coupled line section 3. Compute even/odd impedances of (N+1) coupled line section 4. Use ADS to find coupled line geometry in terms of w, s, & βe, βo or εeff,e , εeff,o 5. Compute ELCT564
Coupled Line Bandpass Filters Example I Design a 0.5dB equal ripple coupledline BPF with fo=10GHz, 10%BW & 10-dB attenuation at 13 GHz. Assume Zo=50Ω. From atten. Graph N=4 ok But use N=5 to have Zo=50 Ω go=ge=1, g1=g5=1.7058, g2=g4=1.229, g3=2.5408 ELCT564
Coupled Line Bandpass Filters Example II Design a coupled line bandpass filter with N=3 and 0.5dB equal ripple response. The center frequency is 2GHz, 10%BW & Zo=50Ω. What is the attenuation at 1.8 GHz ELCT564
Capacitively Coupled Resonator Filter • Convenient for microstrip or stripline fabrication • Nth order filter uses N resonant sections of transmission line with N+1 capacitive gaps between then. • Gaps can be approximated as series capacitors • Resonators are ~ λg/2 long at the center frequency ELCT564
Capacitively Coupled Resonator Filter Design a bandpass filter using capacitive coupled series resonators, with a 0.5 dB equal-ripple passband characteristic. The center frequency is 2.0 GHz, the bandwidth is 10%, and the impedance is 50 Ω. At least 20 dB of attenuation is required at 2.2GHz ELCT564
Bandpass Filters using Capacitively Shunt Resonators ELCT564
Bandpass Filters using Capacitively Shunt Resonators Design a third-order bandpass filter with a 0.5 dB equal-ripple response using capacitively coupled short-circuited shunt stub resonators. The center frequency Is 2.5 GHz, and the bandwidth is 10%. The impedance is 50 Ω. What is the resulting attenuation at 3.0 GHz? ELCT564