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Published byLaureen Johns Modified over 9 years ago
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Network Functions Definition, examples , and general property
Poles, zeros, and frequency response Poles, zeros, and impulse response Physical interpretation of poles and zeros Application to oscillator design Symmetry properties
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Definition, Examples , and General Property
or where and
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Resistor Inductor Capacitor Sinusoidal steady state driving point impedance = special case of a network function
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Example 1 Parallel RC circuit
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Example 2 Low pass filter
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Mesh analysis gives Solve for I2
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General Property For any lumped linear time-invariant circuit
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Poles, Zeros, and Frequency Response
phase magnitude Gain (nepers) Gain (dB)
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Example 3 RC Circuit Frequency Response
No finite zero Pole at s = -1/RC
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At At
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Example 4 RLC Circuit Frequency Response
Zero at s = 0 Complex conjugate poles at
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At For and
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At For General Case
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Example 3 zeros 4 poles
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Poles, Zeros, and Impulse Response
Example 5 RC Circuit See section 6 Chapter 4 for derivation of h(t)
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Example 6 RLC Circuit Fig 3.2 For Fig 3.3 For
See section 2 Chapter 5 for derivation of h(t)
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Physical Interpretation of Poles and Zeros
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Poles Any pole of a network function is a natural frequency of the
corresponding (output) network variable. Using partial-fraction expansion Residue at pi
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If a particular input waveform is chosen over the interval [0,T]
For input current = For i = 1 Natural frequency p1 If a particular input waveform is chosen over the interval [0,T] then for t > T
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Summary Any pole of a network function is a natural frequency of the
corresponding (output) network variable, but any natural frequency of a network variable need not be a pole of a given network function which has this network variable as output.
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