notes/Resources/electricity/circuits/rc-high-pass.md
2023-04-20 12:25:26 +00:00

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High pass filters let through only signals with high frequencies and attenuate low frequency one.

Because high pass filters work exactly like low pass filters but in reverse, lets only do one example here:

Example:

!rc-high-pass-example.png

Lets first calculate the cutoff frequency of this filter:

Resources/electricity/formulas


cards-deck: electricity

Ohms Law

Solve for voltage: #card

$\displaystyle V = I*R$ ^1654598090369

Solve for resistance: #card

$\displaystyle R = \frac{V}{I}$ ^1654598090389

Solve for current #card

$\displaystyle I = \frac{V}{R}$ ^1654598090398

Resistors in Series

#card

$R = R1 + R2 + R3 ...$ ^1654598090404

Resistors in Parallel

#card


\begin{flalign}
&\frac{1}{R} = \frac{1}{R1} + \frac{1}{R2} + \frac{1}{R3} ... &\\
\\
&\textit{For two resistors in parallel:} &\\
\\
&R = \frac{R1 * R2}{R1 + R2} &\\\
\end{flalign}

Tip: If resistors of the same value are in parallel the total resistance is a single resistor divided by the amount if resistors.

Voltage Divider

#card ^1654598090410

V_{out} = V_{in}(\frac{R_{1}}{R_1+R_2})

Thevenins Theorem

States that it is possible to simplify any linear circuit, no matter how complex, to an equivalent circuit with just a single voltage source and series resistance connected to a load.

Conservation of Charge (First Law)

#card

All current entering a node must also leave that node


\begin{flalign}
\sum{I_{IN}} = \sum{I_{OUT}}&&
\end{flalign}

Example: ^1654598090415

For this circuit kirchhoffs law states that:

\displaystyle i1 = i2 + i3 + i4

Conservation of Energy (Second Law)

All the potential differences around the loop must sum to zero.

\displaystyle \sum{V} = 0

Capacitors in Series

#card

$\displaystyle \frac{1}{C_{t}} = \frac{1}{C_{1}}+\frac{1}{C_{2}}+\frac{1}{C_{3}} ...$ ^1654598090421

Impedance in a Circuit

#card


\begin{flalign}
&Z = \sqrt{R^2 + X^2} &\\\
\\
&X = X_{L} - X_{C} \\ 
\end{flalign}

Capacitive Reactance

#card ^1654598090426

\displaystyle X_{c} = \frac{1}{2 \pi fC}

Inductive Reactance

#card

$\displaystyle X_{l} = 2\pi fL$ ^1654598090432

Analog Filters

Cutoff Frequency for RC Filters

#card

$\displaystyle f_{c} = \frac{1}{2\pi RC}$ ^1654598090437

Cutoff Frequency for RL Filters

#card

$\displaystyle f_{c} = \frac{R}{2\pi L}$ ^1654598090445

Cutoff Frequency for multiple Low Pass Filters

\displaystyle f_{(-3db)} = f_{c}\sqrt{2^{(\frac{1}{n})}-1}

Where n = Number if identical filters

Resonance Frequency for RLC Low Pass Filter

#card

$\displaystyle f_{o} = \frac{1}{2\pi \sqrt{LC}}$ ^1654598090452

Center Frequency with Fc and Fh

#card

$f_{c} = \sqrt{f_{h}*f_{l}}$ ^1654598090459

Filter Response for RC Filters

#card

$V_{out} = V_{in}(\frac{X_c}{\sqrt{R_{1}^2+X_{c}^2}})$ ^1654598090466

Cutoff Frequency \pi Topology Filter

#card

When the two capacitors have the same capacitance, it can be calculated like this: ^1654598090479

\displaystyle f_c = \frac{1}{4\pi\sqrt{LC}}

Angular Frequency (\omega)

#card

$\omega = 2\pi f = \frac{2\pi}{T}$ ^1654598090492

RLC Series Response

This is basically Ohms Law:

\displaystyle V = IZ

Where Z is the impedance:

Z = \sqrt{R^2 + (X_L - X_C)^2}

X_L = Reactive Inductance X_C = Reactive Capacativw

Current through a transistor

\displaystyle I_{EQ} = \frac{V_{BB}-{V_{BE}}}{\frac{R_B}{(\beta+1)}+R_E}

Gain Bandwidth Product

#card

$GBP = A_V * f_c$ ^1654598090498

\displaystyle f_c = \frac{GBP}{A_V}

Bandwidth of Multiple OpAmps

Where n = number of stages and BW = Bandwidth of single op-amp

BW_E = BW\sqrt{2^\frac{1}{n}-1}

Power lost in a Resistor

#card

$P = IV = I^2R = \frac{V^2}{R}$ ^1654598090504

\displaystyle f_{c} = \frac{1}{2\pi 100 * 0.00000001}
\displaystyle f_{c} = 159154.94 \approx 159.1kHz