4.5 Design of Analogue Filters
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127
normalized low pass
frequency-
transformation
low pass
high pass
band pass
band stop
Fig. 4.36: Conversion of normalised low-pass to other standard filters (non-normalised low-, high-,
band-pass and band-stop).
A(p) = A0
1 + b1p + b2p2 + ⋅⋅⋅+ bmpm
1 + c1p + c2p2 + ⋅⋅⋅+ cnpn
(4.16)
For example, if the impedance of a coil with jΩL is replaced with Ω:= 2πF by the
impedance ωB/jωC, the transfer function A(jω) to Equation 4.16 remains fractionra-
tional in p. This transformation can be achieved by replacing Ωwith ωB/ω and the
inductance L with the capacitance C = −1/L. However, there is the difference that
now, because of the 1/ω function, the frequency axis is now subdivided differently,
i.e. a low frequency is mapped to a high frequency and a high frequency to a low fre-
quency. So a low pass becomes a high pass.
A summary of the frequency transformations from a normalised low-pass to a non-
normalised low-pass (nTP ⇒TP), a normalised low-pass to a high-pass (nTP ⇒HP),
a normalised low-pass into a band-pass (nTP ⇒BP), and a normalised low-pass into a
bandstop (nTP ⇒BS) is shown in Table 4.5. Explanatory examples of this are covered
in the following sections on power and Chebyshev-filters.
The design of a selective filter can therefore be limited to the design of a normal-
ised low-pass filter. For this, however, only the conditions for the magnitude frequency