An active high pass filter: The differentiator Revisited


For the differentiator, an input capacitor was used so as to block constant signals and just output the rate of change. Some examples of calculated derivatives where for constantly changing which resulted in a constant, and the sinusoidal wave which resulted in a cosinusoidal output, which is just a phase shifted sine wave.

To understand the differentiator's use as a high pass filter, we are going to focus on this last derivative and combine with our understanding of capacitive reactance.

Starting with DC and very low frequencies, the reactance of the capacitor becomes essentially infinite, since it blocks all current due to the voltage buildup inside of it. This makes the gain equation of the inverting amplifier it is based on to approach zero.
Vout = Vin (-Rf / Rin)
As the frequency increases, less residual charge stays in the capacitor making it less restrictive to the apparent current flow, which results in less reactance, driving the ratio of resistances higher as the reactance approaches zero.

At very high frequencies, the capacitive reactance becomes so low that it is essentially a closed switch, drawing large amounts of current that need to be compensated by the opamp, which reaches saturation on each semicycle of the input signal; At high frequencies the gain approaches infinity.

To limit the gain at high frequencies, a resistor is used in series with the input capacitor. What this does is that as the capacitive reactance gets lower to the point of approaching zero, the series resistance becomes the dominant component that prevents the flow of current, limiting the gain to the ratio of that input resistor and the output resistor, just like a simple inverting amplifier.

So you see, the differentiator also works as a high pass filter, being the inverse operation in both mathematical terms as the integrator (a derivative is the inverse operation of the integral) and in filter functionality (blocks the opposite side of the frequencies).

 
 
 

User Agreement and Disclaimer

User Agreement The creator of THIS PAGE or the ISP(s) hosting any content on this site take NO responsibility for the way you use the information provided on this site. These circuits here are for educational purposes only and SHOULD BE VIEWED ONLY. If you download any files to view them, you are agreeing to delete them within a 24 hour period. If you are affiliated with any government, or ANTI-Piracy group or any other related group or were formally a worker of one you CANNOT enter this web site, cannot access any of its files and you cannot view any of the HTML files. All the objects on this site are PRIVATE property and are meant for previewing only. If you enter this site without following these agreements you are not agreeing to these terms and you are violating code 431.322.12 of the Internet Privacy Act signed by Bill Clinton in 1995 and that means that you CANNOT threaten our ISP(s) or any person(s) or company storing these files, cannot prosecute any person(s) affiliated with this page which includes family, friends or individuals who run or enter this web site. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THESE TERMS THEN LEAVE.

Disclaimer All files are found using legitimate search engine techniques. This site does not and will not condone hacking into sites to create the links it list. We will and do assume that all links found on the search engines we use are obtained in a legal manner and the webmasters are aware of the links listed on the search engines. If you find a URL that belongs to you, and you did not realize that it was "open to the public", please use the report button to notify the blogmaster [circuitsmag(at)gmail(dot)com] it will remove within 24 hours. This is not an invitation for webblog haters to spam with requests to remove content they feel that is objectionable and or unacceptable. Proof of URL ownership is required. NOTICE: This Blog Has Already Been Reviewed And Accepted By Blogger.com

Labels

2SA1216 (1) 2SC2922 (1) Amplifier (140) Bandpass (2) Basic Electronics (9) Bias Current (2) Car Audio (2) Circuits (273) Digital (1) Diode (1) Electronic Circuit (1) Gadgets (1) GPS (1) hack (1) Hexfet (1) How To (1) IRFP250 (1) IRFP9250 (1) LCD (1) LM1117 (1) LM1558 (1) LM1875 (1) LM2577 (1) LM339 (3) LM350 (1) LM3886 (2) LM3915 (1) LM723 (1) Microcontroller (8) Modding (1) Offset Voltage (2) Others (518) Phone (5) Power Amplifier (64) Rectifiers (12) TDA2030 (1) TDA7250 (1) TDA7313 (1)

Electronics

Electronic Circuits, Schematics, Hobby kits, Custom Electronics design & tutorials homepage. Tons of free working Electronic Circuits & Discusson forum with thousands of members to discuss anything about Electronics! electronic,circuits,diagrams,electronics, hobby, kits, tutorials, schematics, hobbyists Voltage sags and interruptions, transient overvoltages, fundamental of harmonics, applied harmonics, long duration voltage variation, power quality benchmarking, distributed generation and power quality, wiring and grounding, power quality monitoring, what is power quality, power quality power voltage, why are we concerned about power quality, the power quality evaluation procedure, who should use this book, need for a consistent vocabulary, general classes of power quality problems, transients, long duration voltage variation, Short-Duration Voltage Variations,Voltage Imbalance,Waveform Distortion, Voltage Fluctuation,Power Frequency Variations, Power Quality Terms,Ambiguous Terms, CBEMA and ITI Curves, Sources of Sags and Interruptions, Estimating Voltage Sag Performance, Fundamental Principles of Protection, Solutions at the End-User Level, Evaluating the Economics of Different Ride-Through Alternatives, Motor-Starting Sags, Utility System Fault-Clearing Issues, Sources of Transient Overvoltages, Principles of Overvoltage Protection, Devices for Overvoltage Protection, Utility Capacitor-Switching Transients, Utility System Lightning Protection, Managing Ferroresonance, Switching Transient Problems with Loads, Computer Tools for Transients Analysis,Harmonic Distortion,Voltage versus Current Distortion,Voltage versus Current Distortion, Harmonics versus Transients, Harmonic Indexes, Harmonic Sources from Commercial Loads, Harmonic Sources from Industrial Loads, Locating Harmonic Sources,System Response Characteristics, Effects of Harmonic Distortion,Interharmonics,Harmonic Distortion Evaluations, Principles for Controlling Harmonics,Where to Control Harmonics, Harmonic Studies, Devices for Controlling Harmonic Distortion, Harmonic Filter Design: A Case Study, Standards of Harmonics, Principles of Regulating the Voltage, Devices for Voltage Regulation, Utility Voltage Regulator Application, Capacitors for Voltage Regulation, Power Quality Monitoring Standards,Application of Intelligent Systems, Assessment of Power Quality Measurement Data, Power Quality Measurement Equipment, Historical Perspective of Power Quality Measuring Instruments,Monitoring Considerations,Solutions to Wiring and Grounding Problems, Typical Wiring and Grounding Problems,Reasons for Grounding, Interconnection Standards, Siting DGDistributed Generation, http://tinyurl.com/2fwls3

LINKS

free counters Site Meter Electronic circuits, kits, do-it-yourself, circuit diagrams, design and electronics hobby schematics electronic,circuits,diagrams,electronics,hobby,kits,tutorials schematics,hobbyists Science Blogs Technology blogs