SELF |
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S.B.
Karavashkin, O.N. Karavashkina |
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The input impedance of
the filter for which, in case of the load absence at its end, we will write oc is
equal: at the pass band, el <1 |
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(13) |
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at the stop band, el >1 |
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(14) |
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and at the cutoff
frequency, el
=1 |
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(15) |
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At
the pass band, dependently on 1 and 2 , the impedance Roc can be
active, inductive or capacitive. But the main, in any case its
amplitude-frequency characteristic will have also n resonances. At the
stop band with the frequency growth the input impedance monotonously tends to
zero proportionally to ~ 1/el+. And only at the cutoff
frequency and at large n the input impedance is approximately equal in
its amplitude to the impedance . It essentially differs from the results obtained by the
two-port method (see, e.g., [4, p. 606]. One more important feature of the
presented solutions is that the vibration amplitude of the last filter
section (i = n) is not maximal, as we used to think by the
analogy with electrical distributed transmission lines. According to (9), it
differs by the multiplier cos el and diminishes to zero with the
vibration frequency approaching to that critical. |
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For
a ladder filter with the shorted output the situation will be similar. In
Fig. 3a we show the model of a finite mechanical line whose nth
element is fixed, and in Fig. 3b – the corresponding diagram of an electric
ladder filter with the shortened output. Noting [11] and relations (8), we
can describe the process in the studied filter by the following system of
expressions: at the pass band of the
filter, el
<1 |
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(16) |
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at the stop band, el >1 |
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(17) |
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and at the cutoff
frequency, el
=1 |
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(18) |
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