SELF |
36 |
S.B.
Karavashkin, O.N. Karavashkina |
|
In
this paper we will modify the approach to the ladder filters calculation,
using the original Dynamical ElectroMechanical Analogy (DEMA) whose
foundations have been stated in [6].
The conventional electromechanical analogy has the following known basis: “to
each dependent variable and all derivatives of one system (i.e., x, dx/dt,
d2x/dt2), the variable having similar
derivatives (q, dq/dt, d2q/dt2)
corresponds, and the related functions are interconnected so that if some
function of one system is known, the corresponding function of the second
system can be found” [7, pp. 88
– 89]. In distinction from this, we will use the known property of the
modelling system of equations for ladder filters, which admits to separate
the time and spatial variables. And we will compare the mechanical and
electrical models as the whole, grounding on the correspondence of modelling
systems of algebraic equations obtained from those differential after
the time dependence eliminating. It will enable us to be not fixed so rigidly
to the correspondence of the circuit particular elements and to be not
limited in the range of analogues by differentiating or integrating the
modelling differential equations. So, with the new relationship of models,
the circuits vibration pattern can basically differ, retaining the
correspondence between the models, since the base principles will be more
generalised when choosing the analogues. These principles will be connected
with the boundary conditions and with the features of mechanical system of an
elastic line as a whole, but the main, with the correspondence of modelling
systems of algebraic equations. Namely the systems of algebraic
equations, not one differential equation of the electrical circuit on whose
base the analogy relationship was established up to now (see, e.g., [7, p.
89], [8, pp. 32 – 34]),
referring to the two-port method. The possibility to introduce such an
analogy was indicated by Atkinson in [9, p. 32 – 33]. However the matrix
technique to obtain the solutions for mechanical systems enabled Atkinson
neither to develop this direction nor to exceed the frames of simplest LC
and CL ladder filters nor to write in general form the relationship
between compared systems nor to obtain the solutions in the analytical form. To
avoid the complication appearing when using the matrix methods, we will use,
in addition to DEMA, the exact analytical solutions for mechanical lines
presented in [10] and [11]. Their main distinction is
that when finding the solutions using the non-matrix method, we have no need
to study the eigenvalues and natural frequencies of a mechanical line as the
base to find these solutions. The exact solution is found directly for a
specific modelling system of differential equations which accounts all the
features defined by the initial and boundary conditions, and the solutions
are presented not in the matrix form or as the recurrent relationship but in
the analytical form. Combining
these two methods, we have no need to consider a ladder filter as a simple
assemblage of specific two-ports. As we will show in this paper, it enables
us to extend essentially the calculation scope and to study the exact
patterns of processes for the much broader range of models than the
conventional two-port method enables. |
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