MW Filter
MW Filter
MW Filter
A note from the Unknown Editor: many textbooks have been devoted
to filter design. We don't intend to assimilate all of this knowledge
here, our goal is, as always, to provide you with a basic understanding
of the subject and hook you up with some vendors that can help you
out. For the near future we will concentrate mostly on planar band-
pass filters, then follow up with some lumped element examples.
Got some filter data you'd like to share with us? Shoot it in!
Below is a clickable outline for our filter discussion (some stuff is still
missing!)
RF choke
DC return
DC block
Bias tee
EMI filter
Chebyshev
Bessel-Thomson
Butterworth
Gaussian
Multiplexer
A multiplexer is a network that separates signals from a common port
to other ports, sorted according to their frequency. A diplexer is a pair
of filters arranged in a three port network, such that a signal at port
one will be delivered to port 2 if it is a certain frequency band, and
delivered to port 3 if it is in another frequency band. Not to be
confused with a "duplexer", which is another word for a circulator. A
way to remember which word applies to which device... diplexer has an
"i" in it, so does the word filter. Duplexer has a "u" in it, so does the
word circulator.
Triplexers are four port filters, where one input is split into three
different frequency bands which each have a dedicated output port.
Somewhere out there there are even higher orders of multiplexers, but
we've never run across a "quadraplexer!"
Reentrant modes
Sometimes when you design a band-pass filter for 10 GHz, it also
passes RF at 20 GHz or 30 GHz or 40 GHz. These are called reentrant
modes.
F=1/(2*PI()*SQRT(L*C/1000))
where F is in GHz, L is in nano-Henries and C is in pico-Farads. Click
here to go to our resonant frequency calculator!
Parallel LC resonance
Resonance for a parallel RLC circuit is the frequency at which the
impedance is maximum. Plotted below is the special case where the
resistance of the circuit is infinity ohms (an open circuit). With values
of 1 nH and 1 pF, the resonant frequency is around 5.03 GHz. Here the
circuit behave like a perfect open circuit. Note that for R=Z0, at the
resonant frequency the response would hit the center of the Smith
chart (the arc would still start at the short circuit but would be half the
diameter shown). At zero GHz (DC) as well as infinite frequency, the
ideal parallel LC presents a short circuit.
RF choke
An RF choke is what engineers call something that doesn't pass an RF
signal, but allows a DC or low frequency signal to pass through. Series
inductors are often used as RF chokes, as well as quarter-wave
structures like the one shown below. Here a capacitor forms an RF
short circuit, which is transformed to an open circuit at the input. Such
a capacitor is called a "bypass capacitor".
DC return
This is used to add a DC ground to an RF line. For example, in a PIN
diode switch, you need a path for a series diode's current to return to.
DC block
A DC block is nothing more than a capacitor that has low series
reactance at the RF frequency, and allows you to separate DC voltages
along a transmission line. A parallel coupled line can also serve as a DC
block.
Bias tee
Bias tees are used to supply DC currents or voltages to RF devices,
such as the FETs that are used in amplifiers. Bias tees are everywhere,
from your cell phone's power amp to the front panel of your network
analyzer. A bias tee is a classic example of a diplexer. In the figure
below, an RF signal incident to the upper right port (labeled RF & DC)is
delivered only to the upper left port (RF only). A DC signal (or very low
frequency, or video, signal) can be passed from the upper right port to
the lower right port (DC only). Properties that are important to a bias
tee are RF bandwidth, insertion loss and mismatch at the two RF ports,
the maximum DC current, and video bandwidth of the DC port.
EMI filter
Gaussian
This filter provides a Gaussian response in both frequency and time
domain. It is useful in IF receiver matched filters for radar.