Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Further to the frequency response compensation:
In a world of ideal R, L and C components, you can insert an attenuator into a transmission line, matched to the line's characteristic impedance, to get frequency-independent attenuation while maintaining good return-loss from both input and output ports. If you then modify that circuit by shunting a capacitor across the attenuator, and lifting the ground-return of the attenuator and inserting an inductor in series to ground, and the inductor and capacitor each have reactances equal in magnitude to the line's impedance at some frequency F (assuming a non-reactive, constant impedance line here), the system will still have good return loss at all frequencies, and will have attenuation equal to that of the attenuator alone at DC, and no attenuation at frequencies far enough above F. In the transition region, the maximum slope of the attenuation will be 6dB/octave. That maximum will not be reached for low values of attenuation. If you cascade such sections, with each section having a different frequency F and perhaps differing attenuations, you can make a tailored response adjustment. Cascading identical sections of high enough ultimate attenuation results in maximum slopes in excess of 6dB/octave. Obviously trading the places of the inductor and capacitor give you the opposite shape: more attenuation at higher frequencies. I have a little RFSim99 circuit that illustrates this idea--email if you'd like the file. It's going to get really difficult to make this work right at high frequencies, because of the size of the parts and the parasitics involved. But with modern parts, you might be able to make it work well out to a couple GHz. Cheers, Tom |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Resistor frequency response | Homebrew | |||
North-Central Florida Mil Logs 2/21/2005 | Scanner | |||
FCC: Broadband Power Line Systems | Policy | |||
NF Frequency Response of Dataradio RNet-JSLM | Equipment | |||
NF Frequency Response of Dataradio RNet-JSLM | Equipment |