RLC Bandpass Filter 33
RLC Bandpass Filter 33
RLC Bandpass Filter 33
of an RLC filter
Description
An RLC circuit is an electrical circuit
formed of a number of resistors, inductors
and capacitors. There are multiple applications for this type of circuits. Some of the
most important ones are oscillators, tuners of radio receivers and television sets
and of course filters. RLC circuits are used
to create band- pass and band-stop filters
as well. The RLC filter is normally called
a second order circuit which means that
the circuit parameters such as voltage and
current in can be described by a differential equation of second-order. A problem
that occurs in designing such filters is the
resistance shown by the inductor. As the
inductors are fabricated by coils of wires
they do have an undesirable resistance
that could have a significant effect on the
performance of the circuit. That is why it
is always a good idea to do a field analysis
of such configurations during the design.
HFWorks enables the designer of simulating such circuits either by specifying the
values of the lumped elements used in the
circuits or by modeling the actual coil. This
tutorial focuses on an RLC filter made up
of lumped elements, along with microstrip
lines, profiting of HFWorks ability to mix
both types of simulations: circuit and 3D
models together in a single study. The
band-pass filter operates at 1 GHz with a
bandwidth of 10%.
Simulation
To simulate the behavior of this filter (insertion
and return loss at the desired frequency band, input and output matching), we will create a scattering parameters study, and specify the relevant
frequency band at which the filter operates (in our
case 21 frequencies uniformly distributed from
1.8 GHz to 3.8 GHz). The simulated study provides
multiple choices and options to plot and to adjust the outputted results according to the users
need. They also offer the exploitation of electrical
parameters calculated in Scattering parameters
simulations (insertion, return losses...etc).
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Meshing
Since the signals path implicate port and the in signal surfaces, the mesh has to be concentrated on these parts. Meshing these surfaces helps the solver refine its precision on the eddy
parts, and take the paths shape into account
Boundary conditions
The ports are applied to the lateral faces of the substrate (the sides of the horizontal microstrip line with the two RLC
shields) and the air box. This way, the
simulation considers the electric fields
distribution in the air and the radiation
boundaries would give results more conveniently to quasi-TEM theory of waves
transmission over a microstrip line.
Results
Various 3D and 2D plots are available to exploit, depending on the nature of
the task and on which parameter the user is interested in. As we are dealing
with a filter simulation, plotting the insertion and return losses sounds like
an intuitive task. The following figure shows both the insertion and return
losses of the considered filter:
The electric field distribution at 1 GHz has been spotted on the following figure, we
can see clearly that wave goes through the circuit and reaches the second port
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