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Elementary non-recirculating filter

The non-recirculating comb filter may be generalized to yield the design shown in Figure 8.7. This is the elementary non-recirculating filter, of the first form. Its single, complex-valued parameter $Q$ controls the complex gain of the delayed signal subtracted from the original one.

Figure 8.7: A delay network with a single-sample delay and a complex gain $Q$. This is the non-recirculating elementary filter, first form. Compare the non-recirculating comb filter shown in Figure 7.3, which corresponds to choosing $Q=-1$ here.
\begin{figure}\psfig{file=figs/fig08.07.ps}\end{figure}

To find its frequency response, as in Chapter 7 we feed the delay network a complex sinusoid $1, Z, {Z^2}, \ldots$ whose frequency is $\omega=\arg(Z)$. The $n$th sample of the input is $Z^n$ and that of the output is

\begin{displaymath}
(1 - Q{Z^{-1}}){Z^n}
\end{displaymath}

so the transfer function is

\begin{displaymath}
H(Z) = 1 - Q{Z^{-1}}
\end{displaymath}

This can be analyzed graphically as shown in Figure 8.8. The real numbers $r$ and $\alpha $ are the magnitude and argument of the complex number $Q$:

\begin{displaymath}
Q = r \cdot (\cos(\alpha) + i \sin(\alpha))
\end{displaymath}

The gain of the filter is the distance from the point $Q$ to the point $Z$ in the complex plane. Analytically we can see this because

\begin{displaymath}
\vert 1 - Q{Z^{-1}}\vert = \vert Z\vert\vert 1 - Q{Z^{-1}}\vert = \vert Q - Z\vert
\end{displaymath}

Graphically, the number $Q{Z^{-1}}$ is just the number $Q$ rotated backwards (clockwise) by the angular frequency $\omega $ of the incoming sinusoid. The value $\vert 1 - Q{Z^{-1}}\vert$ is the distance from $Q{Z^{-1}}$ to $1$ in the complex plane, which is equal to the distance from $Q$ to $Z$.

Figure 8.8: Diagram for calculating the frequency response of the non-recirculating elementary filter (Figure 8.7). The frequency response is given by the length of the segment connecting $Z$ to $Q$ in the complex plane.
\begin{figure}\psfig{file=figs/fig08.08.ps}\end{figure}

As the frequency of the input sweeps from 0 to $2\pi $, the point $Z$ travels couterclockwise around the unit circle. At the point where $\omega = \alpha$, the distance is at a minimum, equal to $1-r$. The maximum occurs which $Z$ is at the opposite point of the circle. Figure 8.9 shows the transfer function for three different values of $r=\vert Q\vert$.

Figure 8.9: Frequency response of the elementary non-recirculating filter Figure 8.7. Three values of $Q$ are used, all with the same argument (-2 radians), but with varying absolute value (magnitude) $r=\vert Q\vert$.
\begin{figure}\psfig{file=figs/fig08.09.ps}\end{figure}


next up previous contents index
Next: Non-recirculating filter, second form Up: Elementary filters Previous: Elementary filters   Contents   Index
Miller Puckette 2006-09-24