Licchavi Lyceum

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Licchavi Lyceum

Low Pass RC Filter

An RC Low-Pass Filter is a fundamental electronic circuit that allows low-frequency signals to pass while attenuating high-frequency signals. It is widely used in signal processing, communication systems, and analog electronics.

Circuit Description of Low Pass RC Filter

A basic RC low-pass filter consists of:

  • A resistor \(R\) connected in series with the input signal
  • A capacitor \(C\) connected between the output node and ground
  • The output voltage \(V_{out}\) taken across the capacitor

When an input voltage \(V_{in}\) is applied, the capacitor and resistor form a frequency-dependent voltage divider.

Working Principle

The operation of the RC low-pass filter depends on the frequency-dependent reactance of the capacitor.

Capacitive reactance is given by

\[
X_C = \frac{1}{2\pi f C}
\]

  • At low frequencies, \(X_C\) is large, so most of the input voltage appears across the capacitor. Hence the output is almost equal to the input.
  • At high frequencies, \(X_C\) becomes small and the capacitor effectively shorts the signal to ground. Therefore the output voltage becomes very small.

Thus the circuit allows low-frequency signals to pass while attenuating high-frequency signals.

Transfer Function

Using impedance analysis, the transfer function of the RC low-pass filter is

\[
H(j\omega) = \frac{V_{out}}{V_{in}} = \frac{1}{1 + j\omega RC}
\]

where

  • \(\omega = 2\pi f\)
  • \(R\) = resistance
  • \(C\) = capacitance

Magnitude of the transfer function is

\[
|H(j\omega)| = \frac{1}{\sqrt{1 + (\omega RC)^2}}
\]

Phase angle is

\[
\phi = -\tan^{-1}(\omega RC)
\]

Cutoff Frequency

The cutoff frequency (also called corner frequency) is defined as the frequency at which the output voltage becomes
\( \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} \) times the input voltage.

\[
|H(j\omega_c)| = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}}
\]

The cutoff frequency is given by

\[
f_c = \frac{1}{2\pi RC}
\]

At the cutoff frequency:

  • Output voltage = \(0.707 \, V_{in}\)
  • Gain = \(-3\,dB\)
  • Phase shift = \(-45^\circ\)

Frequency Response

The frequency response of a first-order RC low-pass filter has two main regions:

  • Passband Region: \(f < f_c\). Output voltage is approximately equal to the input voltage.
  • Stopband Region: \(f > f_c\). Output voltage decreases rapidly.

The attenuation rate beyond the cutoff frequency is

\[
-20 \, dB/decade
\]

or

\[
-6 \, dB/octave
\]

This slope is characteristic of a first-order filter.

Time Domain Response

When a step input is applied, the voltage across the capacitor increases gradually according to

\[
V_{out}(t) = V\left(1 – e^{-t/RC}\right)
\]

The parameter

\[
\tau = RC
\]

is known as the time constant of the circuit.

  • At \(t = RC\), output reaches about 63.2% of the final value.
  • At \(t = 5RC\), output reaches approximately 99% of the final value.

Applications

RC low-pass filters are widely used in practical electronic circuits such as:

  • Noise reduction circuits
  • Audio signal filtering
  • Power supply ripple filtering
  • Wave shaping circuits
  • Analog signal conditioning
  • Anti-aliasing filters in data acquisition systems