3.5 8th Order High Pass Bessel Filter – Simplified
Scheme Implementation
3.6 8th Order Band Pass Chebyschev Filter –
Simplified Scheme Implementation
3.7 Designing Filters with New Scheme – Full Blown
Implementation
3.8 Butterworth Low Pass Filter – Calculated Order
10 Cut-Off Frequency 21 MHz
3.9 Chebyschev High Pass Filter-Calculated Order3
Cut Off Frequency 21 MHz Pass Band Ripple 0.45
dB
3.10 ChebySchev Band Pass Filter – Series
Connection of High Pass and Low Pass Filters
3.11 Effect of Non-Ideal Reactive Elements
on Filter Behavior and Performance, Design
Space Exploration
3.12 SPICE – Electronic Circuit Performance
Evaluation Gold Standard
Chapter 4 Higher Frequencies(100's of MHz – 10's of GHz) -
Physical Constraints and Distributed Filters
4.1 Terminology
4.2 High Frequency Issues with Discrete Element
Electronic Filter Fabrication and Transmission
Line Fundamentals
4.2a Lossless Transmission Lines
4.2b Stub Synthesis – Key Equations
4.3 Richard's Transformations and Kuroda's
Identities
4.4 Distributed Electronic Filter Design Scheme
4.5 Transmission Line Losses
4.6 Distributed Electronic Filter Design Example
Stepped Stepped Impedance Low Pass Filter
Chapter 5 Summary and Conclusion
Appendix A Using the Automated Filter Design Tool
Amal Banerjee is an Engineering manager at Analog Electronics in Kolkata, India.
This book describes a novel, efficient and powerful scheme for designing and evaluating the performance characteristics of any electronic filter designed with predefined specifications. The author explains techniques that enable readers to eliminate complicated manual, and thus error-prone and time-consuming, steps of traditional design techniques. The presentation includes demonstration of efficient automation, using an ANSI C language program, which accepts any filter design specification (e.g. Chebyschev low-pass filter, cut-off frequency, pass-band ripple etc.) as input and generates as output a SPICE(Simulation Program with Integrated Circuit Emphasis) format netlist. Readers then can use this netlist to run simulations with any version of the popular SPICE simulator, increasing accuracy of the final results, without violating any of the key principles of the traditional design scheme.