
An example of high-pass active filter. The operational amplifier, U1, is used as a buffer amplifier.
An 'active filter' is a type of
analog electronic filter, distinguished by the use of one or more
active components i.e. voltage
amplifiers or
buffer amplifiers. Typically this will be a
vacuum tube,
transistor or
operational amplifier.
There are two principal reasons for the use of active filters. The first is that the amplifier powering the filter can be used to shape the filter's response, e.g., how quickly and how steeply it moves from its
passband into its
stopband. (To do this passively, one must use inductors, which tend to pick up surrounding electromagnetic signals and are often quite physically large.) The second is that the amplifier powering the filter can be used to buffer the filter from the electronic components it drives. This is often necessary so that they do not affect the filter's actions.
There are several varieties of active filter. Some of them, also available in passive form, are:
★
High-pass filters – attenuation of frequencies below their cut-off points.
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Low-pass filters – attenuation of frequencies above their cut-off points.
★
Band-pass filters – attenuation of frequencies both above and below those they allow to pass.
★
Notch filters – attenuation of certain frequencies while allowing all others to pass.
Active filter circuit configurations include:
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Sallen and Key, and VCVS filters
★
State variable, and biquadratic filters
See also
★
Chebyshev filter
★
Butterworth filter
★
Bessel filter
★
Elliptic filter
External links
★
Split-Supply Analog Filter Expert
★
Single-Supply Analog Filter Expert
★
Introduction to active filters
★ National Semiconductor's
AN-779 application note
★ Active filter dessign - related articles
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