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Wikipedia

Differentiator

In electronics, a differentiator is a circuit that outputs a signal approximately proportional to the rate of change (i.e. the derivative with respect to time) of its input signal. Because the derivative of a sinusoid in another sinusoid whose amplitude is multiplied by its frequency, a true differentiator that works across all frequencies can't be realized (as its gain would have to increase indefinitely as frequency increase). Real circuits such as a 1st-order high-pass filter are able to approximate differentiation at lower frequencies by limiting the gain above its cutoff frequency. An active differentiator includes an amplifier, while a passive differentiator is made only of resistors, capacitors and inductors.

Passive differentiator edit

The four-terminal 1st-order passive high-pass filter circuits depicted in figure, consisting of a resistor and a capacitor, or alternatively a resistor and an inductor, are called differentiators because they approximate differentiation at frequencies well-below each filter's cutoff frequency.

 
Capacitive differentiator
 
Inductive differentiator

According to Ohm's law, the voltages at the two ends of the capacitive differentiator are related by the following transfer function (which has a zero in the origin and a pole at  ):

 

which is a good approximation of an ideal differentiator at frequencies well below the filter's cutoff frequency of   in hertz or   in radians.

Similarly, the transfer function of the inductive differentiator has a zero in the origin and a pole in  , corresponding to a cutoff frequency of   in hertz or   in radians.

 
Frequency response function of the passive differentiator circuits, with frequency axis normalized to the cutoff frequency of   for the capacitive circuit or   for the inductive circuit

Active differentiator edit

Ideal differentiator edit

 
Ideal differentiator.

A differentiator circuit (also known as a differentiating amplifier or inverting differentiator) consists of an ideal operational amplifier with a resistor R providing negative feedback and a capacitor C at the input, such that:

  •   is the voltage across C (from the op amp's virtual ground negative terminal).
  •   is the voltage across R (also from the op amp's virtual ground negative terminal).
  •   is the current flowing from the input through both R and C to the circuit's output.

According to the capacitor's current–voltage relation, this current   as it flows from the input through the capacitor to the virtual ground will be proportional to the derivative of the input voltage:

 

This same current   is converted into a voltage when it travels from the virtual ground through the resistor to the output, according to ohm's law:

 

Inserting the capacitor's equation for   provides the output voltage as a function of the input voltage:

 

Consequently,

  • The output voltage is proportional to the time derivative of the input voltage with a gain of   Hence, the circuit acts as a differentiator and amplifier.
  • The negative sign indicates the output has a 180° phase shift (inversion) with respect to the input.
  • The equation is true for any frequency signal, assuming an ideal op amp (though a real op-amp has limited bandwidth).

The op amp's low-impedance output isolates the load of the succeeding stages, so this circuit has the same response independent of its load.

If a constant DC voltage is applied as input, the output voltage is zero. If the input voltage changes from zero to negative, the output voltage is positive. If the applied input voltage changes from zero to positive, the output voltage is negative. If a square-wave input is applied to a differentiator, then a spike waveform is obtained at the output.

Operation as high pass filter edit

Treating the capacitor as an impedance with capacitive reactance of Xc = 1/2πfC allows analyzing the differentiator as a high pass filter. The inverse-proportionality to frequency means that at low frequency, the reactance of a capacitor is high, and at high frequency reactance is low. Since the feedback configuration provides a gain of Rf/Xc, that means the gain is low at low frequencies (or for slow changing input), and higher at higher frequencies (or for fast changing input).

Frequency response edit

The transfer function of an ideal differentiator is  , resulting in the Bode plot of its magnitude having a positive +20 dB per decade slope over all frequencies and having unity gain at  

Advantages edit

A small time constant is sufficient to cause differentiation of the input signal

Limitations edit

At high frequencies:

  • this simple differentiator circuit becomes unstable and starts to oscillate;
  • the circuit becomes sensitive to high frequency noise that, when amplified, dominates the input signal.
  • the limited gain–bandwidth product of real op amps will put an upper frequency limit for differentiation

Practical differentiator edit

 

In order to overcome the limitations of the ideal differentiator, an additional small-value capacitor C1 is connected in parallel with the feedback resistor R, which prevents the differentiator circuit from oscillating, and a resistor R1 is connected in series with the capacitor C, which limits the increase in gain to a ratio of R/R1.

Since negative feedback is present through the resistor R, we can apply the virtual ground concept, that is, the voltage at the inverting terminal is the same 0 volts at the non-inverting terminal.

Applying nodal analysis, we get

 
 

Therefore,

 

Hence, there occurs one zero at   and one pole at   (corresponding to a corner frequency of  ) and another pole at   (corresponding to a corner frequency of  ).

Frequency response edit

This practical differentiator's frequency response is a band-pass filter with a +20 dB per decade slope over frequency band for differentiation. Its Bode plot when normalized with   and   is:

 

From the above plot, it can be seen that:

  • Below  , the circuit attenuates and acts as a differentiator.
  • Between   and  , the circuit acts as a voltage follower or buffer.
  • Above  , the circuit attenuates and acts as an integrator.

Setting   will produce one zero at   and two poles at   (corresponding to one corner frequency of  ), resulting in the following frequency response (normalized using  ):

 

From the above plot, we observe that:

  • Below  , the circuit acts as a differentiator;
  • Above  , the circuit acts as an integrator.

Applications edit

The differentiator circuit is essentially a high-pass filter. It can generate a square wave from a triangle wave input and produce alternating-direction voltage spikes when a square wave is applied. In ideal cases, a differentiator reverses the effects of an integrator on a waveform, and conversely. Hence, they are most commonly used in wave-shaping circuits to detect high-frequency components in an input signal. Differentiators are an important part of electronic analogue computers and analogue PID controllers. They are also used in frequency modulators as rate-of-change detectors.

A passive differentiator circuit is one of the basic electronic circuits, being widely used in circuit analysis based on the equivalent circuit method.

See also edit

differentiator, this, article, does, cite, sources, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2022, learn, when, remov. This article does not cite any sources Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Differentiator news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message In electronics a differentiator is a circuit that outputs a signal approximately proportional to the rate of change i e the derivative with respect to time of its input signal Because the derivative of a sinusoid in another sinusoid whose amplitude is multiplied by its frequency a true differentiator that works across all frequencies can t be realized as its gain would have to increase indefinitely as frequency increase Real circuits such as a 1st order high pass filter are able to approximate differentiation at lower frequencies by limiting the gain above its cutoff frequency An active differentiator includes an amplifier while a passive differentiator is made only of resistors capacitors and inductors Contents 1 Passive differentiator 2 Active differentiator 2 1 Ideal differentiator 2 1 1 Operation as high pass filter 2 1 2 Frequency response 2 1 3 Advantages 2 1 4 Limitations 2 2 Practical differentiator 2 2 1 Frequency response 2 3 Applications 3 See alsoPassive differentiator editThe four terminal 1st order passive high pass filter circuits depicted in figure consisting of a resistor and a capacitor or alternatively a resistor and an inductor are called differentiators because they approximate differentiation at frequencies well below each filter s cutoff frequency nbsp Capacitive differentiator nbsp Inductive differentiator According to Ohm s law the voltages at the two ends of the capacitive differentiator are related by the following transfer function which has a zero in the origin and a pole at s 1 R C displaystyle s tfrac text 1 RC nbsp Y Z R Z R Z C X R R 1 s C X s R C 1 s R C X Y s R C X for s 1 R C displaystyle Y frac Z R Z R Z C X frac R R frac 1 sC X frac sRC 1 sRC X implies Y approx sRCX quad text for s ll frac 1 RC nbsp which is a good approximation of an ideal differentiator at frequencies well below the filter s cutoff frequency of 1 2 p R C displaystyle tfrac 1 2 pi RC nbsp in hertz or 1 R C displaystyle tfrac 1 RC nbsp in radians Similarly the transfer function of the inductive differentiator has a zero in the origin and a pole in s R L displaystyle s tfrac text R L nbsp corresponding to a cutoff frequency of R 2 p L displaystyle tfrac R 2 pi L nbsp in hertz or R L displaystyle tfrac R L nbsp in radians nbsp Frequency response function of the passive differentiator circuits with frequency axis normalized to the cutoff frequency of w 0 1 R C displaystyle omega 0 tfrac 1 RC nbsp for the capacitive circuit or w 0 R L displaystyle omega 0 tfrac R L nbsp for the inductive circuitActive differentiator editIdeal differentiator edit nbsp Ideal differentiator A differentiator circuit also known as a differentiating amplifier or inverting differentiator consists of an ideal operational amplifier with a resistor R providing negative feedback and a capacitor C at the input such that V in displaystyle V text in nbsp is the voltage across C from the op amp s virtual ground negative terminal V out displaystyle V text out nbsp is the voltage across R also from the op amp s virtual ground negative terminal I displaystyle I nbsp is the current flowing from the input through both R and C to the circuit s output No current flows into the ideal op amp s inputs because they have very high input impedance According to the capacitor s current voltage relation this current I displaystyle I nbsp as it flows from the input through the capacitor to the virtual ground will be proportional to the derivative of the input voltage I C d V in d t displaystyle I C frac dV text in dt nbsp This same current I displaystyle I nbsp is converted into a voltage when it travels from the virtual ground through the resistor to the output according to ohm s law 0 V out I R displaystyle 0 V text out IR nbsp Inserting the capacitor s equation for I displaystyle I nbsp provides the output voltage as a function of the input voltage V out R C d V in d t displaystyle V text out RC frac dV text in dt nbsp Consequently The output voltage is proportional to the time derivative of the input voltage with a gain of R C displaystyle RC nbsp Hence the circuit acts as a differentiator and amplifier The negative sign indicates the output has a 180 phase shift inversion with respect to the input The equation is true for any frequency signal assuming an ideal op amp though a real op amp has limited bandwidth The op amp s low impedance output isolates the load of the succeeding stages so this circuit has the same response independent of its load If a constant DC voltage is applied as input the output voltage is zero If the input voltage changes from zero to negative the output voltage is positive If the applied input voltage changes from zero to positive the output voltage is negative If a square wave input is applied to a differentiator then a spike waveform is obtained at the output Operation as high pass filter edit Treating the capacitor as an impedance with capacitive reactance of Xc 1 2pfC allows analyzing the differentiator as a high pass filter The inverse proportionality to frequency means that at low frequency the reactance of a capacitor is high and at high frequency reactance is low Since the feedback configuration provides a gain of Rf Xc that means the gain is low at low frequencies or for slow changing input and higher at higher frequencies or for fast changing input Frequency response edit The transfer function of an ideal differentiator is V out V in s R C displaystyle tfrac V text out V text in text sRC nbsp resulting in the Bode plot of its magnitude having a positive 20 dB per decade slope over all frequencies and having unity gain at f 0dB 1 2 p R C displaystyle f text 0dB tfrac 1 2 pi RC nbsp Advantages edit A small time constant is sufficient to cause differentiation of the input signal Limitations edit At high frequencies this simple differentiator circuit becomes unstable and starts to oscillate the circuit becomes sensitive to high frequency noise that when amplified dominates the input signal the limited gain bandwidth product of real op amps will put an upper frequency limit for differentiation Practical differentiator edit nbsp In order to overcome the limitations of the ideal differentiator an additional small value capacitor C1 is connected in parallel with the feedback resistor R which prevents the differentiator circuit from oscillating and a resistor R1 is connected in series with the capacitor C which limits the increase in gain to a ratio of R R1 Since negative feedback is present through the resistor R we can apply the virtual ground concept that is the voltage at the inverting terminal is the same 0 volts at the non inverting terminal Applying nodal analysis we get 0 V o R 0 V o 1 s C 1 0 V i R 1 1 s C 0 displaystyle frac 0 V o R frac 0 V o frac 1 sC 1 frac 0 V i R 1 frac 1 sC 0 nbsp V o 1 R s C 1 V i R 1 1 s C displaystyle V o left frac 1 R sC 1 right frac V i R 1 frac 1 sC nbsp Therefore V o V i s R C 1 s R 1 C 1 s R C 1 displaystyle frac V o V i frac sRC 1 sR 1 C 1 sRC 1 nbsp Hence there occurs one zero at s 0 displaystyle s 0 nbsp and one pole at s 1 R 1 C displaystyle s tfrac text 1 R 1 C nbsp corresponding to a corner frequency of f 1 1 2 p R 1 C displaystyle f 1 tfrac 1 2 pi R 1 C nbsp and another pole at s 1 R C 1 displaystyle s tfrac text 1 RC 1 nbsp corresponding to a corner frequency of f 2 1 2 p R C 1 displaystyle f 2 tfrac 1 2 pi RC 1 nbsp Frequency response edit This practical differentiator s frequency response is a band pass filter with a 20 dB per decade slope over frequency band for differentiation Its Bode plot when normalized with R 1 C 10 1 displaystyle R 1 C 10 1 nbsp and R C 1 10 1 displaystyle RC 1 10 text 1 nbsp is nbsp From the above plot it can be seen that Below w 1 displaystyle omega 1 nbsp the circuit attenuates and acts as a differentiator Between w 1 displaystyle omega 1 nbsp and w 2 displaystyle omega 2 nbsp the circuit acts as a voltage follower or buffer Above w 2 displaystyle omega 2 nbsp the circuit attenuates and acts as an integrator Setting R C 1 R 1 C R C displaystyle RC 1 R 1 C RC nbsp will produce one zero at s 0 displaystyle s 0 nbsp and two poles at s 1 R C displaystyle s tfrac text 1 RC nbsp corresponding to one corner frequency of w 1 1 R C displaystyle omega 1 tfrac 1 RC nbsp resulting in the following frequency response normalized using R C 1 displaystyle RC 1 nbsp nbsp From the above plot we observe that Below w 1 displaystyle omega 1 nbsp the circuit acts as a differentiator Above w 1 displaystyle omega 1 nbsp the circuit acts as an integrator Applications edit The differentiator circuit is essentially a high pass filter It can generate a square wave from a triangle wave input and produce alternating direction voltage spikes when a square wave is applied In ideal cases a differentiator reverses the effects of an integrator on a waveform and conversely Hence they are most commonly used in wave shaping circuits to detect high frequency components in an input signal Differentiators are an important part of electronic analogue computers and analogue PID controllers They are also used in frequency modulators as rate of change detectors A passive differentiator circuit is one of the basic electronic circuits being widely used in circuit analysis based on the equivalent circuit method See also editIntegrator Inverting differentiator at op amp applications Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Differentiator amp oldid 1215540214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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