A bandpass filter passes a range of frequencies while rejecting
frequencies outside the upper and lower limits of the passband.
The range of frequencies to be passed is called the passband and
extends from a point below the center frequency to a point above
the center frequency where the output voltage falls about 70% of the
output voltage at the center frequency. These two points are not
equally spaced above and below the center frequency but will look
equally spaced if plotted on a log graph. The percentage change from the
lower point to the center will be the same as from the center to
the upper, but not the absolute amount. This is similar to a musical
keyboard where each key is separated from the next by the same percentage
change in frequency, but not the absolute amount.
The filter bandwidth (BW) is the difference between the upper and lower
passband frequencies. A formula relating the upper, lower, and center
frequencies of the passband is:
Center Frequency = Square Root of (Lower Frequency * Upper Frequency)
The quality factor, or Q of the filter is a measure of the distance
between the upper and lower frequency points and is defined as
(Center Frequency / BW) so that as the passband gets narrower around the
same center frequency, the Q factor becomes higher. The quality factor
represents the sharpness of the filter, or rate that the amplitude falls
as the input frequency moves away from the center frequency during the
first octave. As the frequency gets more than one octave away from center
frequency the rollof approaches 6 dB per octave regardless of Q value.
Approximate rolloff rates for different Q values for a single octave
change from center frequency are:
Q = 1 = 6 dB
Q = 5 = 18 dB
Q = 10 = 24 dB
Q = 50 = 40 dB
Q = 5 = 18 dB
Q = 10 = 24 dB
Q = 50 = 40 dB
For a single op-amp bandpass filter with both capacitors the same
value, the Q factor must be greater than the square root of half
the gain, so that a gain of 98 would require a Q factor of 7 or more.
The example below shows a 1700 Hz bandpass filter with a Q of 8 and
a gain of 65 at center frequency (1700 Hz). Resistor values for the
filter can be worked out using the three formulas below. Both capacitor
values need to be the same for the formulas to work and are chosen to
be 0.01uF which is a common value usable at audio frequencies. This same
filter is used in the "Whistle On / Whistle Off" relay toggle circuit.
R2 = Q / ((2*Q^2)-G)*C*2*Pi*F) = 8/((128-65) * .00000001 * 6.28 * 1700) = 1189 or 1.2K
R3 = (2*Q) / (C*2*Pi*F) = 16 / (.00000001 * 6.28 * 1700) = 150K
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