A resistor-capacitor circuit (RC circuit), or RC filter or RC network, is one of the simplest analogue electronic filters. It consists of a resistor and a capacitor, either in series or in parallel, driven by a voltage source.
The angular frequency s is, in general, a complex number,
where
Sinusoidal steady state is a special case in which the input voltage consists of a pure sinusoid (with no exponential decay). As a result,
and the evaluation of s becomes
By viewing the circuit as a voltage divider, we see that the voltage across the capacitor is:
and the voltage across the resistor is:
The transfer function for the capacitor is
Similarly, the transfer function for the resistor is
Both transfer functions have a single pole located at
In addition, the transfer function for the resistor has a zero located at the origin.
and the phase angles are:
These expressions together may be substituted into the usual expression for the phasor representing the output:
The impulse response for each voltage is the inverse Laplace transform of the corresponding transfer function. It represents the response of the circuit to an input voltage consisting of an impulse or delta function.
The impulse response for the capacitor voltage is
where u(t) is the Heaviside step function and
is the time constant.
Similarly, the impulse response for the resistor voltage is
As :
As :
This shows that, if the output is taken across the capacitor, high frequencies are attenuated (rejected) and low frequencies are passed. Thus, the circuit behaves as a low-pass filter. If, though, the output is taken across the resistor, high frequencies are passed and low frequencies are rejected. In this configuration, the circuit behaves as a high-pass filter.
The range of frequencies that the filter passes is called its bandwidth. The point at which the filter attenuates the signal to half its unfiltered power is termed its cutoff frequency. This requires that the gain of the circuit be reduced to
Solving the above equation yields
or which is the frequency that the filter will attenuate to half its original power.Clearly, the phases also depend on frequency, although this effect is less interesting generally than the gain variations.
As :
As :
So at DC (0 Hz), the capacitor voltage is in phase with the signal voltage while the resistor voltage leads it by 90°. As frequency increases, the capacitor voltage comes to have a 90° lag relative to the signal and the resistor voltage comes to be in-phase with the signal.
The most straightforward way to derive the time domain behaviour is to use the Laplace transforms of the expressions for and given above. This effectively transforms . Assuming a step input (i.e. before and then afterwards):
Partial fractions expansions and the inverse Laplace transform yield:
Thus, the voltage across the capacitor tends towards V as time passes, while the voltage across the resistor tends towards 0, as shown in the figures. This is in keeping with the intuitive point that the capacitor will be charging from the supply voltage as time passes, and will eventually be fully charged and form an open circuit.
These equations show that a series RC circuit has a time constant, usually denoted being the time it takes the voltage across the component to either rise (across C) or fall (across R) to within of its final value. That is, is the time it takes to reach and to reach .
The rate of change is a fractional per . Thus, in going from to , the votage will have moved about 63% of the way from its level at toward its final value. So C will be charged to about 63% after , and essentially fully charged (99.3%) after about . When the voltage source is replaced with a short-circuit, with C fully charged, the voltage across C drops exponentially with t from towards 0. C will be discharged to about 37% after , and essentially fully discharged (0.7%) after about . Note that the current, , in the circuit behaves as the voltage across R does, via Ohm's Law.
These results may also be derived by solving the differential equations describing the circuit:
This means that the capacitor has insufficient time to charge up and so its voltage is very small. Thus the input voltage approximately equals the voltage across the resistor. To see this, consider the expression for given above:
Now,
This means that the capacitor has time to charge up until its voltage is almost equal to the source's voltage. Considering the expression for again, when
Now,
More accurate integration and differentiation can be achieved by placing resistors and capacitors as appropriate on the input and feedback loop of operational amplifiers.
The parallel RC circuit is generally of less interest than the series circuit. This is largely because the output voltage is equal to the input voltage — as a result, this circuit does not act as a filter on the input signal unless fed by a current source.
With complex impedances:
This shows that the capacitor current is 90° out-of-phase with the resistor (and source) current. Alternatively, the governing differential equations may be used:
For a step input (which is effectively a 0Hz or DC signal), the derivative of the input is an impulse at . Thus, the capacitor reaches full charge very quickly and becomes an open circuit — the well-known DC behaviour of a capacitor.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"RC circuit".
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