674 C H A P T E R 11: Introduction to the Design of Discrete Filters
Z=ejθandz=ejωin Equation (11.44) to obtain
e−jθ=
e−jω−α
1 −αe−jω
(11.45)
The value ofα, in Equation (11.44) that maps the cut-off frequencyθpof the prototype into the
desired cut-off frequencyωd(see Figure 11.18(a)), is found from Equation (11.45) as follows. First,
we have that
α=
e−jω−e−jθ
1 −e−j(θ+ω)
=
e−jω−e−jθ
2 je−j0.5(θ+ω)sin((θ+ω)/ 2 )
=
sin((θ−ω)/ 2 )
sin((θ+ω)/ 2 )
and then replacingθandωbyθpandωdgives
α=
sin((θp−ωd)/ 2 )
sin((θp+ωd)/ 2 )
(11.46)
Notice that if the prototype filter coincides with the desired filter (i.e.,θp=ωd), thenα=0, and the
transformation isZ−^1 =z−^1. For different values ofαbetween 0 and 1 the transformation shrinks the
FIGURE 11.18
(a) Frequency transformation from a prototype
low-pass filter with cut-off frequencyθpinto a
low-pass filter with desired cut-off frequencyωd.
(b) Mapping ofθintoωfrequencies in low-pass
to low-pass frequency transformation: the
continuous lines correspond to 0 < α≤ 1 , while
the dashed lines correspond to values
− 1 ≤α≤ 0. The arrow shows the
transformation ofθp=0.4πintoωd≈0.95π
whenα=−0.9.
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θp
−θp
Z-plane
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ωd z-plane
−ωd
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1
θ/π
ω
/π
(b)
(a)