Open-circuit Time Constant Method
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The open-circuit time constant (OCT) method is an approximate analysis technique used in electronic circuit design to determine the
corner frequency In physics and electrical engineering, a cutoff frequency, corner frequency, or break frequency is a boundary in a system's frequency response at which energy flowing through the system begins to be reduced ( attenuated or reflected) rather than ...
of complex circuits. It is a special case of zero-value time constant (ZVT) method technique when reactive elements consist of only capacitors. The zero-value time (ZVT) constant method itself is a special case of the general Time- and Transfer Constant (TTC) analysis that allows full evaluation of the zeros and poles of any lumped LTI systems of with both inductors and capacitors as reactive elements using
time constant In physics and engineering, the time constant, usually denoted by the Greek letter (tau), is the parameter characterizing the response to a step input of a first-order, linear time-invariant (LTI) system.Concretely, a first-order LTI system is a sy ...
s and
transfer constant Transfer constants are low-frequency gains (or in general ratios of the output to input variables) evaluated under different combinations of shorting and opening of reactive elements in the circuit (i.e., capacitors and inductors). They are used in ...
s. The OCT method provides a quick evaluation, and identifies the largest contributions to time constants as a guide to the circuit improvements. The basis of the method is the approximation that the corner frequency of the amplifier is determined by the term in the denominator of its
transfer function In engineering, a transfer function (also known as system function or network function) of a system, sub-system, or component is a function (mathematics), mathematical function that mathematical model, theoretically models the system's output for ...
that is linear in frequency. This approximation can be extremely inaccurate in some cases where a zero in the numerator is near in frequency. The method also uses a simplified method for finding the term linear in frequency based upon summing the RC-products for each capacitor in the circuit, where the resistor R for a selected capacitor is the resistance found by inserting a test source at its site and setting all other capacitors to zero. Hence the name ''zero-value time constant technique''.


Example: Simple RC network

Figure 1 shows a simple RC low-pass filter. Its transfer function is found using
Kirchhoff's current law Kirchhoff's circuit laws are two equalities that deal with the current and potential difference (commonly known as voltage) in the lumped element model of electrical circuits. They were first described in 1845 by German physicist Gustav Kirchhof ...
as follows. At the output, :: \frac = j\omega C_2 V_O \ , where ''V''1 is the voltage at the top of capacitor ''C''1. At the center node: :: \frac = j \omega C_1 V_1 + \frac \ . Combining these relations the transfer function is found to be: :: \frac = \frac The linear term in ''j''ω in this transfer function can be derived by the following method, which is an application of the open-circuit time constant method to this example. # Set the signal source to zero. # Select capacitor ''C''2, replace it by a test voltage ''V''X, and replace ''C''1 by an open circuit. Then the resistance seen by the test voltage is found using the circuit in the middle panel of Figure 1 and is simply ''V''X / ''I''X = ''R''1 + ''R''2. Form the product ''C''2 ( ''R''1 + ''R''2 ). # Select capacitor ''C''1, replace it by a test voltage ''V''X, and replace ''C''2 by an open circuit. Then the resistance seen by the test voltage is found using the circuit in the right panel of Figure 1 and is simply ''V''X / ''I''X = ''R''1. Form the product ''C''1 ''R''1. # Add these terms. In effect, it is as though each capacitor charges and discharges through the resistance found in the circuit when the other capacitor is an open circuit. The open circuit time constant procedure provides the linear term in ''j''ω regardless of how complex the RC network becomes. This was originally developed and proven by calculating the co-factors of the admittance matrix by Thornton and Searle. A more intuitive inductive proof of this (and other properties of TTC) was later developed by Hajimiri. For a complex circuit, the procedure consists of following the above rules, going through all the capacitors in the circuit. A more general derivation is found in Gray and Meyer. So far the result is general, but an approximation is introduced to make use of this result: the assumption is made that this linear term in ''j''ω determines the corner frequency of the circuit. That assumption can be examined more closely using the example of Figure 1: suppose the time constants of this circuit are τ1 and τ2; that is: :: \left( 1 + j \omega _1) (1 +j \omega _2 \right) = 1 + j \omega \left(C_2 (R_1+R_2) +C_1 R_1 \right) +(j \omega )^2 C_1 C_2 R_1 R_2 Comparing the coefficients of the linear and quadratic terms in ''j''ω, there results: :: \tau_1 + \tau_2 = C_2 (R_1+R_2) +C_1 R_1 \ , :: \tau_1 \tau_2 = C_1 C_2 R_1 R_2 \ . One of the two time constants will be the longest; let it be τ1. Suppose for the moment that it is much larger than the other, τ1 >> τ2. In this case, the approximations hold that: :: \tau_1 + \tau_2 \approx \tau_1 \ , and :: \tau_2 = \frac \approx \frac \ . In other words, substituting the RC-values: :: \tau_1 \approx \hat =\ \tau_1 + \tau_2 = C_2 (R_1+R_2) +C_1 R_1 \ , and :: \tau_2 \approx \hat =\frac = \frac \ , where ( ^ ) denotes the approximate result. As an aside, notice that the circuit time constants both involve both capacitors; in other words, in general the circuit time constants are not decided by any single capacitor. Using these results, it is easy to explore how well the corner frequency (the 3 dB frequency) is given by :: f_ = \frac \ , as the parameters vary. Also, the exact transfer function can be compared with the approximate one, that is, :: \frac \ \   with   \ \ \frac \ . Of course agreement is good when the assumption τ1 >> τ2 is accurate. Figure 2 illustrates the approximation. The x-axis is the ratio τ1 / τ2 on a logarithmic scale. An increase in this variable means the higher pole is further above the corner frequency. The y-axis is the ratio of the OCTC (open-circuit time constant) estimate to the true time constant. For the lowest pole use curve T_1; this curve refers to the corner frequency; and for the higher pole use curve T_2. The worst agreement is for τ1 = τ2. In this case τ^1 = 2 τ1 and the corner frequency is a factor of 2 too small. The higher pole is a factor of 2 too high (its time constant is half of the real value). In all cases, the estimated corner frequency is closer than a factor of two from the real one, and always is ''conservative'' that is, lower than the real corner, so the actual circuit will behave better than predicted. However, the higher pole always is ''optimistic'', that is, predicts the high pole at a higher frequency than really is the case. To use these estimates for
step response The step response of a system in a given initial state consists of the time evolution of its outputs when its control inputs are Heaviside step functions. In electronic engineering and control theory, step response is the time behaviour of the out ...
predictions, which depend upon the ratio of the two pole frequencies (see article on
pole splitting Pole splitting is a phenomenon exploited in some forms of frequency compensation used in an electronic amplifier. When a capacitor is introduced between the input and output sides of the amplifier with the intention of moving the pole lowest in freq ...
for an example), Figure 2 suggests a fairly large ratio of τ1 / τ2 is needed for accuracy because the errors in τ^1 and τ^2 reinforce each other in the ratio τ^1 / τ^2. The open-circuit time constant method focuses upon the corner frequency alone, but as seen above, estimates for higher poles also are possible. Application of the open-circuit time constant method to a number of single transistor amplifier stages can be found in Pittet and Kandaswamy. {{cite book , author=Andre Pittet & A. Kandaswamy , title=Analog electronics , page=Chapter 4; pp. 155–166 , year= 2005 , publisher=Prentice-Hall of India , location=New Delhi , isbn=81-203-2784-5 , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TjFkX93jyRAC&q=+%22open+circuit+time+constant+method%22&pg=PA148


References and notes

Electronic design Electronic engineering