Butterworth filter
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The Butterworth filter is a type of
signal processing filter In signal processing, a filter is a device or process that removes some unwanted components or features from a signal. Filtering is a class of signal processing, the defining feature of filters being the complete or partial suppression of some aspe ...
designed to have a frequency response that is as flat as possible in the passband. It is also referred to as a maximally flat magnitude filter. It was first described in 1930 by the British engineer and physicist
Stephen Butterworth Stephen Butterworth (1885–1958) was a British physicist who invented the filter that bears his name, a class of electrical circuits that separates electrical signals of different frequencies. Biography Stephen Butterworth was born on 11 ...
in his paper entitled "On the Theory of Filter Amplifiers".


Original paper

Butterworth had a reputation for solving "impossible" mathematical problems. At the time, filter design required a considerable amount of designer experience due to limitations of the theory then in use. The filter was not in common use for over 30 years after its publication. Butterworth stated that: Such an ideal filter cannot be achieved, but Butterworth showed that successively closer approximations were obtained with increasing numbers of filter elements of the right values. At the time, filters generated substantial ripple in the passband, and the choice of component values was highly interactive. Butterworth showed that a low-pass filter could be designed whose cutoff frequency was normalized to 1 radian per second and whose frequency response (
gain Gain or GAIN may refer to: Science and technology * Gain (electronics), an electronics and signal processing term * Antenna gain * Gain (laser), the amplification involved in laser emission * Gain (projection screens) * Information gain in de ...
) was :G(\omega) = , where \omega is the
angular frequency In physics, angular frequency "''ω''" (also referred to by the terms angular speed, circular frequency, orbital frequency, radian frequency, and pulsatance) is a scalar measure of rotation rate. It refers to the angular displacement per unit ti ...
in radians per second and n is the number of poles in the filter—equal to the number of reactive elements in a passive filter. If \omega = 1, the amplitude response of this type of filter in the passband is 1/ ≈ 0.7071, which is half power or −3 dB. Butterworth only dealt with filters with an even number of poles in his paper. He may have been unaware that such filters could be designed with an odd number of poles. He built his higher-order filters from 2-pole filters separated by vacuum tube amplifiers. His plot of the frequency response of 2-, 4-, 6-, 8-, and 10-pole filters is shown as A, B, C, D, and E in his original graph. Butterworth solved the equations for two-pole and four-pole filters, showing how the latter could be cascaded when separated by
vacuum tube A vacuum tube, electron tube, valve (British usage), or tube (North America), is a device that controls electric current flow in a high vacuum between electrodes to which an electric potential difference has been applied. The type known as ...
amplifier An amplifier, electronic amplifier or (informally) amp is an electronic device that can increase the magnitude of a signal (a time-varying voltage or current). It may increase the power significantly, or its main effect may be to boost t ...
s and so enabling the construction of higher-order filters despite
inductor An inductor, also called a coil, choke, or reactor, is a passive two-terminal electrical component that stores energy in a magnetic field when electric current flows through it. An inductor typically consists of an insulated wire wound into a c ...
losses. In 1930, low-loss core materials such as molypermalloy had not been discovered and air-cored audio inductors were rather lossy. Butterworth discovered that it was possible to adjust the component values of the filter to compensate for the winding resistance of the inductors. He used coil forms of 1.25″ diameter and 3″ length with plug-in terminals. Associated capacitors and resistors were contained inside the wound coil form. The coil formed part of the plate load resistor. Two poles were used per vacuum tube and RC coupling was used to the grid of the following tube. Butterworth also showed that the basic low-pass filter could be modified to give low-pass, high-pass, band-pass and band-stop functionality.


Overview

The frequency response of the Butterworth filter is maximally flat (i.e. has no ripples) in the passband and rolls off towards zero in the stopband. When viewed on a logarithmic Bode plot, the response slopes off linearly towards negative infinity. A first-order filter's response rolls off at −6 dB per octave (−20 dB per decade) (all first-order lowpass filters have the same normalized frequency response). A second-order filter decreases at −12 dB per octave, a third-order at −18 dB and so on. Butterworth filters have a monotonically changing magnitude function with ω, unlike other filter types that have non-monotonic ripple in the passband and/or the stopband. Compared with a
Chebyshev Pafnuty Lvovich Chebyshev ( rus, Пафну́тий Льво́вич Чебышёв, p=pɐfˈnutʲɪj ˈlʲvovʲɪtɕ tɕɪbɨˈʂof) ( – ) was a Russian mathematician and considered to be the founding father of Russian mathematics. Chebyshe ...
Type I/Type II filter or an elliptic filter, the Butterworth filter has a slower roll-off, and thus will require a higher order to implement a particular stopband specification, but Butterworth filters have a more linear phase response in the passband than Chebyshev Type I/Type II and elliptic filters can achieve.


Example

A transfer function of a third-order low-pass Butterworth filter design shown in the figure on the right looks like this: :\frac=\frac A simple example of a Butterworth filter is the third-order low-pass design shown in the figure on the right, with C_2 = 4/3 F, R_4 = 1 Ω, L_1 = 3/2 H, and L_3 = 1/2 H. Taking the impedance of the capacitors C to be 1/(Cs) and the impedance of the inductors L to be Ls, where is the complex frequency, the circuit equations yield the transfer function for this device: :H(s)=\frac=\frac. The magnitude of the frequency response (gain) G(\omega) is given by :G(\omega)=, H(j\omega), =\frac, obtained from :G^2(\omega)=, H(j\omega), ^2=H(j\omega)\cdot H^*(j\omega)=\frac, and the phase is given by :\Phi(\omega)=\arg(H(j\omega)).\! The
group delay In signal processing, group delay and phase delay are delay times experienced by a signal's various frequency components when the signal passes through a system that is linear time-invariant (LTI), such as a microphone, coaxial cable, amplifier, ...
is defined as the derivative of the phase with respect to angular frequency and is a measure of the distortion in the signal introduced by phase differences for different frequencies. The gain and the delay for this filter are plotted in the graph on the left. It can be seen that there are no ripples in the gain curve in either the passband or the stop band. The log of the absolute value of the transfer function H(s) is plotted in complex frequency space in the second graph on the right. The function is defined by the three poles in the left half of the complex frequency plane. These are arranged on a circle of radius unity, symmetrical about the real s axis. The gain function will have three more poles on the right half-plane to complete the circle. By replacing each inductor with a capacitor and each capacitor with an inductor, a high-pass Butterworth filter is obtained. A band-pass Butterworth filter is obtained by placing a capacitor in series with each inductor and an inductor in parallel with each capacitor to form resonant circuits. The value of each new component must be selected to resonate with the old component at the frequency of interest. A band-stop Butterworth filter is obtained by placing a capacitor in parallel with each inductor and an inductor in series with each capacitor to form resonant circuits. The value of each new component must be selected to resonate with the old component at the frequency that is to be rejected.


Transfer function

Like all filters, the typical
prototype A prototype is an early sample, model, or release of a product built to test a concept or process. It is a term used in a variety of contexts, including semantics, design, electronics, and software programming. A prototype is generally used to ...
is the low-pass filter, which can be modified into a high-pass filter, or placed in series with others to form band-pass and band-stop filters, and higher order versions of these. The gain G(\omega) of an nth-order Butterworth low-pass filter is given in terms of the transfer function H(s) as :G^2(\omega)=\left , H(j\omega)\^2 = \frac where n is the order of filter, \omega_c is the cutoff frequency (approximately the −3 dB frequency), and G_0 is the DC gain (gain at zero frequency). It can be seen that as n approaches infinity, the gain becomes a rectangle function and frequencies below \omega_c will be passed with gain G_0, while frequencies above \omega_c will be suppressed. For smaller values of n, the cutoff will be less sharp. We wish to determine the transfer function H(s) where s=\sigma+j\omega (from
Laplace transform In mathematics, the Laplace transform, named after its discoverer Pierre-Simon Laplace (), is an integral transform that converts a function of a real variable (usually t, in the '' time domain'') to a function of a complex variable s (in the ...
). Because \left, H(s)\^2 = H(s)\overline and, as a general property of Laplace transforms at s=j\omega, H(-j\omega) = \overline, if we select H(s) such that: :H(s)H(-s) = \frac , then, with s=j\omega, we have the frequency response of the Butterworth filter. The n poles of this expression occur on a circle of radius \omega_c at equally-spaced points, and symmetric around the negative real axis. For stability, the transfer function, H(s), is therefore chosen such that it contains only the poles in the negative real half-plane of s. The k-th pole is specified by :-\frac = (-1)^ = e^ \qquad k = 1,2,3,\ldots, n and hence :s_k = \omega_c e^\qquad k = 1,2,3,\ldots, n. The transfer (or system) function may be written in terms of these poles as :H(s)=G_0\prod_^n \frac. where \textstyle is the product of a sequence operator. The denominator is a Butterworth polynomial in s.


Normalized Butterworth polynomials

The Butterworth polynomials may be written in complex form as above, but are usually written with real coefficients by multiplying pole pairs that are complex conjugates, such as s_1 and s_n. The polynomials are normalized by setting \omega_c=1. The normalized Butterworth polynomials then have the general product form :B_n(s)=\prod_^ \left ^2-2s\cos\left(\frac\,\pi\right)+1\rightqquad n = \text :B_n(s)=(s+1)\prod_^ \left ^2-2s\cos\left(\frac\,\pi\right)+1\rightqquad n = \text. Factors of Butterworth polynomials of order 1 through 10 are shown in the following table (to six decimal places). Factors of Butterworth polynomials of order 1 through 6 are shown in the following table (Exact). where the Greek letter phi ( or \phi) represents the golden ratio. It is an irrational number that is a solution to the
quadratic equation In algebra, a quadratic equation () is any equation that can be rearranged in standard form as ax^2 + bx + c = 0\,, where represents an unknown value, and , , and represent known numbers, where . (If and then the equation is linear, not qu ...
x^2 - x - 1 = 0, with a value of The nth Butterworth polynomial can also be written as a sum :B_n(s)=\sum_^n a_k s^k\,, with its coefficients a_k given by the recursion formula :\frac=\frac and by the product formula :a_k=\prod_^k\frac\,, where :a_0=1\qquad \text\qquad\gamma=\frac\,. Further, a_k=a_. The rounded coefficients a_k for the first 10 Butterworth polynomials B_n(s) are: The normalized Butterworth polynomials can be used to determine the transfer function for any low-pass filter cut-off frequency \omega_c, as follows :H(s) = \frac , where a = \frac. Transformation to other bandforms are also possible, see prototype filter.


Maximal flatness

Assuming \omega_c=1 and G_0=1, the derivative of the gain with respect to frequency can be shown to be :\frac=-nG^3\omega^ which is
monotonic In mathematics, a monotonic function (or monotone function) is a function between ordered sets that preserves or reverses the given order. This concept first arose in calculus, and was later generalized to the more abstract setting of order ...
ally decreasing for all \omega since the gain G is always positive. The gain function of the Butterworth filter therefore has no ripple. The series expansion of the gain is given by :G(\omega)=1 - \frac\omega^+\frac\omega^+\ldots In other words, all derivatives of the gain up to but not including the 2n-th derivative are zero at \omega=0, resulting in "maximal flatness". If the requirement to be monotonic is limited to the passband only and ripples are allowed in the stopband, then it is possible to design a filter of the same order, such as the
inverse Chebyshev filter Chebyshev filters are analog or digital filters that have a steeper roll-off than Butterworth filters, and have either passband ripple (type I) or stopband ripple (type II). Chebyshev filters have the property that they minimize the error bet ...
, that is flatter in the passband than the "maximally flat" Butterworth.


High-frequency roll-off

Again assuming \omega_c=1, the slope of the log of the gain for large \omega is :\lim_\frac=-n. In decibels, the high-frequency roll-off is therefore 20n dB/decade, or 6n dB/octave (the factor of 20 is used because the power is proportional to the square of the voltage gain; see 20 log rule.)


Filter implementation and design

There are several different filter topologies available to implement a linear analogue filter. The most often used topology for a passive realisation is the Cauer topology, and the most often used topology for an active realisation is the Sallen–Key topology.


Cauer topology

The Cauer topology uses passive components (shunt capacitors and series inductors) to implement a linear analog filter. The Butterworth filter having a given transfer function can be realised using a Cauer 1-form. The ''k''-th element is given by :C_k = 2 \sin \left frac \pi \right qquad k = \text :L_k = 2 \sin \left frac \pi \right qquad k = \text. The filter may start with a series inductor if desired, in which case the ''Lk'' are ''k'' odd and the ''Ck'' are ''k'' even. These formulae may usefully be combined by making both ''Lk'' and ''Ck'' equal to ''gk''. That is, ''gk'' is the
immittance In electrical engineering and acoustics, immittance is a concept combining the impedance and admittance of a system or circuit. The term ''immittance'' was invented by H. W. Bode. It is sometimes convenient to use ''immittance'' to re ...
divided by ''s''. :g_k = 2 \sin \left frac \pi \right qquad k = 1,2,3, \ldots, n. These formulae apply to a doubly terminated filter (that is, the source and load impedance are both equal to unity) with ωc = 1. This prototype filter can be scaled for other values of impedance and frequency. For a singly terminated filter (that is, one driven by an ideal voltage or current source) the element values are given by :g_j = \frac\qquad j = 2,3, \ldots, n where :g_1 = a_1 and :a_j = \sin \left frac \pi \right qquad j = 1,2,3, \ldots, n :c_j = \cos^2 \left frac \pi \right qquad j = 1,2,3, \ldots, n. Voltage driven filters must start with a series element and current driven filters must start with a shunt element. These forms are useful in the design of
diplexer A diplexer is a passive device that implements frequency-domain multiplexing. Two ports (e.g., L and H) are multiplexed onto a third port (e.g., S). The signals on ports L and H occupy disjoint frequency bands. Consequently, the signals on L and ...
s and multiplexers.


Sallen–Key topology

The Sallen–Key topology uses active and passive components (noninverting buffers, usually
op amp An operational amplifier (often op amp or opamp) is a DC-coupled high-gain electronic voltage amplifier with a differential input and, usually, a single-ended output. In this configuration, an op amp produces an output potential (relative to c ...
s, resistors, and capacitors) to implement a linear analog filter. Each Sallen–Key stage implements a conjugate pair of poles; the overall filter is implemented by cascading all stages in series. If there is a real pole (in the case where n is odd), this must be implemented separately, usually as an
RC circuit A resistor–capacitor circuit (RC circuit), or RC filter or RC network, is an electric circuit composed of resistors and capacitors. It may be driven by a voltage or current source and these will produce different responses. A first order RC ...
, and cascaded with the active stages. For the second-order Sallen–Key circuit shown to the right the transfer function is given by :H(s)=\frac=\frac. We wish the denominator to be one of the quadratic terms in a Butterworth polynomial. Assuming that \omega_c=1, this will mean that :C_1C_2R_1R_2=1\, and :C_2(R_1+R_2)=-2\cos\left(\frac \pi\right). This leaves two undefined component values that may be chosen at will. Butterworth lowpass filters with Sallen–Key topology of 3rd and 4th order, using only one
op amp An operational amplifier (often op amp or opamp) is a DC-coupled high-gain electronic voltage amplifier with a differential input and, usually, a single-ended output. In this configuration, an op amp produces an output potential (relative to c ...
, are described by Huelsman, and further single-amplifier Butterworth filters also of higher order are given by Jurišić et al.


Digital implementation

Digital implementations of Butterworth and other filters are often based on the
bilinear transform The bilinear transform (also known as Tustin's method, after Arnold Tustin) is used in digital signal processing and discrete-time control theory to transform continuous-time system representations to discrete-time and vice versa. The bilinear t ...
method or the matched Z-transform method, two different methods to discretize an analog filter design. In the case of all-pole filters such as the Butterworth, the matched Z-transform method is equivalent to the impulse invariance method. For higher orders, digital filters are sensitive to quantization errors, so they are often calculated as cascaded biquad sections, plus one first-order or third-order section for odd orders.


Comparison with other linear filters

Properties of the Butterworth filter are: *
Monotonic In mathematics, a monotonic function (or monotone function) is a function between ordered sets that preserves or reverses the given order. This concept first arose in calculus, and was later generalized to the more abstract setting of order ...
amplitude response in both passband and stopband * Quick roll-off around the cutoff frequency, which improves with increasing order * Considerable overshoot and
ringing Ringing may mean: Vibrations * Ringing (signal), unwanted oscillation of a signal, leading to ringing artifacts * Vibration of a harmonic oscillator ** Bell ringing * Ringing (telephony), the sound of a telephone bell * Ringing (medicine), a ring ...
in step response, which worsens with increasing order * Slightly non-linear phase response *
Group delay In signal processing, group delay and phase delay are delay times experienced by a signal's various frequency components when the signal passes through a system that is linear time-invariant (LTI), such as a microphone, coaxial cable, amplifier, ...
largely frequency-dependent Here is an image showing the gain of a discrete-time Butterworth filter next to other common filter types. All of these filters are fifth-order. The Butterworth filter rolls off more slowly around the cutoff frequency than the Chebyshev filter or the Elliptic filter, but without ripple.


References

{{Reflist, refs= {{cite book , last1=Matthaei , first1=George L. , last2=Young , first2=Leo , last3=Jones , first3=E. M. T. , title=Microwave Filters, Impedance-Matching Networks, and Coupling Structures , publisher=McGraw-Hill , year=1964 , LCCN=64007937 , pages=104-107, 105, and 974 {{cite journal , last1 = Bosse , first1 = G. , year = 1951 , title = Siebketten ohne Dämpfungsschwankungen im Durchlaßbereich (Potenzketten) , journal = Frequenz , volume = 5 , issue = 10 , pages = 279–284 , doi = 10.1515/FREQ.1951.5.10.279 {{cite book , title = Network analysis and synthesis , first = Louis , last = Weinberg , publisher = Robert E. Krieger Publishing Company, Inc. , date = 1962 , publication-date = 1975 , publication-place = Malabar, Florida , isbn = 0-88275-321-5 , pages = 494–496 , url = https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015000986086 , access-date = 2022-06-18 Linear filters Network synthesis filters Electronic design