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9.6:

Transfer function and Bode Plots-II

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Transfer function and Bode Plots-II

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Consider the transfer function in its standard form, with poles and zeros For a transfer function with a simple zero, the magnitude gain at small frequency values is a straight line with zero slope, and the phase approaches zero. At the corner frequency, the asymptotic magnitude deviates from the zero-slope line, and the phase approaches 45 degrees. At higher frequencies, the magnitude plot forms a +20 dB/decade line, and the phase is 90 degrees. A simple pole is the reciprocal of a simple zero. This means that pole based Bode plots mirror the simple zero plot, reflected about the horizontal axis. Consider a quadratic pole transfer function. At lower frequencies, the gain and phase angle approaches zero. At the corner frequency, the asymptotic magnitude deviation depends on the damping factor, and the phase angle is nearly -90 degrees. At higher frequencies, the magnitude plot forms a straight line with a slope of -40 dB/decade and a phase of -180 degrees. For more than one quadratic pole, the slope of the line and phase shift are multiplied by the number of poles.

9.6:

Transfer function and Bode Plots-II

In the standard form, the transfer function is shown in constant gain, poles/zeros at origin, simple poles/zeros, and quadratic poles/zeros; each contributing uniquely to the system's overall response. The term represents the magnitude of the simple zero:

Equation 1

The Bode magnitude plot remains flat at low frequencies (approaching 0 dB) and begins to ascend at 20 dB/decade after a specific frequency known as the corner or break frequency, ω1. This is the frequency where the magnitude plot's slope changes and the actual response begins to deviate from the straight-line approximation. This deviation is quantified as 3 dB at ω=ω1.

The phase angle ϕ, expressed as:

Equation 2

Phase angle starts at 0° and approaches 90° asymptotically as the frequency increases. For frequencies much lower than the corner frequency (ω≪ω1), the term jω/ω1 is very small, so the magnitude is negligible, and the phase is essentially zero. As the frequency approaches ω1, leading to a -3 dB point in magnitude and a phase angle of 45°. For frequencies much higher than ω1 (ω≫ω1), the magnitude's slope changes to 20 dB/decade, and the phase settles at 90°.

Figure 1

Quadratic pole/zero:

The magnitude and phase angle of a quadratic pole is:

Equation 3

Equation 4

The amplitude plot for a quadratic pole has two parts: a flat response below the natural frequency ωn, and a -40 dB/decade slope above ωn, with the actual plot's peak varying with the damping factor ζ2. The phase plot for a quadratic pole decreases linearly with a slope of -90° per decade, starting at one-tenth of the natural frequency and ending at ten times that, influenced by the damping factor ζ2.