Thread Closed

RC networks

 
Share Thread Thread Tools
May18-08, 09:54 PM   #1
 

RC networks


This is not homework, but a question I have posed for myself.

In a linear, passive, 3-terminal RC network for sinusoidal voltage input how many resistors and capacitors are required to give an open-circuit voltage gain of 2?

I've found some very complicated networks, but I'd like to find one with the fewest number of R's and C's.

Thanks for any help.
PhysOrg.com
PhysOrg
science news on PhysOrg.com

>> Ants and carnivorous plants conspire for mutualistic feeding
>> Forecast for Titan: Wild weather could be ahead
>> Researchers stitch defects into the world's thinnest semiconductor
May19-08, 08:39 AM   #2
 
Quote by bobbyk View Post
This is not homework, but a question I have posed for myself.

In a linear, passive, 3-terminal RC network for sinusoidal voltage input how many resistors and capacitors are required to give an open-circuit voltage gain of 2?

I've found some very complicated networks, but I'd like to find one with the fewest number of R's and C's.

Thanks for any help.
No combination of resistors and capacitors without some active device such as a transistor will exhibit any gain at all.
May19-08, 11:52 AM   #3
 
Mentor
This question is still coursework, so I've moved the thread to Homework Help.

bobbyk, do you understand what ASN is saying? How can a passive network have a gain > 1? What do you need to add to get a gain > 1?
May20-08, 09:58 PM   #4
 

RC networks


Yes, I understand what ASN is saying and he is wrong! You don't need to add anything to
get a gain > 1. Even very simple passive RC networks have open-circuit voltage gains > 1.

But I'm trying for a gain of 2.
May20-08, 11:41 PM   #5
 
There was a thread on the Usenet group alt.binaries.schematics.electronic on 10/10/07 with the subject:

Epstein paper--Synthesis of Passive RC Networks with Gains Greater than Unity

One of the responders posted this circuit which seems to be able to give gains much greater than just 2. It has practical problems, however.

May21-08, 12:15 AM   #6
 
Thanks so much! This Is exactly the type of thing I'm looking for!
Thread Closed
Thread Tools


Similar Threads for: RC networks
Thread Forum Replies
Hybrid networks? Computing & Technology 9
Neural Networks Medical Sciences 1
Networks on a Torus Introductory Physics Homework 3
Satellite Networks Computing & Technology 0
Senator wants to ban P2P networks Computing & Technology 0