Passive filter cleans up power-line communications
Edited by Bill Travis
Jose Sebastia and JJ Perez, Polytechnic University of Valencia, Spain -- EDN, September 20, 2001
Many applications require the design of custom analog filters (Reference 1). The application for this design required simple and low-cost I/O filters for PLC (power-line communications), where low power consumption is a crucial factor. Figure 1 shows the filters, which use passive components because of the requirement for low power consumption. The PLC system needs an input and an output filter. They are 100-Hz to 20-kHz passband filters; the communication frequency is 5 kHz. The difference between the two filters lies in the input impedance. The input filter must present a 2.2-kΩ impedance, and the output filter must have a 30Ω impedance. The circuit also needs a solid-state relay, the PVT412 from International Rectifier (www.irf.com) to isolate the output filter. When the circuit is active, the relay connects the output filter to the line. A microcontroller controls the relay to implement the signal-transmission and -reception protocols. ACTIVE_TRANS, RELAY, and TX are the microcontroller pins that control transmission, and RX is the pin that controls reception. Figure 2 shows waveforms before (Figure 2a) and after (Figure 2b) insertion of the input filter. Figure 3 shows waveforms before (Figure 3a) and after (Figure 3b) insertion of the output filter.
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