Band-Pass Filter butter problem
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filter_order_bpf = 10; % filter order, larger number makes the filter
% response sharper but increases the cost
f_low_bpf = f_carrier - f_stop_lpf; % low cut-off frecuency of band-pass filter
f_high_bpf = 31e3; % high cut-off frecuency of band-pass filter
wn_bpf = [f_low_bpf, f_high_bpf]/(Fs/2); % this parameter is used by MATLAB, defines it based
% on your cut-off frequencies and your signal sampling frequency
[b_bpf, a_bpf] = butter(filter_order_bpf, wn_bpf, 'bandpass'); % creates a Butterworth band-pass filter
filt_received = filter(b_bpf, a_bpf, y_mod_am_received); % apply the filter to received signal
filt_rec_sig_FD = fft(filt_received); % calculate frequency domain of audio
filt_rec_sig_FD_amp = abs(filt_rec_sig_FD)/no_of_pnts; % calculate the amplitude of frequency domain
filt_rec_sig_FD_amp_adj = fftshift(filt_rec_sig_FD_amp); % adjust the frequency sides
figure;
semilogy(freq, rec_sig_FD_amp_adj, 'b');
hold on;
semilogy(freq, filt_rec_sig_FD_amp_adj, 'r');
xlim([10, freq_max]);
grid minor;
box on;
xlabel('Frequency (Hz)');
ylabel('Amplitude');
legend('Received', 'Filtered Received');
title('Frequency Domain of Received and Filtered Received Signals');
The error is Error using butter>butterImpl
The cutoff frequencies must be within the interval of (0,1).
Error in butter (line 59)
[varargout{1:nargout}] = butterImpl(n,Wn,varargin{:});
How do I fix this?
1 Kommentar
Star Strider
am 14 Dez. 2023
NOTE — The transfer function implementation is generally not recommended because of potential stability problems. See the butter documentation section on Limitations for details. (This applies to all discrete filter designs, not only butter.)
Akzeptierte Antwort
MarKf
am 14 Dez. 2023
Something something Nyquist frequency.... If you provide the missing data to your example you could get a better answer
f_stop_lpf = 4500; %e.g.
Fs = 100000; %e.g.
f_carrier = 10000; %e.g.
no_of_pnts = 20000;
y_mod_am_received = randn(no_of_pnts, 1); %inputsignal
freq = linspace(1,f_carrier,no_of_pnts);
filter_order_bpf = 10; % filter order, larger number makes the filter% response sharper but increases the cost % maybe use buttord to lower this?
f_low_bpf = f_carrier - f_stop_lpf; % low cut-off frecuency of band-pass filter
f_high_bpf = 31e3; % high cut-off frecuency of band-pass filter
wn_bpf = [f_low_bpf, f_high_bpf]/(Fs/2); % this parameter is used by MATLAB, defines it based % on your cut-off frequencies and your signal sampling frequency
[b_bpf, a_bpf] = butter(filter_order_bpf, wn_bpf, 'bandpass'); % creates a Butterworth band-pass filter
filt_received = filter(b_bpf, a_bpf, y_mod_am_received); % apply the filter to received signal
filt_rec_sig_FD = fft(filt_received); % calculate frequency domain of audio
filt_rec_sig_FD_amp = abs(filt_rec_sig_FD)/no_of_pnts; % calculate the amplitude of frequency domain
filt_rec_sig_FD_amp_adj = fftshift(filt_rec_sig_FD_amp); % adjust the frequency sides
figure;
% % semilogy(freq, rec_sig_FD_amp_adj, 'b'); rec_sig_FD_amp_adj absent
% hold on;
semilogy(freq, filt_rec_sig_FD_amp_adj, 'r');
% xlim([10, freq_max]);
grid minor;
box on;
xlabel('Frequency (Hz)');
ylabel('Amplitude');
legend( 'Filtered Received'); %'Received',
title('Frequency Domain of Received and Filtered Received Signals');
2 Kommentare
MarKf
am 15 Dez. 2023
Thank you for accepting the answer. Once again, I made up the missing data on the spot. The frequency space is definetely wrong.
But indeed the issue was likely the Nyquist frequency, so the cutoff should be less than half the sampling frequency (in butterImpl the cutoff/sampling frequency ratio should be between 0 and 1/2). So maybe that's all you needed. Still, take heed, also of what @Star Strider said above, maybe also use freqz to look at the filter response.
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