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Analog and Digital Filters and
Communications Circuits

Characterization, properties, and analysis of analog filters. Buderworth, Chebyshev, and elliptic approximations. Introduction to the realization of LC one- and two-port circuits; Darlington's method. Active elements such as gyrators and generalized impedance converters, and their representation by singular elements. Design of high-performance, low-sensitivity active filters. The course includes a project in which a complete analog filter is designed. Recursive and nonrecursive digital filters, decimation and interpolation, A/D and D/A conversion as digital filtering problems. Implementation of nonrecursive filters via FFT, quantization problems, e.g., companding and limit.

Course ID
ECEN454
Level
Undergraduate
Credit Hours
CH:3

Develop and conduct appropriate experimentation and/or simulation,
analyze and interpret data, assess and evaluate findings, and use
statistical analyses and objective engineering judgment to draw
conclusions.Develop and conduct appropriate experimentation and/or simulation,
analyze and interpret data, assess and evaluate findings, and use
statistical analyses and objective engineering judgment to draw
conclusions.Practice research techniques and methods of investigation as an
inherent part of learning.Design, model and analyze an electrical, electronic, microwave and
optical system or component for a specific ICT application and
identify the tools required to optimize this design.Use appropriate specialized software packages, write computer
programs, and use relevant laboratory equipment for the analysis
and design of electronics and communications components and
systems