CMP - United Business Media TechOnline
All Articles Products Courses Papers VirtuaLabs Webinars Web



 
LoginRegister
      TechOnline > Learning >  Technical Paper

Technical Papers
How to Decimate with a DSP

Click to Download
pdf logo
1999 International Conference on Signal Processing Applications and Technology (ICSPAT) Paper
117 KB (16 pages)
November 2, 1999
 

Laszlo Hars
Panasonic Information and Networking Technologies Laboratory

Typically, a signal to be digitized is passed through an analog anti-aliasing filter just prior to the Analog to Digital Converter (ADC) to remove those components that the digitizing process would mirror to the needed frequency band (aliases). At high sampling rates, the frequencies, which alias to the useful band are far away, so this anti-aliasing filter can be simple, inexpensive. However, the resulted many samples need considerable processing power unless decimated early in the processing.

The decimation itself introduces aliases, too, so the bandwidth must be further limited. A digital filter can remove those disturbing frequency components, which the analog anti-aliasing filter did not. The best response is achieved with linear phase filters. We discuss the different definitions for the best alias rejection and present algorithms to design the corresponding optimum filters. We investigate the best implementations as well, also when we decimate together with quadrature conversion and digital mixing. Special filter types are examined (comb-, multi-rate-, cascaded half-band filters) and the effects of forcing some coefficients to 0.

 
Rate this paper
WORSE | BETTER
1 2 3 4 5

submit a paper

ICSPAT
Panasonic
   

ARTICLE
1. Advantages and Disadvantages of Using DSP Filtering on Oscilloscope Waveforms

ARTICLE
2. Digital Filters: An Introduction

ARTICLE
3. The Relationship of Dynamic Range to Data Word Size in Digital Audio Processing

ARTICLE
4. Designing Digital Filters