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For any Help with Filter Implementation And Evaluation Assignment upload your Homework Assignment by clicking at Submit Your Assignment button or you can email it to info@matlabassignmentexperts.com .To talk to our Online Filter Implementation And Evaluation Project Tutors you can call at +1 5208371215 or use our Live Chat option. Lowpass FIR Filter
This sample assignment shows how to design and implement an FIR filter using the command line functions: fir1 and fdesign.lowpass, and the interactive tool fdatool. To filter the input signal, these examples use the filter command. The examples in Zero-Phase Filtering show you how to implement zero-phase filtering with filtfilt. Create a signal to use in the examples. The signal is a 100-Hz sinewave in additive N(0,1/4) white Gaussian noise. Set the random number generator to the default state for reproducible results.
y = filter(b,1,x); plot(t(1:100),x(1:100),'k'); hold on; plot(t(1:100),y(1:100),'r','linewidth',2); legend('Original Signal','Filtered Data','Location','SouthEast'); xlabel('Seconds'); ylabel('Amplitude');
Design the same filter using fdesign.lowpass. Set the filter specifications using the 'N,Fc' specification string. With fdesign.lowpass, you can specify your filter design in Hz.
y1 = filter(Hd,x); plot(t(1:100),x(1:100),'k'); hold on; plot(t(1:100),y1(1:100),'r','linewidth',2); legend('Original Signal','Filtered Data','Location','SouthEast'); xlabel('Seconds'); ylabel('Amplitude');
Design and implement a lowpass FIR filter using the window method with the interactive tool fdatool. Start FDATool by entering fdatool at the command line. Set the Response Type to Lowpass. Set the Design Method to FIR and select the Window method.
Under Filter Order, select Specify order. Set the order to 20. Under Frequency Specifications. Set Units to Hz, Fs: to 1000, and Fc: to 150.
Click Design Filter. Select File >Export... to export your FIR filter to the MATLAB workspace as coefficients or a filter object. In this example, export the filter as an object. Specify the variable name as Hd1.
Click Export.
Filter the input signal in the command window with the exported filter object. Plot the result for the first ten periods of the 100-Hz sinusoid.
y2 = filter(Hd1,x); plot(t(1:100),x(1:100),'k'); hold on; plot(t(1:100),y1(1:100),'r','linewidth',2); legend('Original Signal','Filtered Data','Location','SouthEast'); xlabel('Seconds'); ylabel('Amplitude');
Select File > Generate MATLAB Code to generate a MATLAB function to create a filter object using your specifications. You can also use the interactive tool filterbuilder to design your filter.
rng default; Fs =1; n = 1:365; x = cos(2*pi*(1/7)*n)+cos(2*pi*(1/30)*n-pi/4); trend = 3*sin(2*pi*(1/1480)*n); y = x+trend+0.5*randn(size(n)); subplot(211); plot(n,y); xlabel('Days'); set(gca,'xlim',[1 365]); grid on; subplot(212); [pxx,f] = periodogram(y,[],length(y),Fs); plot(f,10*log10(pxx)); xlabel('Cycles/day'); ylabel('dB'); grid on;
The low-frequency trend appears in the power spectral density estimate as increased low-frequency power. The lowfrequency power appears approximately 10 dB above the oscillation at 1/30 cycles/day. Use this information in the specifications for the filter stopbands. Design minimum-order FIR equiripple and IIR Butterworth filters with the following specifications: passband from [1/40,1/4] cycles/day and stopbands from [0,1/60] and [1/4,1/2] cycles/day. Set both stopband attenuations to 10 dB and the passband ripple tolerance to 1 dB.
fprintf('The order of the FIR filter is %d\n',length(Hd1.Numerator)-1); [b,a] = sos2tf(Hd2.sosMatrix,Hd2.ScaleValues); fprintf('The order of the IIR filter is %d\n',length(max(b,a))-1); [phifir,w] = phasez(Hd1,[],1); [phiiir,w] = phasez(Hd2,[],1);
plot(w,unwrap(phifir),'b'); hold on; plot(w,unwrap(phiiir),'r'); grid on; xlabel('Cycles/Day'); ylabel('Radians'); legend('FIR Equiripple Filter','IIR Butterworth Filter');
The IIR filter has a much lower order that the FIR filter. However, the FIR filter has a linear phase response over the passband, while the IIR filter does not. The FIR filter delays all frequencies in the filter passband equally, while the IIR filter does not. Additionally, the rate of change of the phase per unit of frequency is greater in the FIR filter than in the IIR filter. Design a lowpass FIR equiripple filter for comparison. The lowpass filter specifications are: passband [0,1/4] cycles/day, stopband attenuation equal to 10 dB, and the passband ripple tolerance set to 1 dB.
ylow = filter(Hdlow,y);
Plot the PSD estimate of the bandpass IIR filter output. You can replace yiir with yfir in the following code to view the PSD estimate of the FIR bandpass filter output.
The PSD estimate shows the bandpass filter attenuates the low-frequency trend and high-frequency noise. Plot the first 120 days of FIR and IIR filter output.
plot(n(1:120),yfir(1:120),'b'); hold on; plot(n(1:120),yiir(1:120),'r'); xlabel('Days'); axis([1 120 -2.8 2.8]); legend('FIR bandpass filter output','IIR bandpass filter output',... 'Location','SouthEast');
The increased phase delay in the FIR filter is evident in the filter output. Plot the lowpass FIR filter output superimposed on the superposition of the 7-day and 30-day cycles for comparison.
plot(n,x,'k'); hold on; plot(n,ylow,'r'); set(gca,'xlim',[1 365]); legend('7-day and 30-day cycles','FIR lowpass filter output',... 'Location','NorthWest'); xlabel('Days');
You can see in the preceding plot that the low-frequency trend is evident in the lowpass filter output. While the lowpass filter preserves the 7-day and 30-day cycles, the bandpass filters perform better in this example because the bandpass filters also remove the low-frequency trend. Design and implement the bandpass Butterworth (IIR) filter with the interactive tool fdatool. Start FDATool by entering
fdatool
at the command line. Set the Response Type to Bandpass. Set the Design Method to IIR and select the Butterworth design. Under Filter Order, select Minimum order. Under Frequency Specifications. Set Units to Hz, Fs: to 1 , Fstop1: to 1/60, Fpass1: to 1/40, Fpass2: to 1/4, and Fstop2: to 1/2. UnderMagnitude Specifications, set Astop1: and Astop2: to 10 and Apass: to 1.
Click Design Filter. Select File > Export... to export your IIR filter to the MATLAB workspace as coefficients or a filter object. In this example, export the filter as an object. Specify the variable name as Hd3.
Click Export. Filter the input signal in the command window with the exported filter object.
yfilt = filter(Hd3,x);
Select File > Generate MATLAB Code to generate a MATLAB function to create a filter object using your specifications. You can also use the interactive tool filterbuilder to design your filter.
Zero-Phase Filtering
These examples show you how to perform zero-phase filtering. The signal and filters are described in Lowpass FIR Filter Window Method and Bandpass Filters Minimum-Order FIR and IIR Systems. Repeat the signal generation and lowpass filter design with fir1 and fdesign.lowpass. You do not have to execute the following code if you already have these variables in your workspace. rng default;
d = fdesign.lowpass('N,Fc',20,150,Fs); Hd = design(d,'window','Window',kaiser(21,3)); Filter the data using filter. Plot the first 100 points of the filter output along with a superimposed sinusoid with the
same amplitude and initial phase as the input signal.
yout = filter(Hd,x); xin = cos(2*pi*100*t); plot(t(1:100),xin(1:100),'k'); hold on; grid on; plot(t(1:100),yout(1:100),'r','linewidth',2); xlabel('Seconds'); ylabel('Amplitude'); legend('Input Sine Wave','Filtered Data',... 'Location','NorthEast');
Looking at the initial 0.01 seconds of the filtered data, you see that the output is delayed with respect to the input. The delay appears to be approximately 0.01 seconds, which is almost 1/2 the length of the FIR filter in samples (10*0.001). This delay is due to the filter's phase response. The FIR filter in these examples is a type I linear-phase filter. The group delay of the filter is 10 samples. Plot the group delay using fvtool. fvtool(Hd,'analysis','grpdelay'); In many applications, phase distortion is acceptable. This is particularly true when phase response is linear. In other applications, it is desirable to have a filter with a zero-phase response. A zero-phase response is not technically possibly in a noncausal filter. However, you can implement zero-phase filtering using a causal filter with filtfilt. Filter the input signal using filtfilt. Plot the responses to compare the filter outputs obtained with filter and filtfilt.
yzp = filtfilt(Hd.Numerator,1,x);
% or yzp = filtfilt(b,1,x);
In the preceding figure, you can see that the output of filtfilt does not exhibit the delay due to the phase response of the FIR filter. The IIR bandpass filter designed in Bandpass Filters Minimum-Order FIR and IIR Systems is a biquad filter. Stated equivalently, the IIR filter is in the form of cascaded second-order sections. To implement zero-phase filtering with a discrete-time biquad filter, you must input the matrix of second-order sections and the gain values for each of those sections into filtfilt. Zero phase filter the data in Bandpass Filters Minimum-Order FIR and IIR Systems with the IIR bandpass filter. For convenience, the code to generate the signal and filter is repeated. You do not have to execute this code if you already have these variables in your workspace. Generate the data.
d = fdesign.bandpass('Fst1,Fp1,Fp2,Fst2,Ast1,Ap,Ast2',... 1/60,1/40,1/4,1/2,10,1,10,1); Hd2 = design(d,'butter'); Use filtfilt to zero-phase filter the input. Input the matrix of second-order sections and the gain (scale) value of 1 along with your signal. yzpiir = filtfilt(Hd2.sosMatrix,Hd2.ScaleValues,y);