68,227 research outputs found

    Adaptive multichannel control of time-varying broadband noise and vibrations

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    This paper presents results obtained from a number of applications in which a recent adaptive algorithm for broadband multichannel active noise control is used. The core of the algorithm uses the inverse of the minimum-phase part of the secondary path for improvement of the speed of convergence. A further improvement of the speed of convergence is obtained by using double control filters for elimination of adaptation loop delay. Regularization was found to be necessary for robust operation. The regularization technique which is used preserves the structure to eliminate the adaptation loop delay. Depending on the application at hand, a number of extensions are used for this algorithm. For an application with rapidly changing disturbance spectra, the core algorithm was extended with an iterative affine projection scheme, leading to improved convergence rates as compared to the standard nomalized lms update rules. In another application, in which the influence of the parametric uncertainties was critical, the core algorithm was extended with low authority control loops operating at high sample rates. In addition, results of other applications are given, such as control of acoustic energy density and control of time-varying periodic and non-periodic vibrations

    Rapidly converging multichannel controllers for broadband noise and vibrations

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    Applications are given of a preconditioned adaptive algorithm for broadband multichannel active noise control. Based on state-space descriptions of the relevant transfer functions, the algorithm uses the inverse of the minimum-phase part of the secondary path in order to improve the speed of convergence. A further improvement of the convergence rate is obtained by using double control filters for elimination of adaptation loop delay. Regularization was found to be essential for robust operation. The particular regularization technique preserves the structure to eliminate the adaptation loop delay. Depending on the application at hand, a number of extensions are used for this algorithm, such as for applications with rapidly changing disturbance spectra, applications with large parametric uncertainty, applications with control of time-varying acoustic energy density

    Tunable n-path notch filters for blocker suppression: modeling and verification

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    N-path switched-RC circuits can realize filters with very high linearity and compression point while they are tunable by a clock frequency. In this paper, both differential and single-ended N-path notch filters are modeled and analyzed. Closed-form equations provide design equations for the main filtering characteristics and nonidealities such as: harmonic mixing, switch resistance, mismatch and phase imbalance, clock rise and fall times, noise, and insertion loss. Both an eight-path single-ended and differential notch filter are implemented in 65-nm CMOS technology. The notch center frequency, which is determined by the switching frequency, is tunable from 0.1 to 1.2 GHz. In a 50- environment, the N-path filters provide power matching in the passband with an insertion loss of 1.4ā€“2.8 dB. The rejection at the notch frequency is 21ā€“24 dB,P1 db> + 2 dBm, and IIP3 > + 17 dBm

    Harnessing optical micro-combs for microwave photonics

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    In the past decade, optical frequency combs generated by high-Q micro-resonators, or micro-combs, which feature compact device footprints, high energy efficiency, and high-repetition-rates in broad optical bandwidths, have led to a revolution in a wide range of fields including metrology, mode-locked lasers, telecommunications, RF photonics, spectroscopy, sensing, and quantum optics. Among these, an application that has attracted great interest is the use of micro-combs for RF photonics, where they offer enhanced functionalities as well as reduced size and power consumption over other approaches. This article reviews the recent advances in this emerging field. We provide an overview of the main achievements that have been obtained to date, and highlight the strong potential of micro-combs for RF photonics applications. We also discuss some of the open challenges and limitations that need to be met for practical applications.Comment: 32 Pages, 13 Figures, 172 Reference

    Centralised and decentralised configurations for panels with piezoelectric actuators

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    This paper discusses configurations for controlling broadband noise using piezoelectrically excited panels. The configurations can be distinguished by the physical layout and by the control structure. The physical layout of the system has some influence on the complexity of the control algorithms. For particular actuator/sensor combinations and a particular control objective, the control architecture can be decentralized, using very simple feedback or feedforward controllers, at small performance loss when compared to a centralized architecture. For some applications that require a different control objective, an additional centralized or possibly distributed architecture could be beneficial. A hardware realization with an associated control framework that allows the implementation of such a combined centralized-decentralized architecture is shown. Examples that are given are an embedded central control unit with all electronics in a single module and a centralized-decentralized architecture with partly decentralized hardware that is integrated with structural parts

    Pseudo-noise test set for communication system evaluation

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    A test set for communications systems is described which includes a pseudo noise sequence generator providing a test signal that is fed to a pair of signal channels. The first channel includes a spectrum shaping filter and a conditioning amplifier. The second channel includes a variable delay circuit, a spectrum shaping filter matched to the first filter, and an amplifier. The output of the first channel was applied to the system under test. The output of the system and the output of the second channel are compared to determine the degree of distortion suffered by the test signal due to the communications system
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