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This section develops the properties of the Butterworth filter which has as its basic concept a Taylor's seriesapproximation to the desired frequency response. The measure of the approximation is the number of terms in the Taylor's seriesexpansion of the actual frequency response that can be made equal to those of the desired frequency response. The optimal or bestsolution will have the maximum number of terms equal. The Taylor's series is a power series expansion of a function in theform of

F ( ω ) = K 0 + K 1 ω + K 2 ω 2 + K 3 ω 3 +

where

K 0 = F ( 0 ) , K 1 = d F ( ω ) d ω | ω = 0 , K 2 = ( 1 / 2 ) d 2 F ( ω ) d ω 2 | ω = 0 , e t c . ,

with the coefficients of the Taylor's series being proportional to the various order derivatives of F ( ω ) evaluated at ω = 0 . A basic characteristic of this approach is that the approximation is all performed at onepoint, i.e., at one frequency. The ability of this approach to give good results over a range of frequencies depends on the analyticproperties of the response.

The general form for the squared-magnitude response is an even function of ω and, therefore, is a function of ω 2 expressed as

F F ( j ω ) = d 0 + d 2 ω 2 + d 4 ω 4 + . . . + d 2 M ω 2 M c 0 + c 2 ω 2 + c 4 ω 4 + . . . c 2 N ω 2 N

In order to obtain a solution that is a lowpass filter, the Taylor's series expansion is performed around ω = 0 , requiring that F F ( 0 ) = 1 and that F F ( j ) = 0 , (i.e., d 0 = c 0 , N > M , and c 2 N 0 ). This is written as

F F ( j ω ) = 1 + E ( ω )

Combining [link] and [link] gives

d 0 + d 2 ω 2 + + d 2 M w = c 0 + c 2 w + + c 2 N ω 2 N + E ( ω ) [ c 0 + c 2 ω + ]

The best Taylor's approximation requires that F F ( j ω ) and the desired ideal response have as many terms as possible equal in theirTaylor's series expansion at a given frequency. For a lowpass filter, the expansion is around ω = 0 , and this requires E ( ω ) have as few low-order ω terms as possible. This is achieved by setting

c 0 = d 0 , c 2 = d 2 , c 2 M = d 2 M , c 2 M + 2 = 0 , c 2 N - 2 = 0 , c 2 N 0

Because the ideal response in the passband is a constant, the Taylor's series approximation is often called “maximally flat".

[link] states that the numerator of the transfer function may be chosen arbitrarily. Then by setting the denominatorcoefficients of FF(s) equal to the numerator coefficients plus one higher-order term, an optimal Taylor's series approximation isachieved [link] .

Since the numerator is arbitrary, its coefficients can be chosen for a Taylor's approximation to zero at ω = . This is accomplished by setting d 0 = 1 and all other d's equal zero. The resulting magnitude-squared function is [link]

F F ( j ω ) = 1 1 + c 2 N ω 2 N

The value of the constant c 2 N determines at which value of ω the transition of passband to stopband occurs. For this development, it is normalized to c 2 N = 1 , which causes the transition to occur at ω = 1 . This gives the simple form for what is called the Butterworth filter

F F ( j ω ) = 1 1 + ω 2 N

This approximation is sometimes called “maximally flat" at both ω = 0 and ω = , since it is simultaneously a Taylor's series approximation to unity at ω = 0 and to zero at ω = . A graph of the resulting frequency response function is shown in [link] for several N .

Figure one is titled Order-N Analog Butterworth Filter. The horizontal axis is labeled Normalized Frequency, and ranges in value from 0 to 3 in increments of 0.5. The vertical axis is labeled Magnitude Response and ranges in value from 0 to 1 in increments of 0.2. There are three curves on this graph, and they all follow a similar shape. The curves begin at (0, 1), move horizontally for a portion, then begin decreasing at an increasing rate, then begin decreasing at a decreasing rate, and end somewhere in the bottom-right corner of the graph. The first curve, labeled N=1, is the most shallow, spending the least amount of time in horizontal segments and gradually decreasing, terminating at (3, 0.3). The second curve, labeled N=3, behaves in a more exaggerated fashion, with a longer initial horizontal portion, a steeper negative slope, and ending lower at (3, 0.1). The third curve, labeled N=11, has the strongest movements, with the longest initial horizontal segment, a nearly vertical decreasing segment, and a completed horizontal asymptote beginning at (1.7, 0) and continuing to the bottom-right corner of the graph.
Frequency Responses of the Butterworth Lowpass Filter Approximation

The characteristics of the normalized Butterworth filter frequency response are:

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Source:  OpenStax, Filter design - sidney burrus style. OpenStax CNX. May 07, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10701/1.1
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