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Optimal IIR filter design with prescribed group-delay
Syntax
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a) [num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w) [num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius) [num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p) [num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p,dens) [num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p,dens,initden) [num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p,dens,initden,tau) [num,den,tau] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w)
Description
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a)
returns an allpass IIR filter of order n (n must be even) which is the best approximation to the relative group-delay response described by f and a in the least-pth sense. f is a vector of frequencies between 0 and 1 and a is specified in samples. The vector edges specifies the band-edge frequencies for multi-band designs. iirgrpdelay uses a constrained Newton-type algorithm. Always check your resulting filter using grpdelay or freqz.
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w)
uses the weights in w to weight the error. w has one entry per frequency point and must be the same length length as f and a). Entries in w tell iirgrpdelay how much emphasis to put on minimizing the error in the vicinity of each specified frequency point relative to the other points.
f and a must have the same number of elements. f and a can contains more elements than the vector edges contains. This lets you use f and a to specify a filter that has any group-delay contour within each band.
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius)
returns a filter having a maximum pole radius equal to radius, where 0<radius<1. radius defaults to 0.999999. Filters whose pole radius you constrain to be less than 1.0 can better retain transfer function accuracy after quantization.
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p),
where p is a two-element vector [pmin pmax], lets you determine the minimum and maximum values of p used in the least-pth algorithm. p defaults to [2 128] which yields filters very similar to the L-infinity, or Chebyshev, norm. pmin and pmax should be even. If p is the string 'inspect', no optimization occurs. You might use this feature to inspect the initial pole/zero placement.
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p,dens)
specifies the grid density dens used in the optimization process. The number of grid points is (dens*(n+1)). The default is 20. dens can be specified as a single-element cell array. The grid is not equally spaced.
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p,dens,initden)
allows you to specify the initial estimate of the denominator coefficients in vector initden. This can be useful for difficult optimization problems. The pole-zero editor in the Signal Processing Toolbox can be used for generating initden.
[num,den] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w,radius,p,dens,initden,tau)
allows the initial estimate of the group delay offset to be specified by the value of tau, in samples.
[num,den,tau] = iirgrpdelay(n,f,edges,a,w)
returns the resulting group delay offset. In all cases, the resulting filter has a group delay that approximates [a + tau]. Allpass filters can have only positive group delay and a non-zero value of tau accounts for any additional group delay that is needed to meet the shape of the contour specified by (f,a). The default for tau is max(a).
Hint: If the zeros or poles cluster together, your filter order may be too low or the pole radius may be too small (overly constrained). Try increasing n or radius.
For group-delay equalization of an IIR filter, compute a by subtracting the filter's group delay from its maximum group delay. For example,
[be,ae] = ellip(4,1,40,0.2); f = 0:0.001:0.2; g = grpdelay(be,ae,f,2); % Equalize only the passband. a = max(g)-g; [num,den]=iirgrpdelay(8, f, [0 0.2], a);
See Also
freqz Frequency response of digital filters.
filter Filter data with a recursive (IIR) or nonrecursive (FIR)
filter.
grpdelay Average filter delay (group delay).
iirlpnorm Least p-norm optimal IIR filter design.
iirlpnormc Constrained least p-norm optimal IIR filter design.
zplane Zero-pole plot.
| ifir | iirlp2bp | ![]() |