A zero-phase filter is a special case of a linear-phase filter
in which the phase slope is . The real impulse response
of a zero-phase filter is even.12.1That is, it satisfies
Note that a zero-phase filter cannot be causal (except in the
trivial case when the filter is a constant scale factor
). However, in many ``off-line'' applications, such
as when filtering a sound file on a computer disk, causality is not a
requirement, and zero-phase filters are usually preferred.
It is a well known Fourier symmetry that real, even signals have real, even Fourier transforms. Therefore,
This follows immediately from writing the DTFT of![]()
A real frequency response has phase zero when it is positive, and a
phase of radians when it is negative. Therefore, a ``zero-phase
filter,'' as we have defined [
] may actually have a
phase response of 0 or
at each frequency. In practice, the
filter is usually precisely zero-phase in all ``pass bands'', while it
switches between 0 and
in the stop bands (frequency intervals
where the gain is desired to be zero). A better name, in general,
would be piecewise constant-phase filter. For any real filter,
the constant phase can be either 0 or
. Similarly, the term
``linear phase'' could be sharpened to ``linear-phase with
discontinuities by any multiple of
radians''.
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Figure 11.1 shows the impulse response and frequency response of a length 11 zero-phase FIR lowpass filter designed using the Remez exchange algorithm.12.2 The Matlab code for designing this filter is as follows:
N = 11; % filter length - must be odd b = [0 0.1 0.2 0.5]*2; % band edges M = [1 1 0 0 ]; % desired band values h = remez(N-1,b,M); % Remez multiple exchange designThe impulse response h is returned in linear-phase form, so it must be left-shifted
Figure 11.2 shows the amplitude and phase responses of the FIR
filter. We see that each zero-crossing in the frequency response
results in a phase jump of radians. The phase is zero
throughout the pass-band, but in the stop-band, the phase
alternates between zero and
. In practice, very few ``zero-phase
filters'' have a truly zero phase response at all frequencies.
Instead, the phase typically alternates between zero and
, as
shown in Fig.11.2. However, the
phase values typically
occur only in the stop-band of the filter, i.e., at frequencies where
the amplitude response is so small that it can be neglected. At
frequencies for which the phase response is
, the filter may be
said to be ``inverting'', i.e., it negates the frequency components at
such frequencies.
In view of the foregoing, the term ``zero-phase filter'' is only
approximately descriptive. More precise terms would be
0-or--phase filter, even-impulse-response
filter, or real-frequency-response filter.