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Forum Thread Details
  • State Suggested Answer
  • Replies 9 replies
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  • sine
  • pwm
  • raspberry_pi
  • wave
  • pyhton
Related

GPIO produce sine wave

Former Member
Former Member over 11 years ago

Hi

I need the Pi to generate a pulsing sine wave signal. I managed to generate wave signal from the GPIO pin but only square wave with High-Low waveform. So I am wondering if the GPIO can generate the sine wave signal that I need?

Also I have been using the function GPIO.PWM(pin,frequency) i was using it to generate 20kHz signal but when I check the output on oscilloscope it was only 862 Hz is this the maximum frequency of the PWM function or is there something wrong with my pi.

 

I read somewhere the using python Rpi.GPIO library I can output up to around 40 kHz, and I was able to actually output 50 kHz from it but don't know why the it wouldn't output 20 kHz using the GPIO.PWM ().

Can anyone tell me why or suggest another method that I could use?

 

Thank you!

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 11 years ago

    If you are able to generate square wave . If you use a capacitor in parallel , then you will get a sine wave because it will filter out all the high frequency components.

     

    Regards,

    Ali

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  • Former Member
    0 Former Member over 11 years ago

    If you are able to generate square wave . If you use a capacitor in parallel , then you will get a sine wave because it will filter out all the high frequency components.

     

    Regards,

    Ali

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  • rew
    0 rew over 11 years ago in reply to Former Member

    an RC-filter (Resistor in seriers, capacitor to ground) will fiter out the higher frequencies. The square wave will look more like a sine wave, provided you chose the R and C appropriately. But it won't be a perfect sine wave.

     

    We've asked the Thread-Starter to be more specific as to what he needs. The RC might give an  accurate enough sine wave. Or maybe not.....

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