The gyrator or positive impedance inverter is an electric circuit which inverts an impedance. In other words, it can make a capacitive circuit behave inductively, a bandpass filter behave like a band-stop filter, and so on. It is primarily used in active filter design and miniaturization.
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The primary use of a gyrator is to simulate an inductive element in a small electronic circuit or integrated circuit. Before the invention of the transistor, coils of wire with large inductance might be used in electronic filters. A real inductor can be replaced by a much smaller assembly containing a capacitor, operational amplifiers or transistors, and resistors. This is especially useful in integrated circuit technology.
Additionally, real capacitors are often much closer to "ideal capacitors" than real inductors are to "ideal inductors". Because of this, a synthetic inductor realized with a gyrator and a capacitor may, for certain applications, be closer to an "ideal inductor" than any real inductor can be. Thus, use of capacitors and gyrators may improve the quality of filter networks that would otherwise be built using inductors. Also, the Q factor of a synthesized inductor can be selected with ease.
Since gyrators use active components, they only function as a gyrator within the power supply range of the active element. Hence gyrators are usually not very useful for situations requiring simulation of the 'flyback' property of inductors, where a large voltage spike is caused when current is interrupted.
The circuit works by inverting the effect of the capacitor. The desired effect is an impedance of the form of an ideal inductor L with a series resistance RL:

From the diagram, the input impedance of the op-amp circuit is:

With RLRC = L, it can be seen that the impedance of the simulated inductor is the desired impedance in parallel with the impedance of C and R. In typical designs, R is chosen to be adequately large that the dominant term is:

This is the same as a resistance RL in series with an inductance L = RLRC.
In typical applications, both the inductance and the resistance of the gyrator is much greater than that of a real inductor. Gyrators can be used to create inductors from the microhenry range up to the megahenry range. Real inductors are typically limited to tens of henries. Real inductors have parasitic series resistances from hundreds of microohms through the low kiloohm range. The parasitic resistance of a gyrator depends on the topology, but with the topology shown, series resistances will typically range from tens of ohms through hundreds of kiloohms. Q of an LC filter can be either lower or higher than that of a real LC filter -- for the same frequency, the inductance is much higher, the capacitance much lower, but the resistance also higher. Gyrators will typically have higher accuracy than real inductors, due to the lower cost of precision capacitors and inductors.
The primary application for a gyrator is to reduce the size and cost of a system by removing the need for bulky, heavy and expensive inductors. For examples, RLC bandpass filter characteristics can be realized with capacitors, resistors and operational amplifiers without using inductors. Thus hi-fi graphic equalizers can be achieved with capacitors, resistors and operational amplifiers without using inductors because of the invention of "gyrator".
Gyrator circuits are extensively used in telephony devices that connect to a POTS system. This has allowed telephones to be much smaller, as the gyrator circuit carries the DC part of the line loop current, allowing the transformer carrying the AC voice signal to be much smaller, due to the massively reduced current. Circuitry in telephone exchanges has also been affected with gyrators being used in line cards. Gyrators are also widely used in hi-fi graphic equalizers, parametric equalizers, discrete bandstop and bandpass filters (such as rumble filters), and FM pilot tone filters.
There are many applications where it is not possible to use a gyrator to replace an inductor:
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