Substitute s for jw in a transfer function

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Hi, I have a transfer function define by
G = ([1 2],[3 4 5]) (as an example)
I want to change the 's' for 'jw'. Does anyone know how to do it?
I've tried subs(G,{s},{1j*omega}) but it didn't work.

Accepted Answer

Jon
Jon on 11 Jan 2021
Hi,
I think you mean that you define your transfer function using (you forgot the tf() in your example)
G = tf([1 2],[3 4 5]) %(as an example))
Then if you want to evaluate it at a particular frequency, that is a specific value of jw, you can use
w = 3; % for example 3 radians/sec
val = evalfr(G,j*w)
You can also use the freqresp function to evaluate it for multiple values along the jw axis
  2 Comments
Jon
Jon on 11 Jan 2021
If as Pat suggest you don't have the Control System Toolbox, you can do this a little more neatly using
num = [1,2]
den = [3,4,5]
w = 3; % for example 3 rad/s
val = polyval(num,j*w)/polyval(den,j*w)
You can also use i*w MATLAB defines by default i and j as sqrt(-1)

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More Answers (1)

Pat Gipper
Pat Gipper on 11 Jan 2021
Matlab uses the reserved constant "i" which is set equal to sqrt(-1). Using your transfer function as defined try the following which will result in the variable "G" which will be a complex number.
num=1*i*w+2;den=3*(i*w)^2+4*i*w+5;G=num/den;
  2 Comments
Pat Gipper
Pat Gipper on 11 Jan 2021
Edited: Pat Gipper on 11 Jan 2021
Based on some of your other questions it looks like you don't have access to the Control Systems Toolbox. So you need to do this arithmetic explicitly.
Inés Bodoque
Inés Bodoque on 11 Jan 2021
Thank you for your answer! I need this for a project from one of my subjects and I am not allowed to use the Control Systems Toolbox, that's why I have to do it this way

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