Confusing THD value for a Signal without Harmonics

When I use the offical example 'Determine THD for a Signal with Two Harmonics', I change the reference signal without harmonics and change the fundamental frequency from 100Hz to 8Hz, shown as follows:
t = 0:0.001:1-0.001;
x = 2*cos(2*pi*8*t);
Next, obtain the total harmonic distortion explicitly and using thd
r = thd(x,1000,10)
which yields r = -58.9845 dB, almost 11% THD rate!
Why a simple sinusoidal wave can cause such a THD rate using thd function?

 Réponse acceptée

David Goodmanson
David Goodmanson le 5 Mar 2024
Modifié(e) : David Goodmanson le 5 Mar 2024

1 vote

Hi weinan,
MODIFIED
The thd process widens the peaks, as shown by the plot produced when you invoke thd. When the frequency is as small as 8 Hz, the left hand side of the peak is cut off a 0 frequency (first plot) and the code picks the second peak at the nonpeak spot that you see. If you raise the frequency to, say, 20 Hz (second plot), all the peak is included in the plot and and the resulting thd is -296.41 dB which is small by any standard.

3 commentaires

Hi David, thx for your reply, what I am really confused is that why a simple sinusoidal wave without any harmonics can cause such a big THD rate (11%) using thd func, which, in theory, should be nearly 0% (very small negegative number in dB Unit) because no harmonics in this signal.
Hi weinan, after I understood the issue I went back and modified the answer.
Thx, David. From your point of view, it is due to the fact that the thd func somehow cuts off the fundamental and picks the wrong second harmonics when the fundamental frequency is selected small, which, in result, causing a relatively big thd rate.
Thx again!

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