Frequency-shaping, or parasitic reactances in output transformers in the extremes of their response band, shifts phase because they attenuate response.
Do you mean that the attenuation is causing the phase shift?
No, attenuation does not
cause phase shift; they are 2 results of the interaction of reactance and resistance which happen to occur simultaneously, and have a set, repeatable relationship.
Imagine a 2-resistor voltage divider, with no reactance anywhere in the circuit. Regardless of applied frequency the attenuation of the signal is the same, and the phase of the attenuated signal is exactly the same as that of the original signal.
Now imagine a voltage divider made of a resistor and a reactive part (could be a cap or an inductor; we'll talk about a cap here). Because the reactance changes with frequency (i.e., looks like a different number of ohms, and is frequency-dependent) there is changing attenuation with frequency. If you want to know the phase of the resulting voltage output, you do vector algebra to combine the resistive and reactance portions of impedance and determine the resulting phase.
In a purely resistive circuit, the phase angle of voltage and current is 0-degrees; voltage and current waveforms are in lock-step with each other.
In a purely capacitive circuit, voltage lags current by 90 degrees (or the applied voltage appears to have been phase-shifted by -90 degrees). But you never absolutely zero-resistance in any circuit, so the phase shift of voltage across the total impedance is something between 0- and 90-degrees. When capacitive reactance equals the circuit resistance, the phase shift is 45-degrees. This is also the point where the circuit response is -3dB, and a the handy memory tool. When the attenuation is less than -3dB, phase shift is between 0-45 degrees, and when the attenuation is greater than -3dB, the phase shift is between 45-90 degrees.
To determine the amount of phase shift
at a single frequency, perform vector algebra. See Chapter 4 of
NEETS Module 2 for explanation and examples (but do read the whole thing, as well as Modules 1, and maybe 3-8 or 9, plus 16, 19 & 21).
Scroll down to the Interactive RLC Graph on
this page. You only get to use resistance/reactance up to 10Ω, but you can mentally scale that up by adding zeros. Slide the Blue Dot (Inductive Reactance) to zero. Leave the Red Dot (Resistance) on 10Ω. Slide the Green Dot (Capacitive Reactance) down to 10Ω. The diagonal Black Line is the resulting Impedance (in this case 14.15Ω), and the angle between the horizontal resistance axis and the Black Line is the resulting phase angle (in this case, minus 45-degrees because resistance and reactance are equal).
Trigonometry comes back to haunt you: You could have used the Pythagorean Theorem to find the total impedance. Impedance = √(X
c2 + R
2) -> √(10Ω
2 + 10Ω
2) = √(200) = 14.1421356... (Looks like the graphing tool rounds up) You could find the phase angle by calculating tan
-1 -X
c/R -> tan
-1 -10Ω/10Ω = tan
-1 -1 = -45 degrees.
Keystrokes on your computer's calculator will be: [-] [X
c] [/] [R], then [Inv], then [tan] ([tan] may have changed to [tan
-1] after hitting [Inv]).
Since the total impedance calculation and the phase-angle calculation are based on X
c (capacitive reactance in ohms), and that reactance changes depending on the applied frequency, then both the total impedance (and attenuation if this is a voltage divider) and phase angle will change accordingly. Which is why I said attenuation does not
cause phase shift, but it correlates to phase shift; they're both happening simultaneously.