- Sep 19, 2000
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This MAY be considered non-highly technical. But, either way, I felt this is the best place for this.
We are supposed to construct a 30Db (+- 3 Db) power amplifier. The amplifier has a 50 ohm input and a 8 ohm output impedance (IE, Line in from some source and speaker output).
So the thinking was, us a base amplifier for the first stage, a emitter amplifier for the second stage, and a collector amplifier for the second stage. I don't want to use the common versions of these amplifiers because I want to have some fine tuned control over the amplification.
Our teacher hasn't been very good at explaining how BJTs work. But here is my best shot and where I'm at, (any other information would be helpful).
First off, I wanted each stage to have a 10Db amplification, this should prevent the distortion that occurs when the transistor hits saturation. For the emitter (and here is where I'm stuck) I was thinking something like putting a 50 ohm in parallel with a capacitor and the voltage source. This, I believe, gives a ~ 50 ohm input impedance. The next problem I see is that I want to swamp out the r_pi so that I don't have a thermal dependency (or that I minimize this.) How do I go about doing this? Is it just attaching a resistor onto the base?
And finally, do I just use the resistor on the collector to determine the amplification? Is there any way to compensate for the varying betas, or do I need to just pick resistors based on the betas of the transistors I get?
Thanks for the help, and links or resources would be helpful (Though, the common base, emitter, and collector stuff is not so helpful. I get that, I just don't get swamping and when/how to correctly apply it)
We are supposed to construct a 30Db (+- 3 Db) power amplifier. The amplifier has a 50 ohm input and a 8 ohm output impedance (IE, Line in from some source and speaker output).
So the thinking was, us a base amplifier for the first stage, a emitter amplifier for the second stage, and a collector amplifier for the second stage. I don't want to use the common versions of these amplifiers because I want to have some fine tuned control over the amplification.
Our teacher hasn't been very good at explaining how BJTs work. But here is my best shot and where I'm at, (any other information would be helpful).
First off, I wanted each stage to have a 10Db amplification, this should prevent the distortion that occurs when the transistor hits saturation. For the emitter (and here is where I'm stuck) I was thinking something like putting a 50 ohm in parallel with a capacitor and the voltage source. This, I believe, gives a ~ 50 ohm input impedance. The next problem I see is that I want to swamp out the r_pi so that I don't have a thermal dependency (or that I minimize this.) How do I go about doing this? Is it just attaching a resistor onto the base?
And finally, do I just use the resistor on the collector to determine the amplification? Is there any way to compensate for the varying betas, or do I need to just pick resistors based on the betas of the transistors I get?
Thanks for the help, and links or resources would be helpful (Though, the common base, emitter, and collector stuff is not so helpful. I get that, I just don't get swamping and when/how to correctly apply it)
