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EC339-Lecture 3

Applied control

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views

EC339-Lecture 3

Applied control

Uploaded by

Keroles Sabry
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Arab Academy for Science, Technology and Maritime Transport

Electronics and Communications Engineering Department

Electronics 2

Lecture 3
Dr. Hassan Eldib
Voltage Divider

• We will start by considering very simple circuits


• Consider the voltage divider shown here

– from our earlier consideration of the


circuit
Z2
vo = vi 
Z1 + Z 2
– rearranging, the gain of the circuit is
vo Z2
=
vi Z1 + Z 2
– this is also called the
transfer function of the circuit

Dr. Hassan Eldib 2


L & C Reactance

• The reactance of both inductors and capacitance


is frequency dependent and we know that

Z L = j L
1
ZC =
j C

Dr. Hassan Eldib 3


Voltage Gain

• Clearly the transfer function is


vo ZR R 1
= = =
vi Z R + Z C R + 1 1− j
1
j C CR

• At high frequencies
–  is large, voltage gain  1
• At low frequencies
–  is small, voltage gain → 0

Dr. Hassan Eldib 4


Bode Diagram
• Frequency response of the high-pass network

Dr. Hassan Eldib 5


Magnitude of Voltage Gain
• Since the denominator has
real and imaginary parts, the
magnitude of the voltage gain is
1
Voltage gain =
2
 1 
1 +
2

 CR 

• When 1/CR = 1
1 1
Voltage gain = = = 0.707
1+ 1 2

• This is a halving of power, or a fall in gain of 3 dB

Dr. Hassan Eldib 6


Cut-off Frequency
• The half power point is the cut-off frequency of
the circuit
– the angular frequency C at which this occurs is given
by 1
=1
cCR
1 1
c = = rad/s
CR 
– where  is the time constant of the CR network. Also
c 1
fc = = Hz
2 2CR

Dr. Hassan Eldib 7


The Decibel (dB)
• The decibel is a common unit of measurement of voltage gain
and frequency response. It is a logarithmic measurement of the
ratio of one power to another power or one voltage to another
voltage.
• The formulas below are used for calculation of decibels for
power gain and voltage gain.
Ap(db) = 10 log Ap
Av(db) = 20 log Av
• If |Av| is > 1, dB gain is +ve. If |Av| is < 1, dB gain is –ve and
usually called attenuation.

Dr. Hassan Eldib 8


Amplifier gain vs frequency

Midband range

Gain falls of due to the effects


of transistor stray (parasitic)
capacitance

Gain falls of due to the effects of


coupling and by-pass capacitors

f BW = f H − f L

Dr. Hassan Eldib 9


Definitions
• Frequency response of an amplifier is the graph of its gain
versus the frequency.

• Cutoff frequencies : the frequencies at which the voltage gain


equals 0.707 of its maximum value. At this point the output
power drops by 3 dB. [in real number, 0.5 of it’s midrange
value.

• Bandwidth : the band between upper and lower cutoff


frequencies

Dr. Hassan Eldib 10


Low Frequency

• At low frequency range, the gain falloff due to coupling


capacitors and bypass capacitors.

• As signal frequency decreases , the reactance of the coupling


capacitor XC increases, and no longer behave as short circuits.

Dr. Hassan Eldib 11


Low frequency amplifier response (example)
• At the low frequency ac equivalent circuit of a capacitor coupled
amplifier, we can see there are three RC circuits that will limit low
frequency response. The input at the base, the output at the collector,
and the emitter.

Input RC Circuit
(coupling capacitor) Output RC Circuit
(coupling capacitor)
Bypass RC Circuit

Dr. Hassan Eldib 12


Short-circuit time-constant method (SCTC)

• To determine the lower-cutoff frequency having n


coupling and bypass capacitors:

n
1
L  
i =1 RiS Ci

RiS = resistance at the terminals of the ith capacitor Ci with all


the other capacitors replaced by short circuits.

Dr. Hassan Eldib 13


Example 1: Common-emitter Amplifier

VCC = 12V

Given :
 = 100 R1 RC C2
30 k
4.3 k vO
r = 1.45 k
RS C1 0.1 F
RL
1 k 2 F
100 k
vS R2
RE C3
10 k 10 F
1.3 k

Dr. Hassan Eldib 14


Example 1: Low-frequency ac equivalent circuit

C2
vo
RS C1

RC RL
vs RB
RE C3

In the above circuit, there are 3 capacitors (coupling plus bypass


capacitors). Hence we need to find 3 resistances at the terminals of the
3 capacitors in order to find the lower cut-off frequency of the amplifier
circuit.

Dr. Hassan Eldib 15


Example 1: Circuit for finding R1S

RinCE

RS R1S

Replacing C2
RC RL
and C3 by
short circuits
RB

R1S = RS + (RB RinCE ) = RS + (RB r ) = 1000 + (7500 1450) = 2220 

where RB = R1 R2 = 7500

1 1
= = 225 rad / s
R1S C1 (2.22 k )(2.00F )

Dr. Hassan Eldib 16


Example 1: Circuit for finding R2S

RoutCE

Replacing C1
and C3 by R2S
short circuits RC
RL
RS RB

R2 S = RL + RC = 100 k + 4.3 k = 104 k

1 1
= = 96.1 rad / s
R2 S C2 (104 k)(0.100F )
Dr. Hassan Eldib 17
Example 1: Circuit for finding R3S

RTH

Replacing C1
and C2 by
RC||RL
short circuits
RS RB
RoutCC is the equivalent RE R3S
resistance reflected into
the emitter circuit RoutCC

r + RTH 1450 + 882


R3 S = RE RoutCC = RE = 1300 = 22.7 
 +1 101
RTH = RS RB = 882
1 1
= = 4410 rad / s
R3S C3 (22.7)(10F )
Dr. Hassan Eldib 18
Example 1: Estimation of L

3
1
L   = 225 + 96.1 + 4410 = 4730rad / s
i =1 RiS Ci

L
fL = = 753 Hz
2

Dr. Hassan Eldib 19


Example 2: Common-base Amplifier

RS 4.7 F 1 F
vO
100  C1 C2
RE RC RL
vS 43 k 22 k 75 k

-VEE +VCC

Given :
r = 26 
 = 100

Dr. Hassan Eldib 20


Example 2: Low-frequency ac equivalent circuit

vo
RS C2
C1
RC RL
RE
vs

Dr. Hassan Eldib 21


Example 2: Circuit for finding R1S

RS R1S Replacing C2
by short
circuit
RE RC || RL

RinCB
RinCB is the equivalent
resistance reflected into
the emitter circuit  r 
R1S = RS + (RE RinCB )  RS +  RE  = 100 + (4300 0.26)  100 

 1 +  
1 1
= = 2.1310−3 rad / s
R1S C1 (100  )(4.7 F )

Dr. Hassan Eldib 22


Example 2: Circuit for finding R2S

RoutCB R2S
Replacing C1
by short circuit
RS || RE RC RL

R2 S = RL + (RC RoutCB )  RL + RC = 75 k + 22 k = 97 k

1 1
= = 10.309 rad / s
R2 S C2 (97 k)(1F )

Dr. Hassan Eldib 23


Example 2: Estimation of L

2
1
L   = 2.1310−3 + 10.309  10.309 rad / s
i =1 RiS Ci

L
fL = = 1.64 Hz
2

Dr. Hassan Eldib 24


Example 3: Common-collector Amplifier

+VCC

RS C1

1 k 0.1 F C2
RB vO
vS
100 k 100 F
RL
RE
47 k
3 k

Given : -VEE

 = 100
r = 2.6 k

Dr. Hassan Eldib 25


Example 3: Low-frequency ac equivalent circuit

RS C1

C2

vs vo
RB
RE RL

Dr. Hassan Eldib 26


Example 3: Circuit for finding R1S

RinCC
RS R1S Replacing C2
by short circuit

RB
RE || RL RinCC is the equivalent
resistance reflected from
the emitter circuit
R1S = RS + (RB RinCC ) = RS + (RB r + ( + 1)(RE RL ))

= 74.43 k
1 1
= = 136.18 rad / s
R1S C1 (74.43 k )(0.1F )

Dr. Hassan Eldib 27


Example 3: Circuit for finding R2S

Replacing C1
by short circuit RoutCC
R2S

RTH = RS || RB
RE RL

RoutCC is the equivalent


resistance reflected into
the emitter circuit
 RTH + r 
R2 S = RL + (RE RoutCC ) = RL +  RE
 

  +1 
= 47.038k
1 1
= = 0.213 rad / s
R2 S C2 (47.038 k )(100F )

Dr. Hassan Eldib 28


Example 3: Estimation of L

2
1
L   = 136.18 + 0.213 = 136.393rad / s
i =1 RiS Ci

L
fL = = 21.7 Hz
2

Dr. Hassan Eldib 29


Gain-bandwidth Product

• Gain-bandwidth product: constant value of the product of the


voltage gain and the bandwidth.

fT = Amid BW
• Unity-gain frequency : the frequency at which the amplifier’s
gain is 1

Dr. Hassan Eldib 30

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