Patent classifications
H03F2200/18
AUTO-BIAS CIRCUIT FOR STACKED FET POWER AMPLIFIER
The present disclosure relates to circuitry including an auto-bias circuit for a stacked FET power amplifier. The auto-bias circuit includes a dividing circuit and an averaging circuit. The dividing circuit is configured to receive a control signal with a control voltage and provide a first pre-gate signal having a first pre-gate voltage that corresponds to a fraction of the control voltage. The averaging circuit is configured to receive the control signal and a supply signal with a supply voltage and provide a second pre-gate signal having a second pre-gate voltage that corresponds to a fraction of a sum of the control voltage and the supply voltage. The stacked power amplifier includes a first FET in series with a second FET. The first FET receives a first gate signal derived from the first pre-gate signal. The second FET receives a second gate signal derived from the second pre-gate signal.
POWER AMPLIFIER CIRCUIT
A power amplifier circuit includes an amplifier transistor that amplifies a radio-frequency signal and outputs the radio-frequency signal, and a bias circuit that supplies a bias current to a base of the amplifier transistor. The bias circuit includes a bias current supply transistor, and an electrostatic capacity circuit whose electrostatic capacity varies in accordance with a temperature of the amplifier transistor and that is charged in a non-supply period during which the bias current is not supplied and discharges to a supply path for the bias current in a supply period during which the bias current is supplied. The supply period during which the bias current is supplied includes an amplification period during which the radio-frequency signal is amplified by the amplifier transistor. The bias current starts to be supplied before the amplifier transistor starts amplification.
Standby voltage condition for fast RF amplifier bias recovery
Various methods and circuital arrangements for biasing one or more gates of stacked transistors of an amplifier are possible where the amplifier is configured to operate in at least an active mode and a standby mode. Circuital arrangements can reduce bias circuit standby current during operation in the standby mode while allowing a quick recovery to normal operating conditions of the amplifier. Biasing an input transistor of the stacked transistors can be obtained by using a replica stack circuit.
Adaptive Bias Circuit For A Radio Frequency (RF) Amplifier
A circuit includes a first transistor comprising a gate, a source, and a drain, and an inductor coupled between the gate and the source of the first transistor, wherein the source is further coupled to a current source and the gate is further coupled to an amplifier.
Power amplifier circuit
A power amplifier circuit includes a power amplifier that amplifies the power of a high frequency signal, a power amplifier temperature detector circuit that includes a temperature detection element, the temperature detection element being thermally coupled with the power amplifier, a bias control signal generator circuit that generates a bias control signal for the power amplifier based on a temperature detection signal outputted from the power amplifier temperature detector circuit, and a regulator circuit that stabilizes the temperature detection signal. The power amplifier, the power amplifier temperature detector circuit, and the regulator circuit are formed in a first integrated circuit, and the bias control signal generator circuit is formed in a second integrated circuit. The substrate material (for example, GaAs) of the first integrated circuit has a higher cutoff frequency than the substrate material (for example, SOI) of the second integrated circuit.
DUAL OUTPUT RF LNA
RF receive circuitry, which includes a first output impedance matching circuit coupled to a first alpha output of a first alpha LNA, a second output impedance matching circuit coupled to a first beta output of a first beta LNA, and a first dual output RF LNA, is disclosed. The first dual output RF LNA includes the first alpha LNA, the first beta LNA, and a first gate bias control circuit, which is coupled between a first alpha input of the first alpha LNA and ground; is further coupled between a first beta input of the first beta LNA and the ground; is configured to select one of enabled and disabled of the first alpha LNA using an alpha bias signal via the first alpha input; and is further configured to select one of enabled and disabled of the first beta LNA using a beta bias signal via the first beta input.
Modulated Supply Amplifier with Adjustable Input Parameter Configuration
An amplifier may include control circuitry that may track a first input signal parameter and, in response, adjust a value of a second input parameter. Input parameter tracking and adjustment may facilitate control of output parameters for the amplifier. For example, an envelope-tracking amplifier may track input signal amplitude and adjust other input parameters in response. The adjustments may facilitate control of output parameters, such as gain or efficiency. The amplifier may further include calibration circuitry to determine adjustment responses to various tracked input parameters.
Apparatus and method for gallium nitride (GaN) amplifiers
A wide bandgap voltage reference circuit generates a temperature stable negative bias reference voltage for use in wide bandgap circuits. The reference circuit uses field effect transistor (FET) based source feedback. It can also be used as source feedback in high power high bandgap device applications, where constant current is required over process and thermal variations.
POWER CONTROL METHOD, DEVICE AND COMMUNICATION TERMINAL FOR IMPROVING POWER AMPLIFIER SWITCH SPECTRUM
A power control method and device for improving radio-frequency power amplifier (RF PA) switch spectrum, the method comprising the following steps: (a) detecting the gate voltage and drain voltage, or the gate voltage and supply voltage (vdd) of a pass element (105) to obtain the saturation information of the pass element (105); (b) if the saturation information indicates that the pass element (105) is about to leave the saturation working area, shunting the drain current of the pass element (105) to the error amplifier (102) to reduce the drain output voltage, thus reducing the variation of the output voltage, preventing the output voltage from quickly approaching the supply voltage (vdd), maintaining the saturation of the pass element (105), and improving the switch spectrum characteristics of RF PA.
SPLIT CASCODE CIRCUITS AND RELATED COMMUNICATION RECEIVER ARCHITECTURES
Split cascade circuits include multiple cascade paths coupled between voltage supply rails. Each cascade path includes a pair of controllable switches. A feedback path is provided for at least one of the cascade circuit paths. An active load circuit may also have a split cascade structure. Multiple-stage circuits, for implementation in Trans-Impedance Amplifiers (TIAs) or analog Receive Front-End modules (RXFEs), for example, include multiple stages of split cascade circuits.