Patent classifications
H03F2200/555
APPARATUS AND METHODS FOR COMPENSATING SUPPLY SENSITIVE CIRCUITS FOR SUPPLY VOLTAGE VARIATION
Apparatus and methods for compensating supply sensitive circuits for supply voltage variation are provided. In certain embodiments, an electronic system includes a power supply that outputs a supply voltage having a nominal voltage level, a supply conductor for routing the supply voltage, and a group of integrated circuits (ICs) that each receive the supply voltage from the supply conductor. Each IC includes a supply sensing circuit that generates a sense signal based on a local voltage level of the supply voltage at the IC, a bias control circuit that adjusts a bias signal based on the sense signal to account for a difference between the nominal voltage level and the local voltage level of the supply voltage, and a signal processing circuit biased by the bias signal.
DOHERTY POWER AMPLIFIERS AND DEVICES WITH LOW VOLTAGE DRIVER STAGE IN CARRIER-PATH AND HIGH VOLTAGE DRIVER STAGE IN PEAKING-PATH
Doherty power amplifiers and devices are described with a low voltage driver stage in a carrier-path and a high voltage driver stage in a peaking-path. In an embodiment a Doherty power amplifier has a carrier-path driver stage transistor configured to operate using a first bias voltage at the driver stage output, and a final stage transistor configured to operate using a second bias voltage at the final stage output. A peaking-path driver stage transistor is configured to operate using a third bias voltage at the driver stage output, and a final stage transistor electrically coupled to the driver stage output of the peaking-path driver stage transistor is configured to operate using a fourth bias voltage at the final stage output, wherein the third bias voltage is at least twice as large as the first bias voltage.
AMPLIFYING CIRCUIT AND AMPLIFYING DEVICE WITH START-UP FUNCTION
An amplifying circuit is provided. The amplifying circuit includes a bias circuit receiving an operating voltage from a power supply circuit and generating a first bias voltage, a resistance circuit connected between the bias circuit and a gate node and transferring the first bias voltage to the gate node, a start-up circuit generating a high-level start-up voltage and supplying the start-up voltage to the gate node before the operating voltage is supplied, based on a control signal, and an amplifier started-up by receiving the start-up voltage and then receiving the operating voltage and the first bias voltage to amplify a high frequency signal input through the gate node.
Power amplifier
A power amplifier, for a transmitter circuit is disclosed, which comprises at least one field-effect transistor having a gate terminal and a bulk terminal. The at least one field-effect transistor is configured to receive an input voltage at the gate terminal and a dynamic bias voltage at the bulk terminal. The power amplifier comprises a bias-voltage generation circuit configured to generate the dynamic bias voltage as a nonlinear function of an envelope of input signal. The input voltage is a linear function of the input signal. The bias-voltage generation circuit comprises a rectifier circuit configured to generate a rectified input voltage and an amplifier circuit, operatively connected to the rectifier circuit, configured to generate the dynamic bias voltage based on the rectified input voltage. The amplifier circuit is a variable-gain amplifier circuit and the power amplifier comprises a control circuit configured to tune the gain of the amplifier circuit.
Multi-stage decoupling networks integrated with on-package impedance matching networks for RF power amplifiers
An electronic package houses one or more RF amplifier circuits. At least one of an input or output impedance matching network integrated on the package and electrically coupled to the gate or drain bias voltage connection, respectively, of an amplifier circuit, includes a multi-stage decoupling network. Each multi-stage decoupling network includes two or more decoupling stages. Each decoupling stage of the multi-stage decoupling network includes a resistance, inductance, and capacitance, and is configured to reduce impedance seen by the amplifier circuit at a different frequency below an operating band of the amplifier circuit. Bias voltage connections to the impedance matching circuits may be shared, and may be connected anywhere along the multi-stage decoupling network.
DEVICES AND METHODS FOR DETECTING A SATURATION CONDITION OF A POWER AMPLIFIER
The present disclosure relates to devices and methods for detecting and preventing occurrence of a saturation state in a power amplifier. A power amplifier module can include a power amplifier including a cascode transistor pair. The cascode transistor pair can include a first transistor and a second transistor. The power amplifier module can include a current comparator configured to compare a first base current of the first transistor and a second base current of the second transistor to obtain a comparison value. The power amplifier module can include a saturation controller configured to supply a reference signal to an impedance matching network based on the comparison value. The impedance matching network can be configured to modify a load impedance of a load line in electrical communication with the power amplifier based at least in part on the reference signal.
BIAS CIRCUIT FOR A DOHERTY AMPLIFIER, AND A WIRELESS COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
A bias circuit for a Doherty amplifier, characterized by comprising: an input port with an input impedance, wherein the input port is configured to receive a bias signal from a power supply; a first output port configured to provide a bias signal to an amplifier; a second output port configured to provide a bias signal to an amplifier; a two port impedance transformer with an input connected to the first input port, and an output of the two port impedance transformer having an intermediate impedance; an in-phase N-port dividing impedance transformer with an input connected to the output of the two port impedance transformer, wherein the in-phase N-port dividing impedance transformer comprises: a first output connected to the first output port having a first output impedance; and a second output connected to the second output port having a second output impedance.
CURRENT GENERATION DEVICE
In an embodiment, a device for generating a first current from a second current, comprises: an output transistor configured to generate the first current; a first circuit configured to generate a third current representative of the second current and to draw it from a first node; a second circuit configured to generate a fourth current representative of the first current and to supply it to the first node; and a third circuit receiving a fifth current representative of a difference between the third and fourth currents, the third circuit being configured to generate a sixth current representative of the fifth current and to draw it from a control terminal of the output transistor.
HIGH EFFICIENCY ULTRA-WIDEBAND AMPLIFIER
An amplifier comprising a main branch amplifier and an auxiliary branch amplifier, wherein one branch is a constant current-biased branch, and another branch is a voltage biased branch, with the branches connected in cascode configuration to form a load modulated amplifier.
CURRENT MIRROR ARRANGEMENTS WITH SEMI-CASCODING
An example current mirror arrangement includes a current mirror circuit, configured to receive an input current signal at an input transistor Q1 and output a mirrored signal at an output transistor Q2. The arrangement further includes a semi-cascoding circuit that includes transistors Q3, Q4, and a two-terminal passive network. The transistor Q3 is coupled to, and forms a cascode with, the output transistor Q2. The transistor Q4 is coupled to the transistor Q3. The base/gate of the transistor Q3 is coupled to a bias voltage Vref, and the base/gate of the transistor Q4 is coupled to a bias voltage Vref1 via the two-terminal passive network. Nonlinearity of the output current from such a current mirror arrangement may be reduced by selecting appropriate impedance of the two-terminal passive network and selecting appropriate bias voltages Vref and Vref1.