Amplifier Circuit and Method
20170250657 · 2017-08-31
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03F1/0288
ELECTRICITY
H03F1/56
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/405
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/423
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H03F1/02
ELECTRICITY
H03F3/60
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An amplifier arrangement comprises N amplifier stages (10.sub.1 to 10.sub.N). The amplifier arrangement comprises a main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines coupled between an output of a main amplifier (10.sub.2) of the N amplifier stages (10.sub.1 to 10.sub.N) and an output node (15) of the amplifier arrangement, wherein the main cascade comprises N−1 quarter wavelength transmission lines (11.sub.1 to 11.sub.N−1). An output of one peaking amplifier (10.sub.N) of the N amplifier stages is coupled to the output node (15), and remaining peaking amplifiers (10.sub.1, 10.sub.3 to 10.sub.N−1) of the N amplifier stages coupled to respective junctions (12.sub.1 to 12.sub.N−2) in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines (11.sub.1 to 11.sub.N−1). The amplifier arrangement is further configured such that at least one of the quarter wavelength transmission lines in the main cascade is extended by a half wavelength transmission line (13) or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines, and/or at least one of the peaking amplifiers (10−.sub.1, 10.sub.3 to 10.sub.N) is coupled to its respective junction or output node (15) via a connecting half wavelength transmission line (13) or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
Claims
1-21. (canceled)
22. An amplifier arrangement, comprising: N amplifier stages coupled to an output impedance network, the output impedance network comprising a cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines; a main amplifier and a plurality of peaking amplifiers configured to operate in a Doherty mode of operation; wherein the amplifier arrangement is configured such that at least two peaking amplifiers are collectively driven by time-delayed versions of the same signal; and at least one of the following is true: at least one of the quarter wavelength transmission lines of the cascade is extended by a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; at least one of the peaking amplifiers is coupled to a respective junction or output node of the cascade via a connecting half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
23. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22: wherein the output impedance network comprises a cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines coupled between an output of the main amplifier of the N amplifier stages and an output node of the amplifier arrangement, wherein the cascade comprises N−1 quarter wavelength transmission lines; and wherein an output of one peaking amplifier of the N amplifier stages is coupled to the output node, and remaining peaking amplifiers of the N amplifier stages coupled to respective junctions in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines.
24. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22: wherein the amplifiers are substantially equally sized; or wherein at least one amplifier is sized differently to the remaining amplifiers.
25. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22: wherein an impedance of each section of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines is substantially equal; or wherein at least one section of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines comprises an impedance which is different to the remaining sections of the cascade.
26. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein each of the peaking amplifiers is coupled to a respective junction or output node of the cascade via a connecting half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
27. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein a half wavelength transmission line comprises: a single half wavelength transmission line; or a sectioned quarter wavelength transmission line cascade comprising first and second stages, each of the first and second stages coupled to receive first and second amplifiers.
28. The amplifier arrangement of claim 27, wherein at least one of the first and second amplifiers is coupled to a respective junction of the sectioned quarter wavelength transmission line cascade via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
29. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22: wherein the amplifier arrangement comprises four amplifier stages; and wherein a second section of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines is extended by a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
30. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22: wherein the amplifier arrangement comprises four amplifier stages; and wherein a first peaking amplifier is coupled to its respective junction of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
31. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein: the amplifier comprises four amplifier stages; a first peaking amplifier is coupled to its respective junction of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; a second peaking amplifier is coupled to its respective junction of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; and a third peaking amplifier is coupled to the output node via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
32. The amplifier arrangement of claim 31, wherein a second section of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines is extended by a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
33. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein a characteristic impedance of each successive stage in the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines is reduced towards the output node in relation to the parallel combination of preceding connecting transmission lines, whereby an outgoing transmission line has an admittance that is the sum of all incoming admittances.
34. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein a characteristic impedance of each of the half wavelength transmission lines is substantially equal.
35. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein: the amplifier comprises six amplifier stages; the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines comprises five stages; the main amplifier and first and second peaking amplifiers are substantially double the size of the remaining peaking amplifiers; and a fifth peaking amplifier is coupled to the output node via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
36. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein the main amplifier and first and second peaking amplifiers are substantially double the size of any remaining peaking amplifiers.
37. The amplifier arrangement of claim 36, wherein: the amplifier comprises six amplifier stages; the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines comprises five stages; a third peaking amplifier is coupled to its respective junction of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; a fourth peaking amplifier is coupled to its respective junction of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; a fifth peaking amplifier is coupled to the output node via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; and the main amplifier and first and second peaking amplifiers are substantially double the size of the third, fourth and fifth peaking amplifiers.
38. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein: each peaking amplifier is coupled via a half wavelength transmission line to its respective junction in the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines or output node; and the sizes of each of the amplifiers and their corresponding half wavelength line impedances are optimized in relation to a reactive loading effect of the half wavelength transmission lines.
39. The amplifier arrangement of claim 22, wherein: the amplifier arrangement is configured to operate at center frequency, or the amplifier is configured to operate away from center frequency.
40. A method of improving the efficiency of an amplifier arrangement comprising N amplifier stages coupled to an output impedance network, the impedance network comprising a cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines, wherein the amplifier arrangement comprises a main amplifier and a plurality of peaking amplifiers configured to operate in a Doherty mode of operation, the method comprising: collectively driving at least two peaking amplifiers by time-delayed versions of the same signal; at least one of: extending at least one of the quarter wavelength transmission lines in the cascade by a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; coupling at least one of the peaking amplifiers to its respective junction or an output node via a connecting half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
41. The method of claim 40: wherein the output impedance network comprises a cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines coupled between an output of the main amplifier of the N amplifier stages and an output node of the amplifier arrangement; wherein the cascade comprises N−1 quarter wavelength transmission lines; and wherein an output of one peaking amplifier of the N amplifier stages is coupled to the output node, and remaining peaking amplifiers of the N amplifier stages coupled to respective junctions in the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines.
42. The method of claim 40: wherein each peaking amplifier is coupled via a half wavelength transmission line; further comprising selecting the sizes of each of the amplifiers and/or their corresponding half wavelength line impedances in relation to a reactive loading effect of the half wavelength transmission lines.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017] For a better understanding of examples of the present invention, and to show more clearly how the examples may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, by way of example only, to the following drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0049]
[0050] One amplifier, for example the last amplifier stage, also known as the last peaking amplifier (i.e. the fourth amplifier stage 10.sub.4 of this example) is coupled to the output node 15. The output of the main amplifier (i.e. the second amplifier stage 10.sub.2 of this example) is coupled to the input of first section 11.sub.1 of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines. The remaining peaking amplifiers, for example the first and third peaking amplifiers (i.e. the first amplifier stage 10.sub.1 and the third amplifier stage 10.sub.3 of this example) are coupled to respective junctions 12.sub.1 and 12.sub.2 in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.3.
[0051] This type of amplifier arrangement is about optimal for 9 dB peak to average ratio (PAR) Rayleigh distributed amplitude signals. The target bandwidth is 50% (0.75 to 1.25 of center frequency).
[0052] With such an amplifier arrangement, the transition point varies between just below 0.38 to almost 0.43 within the 50% bandwidth, as illustrated by the curve labeled 6 in
[0053]
[0054] As will be described in greater detail below, the embodiments of the present invention provide a method to construct moderately wideband amplifiers, for example Doherty amplifiers. The amplifier arrangements described in the embodiments herein may be used as stand-alone methods to obtain consistent properties over the band when arbitrarily sized transistors are not available (for example when only one size is available), and may also be used to absorb parasitic components.
[0055] According to one aspect, a method consists of inserting half wavelength lines in a multistage Doherty amplifier structure, together with using the peaking amplifiers collectively for in-phase combining to yield maximum output power, for example by collectively driving at least two peaking amplifiers with time-delayed versions of the same signal. The half wavelength lines may be connected between a sub-amplifier and the main Doherty quarter wavelength cascade, and/or be added to one or more quarter wavelength lines in that cascade, as will be described in further detail in the embodiments below. It is noted that these extensions do not change the operation in the middle of the band, but add frequency-dependent reactive components at the junctions that can make the quarterwave stepped transformer action more wideband in the sense of having a high-efficiency transition point with small amplitude variations (ripple) within the bandwidth.
[0056]
[0057] It is also noted that the amplifier arrangement may comprise three or more amplifier stages.
[0058]
[0059] One amplifier, for example the last peaking amplifier (i.e. the fourth amplifier stage 10.sub.4 of this example) is coupled to the output node 15. Another amplifier, for example a second peaking amplifier (i.e. the second amplifier stage 10.sub.2 of this example) is coupled to the first section 11.sub.1 of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines. The remaining peaking amplifiers, for example the first and third peaking amplifiers (i.e. the first amplifier stage 10.sub.1 and the third amplifier stage 10.sub.3 of this example) are coupled to respective junctions 12.sub.1 and 12.sub.2 in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.3.
[0060] According to this embodiment, the second quarter wavelength transmission line 11.sub.2 of the main cascade (between the junctions 12.sub.1 and 12.sub.2 where the peaking amplifiers 10.sub.1 and 10.sub.3 are coupled) is extended by a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.1. In other words, this second section 11.sub.2 of the main cascade has a half wavelength extra compared to the unmodified amplifier of
[0061] It is noted that instead of an extension by half a wavelength, extension by multiples of half wavelength transmission lines may also be used, for example at center frequency. The additional transmission lines help pull up the frequency response where it would otherwise droop. This effect may generally increase with the distance from the center frequency, but also with the number of inserted half wavelength transmission lines. As such, a higher number can sometimes be preferable (for example in narrow band systems) to obtain a greater effect near center frequency.
[0062] Thus, in an example of an amplifier arrangement which comprises four amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.4, the second section 11.sub.2 of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines is extended by a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.1 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines. It is noted that other sections of the cascade may also be extended in this way, either in isolation or in combination. It is also noted that this extension of a section of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines may also be applied to amplifier arrangements having a different number of amplifier stages.
[0063] As can be seen from
[0064]
[0065] One amplifier, for example the last peaking amplifier (i.e. the fourth amplifier stage 10.sub.4 of this example) is coupled to the output node 15. Another amplifier, for example the main amplifier (i.e. the second amplifier stage 10.sub.2 of this example) is coupled to the first section 11.sub.1 of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines. Another peaking amplifier, for example the peaking amplifier of the third amplifier stage 10.sub.3 is coupled to its respective junction 12.sub.2 in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.3.
[0066] However, according to this embodiment, an extra half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.2 is inserted from a sub-amplifier, for example the first peaking amplifier of amplifier stage 10.sub.1, to its junction (junction 12.sub.1 in this example) in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines.
[0067] It is noted that instead of an extension by half a wavelength, multiples of half wavelength transmission lines may also be used.
[0068] Thus, in this amplifier arrangement comprising four amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.4, a first peaking amplifier, for example the first peaking amplifier 10.sub.1, is coupled to its respective junction of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.2 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
[0069] From
[0070] The class B efficiency curves over the 50% bandwidth show the improvement in transition point peak efficiency, as can be seen in
[0071] It is noted that the insertion of the half wavelength transmission line may be applied to one or more of the other peaking amplifiers, for example as shown below in
[0072]
[0073] In the example of
[0074] Thus, the four-stage amplifier arrangement comprises: a first peaking amplifier 10.sub.1 coupled to its respective junction of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.5 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; a second peaking amplifier 10.sub.3 coupled to its respective junction of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.4 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; and a third peaking amplifier 10.sub.4 coupled to the output 15 via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.3 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
[0075] From
[0076] Referring to
[0077] The examples of
[0078] Thus, in general terms, an amplifier arrangement according to an embodiment of the present invention comprises N amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.N coupled to an output impedance network comprising a cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines, wherein the amplifier comprises a main amplifier and a plurality of peaking amplifiers adapted to operate in a Doherty mode of operation. The amplifier arrangement is adapted such that at least two peaking amplifiers are collectively driven by time-delayed versions of the same signal. The amplifier arrangement is further configured such that: at least one of the quarter wavelength transmission lines in the main cascade is extended by a half wavelength transmission line 13 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines; and/or at least one of the peaking amplifiers 10.sub.1, 10.sub.3 to 10.sub.N is coupled to its respective junction or output node 15 via a connecting half wavelength transmission line 13 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
[0079] The output impedance network may comprise a cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines coupled between an output of a main amplifier 10.sub.2 of the N amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.N and an output node 15 of the amplifier arrangement, wherein the main cascade comprises N−1 quarter wavelength transmission lines 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.N−1. An output of one peaking amplifier 10.sub.N of the N amplifier stages is coupled to the output node 15, and remaining peaking amplifiers 10.sub.1, 10.sub.3 to 10.sub.N−1 of the N amplifier stages coupled to respective junctions 12.sub.1 to 12.sub.N−2 in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines.
[0080] Various aspects of the invention may be combined in an amplifier arrangement.
[0081] An example having combined features is shown in
[0082]
[0083] In the embodiments described in the Figures above, each of the amplifiers in the N amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.N is of a substantially equal size. It is noted that the size of an amplifier may be related to its RF current output.
[0084] Thus, according to one example the amplifiers are substantially equally sized. However, according to another example at least one amplifier is sized differently to the remaining amplifiers.
[0085] In these examples a characteristic impedance of each successive stage in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.N−1 is reduced towards the output node in relation to the parallel combination of preceding connecting transmission lines, whereby an outgoing transmission line has an admittance that is the sum of all incoming admittances. In an example where “incoming” transmission lines to a junction have the same impedance, then a characteristic impedance of each successive stage in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.N−1 is reduced towards the output node in relation to the parallel combination of preceding connecting transmission lines, and whereby the characteristic impedance of each successive stage is reduced to 1/M of the impedance of the transmission line from a single amplifier, whereby M relates to the number of preceding amplifiers.
[0086] Furthermore, in these examples the characteristic impedance of each of the half wavelength transmission lines 13 is shown as being substantially equal.
[0087] According to one example the impedance of each section of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines is substantially equal. According to another example at least one section of the cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines comprises an impedance which is different to the remaining sections of the cascade.
[0088] According to one example each of the peaking amplifiers 10.sub.1, 10.sub.3 to 10.sub.N may be coupled to a respective junction or output node of the cascade via a connecting half wavelength transmission line 13 or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
[0089] Examples of embodiments with six amplifier stages will now be described.
[0090] First,
[0091] The unmodified example of
[0092]
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[0094] Thus, in this arrangement the amplifier comprises six amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.6, and the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines comprises five stages 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.5, and wherein the main amplifier 10.sub.2 and the first and second peaking amplifiers 10.sub.1, 10.sub.3 are substantially double the size of the remaining peaking amplifiers 10.sub.4 to 10.sub.6, and wherein the fifth peaking amplifier 10.sub.6 is coupled to the output 15 via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.7, or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
[0095]
[0096] Thus, according to this embodiment the amplifier arrangement comprises six amplifier stages 10.sub.1 to 10.sub.6, and the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines comprises five stages 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.5. The main amplifier 10.sub.2 and the first and second peaking amplifiers 10.sub.1, 10.sub.3 are substantially double the size of the remaining peaking amplifiers 10.sub.4 to 10.sub.6, the third peaking amplifier 10.sub.4 is coupled to its respective junction 12.sub.3 of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.9, or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines, the fourth peaking amplifier 10.sub.5 is coupled to its respective junction 12.sub.4 of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.8, or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines, and the fifth peaking amplifier 10.sub.6 is coupled to the output 15 via a half wavelength transmission line 13.sub.7, or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
[0097] It is noted that other combinations may also be used without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the dependent claims.
[0098] In each of the embodiments described herein, it is noted that any of the half wavelength lines may be replaced by an alternative, whereby a sectioned line consisting of two quarter wavelength lines with peaking amplifiers at both the end and the junction between them is provided. Since the total length is a half wavelength, it can be used in the same way as the half wave lines in the previous examples, and since it has another pattern of reactance over frequency, it may improve the bandwidth or ripple in some cases (although a higher number of sub-amplifiers are required).
[0099] An example of such an alternative is shown in
[0100] The embodiment of
[0101] In the alternative example of
[0102] Thus, according to some embodiments a half wavelength transmission line comprises a single half wavelength transmission line, while in other embodiments at least one half wavelength transmission line comprises a sectioned quarter wavelength transmission line cascade comprising first and second stages 13.sub.31 and 13.sub.32, each of the first and second stages coupled to receive first and second amplifiers 10.sub.41 and 10.sub.42. In one example the first and second amplifiers are reduced in size in comparison to other amplifiers in the amplifier arrangement, and wherein the characteristic impedance of the first and second stages 13.sub.31 and 13.sub.32 is increased by a corresponding ratio compared to the stages 11.sub.1 to 11.sub.N in the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines. In other words, an increase in impedance of a narrower transmission line is accompanied by a decrease, i.e. required output current, of the corresponding amplifier transistor, or vice versa.
[0103] Using half wavelength lines can be used as a method for absorbing parasitic capacitance and/or inductance. This is possible since a part of the half wave line can be replaced by a synthetic transmission line that uses the parasitic element as a circuit component. The simplest networks that achieve this are the L-types, for example consisting of a shunt capacitor (that can be the entire or a part of the parasitic output capacitance of the transistor) and a series inductor, for example a bond wire or a short section of transmission line.
[0104] It is noted that at least one of the first and second amplifiers 10.sub.41 and 10.sub.42 may itself be coupled to a respective junction of the sectioned quarter wavelength transmission line cascade via a half wavelength transmission line or multiples of half wavelength transmission lines.
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[0106]
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[0108] Compared to an amplifier without the half wavelength lines this amplifier may have a somewhat worse response, however with free amplifier sizing the response may be improved by increasing the number of peaking amplifier stages.
[0109] For example,
[0110]
[0111] Therefore, the embodiments of
[0112] A further consideration for the embodiments described herein is that the voltage of any of the peaking sub-amplifiers in response to the driven (main) sub-amplifier may be held below a certain limit, often determined by breakdown. This can be a factor that determines a frequency limit of an amplifier arrangement. An example of one way to express this is that the transimpedance magnitude from the main amplifier to any of the peaking amplifiers is configured such that it is not higher than the self-impedance at the main amplifier (over the entire bandwidth).
[0113]
[0114] The RF voltage response at the upper band edge is shown in
[0115] The high efficiency of the embodiments of the present invention may be obtained, for example, if high-efficiency waveforms are used, such as class B or class F. For amplifiers with very large bandwidths this may require appropriate designs, such as push-pull coupled amplifiers. The embodiments of the invention may be implemented fully differentially in such cases, so that a balun is only used at the output. Other implementations are also feasible, and the specific circuit techniques used may depend on the bandwidth and other requirements. The most appropriate topology to use may depend in many cases upon the implementation details of these networks, since these also affect the wideband reactance pattern and transformation properties at the output of the sub-amplifier transistors.
[0116] The half wavelength insertions described in the embodiments herein can be used together with other methods, for example stubs or resonators that are not connected to sub-amplifiers. The present method can in such cases lessen the negative impact on wideband peak power output that such methods generally have, and the combination could in some cases be better than either basic method by itself.
[0117] It can be seen from the various embodiments described above that the examples of the present invention are useful for constructing wideband Doherty amplifiers with high efficiency. The embodiments may be especially useful when arbitrary sized sub-amplifiers cannot be used, for example when only one size of transistor is available. These amplifiers may have very consistent properties over large bandwidths, which simplifies implementation of the control and drive circuits. The embodiments may also be used as a method for absorbing parasitic capacitance and/or inductance. Static gain and bias settings can be used, which results in simple input side circuits.
[0118] It can be seen from the above that the embodiments described herein comprise modified multistage Doherty amplifier arrangements in which at least two peaking amplifiers are collectively driven by time-delayed versions of the same signal, for example driven with the same amplitude function (typically obtained by class C biasing in the peaking amplifiers themselves or in one or more driver stages), with the higher transition points being unused. To obtain consistent transition point amplitude and high efficiency over a relatively wide bandwidth, half wavelength lines are used either to connect (some or all) sub-amplifiers to their respective junctions, or to change a quarter wavelength line in a quarterwave cascade to three quarter wavelengths (or five, or some other odd number), or a combination of both these techniques.
[0119] Low variations in transition point amplitude and low reactance at the main-sub-amplifier give high efficiency and allows very simple input side signal conditioning. High variations means that circuits that follow these transition-point variations over frequency can be used in order to obtain high efficiency and at the same time not drive the amplifier in too deep and frequency-dependent saturation, which otherwise can cause problems for pre-distortion circuitry.
[0120] These extensions add reactances at the junctions that can make the transforming action of the quarter wavelength cascade more wideband. The reactance magnitude decreases with the frequency offset from being very high at center frequency. Its effect therefore increases with frequency offset, since the reactance is in parallel with the transmission line. Generally, longer lines (more half wavelengths inserted) increase the effects, but at the same time limits the possible bandwidth of high efficiency. The strictest limitation is due to the series-resonance at the frequencies where a line is a quarter wavelength, which short-circuits the quarter wavelength cascade at that point. A weaker effect is due to the lack of transformation at frequencies where for example an intended three quarter wave line becomes a multiple of a half wavelength.
[0121] To obtain wideband performance in the transformation of the load resistance, the reactances from different parts of the circuit can be arranged to cancel each other in their contribution at the main sub-amplifier. Since half wave insertions are used, these reactances are mainly changeable in discrete steps (but vary with frequency). Loosening the requirements of the in-phase combining criterion (as described in the paragraph below), enables continuous adjustments to be carried out, if desired. Pre-calculating the effect of reactances from half-wave lines at each junction is an example of one method that may be used to determine the most optimal combinations. For amplifiers with low numbers of sub-amplifiers, a full search in a circuit simulator may also be feasible.
[0122] In-phase combination to the sum of maximum output powers of any number of sub-amplifiers is possible, over any bandwidth. The requirement is that the admittance sums in any junction of transmission lines is the same going in as going out (towards the output), and that all incoming waves (from successively more sub-amplifiers) are in phase at the junctions. To achieve full output power while optimally loading each amplifier, all sub-amplifiers can be configured to have optimal load resistances (for full output) that are matched to the admittance or admittance difference between the transmission line sections lines at the junctions in the in the quarter wavelength cascade. Thus, according to some embodiments, the quarter or half wavelength transmission lines that connect the sub-amplifiers to the junctions may have characteristic impedances that are equal to those optimal load resistances.
[0123] The timing of the drive signals to the peaking amplifiers may be offset by the same time as the travel time for the wave across all prior transmission line sections. An example of an input side network for managing this is presented in co-pending application reference P43345 by the present Applicant. The input side arrangements for the main sub-amplifier depend on the required phase response over frequency for the single-amplifier drive signal.
[0124] The embodiments of the invention may be implemented with different numbers of sub-amplifiers N, for example three or more amplifiers. The discrete nature of the half wavelength insertions means that an amplifier with a lower number of sub-amplifiers is sometimes better than one with more sub-amplifiers. For equal size sub-amplifiers, a certain number of sub-amplifiers can dictate the transformation in the middle of the band, and therefore also the transition point amplitude there. Having the possibility to parallel combine at least two transistors for some sub-amplifiers increases the freedom to place the transition point at an amplitude that gives the highest efficiency with the signal amplitude distribution at hand.
[0125] In the embodiments described above, it is noted that a characteristic impedance of a transmission line (for example of the main cascade of quarter wavelength transmission lines, or of the half wavelength transmission lines) is represented by the relative thicknesses of the transmission lines (the smaller the thickness the higher the characteristic impedance, and vice versa, which are labelled “R” in the various diagrams).
[0126] It is noted that the embodiments of the invention also have an advantage in that the amplifier arrangements have a lower amount of load modulation (lower RF current increases with amplitude above the transition point). This can have the advantage of providing lower loss sensitivity and improved class F operation.
[0127] The embodiments described herein have the advantage of increasing bandwidth, or increasing performance over a specific bandwidth.
[0128] It should be noted that the above-mentioned embodiments illustrate rather than limit the invention, and that those skilled in the art will be able to design many alternative embodiments without departing from the scope of the appended claims. The word “comprising” does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those listed in a claim, “a” or “an” does not exclude a plurality, and a single processor or other unit may fulfil the functions of several units recited in the claims. Any reference signs in the claims shall not be construed so as to limit their scope.