Wide-band amplifiers using clipper circuits for reduced harmonics
09935592 ยท 2018-04-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H03F2200/351
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/429
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/102
ELECTRICITY
H03F2200/36
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
The present invention breaks up the frequency bands which can be filtered by a simple low-loss band-pass or low pass filter. The second harmonic frequency is reduced by use of a non-linear clipper element which controls the driving waveform symmetry and can reduce the harmonics by as much as 5-15 db which makes the filter much simpler and allows the amplifier to remain wide-band. The output waveform from the amplifier is symmetrical or nearly symmetrical.
Claims
1. A wideband power amplifier circuit comprising: a transistor configured as an amplifier stage of a power amplifier having first, second and third regions where a signal applied to the third region controls current flow between the first and second regions; a waveform clipping element electrically coupled to the third region, which shapes a peak-to-peak amplitude of the signal applied to the third region, and which reduces a second harmonic of the signal, the waveform clipping element including a voltage variable clipper element controlled by a control voltage generated based at least in part on one or more of a temperature, an output power, or a voltage standing wave ratio under mismatch; and a wideband filter electrically coupled to an output of the power amplifier to reduce harmonic levels of the signal.
2. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the waveform clipping element includes a negative waveform clipping element.
3. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 further comprising a voltage generator electrically coupled to the voltage variable clipper element, the voltage generator configured to generate the control voltage to control the operation of the voltage variable clipper element.
4. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the voltage variable clipper element includes one or more diodes.
5. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 4 wherein at least one of the diodes is a gallium-arsenide diode.
6. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 4 wherein at least one of the diodes is a Schottky diode.
7. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the voltage variable clipper element includes an operational amplifier and a capacitor.
8. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the transistor is a metal-oxide-semiconductor device in which the first region is a source region, the second region is a drain region, and the third region is a gate.
9. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the transistor is a bipolar device in which the first region is an emitter, the second region is a collector, and the third region is a base.
10. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the waveform clipping element reduces the second harmonic of the signal between 5 and 15 decibels.
11. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the wideband filter is configured to have substantially the same impedance as a load of the wideband power amplifier.
12. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 further comprising a first direct current blocking capacitor electrically coupled to the transistor.
13. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 further comprising a second direct current blocking capacitor electrically coupled to the wideband filter.
14. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the wideband filter is one of a band pass filter or a low pass filter.
15. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein a clipping voltage of the waveform clipping element is determined based at least in part on an adaptive feedback loop.
16. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the waveform clipping element is a programmable waveform clipping element.
17. The wideband power amplifier circuit of claim 1 wherein the waveform clipping element is a nonlinear clipping element.
18. A communications system comprising: a power amplifier including a transistor having first, second and third terminals where a signal applied to the third terminal controls current flow between the first and second terminals; a waveform clipping circuit electrically coupled to the third terminal, which shapes a peak-to-peak amplitude of the signal applied to the third terminal, and which reduces a harmonic of the signal, the waveform clipping element including a voltage variable clipper element controlled by a control voltage generated based at least in part on one or more of a temperature, an output power, or a voltage standing wave ratio under mismatch; and a filter electrically coupled to an output of the power amplifier to reduce harmonic levels of the signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art in view of the following detailed description in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(10) Conventional silicon bipolar, HBT, JFET, MESFET and PHEMT devices suffer from the inherent problem that they have a diode element in their input controlling element such as the base or gate terminal. An illustrative prior art PHEMT circuit 100 is shown in
(11) When the RF input voltage swing becomes large enough to forward bias the gate diode, the input voltage is clamped to about 0.7 V and the excess voltage is stored across the first DC blocking capacitor 120. This forces the gate voltage to swing very far negative, such that the ON to OFF duty cycle is not 50%.
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(13) Waveforms that are symmetrical have no even order distortion as shown with the square wave in
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(16) To make the system wide band, filter 740 is designed to have roughly the same impedance as the impedance of load 770 (within a 10 db return loss).
(17) The negative clipping element 720 together with the output filter 740 provides a very wide-band amplifier of high output power with good harmonic rejection and low-loss. It is envisioned for instance, an amplifier using this invention could achieve adequate performance to cover EUTRAN bands (5,6,8,12,13,14,17,18,19,20,26) or EUTRAN bands (1,2,3,9,10,25,33,35,36,37,39) assuming each band is routed to an appropriate system filter to meet FCC (or similar) specifications.
(18) Other applications of the wide-band amplifier of the present invention include its use in envelope tracking systems, in envelope elimination and restoration systems, and in polar modulation systems.
(19) As shown in the plots of
(20) Further results of computer simulation are shown in
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(22) The operation of circuit 1300 is similar to that of circuit 700 but the output of clipping element 1320 and therefore the second harmonic level is responsive to a control voltage supplied by voltage generator 1330. The output of the voltage generator can be controlled so that it is responsive to a number of factors such as temperature, output power, oand/or VSWR under mismatch. Thus, the second order harmonic level can made to depend on such factors as temperature, output power, and VSWR under mismatch. The clipping voltage can be programmed; or the clipping voltage can be supplied by an adaptive feedback loop.
(23) The voltage variable clipper circuit can be made from any number of diodes, but in this case a GaAs Schottky diode is preferable.
(24) As will be apparent to those skilled in the art, numerous variations may be practiced within the spirit and scope of the present invention.