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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 163

  • @anandparalkar
    @anandparalkar Před 9 lety +38

    You've done something in little over 12 minutes what my profs (and the books) couldn't do for a lifetime - made me understand the Miller effect! Heartfelt thanks!
    Could you please do a video on - 1. why we introduce an emitter resistance in a common emitter amplifier and 2. what is "emitter degeneration" (a term you use in this video).
    I look forward to the circuit demo (if you actually do this video).
    Thanks once again,
    Anand

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety +14

      Anand Paralkar Adding a resistor into the emitter of a CE amplifier is a form of negative feedback. It reduces the gain, but provided benefits of bias stability and vastly improved linearity. This is also called emitter degeneration. You may find these videos helpful:
      czcams.com/video/NizrzRKQqII/video.html
      czcams.com/video/c6cmkm3UPUI/video.html
      czcams.com/video/zXh5gMc6kyU/video.html
      czcams.com/video/YQlbPGNB-ys/video.html

    • @Dutta1605
      @Dutta1605 Před rokem

      @@w2aew Could also clarify why we decoupling circuit for any LNA or RFIC circuit design??

  • @andrewphillip8432
    @andrewphillip8432 Před 3 lety +2

    64,800 knowledges transferred.. and counting. Every single one of these videos is pure gold! Thanks

  • @davet11
    @davet11 Před 9 lety +16

    This is the most elegant description of Miller effect I've ever seen. The precise reason for the multiplication of Ccb is normally glossed-over in text books as a solution of equations. Very nice and thank you.

    • @Tjousk
      @Tjousk Před 9 lety +1

      Indeed.

    • @tubical71
      @tubical71 Před 9 lety

      davet11 sometimes, IMHO, the book´s author want
      1) that the reader won´t get the whole idea at first glance, so he needs to go and solve the equations him/hisself....(BORING)
      2) the author didn´t get the whole toppic (this happens so much more than you ever expect) but he´s stil trying to teach you about it.....
      3) the autor is simply arrogant and do not want you to understand what he´s talking about, thus leaving you thinking you´re a "jackass" and "not worth it......
      I had some kind of books like these, (and they had been recommended by our university´s professor - DANMIT) but i sold them very quickly and searched myself for book covering that toppic a "little" more better;)

    • @steffengortz7105
      @steffengortz7105 Před 9 lety +2

      davet11 I was thinking the same! At my university it was taught like that, as the interpretation of a solution of equations. I always had the uncomfortable feeling of not understanding it thoroughly. Thank you ***** for this great and insightful video.

  • @williamogilvie6909
    @williamogilvie6909 Před 2 měsíci +1

    That's an excellent demo. I studied cascode amplifiers in an EE lab many years ago. There is an improvement in the bandwidth when a common collector input stage is used. Another way of looking at the high frequency roll off is Cμ is shunted by the collector resistor + input impedance of the CE amplifier. The inverse of this time constant is the main contributor to the high frequency roll off of the cascode amplifier.. With the cascode, the Miller Effect produces a low impedance looking into the emitter of the common base transistor., so the open circuit time constant is much lower. When a CC input stage is used, the input impedance is lowered, so the open circuit time constant is reduced further. The approximation of summing the inverse time constants to calculate the bandwidth is accurate to about 13%, sometimes better.

  • @KX36
    @KX36 Před 9 lety +16

    l love cascodes, they have a million and one uses.. well 3 that I can think of right now:
    -Raising a pole to increase bandwidth, especially useful in a feedback loop. Although you still have to finish compensating the loop elsewhere, at least it can shift pesky poles above the 0dB crossover frequency.
    -Increasing the voltage rating of a transistor amplifier. BJTs only go up to around 400-500V for linear use (Vceo), ones with higher voltage rating that that are specified at the higher voltage only when base and emitter are shorted together (Vces) i.e. a well driven switch.
    -Reducing switching loss, since its during the miller plateau that drain current and voltage coexist (in a FET) and so reducing the duration of that plateau reduces the energy lost in switching.
    I like to think of it as the upper NPN's Vbe is setting its emitter at a fixed voltage as Vb is fixed, therefore the bottom NPN's collector is a fixed voltage regardless of current, so since that voltage doesn't change the voltage across Ccb doesn't change and the miller effect is reduced. As well as this the upper NPN doesn't have a significant miller capacitance because it's common base, the base is grounded to AC. I also like to think of the bottom NPN as a current source driving the emitter of the upper NPN. As you point out it's easier to see in a circuit with no emitter degeneration.

  • @1959Berre
    @1959Berre Před 5 lety +3

    I found a cascode circuit in one of my Kenwood audio amps (KA-300) It did not ring a bell, but now it does. Thank you Alan, for this very clear explanation and demo.

  • @AppliedScience
    @AppliedScience Před 9 lety +36

    Good stuff!

  • @marcusjenkins
    @marcusjenkins Před 9 lety +4

    Thanks again, Alan. It is the clearest, most intuitive explanation of a cascode amplifier I have ever come across (and that includes Horowitz and Hill (2nd Ed)). 73, Marcus

  • @flurng
    @flurng Před 8 lety +4

    Your videos are some of the finest on the Internet! It never ceases to amaze my how effortlessly you seem to make the most nebulous, theoretical concepts as clear and obvious as the nose on your face! Every one of your posts should come with 1000 "Like" buttons!

  • @bwack
    @bwack Před 9 lety +4

    Thanks ! This circuit has puzzeled me for many years. I first saw it in a circuit that amplifies a tacho signal coming from a photo diode. I was told long ago that the additional transistor helped reduce the v_bc (AC) and therefore the effect of the parasitic capacitance C_cb, and the high impedance of the photo diode is then better matched with the input of the amplifier. Now that you explained the miller effect it made more sense to me :)

  • @joewhite976
    @joewhite976 Před 9 lety +7

    Great video. You make understanding circuits very intuitive and straight forward.

    • @tubical71
      @tubical71 Před 9 lety

      Joe White just because, there is nothing "fancy-pancy" about it, it´s just that simple :) But the teachers at the universities keep on trying to make this looking like a "second order" problem only to be fully solved by using integration....

  • @anorthernsoul153
    @anorthernsoul153 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Best explanation of the cascode stage!

  • @frankhughes_vk6fh
    @frankhughes_vk6fh Před 5 lety +3

    The Miller effect (in vacuum tubes):
    Edwin Armstrong discovered in 1915 that oscillation occurs in triode amplifiers because of
    grid-plate capacitance, when the anode load is inductive (and below resonance)
    The actual (small) grid-plate capacitance is multiplied by (µ +1).
    In 1919 John Miller of the US bureau of standards presented a mathematical analysis
    of the phenomina and its effect, which now bears his name!

  • @SamGallagher
    @SamGallagher Před 9 lety +1

    This is just the video I needed right now, I was just researching the cascode and was really struggling to "get" it. Thanks so much!

  • @elpanaqute
    @elpanaqute Před 9 lety +2

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge, I never miss one of your videos, and always learn something, even if I already knew the subject, and that is amazing. Please keep up the good work and greetings from Venezuela.

  • @ohmedarick1
    @ohmedarick1 Před 6 lety +1

    As always thank you. You make the subject so clear to understand.

  • @agstechnicalsupport
    @agstechnicalsupport Před 6 lety

    Thank you for the instructive video making it easier to understand cascode amplifiers and the Miller effect.

  • @davipoyastro
    @davipoyastro Před 9 lety +1

    And i thought Miller effect was what people have after having a Miller's beer.
    Just kidding, it was a great video. Clear and direct to the point. Thumbs up!

  • @esnam6557
    @esnam6557 Před 9 lety +2

    Thanks Alan for the very nice demo

  • @ECOMMUSK
    @ECOMMUSK Před 8 lety +2

    great video. this stuff is really great supplementary resources for engineering students.

  • @vibrion121
    @vibrion121 Před 9 lety +1

    Nice video. I ve find this cascode configuration several years in an exam.... But only it's polarization. I've always said why anyone wants this complicated config? Now i know :) . And for Thevenin discussion similar thing happens with Kirchoff (i know this is a literalization of what it sounds)

  • @jimbenington2144
    @jimbenington2144 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Nice video. The circuit gets its effectiveness by the low impedance of stage 2 on top. The common base amplifier also has a Miller cap but it’s working against an AC short on it’s base. Just a note -Your base cap, 68p, seems pretty low on the CB stage.

  • @doughale1555
    @doughale1555 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I have seen many cascode amplifiers in the schematics of the 7000 series Tektronix scopes!

  • @bobdoritique7347
    @bobdoritique7347 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Merci, a great video. Very well explain!

  • @JeremiahJamesMusic
    @JeremiahJamesMusic Před 5 lety +1

    Great video & explanation. Thank you!

  • @moahmed1368
    @moahmed1368 Před 8 lety +1

    Great video as always. One request, if it isn't much trouble, it would be nice to include the scope images in the notes. Thank you

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 8 lety +2

      I'll consider that in the future.

  • @davidlisney2059
    @davidlisney2059 Před 9 lety +1

    Thank you for another excellent and very understandable video.

  • @Smoke2010
    @Smoke2010 Před 5 lety

    Excellent material as always! Clear presentation.

  • @dwDragon88
    @dwDragon88 Před 9 lety +1

    Great video and explanation as always! Thanks.

  • @RyanJensenEE
    @RyanJensenEE Před 9 lety

    Excellent video, as always!
    Your tutorials are always very well organized.
    p.s. I dig your handwriting and your grid-ruled paper.

  • @guillep2k
    @guillep2k Před 6 lety +2

    Now I know why I add a 100 pF capacitor between the base and the collector to drive LEDs around RF circuits!

  • @SeAfasia
    @SeAfasia Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks Alan,I'm really enjoy your video's...
    Kostas

  • @rfdave3980
    @rfdave3980 Před 5 lety +1

    Your the best. I always learn so much. Thanks

  • @hdmalpas
    @hdmalpas Před 9 lety

    Many thanks for your notes and video.

  • @AnkhArcRod
    @AnkhArcRod Před 4 měsíci +1

    Gain of a mosfet based Cascode is not the same as common source amplifier as stated at 1:30ish. The gain can be as high as (gm × ro)^2. Largely it depends on what the values of Rd and RL are. If Rd is implemented as two stage cascode load using pmos or the circuit is biased using a current source with very high output impedance, the gain can be (gm × ro)^2. The big deal with cascode circuit is that one is able to boost the gain while not having to sacrifice the bandwidth. This happens because the voltage at drain of common source transistor is close to Vin since that voltage is set by gm1 times [~1/gm2 in parallel to ro1] which works out to be close to 1. Including gmbs in the circuit does not make much difference as that effect too cancels out. So, in effect, the voltage gain between gate and drain is almost 1 which ensures that the Miller effect on Cgd is non existent.
    The "only" thing you lose, and this really does matter when supply voltages are tiny, is the voltage headroom.
    For a BJT based amplifier, the gain can be as high as gm1 × (gm2× ro2) (ro1 parallel to rpi2) which is still much higher than common emitter version.

  • @adross23
    @adross23 Před 5 lety

    You save done of my modules in 3rd year Mechatronics :D thank you

  • @PapasDino
    @PapasDino Před 9 lety

    Thanks as usual for a great overview. 73 - Dino KL0S

  • @SaLaGaDH
    @SaLaGaDH Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you! Very useful!

  • @neelbhai1234
    @neelbhai1234 Před 6 lety

    Thanks a lot for your videos. Please do a video on phase sifter using variable capacitors.

  • @anthonyheak3479
    @anthonyheak3479 Před 2 lety

    Very well explained, thanks!

  • @chongli297
    @chongli297 Před rokem

    Wow, they say there's no such thing as a free lunch but the cascode amplifier seems to get pretty close. For one extra transistor you get a nice bandwidth boost!

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před rokem

      Yes, but only if the C-B capacitance is the source of the bandwidth limiting.

  • @erichkeyes5578
    @erichkeyes5578 Před 9 lety

    Learn something new today ! Thanks

  • @davebound268
    @davebound268 Před 4 lety

    Brilliant explanation - thank you

  • @SimonYells
    @SimonYells Před 6 lety

    Thank you for this great tutorial!!

  • @kemiktau
    @kemiktau Před 9 lety +1

    Great video, thanks.
    Quick question: If we assume that the g of the CE amplifier transistor is 20, you would expect a BW improvement of ~10. Why do you think you got only 2-3? Do you know what is limiting the BW of the cascode amp?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety +1

      I didn't design this circuit, so I'd have to look at it more carefully. There is a cap around the b-e junction of the emitter follower, so that is likely part of it.

  • @danseluk5193
    @danseluk5193 Před 9 lety +1

    Great, thanks. I learned something!

  • @wow1022
    @wow1022 Před 2 lety

    how about a video on increasing miller capacitance with an additional capacitor on a common emitter amplifier to limit bandwidth, done commonly in the voltage amplification stage of op amps to improve stability

  • @Dennis-mq6or
    @Dennis-mq6or Před rokem

    If your signal generator started at 1 mhz; why did the output peak at 2 or 3 mhz?
    Shouldn't it have started out high and decreased as the frequency increased?
    Is that gain boost at 2 or 3 mhz caused by that parallel RC network in the emitter circuit?
    I tried to see the component values off the sheet in the video but at 77 years old my eyes are getting pretty bad...
    I would also like to know how he determined the component values to provide the proper bias on the upper transistor.
    Thank you for the interesting video...

  • @akbarhidayat5755
    @akbarhidayat5755 Před 4 lety

    thank you this is so easy to understand!

  • @OctavMandru
    @OctavMandru Před rokem

    And I was complaining today about the performance of my NanoVNA that22 has a drop in amplitude of about 2.5 dbm between 50k and 300M... Now it looks much better.

  • @RBN3C
    @RBN3C Před 7 lety

    This Video is great! Especially The comparison! Thank you :)

  • @andrewferg8737
    @andrewferg8737 Před 2 lety

    Very informative. Thanks for sharing.
    Are identical devices used in this configuration, or should one have a higher current rating than the other?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 2 lety

      Both transistors, being in series, carry the same current - so using identical devices is the way to go.

  • @JustSomeGuy1967
    @JustSomeGuy1967 Před 9 lety +1

    Another great video

  • @FRRRRAAANNK
    @FRRRRAAANNK Před 9 lety

    Really great vid. Thank you!

  • @d.buchko4270
    @d.buchko4270 Před 2 lety

    Great video!

  • @LydellAaron
    @LydellAaron Před rokem

    Thank you for this explanation. Ali Hajimiri's CalTech lectures mentioned cascode amp configurations, so it was nice to hear you explain it here. Question: Is there a good professional oscilloscope that you might recommend from your experience, that will be useful for precision analog, comparator, fast precise rise times, gyrator, and work involving transients?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před rokem

      You've got to be more precise about "fast rise times", as that will determine the bandwidth needed by the scopes and probes. Also, an idea regarding the available budget.

    • @LydellAaron
      @LydellAaron Před rokem

      @@w2aew I've generally been looking at 4 channel scopes with 200-350Mhz. $1500-$6000, definitely under $10k. A EE mentor/colleague told me that 500mhz minimum for work which may involving noise and transient analysis but those 4ch 500mhz analog seem to get pricier. There's also some 10x frequency rule of thumb I heard.
      In terms of tasks, I will be constructing zero crossing detector circuits on sine waves, going up to 30MHz (that 10x rules would suggest a 300MHz scope). I am interested in coupling oscillators together, hooking them to gyrators and looking at the oscillatory current outputs. Trying to build synthetic large value inductors from op-amps in order to get precise inductance for oscillators. And constructing a few analog computers to compute some results.

  • @simonyoungglostog
    @simonyoungglostog Před 2 lety

    Fascinating, thankyou. Would there be any application in an audio-amplifier for cascodes?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 2 lety

      There can be a benefit in lower distortion: www.passlabs.com/technical_article/cascode-amp-design/

    • @simonyoungglostog
      @simonyoungglostog Před 2 lety

      @@w2aew I'm sorry. I didn't google it myself. That's a great link and a fascinating read. I'll simulate some cascodes on an amp I'm working on later. Thanks again...

  • @leventsasmazel6292
    @leventsasmazel6292 Před 9 lety

    Great video Alan. 73s.

  • @danw1million
    @danw1million Před 2 lety

    Great video - thankyou

  • @ericeverton2669
    @ericeverton2669 Před 9 lety

    Great video! Makes the cascode configuration easy to understand. The one issue that you didn't mention though is that it requires more headroom than a CE amp as I learned the hard way! The CB amp biasing forces the output swing to be more constrained than with a plain CE amp.
    One question: Is there anything that can be done to make the amplifier broadband and flat across its passband? I've done a fair bit of simulation of cascodes and can't seem to get much better than about 50-60 MHz BW. I realize that selecting a BJT with a low C_ cb improves freq response, but is there anything more that can be done to improve BW?
    Thanks

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      Eric Everton You will lose a little headroom, but you can usually limit the loss to a few hundred mV by biasing the CB stage so that the CE's collector-emitter voltage is a few hundred mV above saturation. Of course, you'll sacrifice a little BW this way because Ccb will be larger with less Vcb. BW is generally improved with larger Vce in the CE stage, as well as with some degeneration in the CE stage (will do a lot for passband flatness). Proper selection of transistors with low capacitance and high ft is required, as well as operating at generally larger Ic with lower value RC, will all help to increase BW.

  • @andrewferg8737
    @andrewferg8737 Před rokem

    Question: Can this or a similar technique be used in constructing a Colpitts Osc. to improve its bandwidth?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před rokem +1

      If it was the C-B capacitance of the amp that was limiting the bandwidth, yes.

    • @andrewferg8737
      @andrewferg8737 Před rokem

      @@w2aew My goal is to improve the linearity by increasing the bandwidth. Ideally, I would like a relatively flat response in the FM broadcast band.
      I've tried several biasing configurations which I'm not sure qualify as "cascode" or not, but using two transistors instead of a single device does seem to help overall.
      see sim at :
      www.falstad.com/circuit/circuitjs.html?ctz=CQAgjCDMB0YEwFYCmBaMAGEdYA5IYTABYwcA2OdHIskBWhOzZNMAKABMQUdMiic3MLX6C44AHJF06ImwBO4Ms3hK+AkJgxsA7lEp0AnOMgGyAdnHo2AJW68Qo7oZEbMfLVc2boCXY40LcScEY002AHMAwSDHMiIQWPdIoREXVLpVZL14un5EhKT-YWZzWnSEMvC9EszxCqz-U2Y4QWa6ZXCAYxAK-IqqvmhzVDAINHRoC2V0MENIeaoiOATJmXYehvqGfKGR1nBJ+jH8ZaJzSBxCQTXZth64SzoqykFK2i1UQQnoWUgySAIaRwQwISD8CC3DZQahxBI0eG5T4ocyOaDLQFgSwkOatYQ+dYKLBPd7E8QUVaHGTWRSPYIaOl1bwYalsAA2aiZtVJWl81P5ApkcFQqJQt3QCDgFgQ6AuOClJGkNzYABcyc9aO0eeAfAJZOYiJVIODjoZVlNTP8yGCAUDDPKqSAOEgAGYAQwArmyVcVOqTXhrquqnO0nNYooyKer4u4g7kgQk+qsie1Yk4klSmmYnrkiopak40K4bpmAPJwisIxwybzWPSh9Khtz3DKF-FEdLI1FjaCPcE0RBLeVgRhQltasIhMJdnwg0wuBDy9BWsiGVFj-OdJyMsPgXjWNWMwgmAzH5lCaDGY2WM3W5dwKwWuYAyiIczzCi0FlO12e71Eo9VCPQYqXDGEEjPS4INaWtVX0dQ2lhXdxnMaAcGxIEwRwbDDQsHw7zXQxSAWMhyFCR1nXdL0fT0ItolbGs6wYzBIFkatsnA9jOKIUxwkUKCKwEs9MAfcVBX5SAiSraT4yyUCUirM9FJg5J+LY6QWKQxjHHMNgAHssC-bwSHQBgfEhcA2EucBxAAMQssBRggfYxiEEAAGE3QABzdLoAEsVTdAA7LokCswRXPs5knJAFzxggTyfP8wKQrCoA

  • @markatherton7848
    @markatherton7848 Před 9 lety

    Excellent video. One question: it looks like the collector of the input device is clamped at Vb-Vbe. If this is so, why is the Miller effect menationed at 2x ? Won't it be 1x ? Regards, from NZ, Mark

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      It's because the impedance looking into the emitter of the CB transistor is not zero. It is 1/gm. Thus, the CE stage has a gain of -gm*(1/gm), or -1. This makes the miller magnification equal to two.

  • @isidorusa5322
    @isidorusa5322 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the excellent explanation. But I'm still confused as to why there's still a multiplication of C_cb of CE stage by 2. CE stage gain is v_out/v_in, isn't it? The v_in is the change in base voltage, and v_out is the change in collector voltage. But, the collector voltage of CE stage should be constant at (V_b - V_be) of CB stage. So, the v_out of CE stage is always 0, and the CE stage gain is 0. Therefore, there should be no multiplication of C_cb of CE stage, and no Miller effect at all.

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 4 lety

      The gain of the CE stage is -1, which means that the collector voltage moves in the opposite direction of the base voltage. Thus, the change in voltage across the c-e capacitance is double what it would be if the capacitance was simply from base to ground or collector to ground - thus making it appear twice as big.

  • @daviddoty8502
    @daviddoty8502 Před 9 lety

    do you have a technique for measuring phase noise of A 500 Mhz carrier with a spectrum analyzer?

  • @ebayscopeman
    @ebayscopeman Před 5 lety

    Alan,
    Would you please update the links for the PDF's of your notes on this video and video 188 as well as any others that may be linked to your old site.
    Do you have a complete repository or zip of the notes somewhere?
    Thanks
    Sam
    W3OHM

  • @kd5ozy
    @kd5ozy Před 9 lety

    This is a little off the subject, but you are the one that would know. I am trying to convert the 19.2khz scan rate from the crt output on my HP 8921a to feed into a modern LCD monitor. I was wondering if you have a schematic for a converter to achieve this? Great video by the way, keep up the good work!!!!

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      James skippinhopper I'm sorry - I don't have a circuit for that on hand.

  • @efox29
    @efox29 Před 9 lety +1

    +Dr.Lecter The pronunciation of Thevenin might be region specific. W2AEW is American and I am Canadian, and I was taught in university, that that's how you say it (as the video said it). Perhaps different regions might pronounce it differently.

    • @ak47only
      @ak47only Před 9 lety

      efox29 You can pronounce it the way you like but there is only one correct pronunciation.

    • @ak47only
      @ak47only Před 9 lety

      efox29 W2aew is not far off btw ;)

    • @davidblomdahl5518
      @davidblomdahl5518 Před 6 lety

      Thank you, it bugs me to no end when someone corrects another like that. It's not called for and I think it's not polite. On a side note; English is a living language and changes constantly.

  • @Mr86tango
    @Mr86tango Před 2 lety

    More current flow through Ccb, due to a large voltage swing at some frequency across it, has the "effect" of as if it were the gain times larger capacitance. Same impedance (fixed or single frequency) with a larger voltage equals more current (okay). So more current . . . so how does it work? It must somehow make the input impedance smaller to the source, so less input to be amplified? The Ccb doesn't actually change value. Or is it just more negative feedback due to large voltage swing, yielding less input vs frequency? Where does (what path) it shunt the signal to, like a low pass filter to ground, via this capacitance (or is that the "effect" or analogy)? Sure, at the same frequency, a larger capacitance would have lower Xc and draw more current. That is the effect of the higher voltage, but how does it work in the circuit . . . neg feedback, shunting, lower input impedance? Nice demo. Nice to have lots of test equipment. Thanks. Still learning.

  • @kundankumar-ll8in
    @kundankumar-ll8in Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much from.. India

  • @waynegram8907
    @waynegram8907 Před rokem

    Why do FETS and Transistors have "Miller Plateau"? if you look at the turn on/rise time the middle region you will see the Miller Plateau.

  • @bejsfan
    @bejsfan Před 9 lety

    Thanks for the video!

  • @inssane8411
    @inssane8411 Před 6 lety

    Thank you, very helpful!

  • @psionl0
    @psionl0 Před 5 lety

    It's a pity that time didn't permit because the more interesting effect of Miller feedback is when the collector load is not a resistance. It turns out that if the load is capacitive then the feedback capacitor appears as a resistance across the input. If the input came from a tuned circuit then it would be loaded down by this resistance. If the load is inductive then the feedback capacitance appears as a NEGATIVE resistance which could cause oscillations at the input - especially if the input came from a tuned circuit. It is no wonder that neutralization was such a big issue in the receivers of the 1920s.

  • @waynegram8907
    @waynegram8907 Před 8 měsíci

    When using higher gain transistors why do technicians add miller capacitors pf across the collector to base which they say it helps reduced the gain noise hiss? The miller capacitance will reduce or eliminate the gain noise any reasons why it does this?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 8 měsíci

      The miller capacitor reduces the circuit's bandwidth.

    • @waynegram8907
      @waynegram8907 Před 8 měsíci

      @@w2aew yes you said that in your video but other techs have told me that it also reduces gain hiss noise not sure if that is true or not that miller caps help with reducing the noise floor?

  • @dedskin1
    @dedskin1 Před 3 lety

    ive looked this up because they mention it in some amps , but this is a small effect that will only roll off a bit of highs , but guess what in HI FI some roll off of highs is basically what ppl like .
    I guess in highly technical measurement stuff this would have to be fixed but in Audio , i doubt its noticeable . Did anyone do these tests , and knows how much is it exactly ?

  • @pirateman1966
    @pirateman1966 Před 6 lety

    How do you deal with frequencies in the GHz range in an amplifier? Like in 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz WiFi signal boosters?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 6 lety +1

      Microwave amplifiers certainly require suitable transistors and especially proper physical layout techniques.

  • @budude2
    @budude2 Před 9 lety

    Nice video - don't remember any of this stuff from my EE classes way back when...

  • @scollyer.tuition
    @scollyer.tuition Před 5 lety

    Given that all of the gain here is coming from the common base stage, why keep the troublesome common emitter stage? Is it purely to ensure that we have high input impedance (or control over it, maybe)?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 5 lety

      Yes, mainly an input impedance issue (CB amp has a much lower input impedance).

    • @scollyer.tuition
      @scollyer.tuition Před 5 lety

      Thanks. A bit of googling shows that, in the 60s, there were 4 terminal "cascode transistors" (two transistors on the die) which I guess made sense, since that would allow better matching of the g_m of the transistors, which you are cancelling in your derivation of the gain.

  • @jlfqam
    @jlfqam Před 9 lety

    Thanks again for the video. What would be the effect of using a diode instead of the metal jumper to replace the common base amplifier?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      jlfqam Not sure why you'd want to do that - all it would would is add a DC offset to the CE's collector voltage, which would limit the maximum signal swing because the transistor will be that much closer to saturation.

    • @jlfqam
      @jlfqam Před 9 lety

      ***** Thanks, I just wondered about be the effect on the frequency response of the system compared to the jumper and the CB transistor sets.
      Should it fall in between?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      jlfqam I would think it would be very close the the jumper result, in fact maybe even slightly worse because the voltage on the b-e junction will be lower, which will increase the capacitance.

  • @viswanathansankar3789
    @viswanathansankar3789 Před 7 lety

    Please give me a design of a Cascade amplifier whose input is 54 v and output is 540v.

  • @byronwatkins2565
    @byronwatkins2565 Před 3 lety

    Cascode also eliminates the Early effect making the gain independent of power supply voltage.

  • @GaRbAllZ
    @GaRbAllZ Před 9 lety

    What does the slope of the signal look like down in the audio range?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety +4

      Dennis Hill This was designed as an RF amplifier, so it has very little gain at audio frequencies. Of course, component (capacitor) values can be adjusted to improve the audio performance. The Miller effect is generally not an issue for audio amplifiers unless the source impedance is very high, so the cascode isn't used much for audio.

  • @521cjb
    @521cjb Před 5 lety

    Do FET's suffer from Miller effect, and is there a cascode circuit for them ?

  • @Gameboygenius
    @Gameboygenius Před 9 lety

    Could the CB capacitance cause the a circuit to self oscillate under some circumstances? If so, then maybe that would be an interesting idea, to try to force a transistor to self oscillate at, I guess, its own resonance frequency.
    And furthermore, what's that that device with two parallel coaxes with inductors connected to ground? (The on with copper-clad, not the angle bracket.) A choke?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety +1

      Collector-Base capacitance is usually not a source for oscillation (in fact it's often used to help make a circuit more stable). The device you are referring to is a directional coupler from a video I did a few months ago.

    • @KX36
      @KX36 Před 9 lety

      Gameboygenius if you want a self oscillating transistor, look at MOSFETs with no daming resistor on the gate. the lead inductance and the gate capacitance can cause a lot of ringing. You need some feedback gain to maintain oscillation though. In a bigger circuit with gain elsewhere and poor layout they can oscillate seemingly by themselves.

  • @hypergamer1078
    @hypergamer1078 Před 4 lety

    Gr8 work!

  • @pepe6666
    @pepe6666 Před 3 lety

    is this a capacitance multiplier? it is right. man i been meaning to make one of these

  • @sultan7679
    @sultan7679 Před 6 lety

    Love your videos......

  • @timcoates1925
    @timcoates1925 Před 3 lety

    Nice explanation. HP Voyager user as well I see :-)

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, my favorite calculator.

    • @timcoates1925
      @timcoates1925 Před 3 lety

      @@w2aew Have you tried the modern Swiss Micros HP15C copy? Beautifully made and a faithful repro of the original. They also do a lovely copy of the HP42 with a larger LCD screen and 4 stack levels displayed. Viva RPN!

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 3 lety

      @@timcoates1925 I've seen them, but never pulled the trigger on one.

  • @johndenby6192
    @johndenby6192 Před 6 lety

    A vital component is the ferrite bead on Q1 emitter. Without this the circuit will most likely oscillate at maybe 250 Mc/s

  • @jpopelish
    @jpopelish Před 9 lety

    A simple RC low pass filter rolls voltage off at 6db per octave. Is the roll off different for a Miller effect, voltage gain limited CE amplifier. It seems that it must be a lower db per octave because the capacitor is effectively variable and falling in effective value, as frequency rises, until the voltage gain approaches -1. What do you call such a reduced roll off response? A half pole roll off?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      jpopelish I think it's about the same as a simple RC. The capacitance isn't effectively falling, since the *gain* isn't changing, just the signal amplitude. I'd have to examine it more closely to be sure though.

    • @jpopelish
      @jpopelish Před 9 lety

      But an amplifier operating in the frequency range where Miller effect is in control of its gain, certainly shows changing gain, versus frequency, and that changing gain must have a changing multiplier effect on the capacitive (Cbc) feedback. So, changing RC time constant across input signal, versus frequency. Will your scope show a log plot of amplitude versus frequency?

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      jpopelish I think of it as the input being attenuated by the RC filter, not that the gain is being reduced. Again, I'll have to look at it again when I get back to my lab next week...

    • @jpopelish
      @jpopelish Před 9 lety +1

      ***** Never mind. It just occurred to me that the same reduction in voltage, as frequency rises, across the capacitor occurs with a fixed capacitor in an RC, low pass filter. I just had a mental block, because of the gain produced voltage in the CE amplifier. If, somehow, the voltage across the capacitor were forced to be independent of frequency, the result would not be a low pass, but a notch filter.

  • @spark300c
    @spark300c Před 6 lety

    for not so worry about the miller effect but look for way to increase head room.

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 6 lety

      A cascode takes away from headroom. To increase headroom, you want to setup the bias conditions so that the collector voltage (with no signal applied) is halfway between the positive supply and the emitter voltage.

  • @tubical71
    @tubical71 Před 9 lety

    GREAT video, thanx!! Nothing more to say about it! EEVBLOG - µRuler spotted ;) ;) ;) ;)

  • @david_pilling
    @david_pilling Před 9 lety

    The name has always puzzled me, according to wikipedia it comes from "cascaded triodes having similar characteristics to a pentode"

    • @KX36
      @KX36 Před 9 lety

      David Pilling it certainly comes from thermionic valves / vacuum tubes. You get various -odes. Triode, tetrode, pentode etc. which you can cascade to make a casc-ode. There's nothing to say you can't cascode tetrodes or pentodes though. But yes, pentodes have a reduced miller effect because their control grid is screened from the anode by the screen grid IIRC, so 2 triodes in cascode configuration would sort of be pentode-ish in that one single regard.

  • @PriyaKumari-nu6tr
    @PriyaKumari-nu6tr Před 3 lety

    Sir is CB-CE amplifier possible?

  • @vibrion121
    @vibrion121 Před 9 lety +1

    Sorry found not find. Damn small virtual keyboards

  • @BruceNitroxpro
    @BruceNitroxpro Před 7 lety

    Nicely done! de KQ2E

  • @madisonelectronic
    @madisonelectronic Před 9 lety

    nice beefy vise you have there.

    • @w2aew
      @w2aew  Před 9 lety

      I love that old vise. Very stable for building and testing circuits. It's tough to find a nice heavy small machinists vise like that anymore.

  • @aptsys
    @aptsys Před 9 lety +3

    Thévenin is actually pronounced "tevenin", rather than how you said it.

    • @johncherry108
      @johncherry108 Před 6 lety

      I'm sure the French telegraph engineer would have pronounced his own name 'tevenin' -- and that should probably be persuasive -- but not many people are aware of the subtleties of french pronunciation.

  • @DeezNutz-ce5se
    @DeezNutz-ce5se Před rokem +1

    Isn't it a cascade?

  • @ariestategarjr2534
    @ariestategarjr2534 Před 3 lety

    Apa itu Efek Millar ?
    Efek Millar sering kali menjadi faktor pembatas bandwidth utama dan desain penguat common-emitor, alasannya karena perbesaran efek kapasitansi parasit. Jadi, jika ada transistor yang memiliki kapasitansi di antara basis-emitor, basis-kolektor, dan kolektor-emitor maka setiap kapasitansi ini pada dasarnya mencuri arus dari transistor. Dan oleh karena itu, akan mempengaruhi bandwidth dan kinerja transistor.