Analyzing a circuit

M

M. Hamed

Guest
AoE Chapter 3 - circuit ideas A (high-input-impedance follower)

Also here:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/hyxk9ghx9c28vsv/AoE%20-%20Chapter%203%20-%20Circuit%20Ideas%20-%20A.asc?dl=0

and at the end of the post.

1) How do you go about analyzing this circuit? how do you approach it? I can do the DC analysis fine but the AC analysis is a bit difficult.

My approach was to assume all caps are shorts then assume a voltage wiggle at n007 (where R4 and R5 meet) and then try to calculate the currents. I can figure out most of the currents but it's hard for me to figure out what drives the changes in the BJT collector current, given that the base and emitter sorta move in sync. Of course I can't really understand why the circuit behaves the way it does, but simulation confirms that the input current is incredibly small. It appears that the difference between emitter/collector current and the current in the emitter resistor that ends up being really small.

2) How would the circuit designer arrive at such a circuit? Just plain ingenuity or are there specific building blocks?

I appreciate the insights, I'm trying really hard to get better at analyzing transistor circuits and I understand the basics of transistors but can't pull this off.

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SYMBOL npn 288 112 R0
SYMATTR InstName Q1
SYMATTR Value 2N3904
SYMBOL njf 16 16 R0
SYMATTR InstName J1
SYMATTR Value 2N4416
SYMBOL res 48 -128 R0
SYMATTR InstName R1
SYMATTR Value 10k
SYMBOL res 336 240 R0
SYMATTR InstName R2
SYMATTR Value 1k
SYMBOL res -112 -128 R0
SYMATTR InstName R3
SYMATTR Value 2.2meg
SYMBOL res -112 240 R0
SYMATTR InstName R4
SYMATTR Value 1meg
SYMBOL res -224 128 R0
SYMATTR InstName R5
SYMATTR Value 10meg
SYMBOL cap 128 272 R270
WINDOW 0 32 32 VTop 2
WINDOW 3 0 32 VBottom 2
SYMATTR InstName C1
SYMATTR Value .1ľ
SYMBOL cap 128 16 R270
WINDOW 0 32 32 VTop 2
WINDOW 3 0 32 VBottom 2
SYMATTR InstName C2
SYMATTR Value .1ľ
SYMBOL cap -336 96 R270
WINDOW 0 32 32 VTop 2
WINDOW 3 0 32 VBottom 2
SYMATTR InstName C3
SYMATTR Value 1000p
SYMBOL res 48 256 R0
SYMATTR InstName R6
SYMATTR Value 10k
SYMBOL voltage 544 -160 R0
WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 2
WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 2
SYMATTR InstName V1
SYMATTR Value 9
SYMBOL voltage -416 128 R0
WINDOW 123 0 0 Left 2
WINDOW 39 0 0 Left 2
SYMATTR InstName V2
SYMATTR Value SINE(0 1m 1meg)
TEXT -450 424 Left 2 !.tran 20u
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
I would saty a circuit designer would not be likly to ever design that circuit. but that's OK.

First of all, what is the goal of that circuit ? I see I guess a usable amplifier but with maybe some strange charactrostics.

The emitter of Q1 dominates via those caps, but where it is going has little apparent effect. Changing the drain voltage of J1 is not going to vary the current much. The other cap off off emittter of Q1 is working into a seriously high value resistor so it will have a very limited effect.

Further, at queiscence, Q1 should be biased at half the supply voltage but that is impossible because R1 and R6 are bothe 10K. the base of Q1 will only go to half the Vcc when J1 in in saturation.

Now for the AC, that does say 1 mHz rigght ? So we can forget aout Xc here. C2 going to the drain of J1 is going to have so minimal effect it can be disregarded. When you run devices in linear mode, usually a change in overall voltage doesn't cause the increase in current you would see in a resistor for example. Thinking the signal from the drain of J1 would affect the output somehow into a 1 K from a 10 K - ain't happenin. Now IF you were taking the output from the collector of Q1 that would be different. If you look at the deflection amps in CRO scopes you can see that type of shit it action..

But bear in mind these guys took about a year to design a board over at Tektronix n shit. I shit you not. That is why their shit cost more than a new car.

But your circuit looks smokeproof ! That is good. Now simulate some audio into it and see how it reacts. Then we'll go over to Audiokarma. 'Them people love shit like this, and some of them have that mad scientist gene.
 
On Fri, 20 Feb 2015 22:35:27 -0800 (PST), "M. Hamed"
<mhdpublic@gmail.com> wrote:

AoE Chapter 3 - circuit ideas A (high-input-impedance follower)

Also here:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/hyxk9ghx9c28vsv/AoE%20-%20Chapter%203%20-%20Circuit%20Ideas%20-%20A.asc?dl=0

and at the end of the post.

1) How do you go about analyzing this circuit? how do you approach it? I can do the DC analysis fine but the AC analysis is a bit difficult.

Nowadays, you can just Spice it.

If you want to do it analytically (and approximately) the jfet is a
follower that has unity gain and an output impedance that is 1/gm,
where gm is the fet transconductance.

That is loaded by 10K and the base of the NPN. The NPN input impedance
is about 1K * beta. So the fet gain, loaded, is a bit below 1.

The NPN emitter follower has an output impedance of about 25/Ie, with
Ie in mA. That makes another voltage divider wih its load, 1K||10K. So
its gain is a bit below 1.

The two bootstraps increase the input impedance and the non-ideal
voltage gain of the jfet.

My approach was to assume all caps are shorts then assume a voltage wiggle at n007 (where R4 and R5 meet) and then try to calculate the currents. I can figure out most of the currents but it's hard for me to figure out what drives the changes in the BJT collector current, given that the base and emitter sorta move in sync. Of course I can't really understand why the circuit behaves the way it does, but simulation confirms that the input current is incredibly small. It appears that the difference between emitter/collector current and the current in the emitter resistor that ends up being really small.

2) How would the circuit designer arrive at such a circuit? Just plain ingenuity or are there specific building blocks?

It's hard to say where circuit ideas come from. Most circuits combine
a lot of previous practice with a bit of inspiration. You learn a lot
by studying existing circuits (in books, manuals, whatever) and also
studying component behavior. This circuit uses two common ideas,
voltage followers and bootstrapping.

I have a mental process that sort of consists of taking a pile of
candidate parts, throwing them up in the air, and seeing how they
land... essentially designing random circuits. The number of such
circuits that you can make from, say, 10 parts is literally
astronomical. But a trained and open brain can parallel-process
evaluate that astronomical number of possible circuits. Experience
with existing circuits and a mental ability to "see" how circuits work
helps the brain to sort out the few reasonable circuits. So, keep
trying things and analyzing circuits to train your instincts.

A pad of blue-grid paper is invaluable. Evolving a simple circuit
might burn up a couple dozen sheets of failed attempts.

"Design" is a mental process that is under-studied.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
 
On Sat, 21 Feb 2015 01:39:41 -0800 (PST), jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:

>I would saty a circuit designer would not be likly to ever design that circuit. but that's OK.

Win Hill designed it.

First of all, what is the goal of that circuit ? I see I guess a usable amplifier but with maybe some strange charactrostics.

High input impedance, low output impedance, gain close to 1.


The emitter of Q1 dominates via those caps, but where it is going has little apparent effect. Changing the drain voltage of J1 is not going to vary the current much.

Bootstrapping the jfet drain increses its AC gain, closer to unity,
and decreases its input capacitance.


>The other cap off off emittter of Q1 is working into a seriously high value resistor so it will have a very limited effect.

It bootstraps R5 and increases the AC input impedance.

Further, at queiscence, Q1 should be biased at half the supply voltage but that is impossible because R1 and R6 are bothe 10K. the base of Q1 will only go to half the Vcc when J1 in in saturation.

Win didn't specify the supply voltage, and 9 is too low, at least with
10K as R1. Higher supply or lower R1 is needed to get some voltage
across the jfet. Try 15 volts and 5K.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
 
"The two bootstraps increase the input impedance and the non-ideal
voltage gain of the jfet. "

That's why I said what I said. This circuit would not be put into use, it is just for study. And FET needs no bootstrap because its input resistance is already so high. Actually, thopugh it would probably not be the right way to do it, that circuit could maybe reduce the effective input capacitance. (???) That is pretty much the only useful thing I see.

Actually it as commendable just to ge ta circuit that doesn't smoke. A viable curcuit I guess would be the word.

Oh, and about the gain being <1, it isn't. The VOLTAGE gain is <1 but it has a whole bunch of current gain.
 
>"and decreases its input capacitance. "

Yes, but not by much. it's working through a 10 meg.
 
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 13:18:35 -0800 (PST), jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:

"and decreases its input capacitance. "

C2 makes the AC drain voltage almost track the gate voltage. That
reduces the effective Cgd a lot, roughly 10:1 maybe. Cgs is already
bootstrapped by the fact that the jfet is a follower. So both Cgd and
Cgs appear to be much lower than the datasheet values.

>Yes, but not by much. it's working through a 10 meg.

The other bootstrap, C1 through R5, increases the effective value of
R5, as seen by the input signal.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
 
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 13:15:13 -0800 (PST), jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:

"The two bootstraps increase the input impedance and the non-ideal
voltage gain of the jfet. "

That's why I said what I said. This circuit would not be put into use, it is just for study. And FET needs no bootstrap because its input resistance is already so high. Actually, thopugh it would probably not be the right way to do it, that circuit could maybe reduce the effective input capacitance. (???) That is pretty much the only useful thing I see.

Win Hill puts those example circuits into AoE to encourage people to
think.

Bootstrapped jfets are commonly used in low-level circuits, like
photodiode amplifiers, to simultaneously increase follower gain and
reduce input capacitance.

This has some good theory and examples:

http://www.amazon.com/Building-Electro-Optical-Systems-Making-Work/dp/0470402296/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1424642157&sr=8-1&keywords=hobbs+electro+optics



--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
 
On 2/22/2015 4:51 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 13:18:35 -0800 (PST), jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:

"and decreases its input capacitance."



C2 makes the AC drain voltage almost track the gate voltage. That
reduces the effective Cgd a lot, roughly 10:1 maybe.

It can be way better than that, as good as 500:1 or 1000:1, in real
life, at least up to a few megahertz. (Happy customers attest to
this--bootstrapped bootstraps rock.) The 2N4416 is far inferior to the
BF862 for that sort of thing, but of course there weren't any BF862s in
1989, when AoE II came out.

Cgs is already
bootstrapped by the fact that the jfet is a follower. So both Cgd and
Cgs appear to be much lower than the datasheet values.

You do have to use a good quality current sink load for the JFET,
though, because otherwise its voltage gain can be quite a bit less than 1.

Yes, but not by much. it's working through a 10 meg.

The other bootstrap, C1 through R5, increases the effective value of
R5, as seen by the input signal.


Cheers

Phil Hobbs


--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics

160 North State Road #203
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

hobbs at electrooptical dot net
http://electrooptical.net
 
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 18:00:29 -0500, Phil Hobbs
<hobbs@electrooptical.net> wrote:

On 2/22/2015 4:51 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 13:18:35 -0800 (PST), jurb6006@gmail.com wrote:

"and decreases its input capacitance."



C2 makes the AC drain voltage almost track the gate voltage. That
reduces the effective Cgd a lot, roughly 10:1 maybe.

It can be way better than that, as good as 500:1 or 1000:1, in real
life, at least up to a few megahertz.

Only if you are a bootstrap maniac. I mean that in a good way.

(Happy customers attest to
this--bootstrapped bootstraps rock.) The 2N4416 is far inferior to the
BF862 for that sort of thing, but of course there weren't any BF862s in
1989, when AoE II came out.

Cgs is already
bootstrapped by the fact that the jfet is a follower. So both Cgd and
Cgs appear to be much lower than the datasheet values.

You do have to use a good quality current sink load for the JFET,
though, because otherwise its voltage gain can be quite a bit less than 1.

Win's circuit, with sensible DC biasing, runs around 0.9 overall gain,
so the jfet caps are bootstrapped roughly 10:1.

You showed me this trick:

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/53724080/Circuits/Amps/Jfet_Bootstrap.JPG

Of course, the base resistor loads the jfet source, so the bootstrap
ratio can't hit truly maniacal levels.

As long as we're here, in the Basics group, allow me to say

DON'T RUN JFETS WITH VDS OVER 5 VOLTS.

or you'll see a bunch of unexpected gate current.


--

John Larkin Highland Technology, Inc
picosecond timing laser drivers and controllers

jlarkin att highlandtechnology dott com
http://www.highlandtechnology.com
 
On 2/22/2015 6:57 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 18:00:29 -0500, Phil Hobbs
hobbs@electrooptical.net> wrote:

On 2/22/2015 4:51 PM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 13:18:35 -0800 (PST), jurb6006@gmail.com
wrote:

"and decreases its input capacitance."



C2 makes the AC drain voltage almost track the gate voltage.
That reduces the effective Cgd a lot, roughly 10:1 maybe.

It can be way better than that, as good as 500:1 or 1000:1, in
real life, at least up to a few megahertz.

Only if you are a bootstrap maniac. I mean that in a good way.

(Happy customers attest to
this--bootstrapped bootstraps rock.) The 2N4416 is far inferior to
the BF862 for that sort of thing, but of course there weren't any
BF862s in 1989, when AoE II came out.

Cgs is already bootstrapped by the fact that the jfet is a
follower. So both Cgd and Cgs appear to be much lower than the
datasheet values.

You do have to use a good quality current sink load for the JFET,
though, because otherwise its voltage gain can be quite a bit less
than 1.

Win's circuit, with sensible DC biasing, runs around 0.9 overall
gain, so the jfet caps are bootstrapped roughly 10:1.

You showed me this trick:

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/53724080/Circuits/Amps/Jfet_Bootstrap.JPG

Of course, the base resistor loads the jfet source, so the
bootstrap ratio can't hit truly maniacal levels.

A BF862 has a source resistance of about 30 ohms. With a PNP wraparound
on the FET (that's shunt feedback, like the classic circuit for
current-boosting a regulator, as in the LM7805 datasheet) you can get
that down to an ohm or so, in which case the bootstrap's base resistor
isn't too much of a problem. You do have to work at making the whole
foofaraw not oscillate. ;)
As long as we're here, in the Basics group, allow me to say

DON'T RUN JFETS WITH VDS OVER 5 VOLTS.

or you'll see a bunch of unexpected gate current.

Roight. BF862s like 2 to 3 volts--in that range they pretty well have
their full bandwidth, and gate current is a picoamp or two.

Cheers

Phil Hobbs


--
Dr Philip C D Hobbs
Principal Consultant
ElectroOptical Innovations LLC
Optics, Electro-optics, Photonics, Analog Electronics

160 North State Road #203
Briarcliff Manor NY 10510

hobbs at electrooptical dot net
http://electrooptical.net
 

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