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Diode compensates distortion in amplifier stage

Edited by Bill Travis

S Chekcheyev, Pridnestrovye State University, Moldova -- EDN, September 16, 2004

The voltage amplifier in Figure 1 exhibits smaller nonlinear distortion than does the conventional amplifier in Figure 2. Diode D1 compensates for the distortion inherent in the npn transistor. The voltage gain of a common-emitter amplifier depends on the transconductance of the transistor. The transconductance of the bipolar transistor is as follows:

where e is the charge of an electron, k is Boltzmann's constant (approximately 1.38×10–23J/°K), T°C is temperature in degrees Celsius, I is the emitter current, and n=e/[k(273+T°C)]. So, the transconductance is proportional to the emitter current. Consequently, the instantaneous voltage-gain coefficient of the conventional common-emitter amplifier is proportional to the instantaneous emitter current. As a result, the negative half-cycle of the output signal gets more amplification than does the positive half-cycle (Figure 3).

The dynamic resistance of diode D1 in Figure 1 is inversely proportional to the instantaneous current. That dynamic resistance forms part of the negative-feedback circuit of the amplifier. The average current of diode D1 is equal to the average emitter current of transistor Q1. However, the instantaneous current of D1 becomes smaller, and the instantaneous dynamic resistance of D1 becomes larger when the instantaneous emitter current of Q1 becomes larger, and vice versa. Therefore, the negative feedback becomes stronger during the negative half-cycle of the output signal. As a result, the output signal of the amplifier becomes more symmetric (Figure 4). The circuits in Figure 1 and  Figure 2 have the same average collector current and the same load resistance. Figure 3 and Figure4 show the results of their PSpice simulation. The amplitude of the output signal is 5V p-p in both cases with a 1-kHz sinusoidal signal applied to the input. You can see that the linearized amplifier yields a more symmetrical output signal. Figure 5 gives the quantitative results of the simulations. The improvement in harmonic distortion accrues because of the suppression of the even harmonics in the output of the linearized amplifier.

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