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Common-Base vs. Common-Emitter
Identical quiescent conditions Identical voltage gain (except C-E inverts) Identical output resistance Common-Base input impedance is very low Common-Emitter suffers Miller effect
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Cascode Configuration
Common-Emitter Amp High Rin, Low Gain Common-Base Amp Low Rin, High Gain
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Cascode Quiescent Conditions
VB1 VB2 VB1-0.5 VB2-0.5 (VB1-0.5+VS)/RE Note, IC1 = IC2
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Cascode (I) Common-Base Stage
From common-emitter input stage
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Cascode (II) Common-Emitter Stage
To common-base stage, rin = re
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Upper Cut-Off Frequency
Cascode configuration Common-emitter amplifier
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Practical Cascode Configuration
To keep Q1 and Q2 out of saturation: To ensure this, biasing networks for Q1 and Q2 are often combined.
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Analysis Example Quiescent conditions
Assume base currents are negligible.
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-5.5 V +4.5 V +8.6 V +5 V IC = 0.8 mA -5 V
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Voltage Gain : +8.6 V +5 V +4.5 V -5 V -5.5 V IC = 0.8 mA
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Cut-off frequencies Lower: Upper: -5 V +8.6 V +5 V +4.5 V -5.5 V
IC = 0.8 mA
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Measured Response
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Summary – RF Design Upper cut-off frequency of a common-emitter amplifier is set mostly by CBC due to the Miller effect. Increase bandwidth by: Reducing gain Reducing RS Reducing CBC (different transistor) Suppressing Miller effect – Cascode configuration
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