It is possible to make a voltage amplifier ( common emitter stage ) style class B? , that is to say, with two transistors , one PNP and the other NPN . Where amplify each half cycle .
If the NPN is at the positive (upper) side, then it will not be a voltage amplifier. Your incoming signal amplitude is the same (or less) as your output voltage.
Voltage gain is possible by putting the PNP at the upper side.
I have a Youtube video which portrays animated simulations of simple class B amplifiers. It examines several configurations.
you will find BJT designs for { Op Amp & Power Amp) contains an output stage with cascaded complementary common emitters followed by more than 1 stage of emitter followers with cross prevention bias.
The circuit with the TIP31 and TIP32 transistors as common emitter has an average of nearly 70mA of base current for each transistor so they are conducting in class-A more current collector than their maximum allowed current and are getting much hotter than their maximum allowed dissipation, even when there is no signal.
Now I uses tips 142 and 147 with the same configuration and I have the same problem. Is there a book which talks about this topic? especialy this type of singular class B
Almost every audio amplifier uses complimentary (NPN and PNP) common-collector emitter-followers at the output, biased slightly into class-AB to eliminate class-B crossover distortion. Diodes or a transistor automatically adjust their bias so that temperature changes do not change their low idle current.
Your (crazy?) idea of using common-emitter output transistors causes them to be turned on hard conducting a LOT of current all the time and burning up.
Your (crazy?) idea of using common-emitter output transistors causes them to be turned on hard conducting a LOT of current all the time and burning up.
That would be also my comment about the circuit in post #4. Particularly it's pure class A (as long as the transistors withstand the high power dissipation), not class B.
As suggested by SunnySkyguy, you can have a complementary darlington class-B circuit with the final output transistors in common emitter configuration, if this fact is of specific relevance for you. I don't believe it is.
To ask more generally, what's the problem you want to solve?
A class B output stage needs a mechanism that makes either one or the other branch conduct at a time. In the well-known common collector class B stages, it's achieved automatically. There's no natural way to do the same in common emitter configuration, the said complementary darlington circuits have still a predriver in voltage follower (common collector) configuration.