I simulated the circuit using a "typical" 2N3904 transistor to show you the difference in voltage gain and distortion with and without an emitter capacitor:
Hi,
My explanation about the distortion with and without emitter capacitor:
There is unsymmetrical drive current for positive and negative halfwaves.
The positive halfwave is driven by R4 = 3.9k.
If output voltage is 7V for example then the pull_high_current is limited to (9V - 7V) / 3900 Ohm = about 0.5mA.
The drive low_current (AC) is limited by th impedance of the capacitor (about 16 ohms) and the drive capability of the transistor.
This is way more than the 0.5mA. Unsymmetric drive current means unymmetric output voltage and this means distortions.
Klaus
Sometimes using shunt feedback instead of the conventional series feedback can achieve better performance. It all depends upon the design requirements.
The shunt circuit below has twice the gain and almost half the distortion of the series feedback design.
it's easy to get low distortion driving miniscule loads (i.e. no o/p current), the real design challenge starts for a bit more power gain... in some of the above circuits there appears to be not that much more power in the output than in the base drive...
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?